NEWS/Changelog for Rserve --------------------------- NOTE: Rserve 1.8 series has many new features, but it has also removed support for control commands. If you absolutely need them, please use Rserve 1.7 series and notify me so I can assess whether they may be resurrected for the 1.9 series. If you don't know what it means, just ignore this note. 1.8-13 2023-11-28 o replace sprintf with snprintf even in safe cases to avoid compiler warnings. 1.8-12 2023-08-17 o added a work-around for buggy libcrypt (first seen in Ubuntu 22.04) which incorrectly uses salt leading to authentication error if crypt is used even with a correct password. (#192) o parsing of dates in conditional requests could be off, leading to fewer 304 Not Modified responses than expected (proxy). o added experimental built-in feature in Rserve's HTTP(s) server to serve static files directly (similar to the feature of the forward proxy). Multiple prefixes can be registered to serve static content from different paths using the Rserve:::Rserve.http.add.static() function. Static handlers are processed before R handers, but they can pass on requests if the file is not found. Conditional requests are supported. 1.8-11 2022-11-28 o fix possible buffer overflow attacks in WebSockets code (many thanks to Dane Henshall for performing a security audit!) o clean up code to avoid mixing 32-bit and 64-bit integers on 64-bit platforms o enhance `Rserve.eval()` to report the condition object for error conditions in the `condition` component of the `Rserve-eval-error` object (#154) and to support custom calling handlers. This is done by adding a new argument `handlers` to `Rserve.eval()` which allows registration of calling handlers for the duration of the evaluation. The default is to register an `error` handler which stores the condition (via `Rserve_set_last_condition`) so `Rserve.eval` can pick it up and return in the `condition` component. To revert to previous behavior, use `handers=NULL` which prevents the registration of handlers. o Issue a warning if eval/source configuration directive is used in `run.Rserve()` since they only affect stand-alone Rserve daemon startup and thus setting them in an R session is likely a mistake (as the user can run R code directly in the session prior to calling `run.Rserve()` instead). 1.8-10 2021-11-25 o reduce the size of the authkey (nonce) in CMD_reqKey to 256 bytes such that the payload of CMD_secLogin can fit into one encryption block (for 4096-bit RSA key). This improves the nonce entropy size from 50 bytes to 256. Note that effectively the maximum safe size of the authentication payload is 206 bytes. Larger sizes can be transmitted, but should be considered unsafe due to the second block not including any nonce. o Prevent replay attacks on non-forked servers using CMD_secLogin without CMD_keyReq. (Thanks to Dane Henshall for reporting!) Deployments relying on CMD_secLogin for authentication should upgrade to this version to avoid vulnerability. Note that clients do not have to be updated. o Respect CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS from R CMD config 1.8-9 2021-11-05 o move m4 under tools according to R-exts 1.2 o several fixes to QAP encoding/decoding, use R_xlen_t type for indexing if available (previously Windows builds used 32-bit index due to long int size limits). o protection fixes for serialized commands o remove rsio entirely since it is not used 1.8-8 2021-10-31 o add basic ulog logging for QAP1 even outside of OCAP mode (#169) o TLS configuration options now check the success of the operation and will issue a warning if it failed. Most importantly `tls.key` must succeed in order for the server to support TLS. o New option `tls.client` governs the treatment of client certificates. There are following possible values: none - does not ask nor check the client certificate request - request certificate from the client, but do not check its validity require - require client certificate, if not present or not valid, reject the connection match:... - client's common name must match exactly one of the listed (comma-separated) names. No spaces are allowed around the commas. prefix:... - the client's common name must start with the specified prefix suffix:... - the client's common name must end with the specified suffix The options `match`, `prefix` and `suffix` imply `require`. Each of them can be specified only once. However, it is possible to use up to one each in which case the requirement is treated as logical "or", e.g., tls.client match:foo.bar tls.client suffix:me.com will allow both clients `foo.bar` and `foo.me.com`. NOTE: `none`/`request`/`require` are mutually exclusive. If more than one is specified, the behavior is undefined (currently the last one wins but that shold not be relied upon). All comparisons are case-senstitive (sorry, no regex support at this point, because we do not want to depend on PCRE just yet). If the `tls.client` option is not specified, then the default behavior is one of `none` or `request`. In that case no attempt is made to control the TLS behavior so it depends on the SSL library's default whether it asks for the client certificate or not, but in either case it is not checked. NOTE: probably the best way to use the new feature is to use certificates issued by your organization with `tls.client require` and `tls.ca` set to the organization's CA certificate which means you don't need to check client names and yet no unauthorized client can connect. o -DULOG_STDERR now correctly produces ulog output on stderr and ulog output is visible in the debug build o TLS shutdowns are performed explicitly and sockets closed (only affects non-forking servers) o several possible leaks of arguments under error conditions were fixed 1.8-7 2020-12-17 o proxy: fail with an error if no servers can bind (#152) o proxy: fail if SSL cannot be initialized o include err.h SSL header outside of debug mode 1.8-6 2020-06-11 o proxy: handle WebSockets control frames (PING/PONG/CLOSE) proper. o proxy: fail with an error if key/certificate cannot be loaded at start time. Both -k and -c are required to enable TLS/SSL. Also the proxy will issues an error if -k is used and SSL support has not been available at compile time. (#127) o proxy: linking no longer hard-codes `-lssl` (it effectively failed compilation when SSL was not available). o proxy: added -S [:] which allows automatic registration and de-registation with a server manager when the service is available (e.g., this can be used to keep the compute node list up-to-date automatically when load-balancing via the nginx reverse proxy). o support large vectors in QAP encoding/decoding o restore some Windows compatibility - at least to the point where it compiles. It is still strongly discouraged to use Windows given how limited the OS is and how it prevents any sensible use (Windows only supports single-client, single-thread, cooperative mode - so for toy uses only). o content-type header entry is lower-cased only up to a semicolon since trailing options may be case-sensitive. (#149) 1.8-5 2017-03-25 o add support for callback in OCAP idle mode. If the function .ocap.idle() exists in the global environment and the configuration option use.idle.callback yes is set then that function is called inside each OCAP iteration after a timeout of 200ms (i.e., if R is idle in the OCAP loop with no input from any side for at least 200ms). o control commands are now officially disabled since they never worked reliably in the 1.8 series after the the rsio re-write. 1.8-4 2015-12-23 o bugfix: when using compute separation on some Linux systems the death of the compute process may remain undetected. Rserve now actively detects if the compute process has terminated and will signal accordingly. The same goes of a compute process whose parent has died. o bugfix: make sure headers are correctly terminated when using forward proxy and R scripts. o bugfix: static files served by the proxy had duplicate (and possibly conflicting) content-type headers. 1.8-3 2015-07-20 o add support for the notion of a context object which can be retrieved/set using Rserve.context() function. If io.use.context yes configuration option is set then the context is passed as-is in OOB console callbacks as the first argument after the callback name. Rserve.eval() can also safely set a context object for the duration of the evaluation which guarantees that any previous context is restored upon exit - both on error or success. o added WebSockets/QAP proxy and HTTP server. It is a stand-alone program that can be used to separate the R process from the network to enhance security. typical setup is for the proxy to listen on an outside port and connect to Rserve on a local (unix) socket which is restricted to the user running the proxy. It is enabled by default and installed into the package's libs directory along with the Rserve binaries. It is, however, not installed into $R_HOME/bin. The building of the proxy can be disabled via --disable-proxy configure directive. 1.8-2 2015-05-20 o fix bug in the WebSockets protocol implementation where frames over 64kB from the client may be parsed incorrectly. 1.8-1 2015-04-08 o add ulog() R function to allow custom logging from R code o add "fork here" directive which allows to spawn multiple pre-forked instances of Rserve which all share the same memory. The rest of the configuration file is then ignored in the forked instance while the parent server instance continues to read on. This can be useful on machines with many cores and very short requests where the serial fork() time for each connection is in the order of the computing time. Note that by design this only works in configuration files and cannot be used on the command line. o daemonize only *after* all servers have been bound such the exit code can be used to detect if Rserve has actually started successfully o add Rserve.eval() function to perfrom REPL-like evaluation o add a new config option to close all stdio file descriptors (stdin, stdout, stderr) on daemonization: close.all.stdio enable For compatibiliy the default is false. o Rserve will honor --silent command line option (destined for R) to not print the "Rserve started .." line. o add support for console input OOB message, enabled via console.input enable When enabled R will request input to ReadConsole by sending a OOB message to the client, expecting back a string to be used as input to the console. It is only honored if console.oob is also enabled. 1.8-0 2014-09-03 o new logging mechanism has been added to Rserve. It can be enabled using the ulog directive and uses syslogd-compatible unix socket or UDP datagram transfer to log events. Currently, only OCAP events are logged. o OCAPs can now be tagged with a name o avoid duplicate symbols by not loading the Rserve dylib inside an embedded Rserve instance. This avoid issues of calling the wrong symbols, but it implies that run.Rserve() can no longer be used from within a child proces of an embedded Rserve instance (which you really don't want to do anyway). o symbols are now registered *before* processing source/eval directives from the configuration file o added new option to remove the working directory on session close recursively - activated by workdir.clean enable If not set, the default is to only remove it if it is empty (on the assumption there are files that will be served beyond the life of the session). o added workdir.parent.mode option which specifies the permissions on the parent directory of session working directories. The default is 0755. Unlike workdir.mode this one does not respect the umask (beause it may be shared and thus may need to include permissions that are otherwise not granted). o the data offset field in the QAP header is deprecated and can be used for message ID if enabled using msg.id enable In that mode all responses will copy the message ID from the request and new requests (such as OOB send/msg) will use randomly generated message IDs. This allows clients to more easily track responses for nested commands. Note that this is backwards-compatible if old clients use the convention of 0 data offset which was the norm (as long as OOB is not used). o nested evaluation is supported in OCAP mode. This means that OCcall followed by another OCcall can be processed before the first call terminates if the R side issues an OOB message in which case the second OCcall will be nested within the first call. o allow expansion of environment variables in the configuration file, i.e., ${VAR} will be replaced with the contents of the VAR environemnt variable. This only applies to the right-hand side of configuration directives. o added command line argument --RS-set which allows any configuration directive that is accepted in the configuration file to be specified on the command line as --RS-set directive=value o fix a typo in the "daemon" configuration option which was looking for "deamon" instead. o added support for console callbacks. They can be enabled using console.oob enable directive and they result in OOB messages being sent on console I/O operations. o add a configuration option "shutdown disable" that will disable the shutdown command. This makes is a bit harder for unprivileged users to shut down the Rserve instance. It does not disable the ctrlShutdown command, so users that have control command access can still issue a shutdown. Note that this option will eventually become the default so consider specifically using "shutdown enable" where CMD_shutdown is still needed. Note that the shutdown command is not functional in cases where user switching is performed anyway, so is it only used for backward compatibility. Only ctrlShutdown is guaranteed to work. o add a configuration option "oob.idle.interval" which will trigger automated OOB send of "idle" command after a specified interval. Currently it only works with WebSockets. o add a configuration option "forward.stdio enable" which will enable capturing of stdout/err and forward it to the peer via OOB send messages. Note that this requires thread support and uses additional file descriptors. It in currently only available in OCAP WebSockets. o bugfix: pairlists were incorrecty protected when parsing SEXPs (qap_decode) in messages from client to server (#16). 1.7-3 2013-08-21 o the handling of server configuration modes has been inconsistent for some combinations (mostly affected were combinations involving WebSockets upgrade and OC mode on HTTP/WS servers). Also the websockets.qap.oc configuration option has been misspelled. o HTTPS->WSS upgrade is now supported o mkdist -i installs the built package, use -c for check o Windows compatibility has been restored thanks to David Champagne from Revolution Analytics 1.7-2 2013-08-12 o when uid/gid is changed, create a new tempdir() and set its permissions as well as the wokring directory's owner to match. o bugfix: if the first command is not any of the eval family the Rserve may respond with an additional, spurious error response o deamonized server would record incorrect pid when pid.file is used (i#5). The pid is now removed on clean sutdown. o added support for keep.alive configuration option - it is global to all servers and if enabled the client sockets are instructed to keep the connection alive by periodic messages. 1.7-1 2013-07-02 o remove a spurious character that prevented compilation on Suns o add OPENSSL_INCLUDES precious variable that can be used to point to non-standard location of OpenSSL headers o check the usability of OpenSSL headers before enabling TLS support o added the choice of GPLv2 or GPLv2 with OpenSSL linking exception 1.7-0 *** ---- HEADLINE NEWS ---- *** new protocols: HTTP, HTTPS, WebSockets and TLS/QAP *** added protocol switching (from QAP to TLS/QAP) via CMD_switch *** The R client was moved to RSclient package *** New in-session server support with run.Rserve() *** Out-of-band messages via self.oobSend() *** user-based uid/gid switch, MD5/SHA1 stored passwords *** preliminary IPv6 support; RSA secure authentication *** .Rserve.done global env hook for optiopnal cleanup *** auth.function setting to allow custom authentication *** Object-capability mode for hardened, secure services *** ---- END - see below for details ---- o This is the first release in the new 1.x Rserve series. Many of the Rserve internals have been re-written or cleaned up. The original protocol remains the same (so all clients that worked with Rserve 0.6 will continue to work), but the suite of available protocols has been extended (see below). o added support for multiple protocols in Rserve: ** QAP ** this is the original Rserve protocol used in Rserve 0.x series. It works over TCP/IP and unix sockets. It is enabled by default and can be disabled using "qap disable" configuration directive. ** HTTP ** this is very similar to the built-in R http server except that on unix it forks on connection so it allows parallel separate, persistent connections. It requires a worker function .http.request to be defined in the session which will handle incoming requests. This allows the use of facilities like FastRWeb without an external webserver. This protocol is disabled by default and can be enabled by setting "http.port" configuration directive to the desired port to listen to. (Also see TLS support below for https server). The http.raw.body configuration option (default is false which results in the same behavior as Rhttpd) can be used to force passing body in raw form to the handler (useful for the FastRWeb handler which does its own parsing). ** WebSockets ** this protocol is used by HTML5 web browsers for direct access to R with a persistent connection. This allows implementation of websites that have a dedicated R session (and could be used as an R console). There are two subprotocols supported by Rserve: -- WebSocket(*, "QAP") -- this is a tunnel for the original QAP protocol through WebSockets. It requires a browser capable of binary WebSockets protocol (version 01 or higher). It allows very efficient data transfer, typically by loading ArrayBuffers directly into GPU or CPU. It is disabled by default and can be enabled using "websockets.qap enable" configuration directive. (If no subprotocol is specified, QAP is assumed) -- WebSocket(*, "text") -- this is a very simplistic protocol using plain text frames to send input to R and output from R directly as text. It acts essentially as an R console. This protocol works with any WebSockets implementation including version hybi-00 and hixie-75/76 It is disabled by default and can be enabled using "websockets.text enable" configuration directive. NOTE: The textual WebSockets protocol does NOT provide any authentication mechanism, so use with extreme care as you are essentially giving any user with a web browser access to R and thus to the shell. In addition to enabling each or both subprotocols, the port on which the WebSockets server should listen must be specified in the configuration using "websockets.port" directive, for example "websockets.port 8080". Alternatively, the HTTP server can be enabled to allow connection upgrade to WebSockets on the same port with "http.upgrade.websockets enable" NOTE: remember that the default in Rserve is to disallow remote connections, so you may need to use "remote enable" in order to use WebSockets or HTTP in practice, since the point is to serve remote machines. Typically, if both QAP and either HTTP or WebSockets are used, it is recommended to use QAP on a local unix socket for better access control. o Rserve now supports SSL/TLS connections on QAP, HTTP and WS protocols. The TLS key/CA entries are common for all protocols. The relevant new configuration directives are: tls.key tls.cert tls.ca SSL/TLS can be used in several ways: with separate port for TLS connections or by switching protocol form a regular QAP connection using CMD_switch with "TLS" as argument. The latter can be enabled using switch.qap.tls enable Enabled switching is advertized by Rserve with the presence of a "TLS" entry in the ID string. Keys and other TLS entries must be initialized in order for TLS to be enabled. Dedicated TLS servers can be enabled by specifying the port for the corresponding protocol: qap.tls.port - for Rserve/QAP http.tls.port - for HTTPS websockets.tls.port - for WebSockets (there are synonyms "https.port" for "http.tls.port" and "tls.port" for "qap.tls.port", however, the *.tls.port versions are preferred for clarity) The use of TLS protocols is encouraged where sensitive data is transmitted or when requiring secure authentication. For QAP protocol, using TCL/QAP with SHA1 passwords (also new, see below) is the currently recommended way where authorization is required. The only drawback is increased CPU utilization during transfers casued by the encryption and the fact that TLS-enabled clients must be used. See also RSA secure authentication (CMD_keyReq + CMD_secLogin) for a different method if only the authentication step is to be encrypted. When enabling TLS tls.key and tls.cert are mandatory, tls.ca is optional to establish CA chain of trust (whether this is needed depends on the client and the certificate). To generate a key and self-signed certificate, you can use something like openssl genrsa -out server.key 2048 openssl req -new -key server.key -out server.csr openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in server.csr \ -signkey server.key -out server.crt NOTE: TLS services are started **in addition** to any other servers, i.e., if you want to enable TLS/QAP only, you have to set tls.qap.port but also add "qap disable" to disable the plain Rserve access. o QAP servers (classic Rserve QAP, QAP/TLS and WebSocket/QAP) support object-capability (OC) mode in which all Rserve commands are disabled except for CMD_OCcall. All messages including the initial handshake are always QAP and the initial message defines capabilities (here opaque references to closures) that can be called. This mode can be enabled using qap.oc enable ## for Rserve QAP and QAP/TLS websockets.qap.oc enable ## for WebSockets/QAP In this mode the configuration *must* define a function oc.init (typically using eval or source configuration directives) which has to supply OC references that can be used in calls. If the evaluation of oc.init() fails, the connection is closed immediately. The use of invalid OC references or any other commands other than CMD_OCcall results in immediate connection termination. This allows creation of hardened, secure services that can disallow arbitrary code execution. NOTE: this mode is inherenty incompatible with all classic Rserve clients. The first four bytes of the initial packet are "RsOC" instead of "Rsrv" o Rserve can now be started from within an existing R session using run.Rserve() command. This allows the user to prepare a session "by hand", run Rserve from within that session and go back to the session (by shutting down the server or sending an interrupt). This allows the use of Rserve even without the presence of libR. o Rserve now supports out-of-band (OOB) messages. Those can be sent using the self.oobSend() [one-way] and self.oobMessage() [roundtrip] functions from within code that is evaluated in Rserve child instances. OOB messages are not used by Rserve itself but offer asynchronous notification to clients that support it (one typical use are WS-QAP1 tunnels to web browsers that allow status updates as R code is evaluated). o Rserve accepts additional command line arguments: --RS-source (same as "source " in cfg file) --RS-enable-remote (same as "remote enable" in cfg file) --RS-enable-control (same as "control enable" in cfg file) o The Rserve package no longer includes the R client. It has been moved to a separate package "RSclient" so that it can be used on machines separate from the server. o There was a bug in QAP storage estimation affecting pairlists, possibly resulting in buffer overflows. This should be fixed and an error message will be printed when such overflows are detected in the future (which hopefully won't happen). o Bugfix: command line parsing would skip over some arguments o Passwords file can contain MD5 or SHA1 hash of a password instead of the plaintext password for non-crypt authentication. In that case the hash must be lowercase hex representation with preceding $ sign, so for example user "foo" with password "bar" would have an entry foo $62cdb7020ff920e5aa642c3d4066950dd1f01f4d You can use echo -n 'password' | openssl sha1 to obtain the SHA1 hash of a password (openssl md5 for MD5 hash - MD5 is probably more common but less secure than SHA1). This feature makes sure that passwords are not stored in plain text and thus are safe from local attacks. o Rserve now has the ability to change uid/gid according to the user that has been authenticated. The following settings concern this feature (unix-only): auto.uid {enable|disable} [disable] auto.gid {enable}disable} [disable] default.uid [none] default.gid [none] The auto.uid/gid directives enable setuid/setgid based on user's uid/gid. In case no uid/gid is specified with the username, the default.uid/gid settings will be used. If there is no uid/gid in the username and no defaults are specified, the user's authentication will fail. User's uid/gid can be specified in the passwords file by appending /uid,gid to the username. If gid is not specified, uid will be used for both uid and gid. So for example user "foo" (from the above MD5 example) with uid=501 would have an entry on the passwords file: foo/501 $37b51d194a7513e45b56f6524f2d51f2 For this to work, Rserve must be started as root. However, with auto.uid enabled it is safe to do so since Rserve will prevent any R access until authenticated. You should, however, use a client capable of secure RSA authentication or use secure connection such as QAP/TLS as to not send password in cleartext over the wire. o Rserve can now be run in a mode where each connection has a different uid and/or gid such that separate client instances are isolated. This allows more restricted setup in cases where instances may not be trusted and need to be sandboxed. The following configuration directives are associated with this functionality: random.uid {enable|disable} [disable] random.gui {enable|disable} [disable] random.uid.range {..} [32768..65540] If random.uid is enabled and random.gid disable then only the uid of the process is changed. If both are enabled then the gid is set to match the value of the uid. random.gid cannot be enabled without random.uid. To support sandboxing, the permissions on the working directory can be specified using workdir.mode o If any kind of client-process uid switching is enabled in the configuration, the permissions on the working directory will match the uid of the process. Also the working directories are now named by the process ID to facilitate cleanup. o Rserve now supports secure authentication even outside of SSL/TLS. There are two new commands that can be used by the client: CMD_keyReq - requests an authentication key from the server that will be used to perform a secure login. The kind of the requested key is specified as a parameter. Currently, only "rsa-authkey" is supported which returns server authentication key (authkey) and a RSA public key which must be used to encode the authkey and the authentication information (see below). The RSA key can be compared on the client side to ensure the authenticity of the server. CMD_secLogin - secure login. It consists of an encrypted data stream that will authenticate the user. In the case of the "rsa-authkey" method, the stream consists of the authkey and the login + password, all of which must be encrypted using server's RSA key. The RSA key on the server (Rserve) side is specified using rsa.key configuration file directive. The file is expected to be in PEM format. You can generate such file, e.g., with: openssl genrsa -out server.key 4096 where 4096 is the key size in bits. A public key can be extracted from the private key using openssl rsa -pubout -in server.key -out server_pub.key The clients can pre-share the public key by other means to compare it to the key received from the server as to verify its authenticity. This will prevent them from sending the authentication information to rogue servers. NOTE: if the rsa.key directive is missing, Rserve will generate a key on the fly when asked for RSA authentication - although this allows encrypted transmission and thus is safe from sniffing, it is not safe from man-in-the-middle attacks where a rogue server intercepts the request and sends its own public key. Therefore the use of the rsa.key directive is highly recommended. The RSA authentication enables the client to a) check the authenticity of the server (by comparing the RSA public key) and b) send authentication information encrypted. This method is highly recommended in cases where a full TLS/SSL encryption of the entire connection would be too expensive (i.e. in cases where the data is large and the security of the transported data is not crucial). o Rserve has a preliminary IPv6 support. Rserve must be installed with --enable-ipv6 configure flag to enable it in the Rserve build. In order to start all servers on IPv6 add ipv6 enable to the configuration file. The option is global, i.e. once enabled it applies to all servers that support it. Note that not all features work with IPv6 yet - detaching sessions (they will use IPv4 for re-attach) and remote client filtering only work with IPv4 at this point. o Rserve now binds only to the loopback interface in "remote disable" mode. This is safer and prevents remote DoS attacks. Previously, Rserve would bind on all interfaces and check the peer IP address. If desired, you can replicate the old behavior by adding remote enable allow 127.0.0.1 to the configuration (if you don't know the difference then you don't need this -- if you actually need this, then you probably want to add more "allow" entries for the machine's other interfaces as well). o If a function .Rserve.done() is defined in the global environment, it will be run after a clean connection shutdown. This allows custom code to be run when a client connection is closed. o If a function .Rserve.served() is defined in the global environment of the server, it will be run after a client connection has been served. For forked servers this is just after the fork(), for co-operative servers this is after the client conenction has been closed. It is guaranteed that no other client is served before the call so it can be used to manage resources that are unsafe to share with forked processes (e.g. sockets etc.). o The server and client process can be tagged with extra information in argv[0] so it is possible to distinguish the server and children. This behavior can be enabled using tag.argv enable Note, however, that this not always possible and it will have impact on programs that use argv[0] such as killall. o Added configuration option pid.file and command-line option --RS-pidfile which instructs Rserve to write its process id (pid) into that file at startup. o Added configuration directives http.user, https.user and websockets.user which take a username and perform setuid/setgid/initgroups immediately after forking. This minimizes the amount of code that is run with elevated privileges in cases where user switching is desired. o Added configuration directive daemon disable which can be used to prevent Rserve from daemonizing. It has effect only in builds of Rserve that support daemonization. Note that -DNODAEMON build flag disables daemonization entirely and can be used in any Rserve version. o All commands based on eval now also accept DT_SEXP in addition to DT_STRING. In such case the parse step is skipped and the expression is evaluated directly. The intended use of this functionality is to evaluate language constructs and thus allow calls with both reference and inlined arguments. o QAP decoding is slightly more efficient and avoids protection cascades. QAP_decode() has now only one argument and it is guaranteed to not increase the protection stack when returning (which implies that it is the responsibility of the caller to protect the result if needed). o Both QAP encoding and decoding now use native copy operations on little-endian machines which can increase the speed considerably when the compiler cannot do this optimization on its own (most commoly used compilers don't). o Assigning logical NAs now uses the proper NA_LOGICAL value that is also recognized by R. (PR#276) o Forked child processes will now close all server sockets so that any server can be restarted without closing existing children. o Signal handling has been streamlined: the server process captures HUP, TERM and INT which will lead to clean shutdown. Child processes restore signal handlers back to R so that regular R signal handling rules apply. Note that interrupt during eval will result in RESP_ERR with code 127 even if try() is used. --- In order to support new ideas a major re-organization of Rserve --- --- has been started - almost 10 years after the first release. --- --- It is time to look ahead again with a new major version. The --- --- protocol will remain compatible so 1.x series can be used to --- --- replace the previous 0.x series --- 0.6-8 2012-02-20 o added RSserverEval() and RSserverSource() control commands in the R client as well as ctrl parameter to RSshutdown(). o added new facility that allows R scripts running in Rserve to issue control commands if allowed. This feature must be enabled in the Rserve configuration file using r-control enable This will make self.ctrlEval() and self.ctrlSource() functions available to code that is running within the Rserve instance. It is also possible to use this feature without explicitly loading the Rserve package via .Call("Rserve_ctrlEval", paste(text, collapse='\n')) .Call("Rserve_ctrlSource", as.character(file)) although this may change in the future. 0.6-7 2012-01-17 o fix processing of login information **IMPORTANT**: this fixes a serious security hole in the remote login mechanism! If you rely on authentication, please make sure you update your Rserve immediately! (Thanks to Daniel Faber for reporting) o add a namespace to make R 2.14+ happy o work around broken readBin() in R 2.14.0 that errors on unsigned integers (affects R client only) 0.6-6 2011-12-10 o fix a bug that can cause heap corruption due to incorrect addressing in padding of symbols. Unless extremely long symbol names are used it is unlikely to have a real effect in practice, but in theory it could be used to zero targetted parts of the heap. Thanks to Ralph Heinkel for reporting. o fix Rserve() call on Windows with quote=FALSE and more than one argument. o clarify that sisocks.h is under LGPL 2.1 as well as the other headers used by clients. o add support for plain S4 objects (S4SEXP) in assignments (Note: derived S4 objects - those using other native SEXP type as a base - cannot be supported properly, becasue there is no way to distinguish them from S3 objects!) o Unsupported types in CMD_assign will no longer crash R. The resulting object is always NULL and an error is printed on the R side. 0.6-5 2011-06-21 o use new install.libs.R custom installation script in R 2.13.1 to install binaries o install clients by default on Windows as well o multi-arch binaries are no longer installed with the arch suffix in the package root. The canonical place is libs$(R_ARCH) instead. For now Rserve.exe/Rserve_d.exe are still installed in the root but they will be also removed in the future as they are not multi-arch safe. 0.6-4 2011-05-19 o make all buffers capable of using 64-bit sizes. This means that clients can use more that 4Gb of data on 64-bit platforms when communicating with Rserve, provided the buffer limits are either disabled or configured to be high enough. Note that this does not change the limitations in R with respect to vector lengths so you still can only use up to 2^31-1 elements. o bug fix: contrary to the documentation scalar logicals were sent in the old XT_BOOL format instead of XT_ARRAY_BOOL o work around several issues introduced in R 2.13.0 for Windows Rserve() now also allows arguments to be passed to system() for more fine-grained control of the environment, mostly to work around bugs and incompatible changes to system() on Windows in R 2.13.0 (commonly used options are invisible=FALSE to get back to a more reasonable pre-2.13.0 behavior and wait=TRUE if using R 2.13.0 that has broken wait=FALSE support). o In Rserve() startup wrapper, args are now quoted automatically if quote=TRUE is set. For backward compatilility args are not quoted by default if they consist of just one string. 0.6-3 2011-01-17 o bug fix: the child process could get stuck in the server loop after some abnormal return from the child connection code Thanks to David Richardson for reporting. o set R_ARCH automatically on Windows if a multi-arch R is detected (such as CRAN binaries since R 2.12.0) o add R_ARCH support in Rserve() on Windows to locate the proper binary o bug fix: C++ client did not handle new-style lists (introduced in Rserve 0.5) properly. Thanks to Carl Martin Grewe for reporting. 0.6-2 2010-09-02 o add support for NAs in character vectors by using a special "\xff" string. Any string beginning with '\xff' is prepended by additional '\xff' to remove ambiuguity and clients should remove leading '\xff' accordingly. (Note that UTF-8 encoded strings never contain '\xff' so in most uses it never occurs). The Java client has been updated accordingly and represents NA strings with null. o add a new config file option "interactive" that allows to run Rserve in interactive or non-interactive mode across platforms. Previously Windows ran in non-interactive mode and unix in interactive mode. Non-interactive mode is useful if you want to prevent R from soliciting user input, but it requires error option to be set if you don't want to quit R on all errors (i.e., something like options(error=function() NULL) will do) Note: on unix the interactivity flag can only be set *after* R initialization (due to limitation in R) so you still may have to pass flags like --no-save in order to appease R. o more Windows fixes - Rserve uses R's own initialization in recent R versions. This also fixes issues with Win64 and more recent toolchains. Note that both Widnows and unix now behave consistently with respect to interactive mode - the default is now interactive for both platforms but can be changed in the config file. 0.6-1 2010-05-24 o add a safety margin to the send buffer to avoid crashes when size estimates are off (e.g., due to re-coding) o added a very primitive PHP client o Win64 fixes by Brian Ripley o added new configuration options: su {now|server|client} - switches user either immediately as the config file is loaded ("now", default and always the behavior of Rserve before 0.6-1), when the server is ready ("server") or when a client is spawned ("client"). The latter is useful to restrict clients from sending signals to the server process. uid, gid config options are interpreted accordingly to the su value. cachepwd - {no|yes|indefinitely} - allows Rserve to cache the password file. "no" = read it at each authorization (default and behavior before 0.6-1), "yes" = read it when a client is spawned before su, "indefinitely" = read it just after the config file (most efficient but changes are only active after re-start). "yes" has only effect in unix and can be used to restrict permissions on the password file such that client code has no access to it (do does "indefinitely" but can be used anywhere). 0.6-0 2009-10-27 o added support for control commands CMD_ctrlEval, CMD_ctrlSource and CMD_ctrlShutdown. Those commands provide control over the server process. The side-efect of eval and source are then available to all future connections. Control commands are only available if they are enabled, e.g., with the config file entry "control enable". In addition if authorization is required or the passwords file is set only designated users will have control access (see next point). Note that enabling control commands will make Rserve use at least one file descriptor per active child process, so you may want to adjust the maximum number of file descriptor in your system if you expect hundreds of concurrent clients. o The passwords file format has been enhanced to give finer-granularity control over the user authorization. Only users with "@" prefix can issue control commands. The prefix is not part of the user name for authentication purposes. In addition, if the password file contains an entry starting with "*" it will be interpreted as blank authorization, i.e. any username/pwd will authenticate. This may be useful in conjunction with control prefix, e.g., the following file would give blank authorization to all users but only the user "joe" will be able to use control commands: @joe foobar * o Windows build cleanup (thanks to Brian Ripley) o fixed decoding of XT_RAW (it advanced too far), this affected the use of XT_RAW as non-last element only (thanks to Saptarshi Guha for reporting) o don't advertize ARuc if not supported (this bug only affected systems without crypt support with plaintext enabled and required authorization) o add assign support for logical vectors 0.5-3 2009-01-25 o fix SET_VECTOR_ELT/SET_STRING_ELT mismatches o set object flag when decoding objects that have a "class" attribute (fixes issues with S3 objects that were passed from the client to the server). o set S4 bit for pure S4 objects (S4SEXP). No other S4 objects are supported because there is no way to tell that an assembled object is really an S4 object o added string encoding support (where R supports it) The string encoding can be set in the configuration file (directive "encoding"), on the command line with --RS-encoding or within a session by the client command CMD_setEncoding. This means that strings are converted to the given encoding before being sent to the client and also all strings from the client are assumed to come from the given encoding. (Previously the strings were always passed as-is with no conversion). The currently supported encodings are "native" (same as the server session locale), "utf8" and "latin1". The server default is currently "native" for compatibility with previous versions (but may change to "utf8" in the future, so explicit use of encoding in the config file is advised). If a server is used mainly by Java clients, it is advisable to set the server encoding to "utf8" since that it the only encoding supported by Java clients. For efficieny it is still advisable to run Rserve in the same locale as the majority of clients to minimize the necessary conversions. With diverse clients UTF-8 is the most versatile encoding for the server to run in while it can still serve latin1 clients as well. 0.5-2 2008-10-17 o fix a bug in CMD_readFile and CMD_setBufferSize that resulted in invalid buffer sizes (one of the ways to trigger the bug was to attempt to read a small number of bytes with readFile). Thanks to H. Rehauer for reporting. o ignore attributes if they are not in a LISTSXP - there seem to be other uses of the ATTRIB entry in conjunction with character hashes in recent R versions. (BR #76) o adapt C++ client to changes in 0.5 (at least to the point where the demo1 code works) o add support for XT_VECTOR_EXP in assignments o improve protection for vectors o report "remote" setting in --RS-settings o updates in the REngine Java client, added documentation 0.5-1 2008-07-22 o fix build issue with R 2.7.x on Windows o mergefat now works properly and uses cp if there is no lipo (this fixes multi-arch issues on Mac OS X and makes sure that Rserve/Rserve.dbg are installed even on non-Mac systems) 0.5-0 2008-07-21 o added CMD_serEval and CMD_serAssign which are highly efficient when talking to R clients as they don't need any intermediate buffer. The corresponding R client functions RSeval and RSassign have been re-written to use this new API. o deprecate scalar types in the protocol o add more efficient storage for dotted-pair lists and symbol names o add support for complex numbers o new Java client: REngine it is more flexible than JRclient and it can be used with other Java/R engines such as JRI. Also it has a much more clean API and better exeption handling. - allow NaNs to be passed in raw form to R, i.e. double NAs can be created using Double.longBitsToDouble(0x7ff00000000007a2L) (nice methods for this should follow) o C++ client was moved to src/client/cxx JRclient: o change the representation of lists to generic named vectors (class RList) o change the ways attributes are accessed 0.4-7 2007-01-14 o relax DLL versions checking on Windows o added more sophisticated implementation of RSassign in R client to support larger data. Nevertheless, due to limitations in R, objects must be serializable to less than 8MB to be assignable via RSassign. o added more robust error handling in the R client o fixed compilation on systems with custom include dir (such as Debian) o JRclient is now part of the Rserve package. See clients.txt for details. It is not compiled by default (but installed when --with-client is specified), because we cannot assume the existence of a Java compiler. 0.4-6 2006-11-30 o fixed bug in RSeval when handling large objects o minor fix in RSassign o add an endianness hack for Windows in case config.h is not included properly 0.4-5 2006-11-29 o added --with-server option (by default enabled). When disabled, the server itself is not built. When enabled, R must provide R shared library, i.e. it must have been compiled with --enable-R-shlib. o added --with-client option (by default disabled). When enabled, the C/C++ client is built and installed in the package. It will be copied in the "client" directory of the package and contains all files necessary for building a client application. This option has no effect on the R client which is always built and installed. o Windows version of Rserve now builds and installs both debug (Rserve_d.exe) and regular (Rserve.exe) version of Rserve. In addition, the Rserve function can now be used to launch Rserve even on Windows. o endianness detection now prefers information from the compiler macros thus allowing cross-compilation. Use -D_BIG_ENDIAN_ or -D_LITTLE_ENDIAN_ to override it if necessary. o allows universal build on Mac OS X o adapt to R_ParseVector interface change in R-devel 0.4-4 2006-11-15 o first release on CRAN o added support for RAW type (both in and out) o added rudimentary client support (thanks to David Reiss for his contributions) and documentation Previous major releases: 0.4 2005-08-31 * added support for sessions 0.3 2003-10-07 * new format for boolean arrays last version: 0.3-18 (2005-08-28) 0.2 2003-08-21 * support for large objects 0.1 2002-07-06 * first release