Metalink Plugin
The Metalink plugin implements the Metalink download description format in order to try not to download the same file twice. This improves cache efficiency and speeds up users’ downloads.
It takes standard headers and knowledge about objects in the cache and potentially rewrites those headers so that a client will use a URL that’s already cached instead of one that isn’t. The headers are specified in RFC 6249 (Metalink/HTTP: Mirrors and Hashes) and RFC 3230 (Instance Digests in HTTP) and are sent by various download redirectors or content distribution networks.
A lot of download sites distribute the same files from many different mirrors and users don’t know which mirrors are already cached. These sites often present users with a simple download button, but the button doesn’t predictably access the same mirror, or a mirror that’s already cached. To users it seems like the download works sometimes (takes seconds) and not others (takes hours), which is frustrating.
An extreme example of this happens when users share a limited, possibly unreliable internet connection, as is common in parts of Africa for example.
How it Works
When the plugin sees a response with a Location: ... header and a Digest: SHA-256=... header, it checks if the URL in the Location header is already cached. If it isn’t, then it tries to find a URL that is cached to use instead. It looks in the cache for some object that matches the digest in the Digest header and if it succeeds, then it rewrites the Location header with that object’s URL.
This way a client should get sent to a URL that’s already cached and won’t download the file again.
Installation
The Metalink plugin is a global plugin. Enable it by adding
metalink.so
to your plugin.config
file. There are no
options.
Implementation Status
The plugin implements the TS_HTTP_SEND_RESPONSE_HDR_HOOK
hook to check and potentially rewrite the Location and
Digest headers after responses are cached. It doesn’t
do it before they’re cached because the contents of the cache can
change after responses are cached. It uses TSCacheRead()
to
check if the URL in the Location header is already
cached. In future, the plugin should also check if the URL is fresh
or not.
The plugin implements the TS_HTTP_READ_RESPONSE_HDR_HOOK
hook and a null transformation
to compute the SHA-256 digest for
content as it’s added to the cache. It uses SHA256_Init(),
SHA256_Update(), and SHA256_Final() from OpenSSL to compute the
digest, then it uses TSCacheWrite()
to associate the digest
with the request URL. This adds a new cache object where the key is
the digest and the object is the request URL.
To check if the cache already contains content that matches a digest,
the plugin must call TSCacheRead()
with the digest as the key,
read the URL stored in the resultant object, and then call
TSCacheRead()
again with this URL as the key. This is
probably inefficient and should be improved.
An early version of the plugin scanned Link: <...>; rel=duplicate headers. If the URL in the Location: ... header wasn’t already cached, it scanned Link: <...>; rel=duplicate headers for a URL that was. The Digest: SHA-256=... header is superior because it will find content that already exists in the cache in every case that a Link: <...>; rel=duplicate header would, plus in cases where the URL is not listed among the Link: <...>; rel=duplicate headers, maybe because the content was downloaded from a URL not participating in the content distribution network, or maybe because there are too many mirrors to list in Link: <...>; rel=duplicate headers.
The Digest: SHA-256=... header is also more efficient than Link: <...>; rel=duplicate headers because it involves a constant number of cache lookups. RFC 6249 requires a Digest: SHA-256=... header or Link: <...>; rel=duplicate headers MUST be ignored:
If Instance Digests are not provided by the Metalink servers, the Link header fields pertaining to this specification MUST be ignored.
Metalinks contain whole file hashes as described in Section 6, and MUST include SHA-256, as specified in [FIPS-180-3].