Connection filters is a design in the internals of curl, not visible in its public API. They were added in curl v7.87.0. This document describes the concepts, its high level implementation and the motivations.
A "connection filter" is a piece of code that is responsible for handling a range of operations of curl's connections: reading, writing, waiting on external events, connecting and closing down - to name the most important ones.
The most important feat of connection filters is that they can be stacked on
top of each other (or "chained" if you prefer that metaphor). In the common
scenario that you want to retrieve a https:
URL with curl, you need 2 basic
things to send the request and get the response: a TCP connection, represented
by a socket
and a SSL instance en- and decrypt over that socket. You write
your request to the SSL instance, which encrypts and writes that data to the
socket, which then sends the bytes over the network.
With connection filters, curl's internal setup looks something like this (cf for connection filter):
Curl_easy *data connectdata *conn cf-ssl cf-socket
+----------------+ +-----------------+ +-------+ +--------+
|https://curl.se/|----> | properties |----> | keys |---> | socket |--> OS --> network
+----------------+ +-----------------+ +-------+ +--------+
Curl_write(data, buffer)
--> Curl_cfilter_write(data, data->conn, buffer)
---> conn->filter->write(conn->filter, data, buffer)
While connection filters all do different things, they look the same from the
"outside". The code in data
and conn
does not really know which
filters are installed. conn
just writes into the first filter, whatever that
is.
Same is true for filters. Each filter has a pointer to the next
filter. When
SSL has encrypted the data, it does not write to a socket, it writes to the
next filter. If that is indeed a socket, or a file, or an HTTP/2 connection is
of no concern to the SSL filter.
This allows stacking, as in:
Direct:
http://localhost/ conn -> cf-socket
https://curl.se/ conn -> cf-ssl -> cf-socket
Via http proxy tunnel:
http://localhost/ conn -> cf-http-proxy -> cf-socket
https://curl.se/ conn -> cf-ssl -> cf-http-proxy -> cf-socket
Via https proxy tunnel:
http://localhost/ conn -> cf-http-proxy -> cf-ssl -> cf-socket
https://curl.se/ conn -> cf-ssl -> cf-http-proxy -> cf-ssl -> cf-socket
Via http proxy tunnel via SOCKS proxy:
http://localhost/ conn -> cf-http-proxy -> cf-socks -> cf-socket
Before Curl_easy
can send the request, the connection needs to be
established. This means that all connection filters have done, whatever they
need to do: waiting for the socket to be connected, doing the TLS handshake,
performing the HTTP tunnel request, etc. This has to be done in reverse order:
the last filter has to do its connect first, then the one above can start,
etc.
Each filter does in principle the following:
static CURLcode
myfilter_cf_connect(struct Curl_cfilter *cf,
struct Curl_easy *data,
bool *done)
{
CURLcode result;
if(cf->connected) { /* we and all below are done */
*done = TRUE;
return CURLE_OK;
}
/* Let the filters below connect */
result = cf->next->cft->connect(cf->next, data, blocking, done);
if(result || !*done)
return result; /* below errored/not finished yet */
/* MYFILTER CONNECT THINGS */ /* below connected, do out thing */
*done = cf->connected = TRUE; /* done, remember, return */
return CURLE_OK;
}
Closing a connection then works similar. The conn
tells the first filter to
close. Contrary to connecting, the filter does its own things first, before
telling the next filter to close.
There are two things curl is concerned about: efficient memory use and fast transfers.
The memory footprint of a filter is relatively small:
struct Curl_cfilter {
const struct Curl_cftype *cft; /* the type providing implementation */
struct Curl_cfilter *next; /* next filter in chain */
void *ctx; /* filter type specific settings */
struct connectdata *conn; /* the connection this filter belongs to */
int sockindex; /* TODO: like to get rid off this */
BIT(connected); /* != 0 iff this filter is connected */
};
The filter type cft
is a singleton, one static struct for each type of
filter. The ctx
is where a filter holds its specific data. That varies by
filter type. An http-proxy filter keeps the ongoing state of the CONNECT here,
free it after its has been established. The SSL filter keeps the SSL*
(if
OpenSSL is used) here until the connection is closed. So, this varies.
conn
is a reference to the connection this filter belongs to, so nothing
extra besides the pointer itself.
Several things, that before were kept in struct connectdata
, now goes into
the filter->ctx
when needed. So, the memory footprint for connections that
do not use an http proxy, or socks, or https is lower.
As to transfer efficiency, writing and reading through a filter comes at near zero cost if the filter does not transform the data. An http proxy or socks filter, once it is connected, just passes the calls through. Those filters implementations look like this:
ssize_t Curl_cf_def_send(struct Curl_cfilter *cf, struct Curl_easy *data,
const void *buf, size_t len, CURLcode *err)
{
return cf->next->cft->do_send(cf->next, data, buf, len, err);
}
The recv
implementation is equivalent.
The currently existing filter types (curl 8.5.0) are:
TCP
, UDP
, UNIX
: filters that operate on a socket, providing raw I/O.SOCKET-ACCEPT
: special TCP socket that has a socket that has been
accept()
ed in a listen()
SSL
: filter that applies TLS en-/decryption and handshake. Manages the
underlying TLS backend implementation.HTTP-PROXY
, H1-PROXY
, H2-PROXY
: the first manages the connection to an
HTTP proxy server and uses the other depending on which ALPN protocol has
been negotiated.SOCKS-PROXY
: filter for the various SOCKS proxy protocol variationsHAPROXY
: filter for the protocol of the same name, providing client IP
information to a server.HTTP/2
: filter for handling multiplexed transfers over an HTTP/2
connectionHTTP/3
: filter for handling multiplexed transfers over an HTTP/3+QUIC
connectionHAPPY-EYEBALLS
: meta filter that implements IPv4/IPv6 "happy eyeballing".
It creates up to 2 sub-filters that race each other for a connection.SETUP
: meta filter that manages the creation of sub-filter chains for a
specific transport (e.g. TCP or QUIC).HTTPS-CONNECT
: meta filter that races a TCP+TLS and a QUIC connection
against each other to determine if HTTP/1.1, HTTP/2 or HTTP/3 shall be used
for a transfer.Meta filters are combining other filters for a specific purpose, mostly during
connection establishment. Other filters like TCP
, UDP
and UNIX
are only
to be found at the end of filter chains. SSL filters provide encryption, of
course. Protocol filters change the bytes sent and received.
Filter types carry flags that inform what they do. These are (for now):
CF_TYPE_IP_CONNECT
: this filter type talks directly to a server. This does
not have to be the server the transfer wants to talk to. For example when a
proxy server is used.CF_TYPE_SSL
: this filter type provides encryption.CF_TYPE_MULTIPLEX
: this filter type can manage multiple transfers in parallel.Filter types can combine these flags. For example, the HTTP/3 filter types
have CF_TYPE_IP_CONNECT
, CF_TYPE_SSL
and CF_TYPE_MULTIPLEX
set.
Flags are useful to extrapolate properties of a connection. To check if a
connection is encrypted, libcurl inspect the filter chain in place, top down,
for CF_TYPE_SSL
. If it finds CF_TYPE_IP_CONNECT
before any CF_TYPE_SSL
,
the connection is not encrypted.
For example, conn1
is for a http:
request using a tunnel through an HTTP/2
https:
proxy. conn2
is a https:
HTTP/2 connection to the same proxy.
conn3
uses HTTP/3 without proxy. The filter chains would look like this
(simplified):
conn1 --> `HTTP-PROXY` --> `H2-PROXY` --> `SSL` --> `TCP`
flags: `IP_CONNECT` `SSL` `IP_CONNECT`
conn2 --> `HTTP/2` --> `SSL` --> `HTTP-PROXY` --> `H2-PROXY` --> `SSL` --> `TCP`
flags: `SSL` `IP_CONNECT` `SSL` `IP_CONNECT`
conn3 --> `HTTP/3`
flags: `SSL|IP_CONNECT`
Inspecting the filter chains, conn1
is seen as unencrypted, since it
contains an IP_CONNECT
filter before any SSL
. conn2
is clearly encrypted
as an SSL
flagged filter is seen first. conn3
is also encrypted as the
SSL
flag is checked before the presence of IP_CONNECT
.
Similar checks can determine if a connection is multiplexed or not.
Filters may make use of special trace macros like CURL_TRC_CF(data, cf, msg,
...)
. With data
being the transfer and cf
being the filter instance.
These traces are normally not active and their execution is guarded so that
they are cheap to ignore.
Users of curl
may activate them by adding the name of the filter type to the
--trace-config
argument. For example, in order to get more detailed tracing
of an HTTP/2 request, invoke curl with:
> curl -v --trace-config ids,time,http/2 https://curl.se
Which gives you trace output with time information, transfer+connection ids
and details from the HTTP/2
filter. Filter type names in the trace config
are case insensitive. You may use all
to enable tracing for all filter
types. When using libcurl
you may call curl_global_trace(config_string)
at
the start of your application to enable filter details.
Meta filters is a catch-all name for filter types that do not change the transfer data in any way but provide other important services to curl. In general, it is possible to do all sorts of silly things with them. One of the commonly used, important things is "eyeballing".
The HAPPY-EYEBALLS
filter is involved in the connect phase. Its job is to
try the various IPv4 and IPv6 addresses that are known for a server. If only
one address family is known (or configured), it tries the addresses one after
the other with timeouts calculated from the amount of addresses and the
overall connect timeout.
When more than one address family is to be tried, it splits the address list into IPv4 and IPv6 and makes parallel attempts. The connection filter chain looks like this:
* create connection for http://curl.se
conn[curl.se] --> SETUP[TCP] --> HAPPY-EYEBALLS --> NULL
* start connect
conn[curl.se] --> SETUP[TCP] --> HAPPY-EYEBALLS --> NULL
- ballerv4 --> TCP[151.101.1.91]:443
- ballerv6 --> TCP[2a04:4e42:c00::347]:443
* v6 answers, connected
conn[curl.se] --> SETUP[TCP] --> HAPPY-EYEBALLS --> TCP[2a04:4e42:c00::347]:443
* transfer
The modular design of connection filters and that we can plug them into each other is used to control the parallel attempts. When a TCP
filter does not connect (in time), it is torn down and another one is created for the next address. This keeps the TCP
filter simple.
The HAPPY-EYEBALLS
on the other hand stays focused on its side of the problem. We can use it also to make other type of connection by just giving it another filter type to try to have happy eyeballing for QUIC:
* create connection for --http3-only https://curl.se
conn[curl.se] --> SETUP[QUIC] --> HAPPY-EYEBALLS --> NULL
* start connect
conn[curl.se] --> SETUP[QUIC] --> HAPPY-EYEBALLS --> NULL
- ballerv4 --> HTTP/3[151.101.1.91]:443
- ballerv6 --> HTTP/3[2a04:4e42:c00::347]:443
* v6 answers, connected
conn[curl.se] --> SETUP[QUIC] --> HAPPY-EYEBALLS --> HTTP/3[2a04:4e42:c00::347]:443
* transfer
When we plug these two variants together, we get the HTTPS-CONNECT
filter
type that is used for --http3
when both HTTP/3 and HTTP/2 or HTTP/1.1
shall be attempted:
* create connection for --http3 https://curl.se
conn[curl.se] --> HTTPS-CONNECT --> NULL
* start connect
conn[curl.se] --> HTTPS-CONNECT --> NULL
- SETUP[QUIC] --> HAPPY-EYEBALLS --> NULL
- ballerv4 --> HTTP/3[151.101.1.91]:443
- ballerv6 --> HTTP/3[2a04:4e42:c00::347]:443
- SETUP[TCP] --> HAPPY-EYEBALLS --> NULL
- ballerv4 --> TCP[151.101.1.91]:443
- ballerv6 --> TCP[2a04:4e42:c00::347]:443
* v4 QUIC answers, connected
conn[curl.se] --> HTTPS-CONNECT --> SETUP[QUIC] --> HAPPY-EYEBALLS --> HTTP/3[151.101.1.91]:443
* transfer