commit | a3e65892add97ce68816c1544c0aa21591239fc7 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Ed Tanous <edtanous@google.com> | Thu Sep 16 14:13:20 2021 -0700 |
committer | Ed Tanous <ed@tanous.net> | Fri Sep 17 21:37:45 2021 +0000 |
tree | 29ec78e960b9a8af5015b72f67941b4402dbfe88 | |
parent | ad22fefecaf7988fd7072dc71042efbf86fc5162 [diff] |
Make fewer copies There are apparently places where we make complete copies of the request structure, including the body data within it. Recently, 59b98b2222fddbea3d6f678d9e94006521f0c381 came along and made the size of the Request structure include the body payload. This is good for object ownership, but bad for code that wants to make a copy. This commit tries to do something less insane, and construct the Payload object (which only really includes the http headers, uri and method) before jumping into callback hell, thus meaning that the Payload object is copied 4 times instead of the Request object. Tested: Code compiles. Deleted the boost::beast::http::message copy constructor, and observed that new code now compiles without needing a copy. Signed-off-by: Ed Tanous <edtanous@google.com> Change-Id: Ie81bade61fb1f6f392b163f98c84540e09a26690
This component attempts to be a "do everything" embedded webserver for openbmc.
At this time, the webserver implements a few interfaces:
BMCWeb is configured by setting -D
flags that correspond to options in bmcweb/meson_options.txt
and then compiling. For example, meson <builddir> -Dkvm=disabled ...
followed by ninja
in build directory. The option names become C++ preprocessor symbols that control which code is compiled into the program.
meson builddir ninja -C builddir
meson builddir -Dbuildtype=minsize -Db_lto=true -Dtests=disabled ninja -C buildir
If any of the dependencies are not found on the host system during configuration, meson automatically gets them via its wrap dependencies mentioned in bmcweb/subprojects
.
meson builddir -Dwrap_mode=nofallback ninja -C builddir
meson builddir -Dbuildtype=debug ninja -C builddir
meson builddir -Db_coverage=true -Dtests=enabled ninja coverage -C builddir test
When BMCWeb starts running, it reads persistent configuration data (such as UUID and session data) from a local file. If this is not usable, it generates a new configuration.
When BMCWeb SSL support is enabled and a usable certificate is not found, it will generate a self-sign a certificate before launching the server. The keys are generated by the secp384r1
algorithm. The certificate
C=US, O=OpenBMC, CN=testhost
,SHA-256
algorithm.