I remember backporting some fixes for building with OpenSSL 1.1 to 6.2 [1] ... Which errors are you still getting?

I tried just now and successfully built the 6.2 branch with OpenSSL 1.1.0f -- I did get warnings but no errors:

  $ git clone -b 6.2.x https://github.com/apache/trafficserver.git
  $ cd trafficserver
  $ autoreconf -i
  $ ./configure
  $ make

[1] https://github.com/apache/trafficserver/pull/1321

On 22/09/17 06:44 AM, Jeremy Payne wrote:
Did you have to make any changes to 6.2 for it to compile cleanly
against openssl 1.1 ?
I can only get ATS 7+ to compile without producing any errors.



On Thu, Sep 21, 2017 at 10:05 PM,  <[email protected]> wrote:
I tested traffic server 6.2 + openssl 1.1 and traffic server 6.2 + openssl
1.0.1 + patch respectively, and they almost have the same performance.


----- 原始邮件 -----
发件人:<[email protected]>
收件人:"bcall" <[email protected]>
抄送人:"users" <[email protected]>
主题:回复:Re: Openssl 1.1.0f Support
日期:2017年09月22日 10点55分

With the patch, the ERR_clear_error() will only be called when the error
occurs. In the normal situation, ERR_clear_error() will not be called, so
the Err_get_state() will not be called and no lock contention in openssl
1.0.1 with the patch.


----- 原始邮件 -----
发件人:Bryan Call <[email protected]>
收件人:[email protected]
抄送人:users <[email protected]>
主题:Re: Openssl 1.1.0f Support
日期:2017年09月21日 23点37分

This only changes the order of the calls.  There is still going to be lock
contention inside OpenSSL 1.0.1.

-Bryan

On Sep 20, 2017, at 11:37 PM, [email protected] wrote:


The following traffic server patch can improve openssl 1.0.1 performance as
openssl 1.1.0:

diff --git a/iocore/net/SSLUtils.cc b/iocore/net/SSLUtils.cc
index 5c9709c..5d306a1 100644
--- a/iocore/net/SSLUtils.cc
+++ b/iocore/net/SSLUtils.cc
@@ -1936,7 +1936,7 @@ SSLWriteBuffer(SSL *ssl, const void *buf, int64_t
nbytes, int64_t &nwritten)
   if (unlikely(nbytes == 0)) {
     return SSL_ERROR_NONE;
   }
-  ERR_clear_error();
+
   int ret = SSL_write(ssl, buf, (int)nbytes);
   if (ret > 0) {
     nwritten = ret;
@@ -1953,6 +1953,9 @@ SSLWriteBuffer(SSL *ssl, const void *buf, int64_t
nbytes, int64_t &nwritten)
     ERR_error_string_n(e, buf, sizeof(buf));
     Debug("ssl.error.write", "SSL write returned %d, ssl_error=%d,
ERR_get_error=%ld (%s)", ret, ssl_error, e, buf);
   }
+
+  ERR_clear_error();
+
   return ssl_error;
 }

@@ -1964,7 +1967,7 @@ SSLReadBuffer(SSL *ssl, void *buf, int64_t nbytes,
int64_t &nread)
   if (unlikely(nbytes == 0)) {
     return SSL_ERROR_NONE;
   }
-  ERR_clear_error();
+
   int ret = SSL_read(ssl, buf, (int)nbytes);
   if (ret > 0) {
     nread = ret;
@@ -1978,13 +1981,14 @@ SSLReadBuffer(SSL *ssl, void *buf, int64_t nbytes,
int64_t &nread)
     Debug("ssl.error.read", "SSL read returned %d, ssl_error=%d,
ERR_get_error=%ld (%s)", ret, ssl_error, e, buf);
   }

+  ERR_clear_error();
+
   return ssl_error;
 }

 ssl_error_t
 SSLAccept(SSL *ssl)
 {
-  ERR_clear_error();
   int ret = SSL_accept(ssl);
   if (ret > 0) {
     return SSL_ERROR_NONE;
@@ -1997,13 +2001,14 @@ SSLAccept(SSL *ssl)
     Debug("ssl.error.accept", "SSL accept returned %d, ssl_error=%d,
ERR_get_error=%ld (%s)", ret, ssl_error, e, buf);
   }

+  ERR_clear_error();
+
   return ssl_error;
 }

 ssl_error_t
 SSLConnect(SSL *ssl)
 {
-  ERR_clear_error();
   int ret = SSL_connect(ssl);
   if (ret > 0) {
     return SSL_ERROR_NONE;
@@ -2016,5 +2021,7 @@ SSLConnect(SSL *ssl)
     Debug("ssl.error.connect", "SSL connect returned %d, ssl_error=%d,
ERR_get_error=%ld (%s)", ret, ssl_error, e, buf);
   }

+  ERR_clear_error();
+
   return ssl_error;
 }


From: Bryan Call <[email protected]>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, September 21, 2017 at 8:38 AM
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Openssl 1.1.0f Support



I meant to say 1.1.0.



-Bryan



On Sep 20, 2017, at 3:54 PM, Bryan Call <[email protected]> wrote:



I was see something like 2x the performance in my benchmarks with OpenSSL
1.0.1.  I have been doing all my development with OpenSSL 1.0.1 ATS since
May, when I upgraded to Fedora 26.



-Bryan



On Sep 20, 2017, at 2:16 PM, Dave Thompson <[email protected]> wrote:



Sorry Jeremy, my recollections were from 16 months ago which is fuzzy by now
at best.   The gist of my recollection is that QAT is an IO based async
engine, which of course ATS already has done extensively.   I recall the
under-the-hood QAT longjumping was a non-starter in an ATS framework.   This
was all static code analysis.  Integration looked like a non-starter, so no
performance test done.

Regarding performance testing of "ATS + Openssl 1.1.0(x) + standard aes-ni
acceleration", Susan (?Bryan?) was just telling me today of a measured order
of magnitude improvement over with the same using Openssl 1.0.1(x) and small
packet sizes...  Improvement attributed to lock contention issues in the
older OpenSSL 1.0.1(x).



Dave



On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 3:22 PM, Jeremy Payne <[email protected]> wrote:

Dave,


Did you run any comparison performance tests using the QAT engine ?

Specifically around these configurations(or similar)


1. ATS + Openssl 1.1.0(x) + QAT engine(sync)

2. ATS + Openssl 1.1.0(x) + standard aes-ni acceleration




On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 11:26 AM, Dave Thompson <[email protected]> wrote:

July 2016, I was evaluating the async Quick Assist in the context of ATS,

and came away with the opinion it's value comes into play with a much

simpler application.   It's effectively it's own async engine, long
jumping

across the stack, and doesn't play well or add  value to ATS's more

extensive model to do similar.... not to mention mutually exclusive in
their

current forms.



Dave







On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 10:08 AM, Alan Carroll <[email protected]>

wrote:



Susan and Dave Thompson were working on something related to that,
"crypto

proxy". There's a small mention of it by Susan at the Fall 2016 summit in

the TLS state slides

(https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TS/Presentations+-+2016).
I'd

start there and see if you can bug Susan or Good Dave*. Although that
work

was designed to use an off box crypto engine, the implementation from the

ATS point of view is identical to what you're writing about. Susan will
be

at the Fall 2017 Summit, I'd look her up then as well.



* To distinguish from "Evil Dave" Carlin.



On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 9:44 AM, Jeremy Payne <[email protected]> wrote:



Thanks guys.. Thats all I needed to know.. Now I can look closer at my

end. Will let you know what I find.



Also, any plans on supporting openssl async, which then allows for

taking full advantage of the Intel QAT engine?

Understood patches/commits are welcome, but just figured there may be

some behind the scene works already started.



Thanks!



On Tue, Sep 19, 2017 at 6:31 PM, Alan Carroll <[email protected]>

wrote:

Susan has also run some performance tests with 7.1.x and openSSL 1.1

vs.

openSSL 1.0.2.



On Tue, Sep 19, 2017 at 5:55 PM, Leif Hedstrom <[email protected]>

wrote:





On Sep 19, 2017, at 2:20 PM, Jeremy Payne <[email protected]> wrote:



I can link ATS 7.x and 8.x against openssl 1.1.0f, however, for some

reason I can't establish a SSL/TLS connection.  Has anyone

successfully linked ATS against openssl 1.1.0f  and successfully been

able to establish a SSL/TLS session?

In other words, is openssl 1.1.0f supported by ATS? If not, what
about

an earlier version of 1.1.0(x)??







Yeh, we’re running current master with OpenSSL v1.1.0f on
docs.trafficserver.apache.org. Maybe you have some mismatch / issues

between

headers (when compiling ATS) and runtime?



Cheers,



— Leif







Reply via email to