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authorFred Hebert <[email protected]>2016-08-19 08:46:48 -0400
committerFred Hebert <[email protected]>2016-08-19 15:52:54 -0400
commit59ec0761d69608a6d4be2db1967e71efdb9f535d (patch)
tree171ac09fea4f3149cc2602361aea847cfda1c005 /otp_patch_apply
parent7b1cda1f97cd3ec91e7111b22aeffa3b5a6812f1 (diff)
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Add option to bypass SSL PEM cache
The current SSL implementation has a PEM cache running through the ssl manager process, whose primary role is caching CA chains from files on disk. This is intended as a way to save on disk operation when the requested certificates are often the same, and those cache values are both time-bound and reference-counted. The code path also includes caching the Erlang-formatted certificate as decoded by the public_key application The same code path is used for DER-encoded certificates, which are passed in memory and do not require file access. These certificates are cached, but not reference-counted and also not shared across connections. For heavy usage of DER-encoded certificates, the PEM cache becomes a central bottleneck for a server, forcing the decoding of every one of them individually through a single critical process. It is also not clear if the cache remains useful for disk certificates in all cases. This commit adds a configuration variable for the ssl application (bypass_pem_cache = true | false) which allows to open files and decode certificates in the calling connection process rather than the manager. When this action takes place, the operations to cache and return data are replaced to strictly return data. To provide a transparent behaviour, the 'CacheDbRef' used to keep track of the certificates in the cache is replaced by the certificates itself, and all further lookup functions or folds can be done locally. This has proven under benchmark to more than triple the performance of the SSL application under load (once the session cache had also been disabled).
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