Mostly, treat HTTP0.9 completely separate. Because we're doing raw
delivery of a body directly, fake enough (connection_close=1, and finish
headers manually) so that the MIME infrastructure thinks it is seeing a
body.
This deals better with the body due to accounting for the first line. Also
it avoids the content line analyzer to strip CRLF/LF and the analyzer
then adding CRLF unconditionally by fully bypassing the content line
analyzer.
Concretely, the vlan-mpls test case contains a HTTP response with LF only,
but the previous implementation would use CRLF, accounting for two many bytes.
Same for the http.no-version test which would previously report a body
length of 280 and now is at 323 (which agrees with wireshark).
Further, the mime_type detection for the http-09 test case works because
it's now seeing the full body.
Drawback: We don't extract headers when a server actually replies with
a HTTP/1.1 message, but grrr, something needs to give I guess.
This is to avoid missing large sessions where a single side exceeds
the DPD buffer size. It comes with the trade-off that now the analyzer
can be triggered by anybody controlling one of the endpoints (instead
of both).
Test suite changes are minor, and nothing in "external".
Closes#343.
This commit switches UID hashing from md5 to a highway hash. It also
moves the salt value out of the file plugin - and makes it
installation-specific instead - it is moved to the global namespace.
There now are digest hash functions to make "static"
installation-specific hashes that are stable over workers available to
everyone; hashes can be 64, 128 or 256 bits in size.
Due to the fact that we switch the file hashing algorithm, all file
hashes change.
The underlyigng algorithm that is used for hashing is highwayhash-128,
which is significantly faster than md5.
This allows one to tune the number of protocol violations to tolerate
from any given analyzer type before just disabling a given instance
of it.
Also removes the "disabled_aids" field from the DPD::Info record
since it serves no purpose: in this case, calling disable_analyzer
multiple times for the same analyzer is a no-op.