Apache HTTP Server Version 2.4
When using any of the threaded mpms in the Apache HTTP Server 2.x it is important that every function called from Apache be thread safe. When linking in 3rd party extensions it can be difficult to determine whether the resulting server will be thread safe. Casual testing generally won't tell you this either as thread safety problems can lead to subtle race conditions that may only show up in certain conditions under heavy load.
When writing your module or when trying to determine if a module or 3rd party library is thread safe there are some common things to keep in mind.
First, you need to recognize that in a threaded model each individual thread has its own program counter, stack and registers. Local variables live on the stack, so those are fine. You need to watch out for any static or global variables. This doesn't mean that you are absolutely not allowed to use static or global variables. There are times when you actually want something to affect all threads, but generally you need to avoid using them if you want your code to be thread safe.
In the case where you have a global variable that needs to be global and accessed by all threads, be very careful when you update it. If, for example, it is an incrementing counter, you need to atomically increment it to avoid race conditions with other threads. You do this using a mutex (mutual exclusion). Lock the mutex, read the current value, increment it and write it back and then unlock the mutex. Any other thread that wants to modify the value has to first check the mutex and block until it is cleared.
If you are using APR, have a look
at the apr_atomic_*
functions and the
apr_thread_mutex_*
functions.
This is a common global variable that holds the error number of the
last error that occurred. If one thread calls a low-level function that
sets errno and then another thread checks it, we are bleeding error
numbers from one thread into another. To solve this, make sure your
module or library defines _REENTRANT
or is compiled with
-D_REENTRANT
. This will make errno a per-thread variable
and should hopefully be transparent to the code. It does this by doing
something like this:
#define errno (*(__errno_location()))
which means that accessing errno will call
__errno_location()
which is provided by the libc. Setting
_REENTRANT
also forces redefinition of some other functions
to their *_r
equivalents and sometimes changes
the common getc
/putc
macros into safer function
calls. Check your libc documentation for specifics. Instead of, or in
addition to _REENTRANT
the symbols that may affect this are
_POSIX_C_SOURCE
, _THREAD_SAFE
,
_SVID_SOURCE
, and _BSD_SOURCE
.
Not only do things have to be thread safe, but they also have to be
reentrant. strtok()
is an obvious one. You call it the first
time with your delimiter which it then remembers and on each subsequent
call it returns the next token. Obviously if multiple threads are
calling it you will have a problem. Most systems have a reentrant version
of the function called strtok_r()
where you pass in an
extra argument which contains an allocated char *
which the
function will use instead of its own static storage for maintaining
the tokenizing state. If you are using APR you can use apr_strtok()
.
crypt()
is another function that tends to not be reentrant,
so if you run across calls to that function in a library, watch out. On
some systems it is reentrant though, so it is not always a problem. If
your system has crypt_r()
chances are you should be using
that, or if possible simply avoid the whole mess by using md5 instead.
The following is a list of common libraries that are used by 3rd party
Apache modules. You can check to see if your module is using a potentially
unsafe library by using tools such as ldd(1)
and
nm(1)
. For PHP, for example,
try this:
% ldd libphp4.so
libsablot.so.0 => /usr/local/lib/libsablot.so.0 (0x401f6000)
libexpat.so.0 => /usr/lib/libexpat.so.0 (0x402da000)
libsnmp.so.0 => /usr/lib/libsnmp.so.0 (0x402f9000)
libpdf.so.1 => /usr/local/lib/libpdf.so.1 (0x40353000)
libz.so.1 => /usr/lib/libz.so.1 (0x403e2000)
libpng.so.2 => /usr/lib/libpng.so.2 (0x403f0000)
libmysqlclient.so.11 => /usr/lib/libmysqlclient.so.11 (0x40411000)
libming.so => /usr/lib/libming.so (0x40449000)
libm.so.6 => /lib/libm.so.6 (0x40487000)
libfreetype.so.6 => /usr/lib/libfreetype.so.6 (0x404a8000)
libjpeg.so.62 => /usr/lib/libjpeg.so.62 (0x404e7000)
libcrypt.so.1 => /lib/libcrypt.so.1 (0x40505000)
libssl.so.2 => /lib/libssl.so.2 (0x40532000)
libcrypto.so.2 => /lib/libcrypto.so.2 (0x40560000)
libresolv.so.2 => /lib/libresolv.so.2 (0x40624000)
libdl.so.2 => /lib/libdl.so.2 (0x40634000)
libnsl.so.1 => /lib/libnsl.so.1 (0x40637000)
libc.so.6 => /lib/libc.so.6 (0x4064b000)
/lib/ld-linux.so.2 => /lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0x80000000)
In addition to these libraries you will need to have a look at any
libraries linked statically into the module. You can use nm(1)
to look for individual symbols in the module.
Please drop a note to dev@httpd.apache.org if you have additions or corrections to this list.
Library | Version | Thread Safe? | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
ASpell/PSpell | ? | ||
Berkeley DB | 3.x, 4.x | Yes | Be careful about sharing a connection across threads. |
bzip2 | Yes | Both low-level and high-level APIs are thread-safe. However, high-level API requires thread-safe access to errno. | |
cdb | ? | ||
C-Client | Perhaps | c-client uses strtok() and
gethostbyname() which are not thread-safe on most C
library implementations. c-client's static data is meant to be shared
across threads. If strtok() and
gethostbyname() are thread-safe on your OS, c-client
may be thread-safe.
|
|
libcrypt | ? | ||
Expat | Yes | Need a separate parser instance per thread | |
FreeTDS | ? | ||
FreeType | ? | ||
GD 1.8.x | ? | ||
GD 2.0.x | ? | ||
gdbm | No | Errors returned via a static gdbm_error
variable |
|
ImageMagick | 5.2.2 | Yes | ImageMagick docs claim it is thread safe since version 5.2.2 (see Change log). |
Imlib2 | ? | ||
libjpeg | v6b | ? | |
libmysqlclient | Yes | Use mysqlclient_r library variant to ensure thread-safety. For more information, please read http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/Threaded_clients.html. | |
Ming | 0.2a | ? | |
Net-SNMP | 5.0.x | ? | |
OpenLDAP | 2.1.x | Yes | Use ldap_r library variant to ensure
thread-safety. |
OpenSSL | 0.9.6g | Yes | Requires proper usage of CRYPTO_num_locks ,
CRYPTO_set_locking_callback ,
CRYPTO_set_id_callback
|
liboci8 (Oracle 8+) | 8.x,9.x | ? | |
pdflib | 5.0.x | Yes | PDFLib docs claim it is thread safe; changes.txt indicates it has been partially thread-safe since V1.91: http://www.pdflib.com/products/pdflib-family/pdflib/. |
libpng | 1.0.x | ? | |
libpng | 1.2.x | ? | |
libpq (PostgreSQL) | 8.x | Yes | Don't share connections across threads and watch out for
crypt() calls
|
Sablotron | 0.95 | ? | |
zlib | 1.1.4 | Yes | Relies upon thread-safe zalloc and zfree functions Default is to use libc's calloc/free which are thread-safe. |