On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 11:41 AM, Lieven Govaerts <lgo_at_apache.org> wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 5, 2012 at 11:51 AM, Lieven Govaerts <lgo_at_apache.org> wrote:
>> Hi,
>> when OpenSSL is built with zlib, it will automatically compress all data
>> sent over an SSL connection. You can see this in the initial handshake
>> "Client Hello" and "Server Hello" where client and server agree on the
>> compression mechanism to be used.
>>
>> If the data being sent or received is already compressed, OpenSSL will
>> compress it a second time. This can happen when already compressed binaries
>> like .gif or .zip are sent, or when the server uses gzip encoding for a http
>> response. This can have impact on performance and memory usage. See Paul
>> Querna's blog post about this topic in [1]. This also has been mentioned
>> before on svn-dev by Justin in [2].
>>
>> Since OpenSSL 1.0 this automatic compression can be disabled at runtime.
>>
>> Compression by OpenSSL has some advantages and disadvantages:
>> + OpenSSL will compress the full data stream, so for https that includes all
>> headers + all small requests and responses which mod_deflate skips.
>> + OpenSSL compression is stateful, it will not reset its dictionary between
>> every response like gzip/deflate-encoding does, so it will reach better
>> compression ratio when content of multiple consecutive requests or responses
>> are similar within a 32KB window. Side note: I have done tests with using a
>> preset dictionary for zlib for http(s) responses and found the difference
>> can be up to 50% extra compression.
>> - Where content is already compressed by the application layer (e.g. gzip
>> encoding or transferring binary files), OpenSSL will compress these again.
>>
>>
>> I have been doing some small-scale testing to see what difference this all
>> makes. My test case was using svn to checkout a copy of the subversion trunk
>> branch in the asf repository.
>>
>> I have tested 4 different scenario's:
>> 1. As-is setup, OpenSSL compression enabled + gzip encoding enabled. (double
>> compression)
>> 2. OpenSSL compression disabled + gzip encoding enabled. (compression
>> handled by the application)
>> 3. OpenSSL compression disabled + gzip encoding disabled. (no compression at
>> all)
>> 4. OpenSSL compression enabled + gzip encoding disabled (compression handled
>> by OpenSSL)
>>
>> I found this particular scenario too small to see a measurable difference in
>> memory or cpu usage, although this is interesting to test further.
>>
>> Difference in total times are more interesting:
>> | bytes read | bytes written | total time
>> 1: | 17.50MB | 233-284KB | 59s
>> 2: | 18.67MB | 2.13-2.43MB | 1m9s-1m18s
>> 3: | 50.35MB | 2.34MB | 103s-108s
>> 4: | 15.27MB | 235-260KB | 50s-56s
>>
>> You can see from the above reasoning and my test results that it would be
>> beneficial to disable gzip encoding when using https if OpenSSL was built
>> with zlib. However, in the scenario where large compressed binary files are
>> stored in a svn repository, I suppose disabling both OpenSSL compression and
>> gzip encoding will provide the best results.
>>
>> Given the above I propose the following:
>> - Add an option in serf to disable OpenSSL compression
>> - Add a function in serf to check if compression is enabled in OpenSSL.
>> - In Subversion, don't ask for gzip encoding when working over https with
>> compression.
>> - In Subversion, if the config option "http-compression" is set to "no",
>> disable both OpenSSL compression and gzip encoding.
>>
>> Which makes scenario 4 the default, and the user can select for scenario 3
>> with the "http-compression" option.
>>
>> Patch to disable OpenSSL compression in serf is attached.
>>
>> Suggestions? Objections?
>
> This topic seems to be coming up in issue #3980 - serf increases
> server load, so I'd like to clear that none of the proposed changes
> have been implemented.
> The reason is a confirmed security issue with openssl compression:
> http://web.nvd.nist.gov/view/vuln/detail?vulnId=CVE-2012-4929
> https://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=53219
>
> The proposed approach here is to disable SSL compression completely,
> so in terms of the above that leaves us with scenario 2.
>
> Serf doesn't have an option currently to disable SSL compression from
> the client side. I plan to add it in the next version.
>
From my testing OpenSSL compression is also very slow when used for
local area connections.
--
Ivan Zhakov
Received on 2012-11-13 10:16:30 CET