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momentum

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fb801e200611ba735041c318fcbbdd772a8340e8

handle uppercase request methods

jjonasschneider committed 13 years ago
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403fe82abb67bf006bf15a5e0bcb86eadc1c8eb6

pass the connection's remote IP when creating the Request

jjonasschneider committed 13 years ago
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d02572ad41a398ceee7c605ea658a07649a73412

move the remote IP unpacking code into its own method

jjonasschneider committed 13 years ago
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5f93189a49a0d038a58c6af88918c521c91a00c3

set an X-Forwarded-For header for proxied requests

jjonasschneider committed 13 years ago
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1aea8219c8228dc536f865c623d79b97e6600200

have the Proxy adapter send request bodies to upstream

jjonasschneider committed 13 years ago
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bdb00b11f28e0a15f1079a66b10ff5a852c33589

accept request bodies

jjonasschneider committed 13 years ago

README

The README file for this repository.

Momentum, a SPDY Server

Momentum is a Rack handler for SPDY clients. That means, it receives connections from SPDY clients and runs Rack apps. It's that simple.

But that doesn't mean you can only run your Rack app on it. Adapters enable Momentum to act as a proxy to your existing HTTP backend, and should you want to, you can also run your Rack app in seperate threads.

Installation

Installation is quite complicated at the moment, as there is no gem release yet. First, clone this repo and dependencies:

$ git clone git://github.com/jonasschneider/momentum.git
$ cd momentum
$ git submodule update --init
$ bundle install

Then go ahead and run the proxy example:

$ bundle exec ruby examples/proxy.rb 80

This will start Momentum on 0.0.0.0:5555 with the Proxy adapter (see below), forwarding all requests to an HTTP server running on port 80. If you have a recent version of Chrome/Chromium, use the command line flag --use-spdy=no-ssl to force it to use SPDY. Point it at your_server:5555, and bam! You're running SPDY.

For more usage examples, see the examples/ directory.

Backend

As Momentum is Rack-based, the server will deliver all requests to a Rack app. This Rack app is the argument to Momentum.start. The simplest possible solution is to just use your regular Rack app with the Momentum backend. SPDY requests to your app will cause your application code to be executed in the SPDY server itself. But you probably don't want this, for several reasons.

First, as your app is most likely not asynchronous, the event loop of the SPDY server will be blocked when running your app's code. This can cause timeouts and will effectively make your SPDY sever synchronous.

Second, SPDY is meant as a front-end protocol. Running your app on a front-end server will break when you need to scale.

The recommended solution is simple: keep your existing HTTP infrastructure and backend servers, and use Momentum as a proxy to your backend servers, as described in the usage example above.

If you don't care about scaling

Add the following to your app's Gemfile:

gem 'momentum', :git => 'git://github.com/jonasschneider/momentum.git', :submodules => true

Then download the code and start the server by running:

$ bundle install
$ bundle exec momentum

This will start momentum running your config.ru with the Defer adapter. This adapter (see below) will run your application code in a separate thread per request, so make sure it's threadsafe. If you're curious, you can try out what happens without an adapter (running your app directly in the event loop, no threads) by running momentum --plain in your app's directory.

Adapters

Adapters are Rack apps. They can be thought of as middleware. If you do not want your app to be executed within the SPDY server event loop (i.e. because it blocks), you should use an adapter. The design of adapters is to return an :async response immediately, so the event loop of the SPDY server is not blocked. Of course, the adapter has to get the real response from somewhere. The adapters use mechanisms that are provided by EventMachine to generate or fetch the response asynchronously.

Momentum::Adapters::Proxy

The Proxy adapter will cause all requests to be forwarded to a given HTTP server. The SPDY server will act as an HTTP proxy. Internally, EM::HttpRequest is used to asynchronously fetch the resource from the backend.

Advanced features of the SPDY protocol, such as Server Push, currently cannot be used, as they would require communication betweeen the backend and the SPDY server before the response is sent.

Trivial performance tests showed that using the Proxy adapter in combination with a Thin/nginx setup yields the best results for serving clients over the internet for sites with many assets (see below.)

Note that is is not a SPDY/HTTPS proxy for proxying connections to arbitrary servers through a SPDY tunnel as described in http://dev.chromium.org/spdy/spdy-proxy-examples. It is merely a way of providing the SPDY protocol to clients without any backend configuration changes.

Momentum::Adapters::Defer

Defer will use the EventMachine thread pool (configured with a size of 100) to run your application code. This requires your code to be threadsafe. This adapter is used when running the momentum command.

Server Push (see below) is possible with this adapter.

Backwards compatibility is important! HTTP clients should be handled by a slave HTTP server that forwards requests to the master SPDY server. HTTP support for the SPDY server is a work in progress.

Taking advantage of SPDY Server Push

A Momentum::AppDelegate object is available in env['spdy'] when running on Momentum. The public API for this object currently consists of just one method, push(url). It should be called when the app can safely determine that the resource at path is going to be required to render the page. However, you should not rely on env['spdy'] being available, in order to stay compatible to regular Rack servers.

Using it requires the Defer adapter. If you are not running on it, calling push will result in a no-op. If you are, calling push(url) will initiate a SPDY Server Push to the client.

The SPDY server will be informed of the app's push request, and will start processing the request immediately as if was sent as a separate request by the client.

Per the SPDY spec, the virtual request will look to the application completely identical to the original request, except for the host, scheme and path headers (and also url to stay compatible to the current Chromium implementation), which contain the location of the requested resource.

Performance

This project is somewhat in development. Since one of the main goals of SPDY is to improve loading times, performance is considered vital for Momentum. I performed some totally unscientific performance tests. The app in question is located in examples/lots_of_images.ru. It displays a bare-bones HTML page, which in turn loads 100 thumbnail-sized JPEG images from the server.

Loading times were measured using the Chrome DOM inspector, reading the time of the DOMContentLoaded event, which indicates the arrival of the main HTML document, and the onLoad event, which indicates that all of the images have been loaded. Traditional benchmark approaches using tools like ab are deemed inappropriate because SPDY is not optimized for raw request benchmarking, but instead focuses on the results given by real browsers. Besides that, there is no ab equivalent for SPDY. High-concurrency benchmarks are therefore still to be done.

To test SPDY, Chrome was started with the --use-spdy=no-ssl flag, which forces Chrome to talk SPDY everywhere. This means that TLS SPDY negotiation is not included in the benchmark. For testing the HTTP servers, Chrome was started without command-line flags.

The first, smaller group of tests was performed over a local network. The server was running on a media center-style box under Debian. For the second group of tests, a small Amazon EC2 instance was fired up. The results of the two test groups should not be cross-compared, as the system specs differ vastly.

<tr>
  <td>WEBrick (for comparison)</td>
  <td>0,2s</td>
  <td>1,5s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Thin</td>
  <td>0,2s</td>
  <td><b>0,8s</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Unicorn, 4 workers</td>
  <td>0,3s</td>
  <td>1,0s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Momentum/Defer</td>
  <td>0,3s</td>
  <td>2,5s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Momentum/Proxy in front of Unicorn</td>
  <td>0,3s</td>
  <td>3,4s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Momentum/Proxy in front of Thin</td>
  <td>0,2s</td>
  <td>2,3s</td>
</tr>

<tr>
  <td colspan=3><b>Internet connection</b></td>
</tr>

<tr>
  <td>WEBrick (for comparison)</td>
  <td>0,5s</td>
  <td>4,5s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Unicorn, 1 worker</td>
  <td>0,6s</td>
  <td>6,5s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Unicorn, 4 workers</td>
  <td>0,6s</td>
  <td>5,9s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Unicorn, 4 workers behind nginx</td>
  <td>0,5s</td>
  <td><b>3,0s</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Thin</td>
  <td>0,5s</td>
  <td>4,5s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Thin behind nginx</td>
  <td>0,4s</td>
  <td><b>2,6s</b></td>
</tr>

<tr>
  <td>Momentum/Defer</td>
  <td>0,4s</td>
  <td>2,3s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Momentum/Defer adapter (subsequent)</td>
  <td>0,3s</td>
  <td><b>2,2s</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Momentum/Proxy in front of Thin</td>
  <td>0,5s</td>
  <td>2,7s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Momentum/Proxy in front of Thin (subsequent)</td>
  <td>0,4s</td>
  <td>2,5s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Momentum/Proxy in front of nginx and Thin</td>
  <td>0,5s</td>
  <td>2,4s</td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Momentum/Proxy in front of nginx and Thin (subsequent)</td>
  <td>0,3s</td>
  <td><b>2,3s</b></td>
</tr>
  DOMContentLoaded onLoad
LAN connection

Over a local connection, the advantage of the single connection is negated by the protocol overhead, making the multi-connection approach much faster. Additional tests were therefore ommited.

But over a remote connection, the results look drastically different. As can be seen, the high-performant servers Thin and Unicorn are meant to be run behind a reverse proxy. There, they achieve great loading times. Measuring subsequent requests showed that no speedup was gained. Those results are ommited.

The Momentum tests were performed on both initial and subsequent tests to show the improvement caused by the held SPDY connection. The simplicity of the Defer makes it faster than the Proxy adapter in front of Thin. Sadly, testing the Proxy adapter with Unicorn behind nginx was forgotten.

Therefore, the best results were achieved with the Defer adapter and the Proxy adapter proxying to nginx, which in turn proxies to Thin. This is surprising given the overhead of the multiple proxies, but shows the power that lies in the simple addition of a SPDY server to an existing nginx/Thin configuration (and probably also Unicorn/nginx.)

The test may seem biased, as the amount of assets to be loaded is quite high, which favors SPDY. But, looking at sites such as http://www.nytimes.com/, asset counts in this dimension are quite normal. For future investigation, different asset file sizes should be considered, especially larger stylesheet and JavaScript files.

Compliance

Momentum is meant to be compliant with version 2 of the SPDY spec: http://www.chromium.org/spdy/spdy-protocol/spdy-protocol-draft2

License

Released under the MIT License - Copyright (c) 2011-2012 Jonas Schneider

Credits

Thanks to Ilya Grigorik for the great SPDY parser gem. Inspired by Roman Shterenzon's SPDY server. And thanks to https://github.com/inkel/spdy-examples for the sample images ;)