This produced error log messages about GenServer termination
every time the connection was not open due to a timeout.
Instead we stop with `{:shutdown, <gun_error>}` since shutting down
when the connection can't be established is normal behavior.
- `verify_fun` is not useful now
- use `customize_check_hostname` (OTP 20+ so OK)
- `partial_chain` is useless as of OTP 21.1 (wasn't there, but hackney/..
uses it)
The new pooling code just removes the connection when it's down,
there is no need to reconnect a connection that is just sitting idle,
better just open a new one next time it's needed
The numbers of the native time unit were so small the CRF was always 1,
making it an LRU. This commit switches the time to miliseconds and changes
the time delta multiplier to the one yielding mostly highest hit rates according
to the paper
When the application restarts (which happens after certain config
changes), the limiters are not destroyed, so `ConcurrentLimiter.new`
will produce {:error, :existing}
See https://bugs.erlang.org/browse/ERL-1260 for more info.
The ssl match function is basically copied from mint, except
that `:string.lowercase/1` was replaced by `:string.casefold`.
It was a TODO in mint's code, so might as well do it since we don't need
to support OTP <20.
Closes#1834
`:retry_timeout` and `:retry` got removed because reconnecting on failure is
something the new pool intentionally doesn't do.
`:max_overflow` had to go in favor of `:max_waiting`, I didn't reuse the key because
the settings are very different in their behaviour.
`:checkin_timeout` got removed in favor of `:connection_acquisition_wait`,
I didn't reuse the key because the settings are somewhat different.
I didn't do any migrations/deprecation warnings/changelog entries because
these settings were never in stable.
While running this in production I noticed a number of ghost
processes with all their clients dead before they released the connection,
so let's track them to log it and remove them from clients
This patch refactors gun pooling to use Elixir process registry and
simplifies adapter option insertion.
Having the pool use process registry instead of a GenServer has a number of advantages:
- Simpler code: the initial implementation adds about half the lines of code it deletes
- Concurrency: unlike a GenServer, ETS-based registry can handle multiple checkout/checkin
requests at the same time
- Precise and easy idle connection clousure: current proposal for closing idle connections in
the GenServer-based pool needs to filter through all connections once a minute and compare their
last active time with closing time. With Elixir process registry this can be done
by just using `Process.send_after`/`Process.cancel_timer` in the worker process.
- Lower memory footprint: In my tests `gun-memory-leak` branch uses about 290mb on peak load (250 connections)
and 235mb on idle (5-10 connections). Registry-based pool uses 210mb on idle and 240mb on peak load