From 6beeb1b708550be0d4a53b272283e17e5e35fe17 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sun, 7 Apr 2024 17:01:30 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 2.4.57. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- docs/manual/developer/hooks.html.en | 261 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 261 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/manual/developer/hooks.html.en (limited to 'docs/manual/developer/hooks.html.en') diff --git a/docs/manual/developer/hooks.html.en b/docs/manual/developer/hooks.html.en new file mode 100644 index 0000000..30aa6f9 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/manual/developer/hooks.html.en @@ -0,0 +1,261 @@ + + + + + +Hook Functions in the Apache HTTP Server 2.x - Apache HTTP Server Version 2.4 + + + + + + + +
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+

Hook Functions in the Apache HTTP Server 2.x

+
+

Available Languages:  en 

+
+ +

Warning

+

This document is still in development and may be partially out of + date.

+
+ +

In general, a hook function is one that the Apache HTTP Server + will call at some point during the processing of a request. + Modules can provide functions that are called, and specify when + they get called in comparison to other modules.

+
+ +
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+
+

Core Hooks

+

The httpd's core modules offer a predefinined list of hooks + used during the standard request processing + phase. Creating a new hook will expose a function that + implements it (see sections below) but it is essential to understand that you will not + extend the httpd's core hooks. Their presence and order in the request processing is in fact + a consequence of how they are called in server/request.c + (check this section + for an overview). The core hooks are listed in the + doxygen documentation.

+ +

Reading guide for developing modules and + request processing before proceeding is + highly recommended. +

+
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+
+

Creating a hook function

+

In order to create a new hook, four things need to be + done:

+ +

Declare the hook function

+

Use the AP_DECLARE_HOOK macro, which needs to be given + the return type of the hook function, the name of the hook, and the + arguments. For example, if the hook returns an int and + takes a request_rec * and an int and is + called do_something, then declare it like this:

+
AP_DECLARE_HOOK(int, do_something, (request_rec *r, int n))
+ + +

This should go in a header which modules will include if + they want to use the hook.

+ + +

Create the hook structure

+

Each source file that exports a hook has a private structure + which is used to record the module functions that use the hook. + This is declared as follows:

+ +
APR_HOOK_STRUCT(
+  APR_HOOK_LINK(do_something)
+  ...
+)
+ + + +

Implement the hook caller

+

The source file that exports the hook has to implement a + function that will call the hook. There are currently three + possible ways to do this. In all cases, the calling function is + called ap_run_hookname().

+ +

Void hooks

+

If the return value of a hook is void, then all the + hooks are called, and the caller is implemented like this:

+ +
AP_IMPLEMENT_HOOK_VOID(do_something, (request_rec *r, int n), (r, n))
+ + +

The second and third arguments are the dummy argument + declaration and the dummy arguments as they will be used when + calling the hook. In other words, this macro expands to + something like this:

+ +
void ap_run_do_something(request_rec *r, int n)
+{
+    ...
+    do_something(r, n);
+}
+ + + +

Hooks that return a value

+

If the hook returns a value, then it can either be run until + the first hook that does something interesting, like so:

+ +
AP_IMPLEMENT_HOOK_RUN_FIRST(int, do_something, (request_rec *r, int n), (r, n), DECLINED)
+ + +

The first hook that does not return DECLINED + stops the loop and its return value is returned from the hook + caller. Note that DECLINED is the traditional + hook return value meaning "I didn't do anything", but it can be + whatever suits you.

+ +

Alternatively, all hooks can be run until an error occurs. + This boils down to permitting two return values, one of + which means "I did something, and it was OK" and the other + meaning "I did nothing". The first function that returns a + value other than one of those two stops the loop, and its + return is the return value. Declare these like so:

+ +
AP_IMPLEMENT_HOOK_RUN_ALL(int, do_something, (request_rec *r, int n), (r, n), OK, DECLINED)
+ + +

Again, OK and DECLINED are the traditional + values. You can use what you want.

+ + + +

Call the hook callers

+

At appropriate moments in the code, call the hook caller, + like so:

+ +
int n, ret;
+request_rec *r;
+
+ret=ap_run_do_something(r, n);
+ + +
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+
+

Hooking the hook

+

A module that wants a hook to be called needs to do two + things.

+ +

Implement the hook function

+

Include the appropriate header, and define a static function + of the correct type:

+ +
static int my_something_doer(request_rec *r, int n)
+{
+    ...
+    return OK;
+}
+ + + +

Add a hook registering function

+

During initialisation, the server will call each modules hook + registering function, which is included in the module + structure:

+ +
static void my_register_hooks()
+{
+    ap_hook_do_something(my_something_doer, NULL, NULL, APR_HOOK_MIDDLE);
+}
+
+mode MODULE_VAR_EXPORT my_module =
+{
+    ...
+    my_register_hooks       /* register hooks */
+};
+ + + +

Controlling hook calling order

+

In the example above, we didn't use the three arguments in + the hook registration function that control calling order of + all the functions registered within the hook. + There are two mechanisms for doing this. The first, rather + crude, method, allows us to specify roughly where the hook is + run relative to other modules. The final argument control this. + There are three possible values: APR_HOOK_FIRST, + APR_HOOK_MIDDLE and APR_HOOK_LAST.

+ +

All modules using any particular value may be run in any + order relative to each other, but, of course, all modules using + APR_HOOK_FIRST will be run before APR_HOOK_MIDDLE + which are before APR_HOOK_LAST. Modules that don't care + when they are run should use APR_HOOK_MIDDLE. These + values are spaced out, so that positions like APR_HOOK_FIRST-2 + are possible to hook slightly earlier than other functions.

+ +

Note that there are two more values, + APR_HOOK_REALLY_FIRST and APR_HOOK_REALLY_LAST. These + should only be used by the hook exporter.

+ +

The other method allows finer control. When a module knows + that it must be run before (or after) some other modules, it + can specify them by name. The second (third) argument is a + NULL-terminated array of strings consisting of the names of + modules that must be run before (after) the current module. For + example, suppose we want "mod_xyz.c" and "mod_abc.c" to run + before we do, then we'd hook as follows:

+ +
static void register_hooks()
+{
+    static const char * const aszPre[] = { "mod_xyz.c", "mod_abc.c", NULL };
+
+    ap_hook_do_something(my_something_doer, aszPre, NULL, APR_HOOK_MIDDLE);
+}
+ + +

Note that the sort used to achieve this is stable, so + ordering set by APR_HOOK_ORDER is preserved, as far + as is possible.

+ + +
+
+

Available Languages:  en 

+
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Comments

Notice:
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