| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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This function is like nng_device(), but runs asynchronously.
Also, this fixes #1503 nng_device causes nng_close to blocking
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This also arranges to clean up the maps at nng_fini time.
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This introduces new public APIs for obtaining statistics,
and adds some generic stats for dialers, listeners, pipes, and
sockets. Also added are stats for inproc and pairv1 protocol.
The other protocols and transports will have stats added
incrementally as time goes on.
A simple test program, and man pages are provided for this.
Start by looking at nng_stat(5).
Statistics does have some impact, and they can be disabled by
using the advanced NNG_ENABLE_STATS (setting it to OFF, it's
ON by default) if you need to build a minimized configuration.
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This changeset needs work. We are seeing errors described by
This reverts commit d7f7c896c0ede24249ef63b1e45b1878bf4bd473.
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fixes #208 pipe start should occur before connect / accept
fixes #616 Race condition closing between header & body
This refactors the transports to handle their own connection
handshaking before passing the pipe to the socket. This
changes and simplifies the setup. This also fixes a rather
challenging race condition described by #616.
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fixes #170 Make more use of reaper
This is a complete restructure/rethink of how child objects interact
with the socket. (This also backs out #576 as it turns out not to be
needed.) While 568 says reader/writer lock, for now we have settled
for a single writer lock. Its likely that this is sufficient.
Essentially we use the single socket lock to guard lists of the socket
children. We also use deferred deletion in the idhash to facilitate
teardown, which means endpoint closes are no longer synchronous.
We use the reaper to clean up objects when the reference count drops
to zero. We make a special exception for pipes, since they really
are not reference counted by their parents, and they are leaf objects
anyway.
We believe this addresses the main outstanding race conditions in
a much more correct and holistic way.
Note that endpoint shutdown is a little tricky, as it makes use of
atomic flags to guard against double entry, and against recursive
lock entry. This is something that would be nice to make a bit more
obvious, but what we have is safe, and the complexity is at least
confined to one place.
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fixes #565 Option getting should validate sizes more aggressively
fixes #563 Reconnect timeouts should be settable on dialers
fixes #562 pipe test is fragile
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This separates the plumbing for endpoints into distinct
dialer and listeners. Some of the transports could benefit
from further separation, but we've done some rather larger
separation e.g. for the websocket transport.
IPC would be a good one to update later, when we start looking
at exposing a more natural underlying API.
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fixes #538 setopt should have an explicit chkopt routine
fixes #537 Internal TCP API needs better name separation
fixes #524 Option types should be "typed"
This is a rework of the option management code, to make it both clearer
and to prepare for further work to break up endpoints. This reduces
a certain amount of dead or redundant code, and actually saves cycles
when setting options, as some loops were not terminated that should have
been.
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This changes the signature of nng_pipe_notify(), and the associated
events. The documentation is updated to reflect this.
We have also broken the lock up so that we don't hold the master
socket lock for some of these things, which may have beneficial
impact on performance.
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* fixes #419 want to nni_aio_stop without blocking
This actually introduces an nni_aio_close() API that causes
nni_aio_begin to return NNG_ECLOSED, while scheduling a callback
on the AIO to do an NNG_ECLOSED as well. This should be called
in non-blocking close() contexts instead of nni_aio_stop(), and
the cases where we call nni_aio_fini() multiple times are updated
updated to add nni_aio_stop() calls on all "interlinked" aios before
finalizing them.
Furthermore, we call nni_aio_close() as soon as practical in the
close path. This closes an annoying race condition where the
callback from a lower subsystem could wind up rescheduling an
operation that we wanted to abort.
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This adds a new pipe event notification API (callbacks called
on either pipe add or remove), including both tests and docs.
Also supporting APIs to get the socket or endpoint associated
with a pipe are included (tested and documented as well.)
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This provides context support for REQ and REP sockets.
More discussion around this is in the issue itself.
Optionally we would like to extend this to the surveyor pattern.
Note that we specifically do not support pollable descriptors
for non-default contexts, and the results of using file descriptors
for polling (NNG_OPT_SENDFD and NNG_OPT_RECVFD) is undefined.
In the future, it might be nice to figure out how to factor in
optional use of a message queue for users who want more buffering,
but we think there is little need for this with cooked mode.
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fixes #302 nng_dialer/listener/pipe_getopt_sockaddr desired
This adds plumbing to pass and check the type of options
all the way through.
NNG_ZT_OPT_ORBIT is type UINT64, but you can use the untyped form to
pass two of them if needed.
No typed access for retrieving strings yet. I think this should allocate
a pointer and copy that out, but that's for later.
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This introduces enough of the HTTP API to support fully server
applications, including creation of websocket style protocols,
pluggable handlers, and so forth.
We have also introduced scatter/gather I/O (rudimentary) for
aios, and made other enhancements to the AIO framework. The
internals of the AIOs themselves are now fully private, and we
have eliminated the aio->a_addr member, with plans to remove the
pipe and possibly message members as well.
A few other minor issues were found and fixed as well.
The HTTP API includes request, response, and connection objects,
which can be used with both servers and clients. It also defines
the HTTP server and handler objects, which support server applications.
Support for client applications will require a client object to be
exposed, and that should be happening shortly.
None of this is "documented" yet, bug again, we will follow up shortly.
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This is a rather large changeset -- it fundamentally adds websocket
transport, but as part of this changeset we added a generic framework
for both HTTP and websocket. We also made some supporting changes to
the core, such as changing the way timeouts work for AIOs and adding
additional state keeping for AIOs, and adding a common framework for
deferred finalization (to avoid certain kinds of circular deadlocks
during resource cleanup). We also invented a new initialization framework
so that we can avoid wiring in knowledge about them into the master
initialization framework.
The HTTP framework is not yet complete, but it is good enough for simple
static serving and building additional services on top of -- including
websocket. We expect both websocket and HTTP support to evolve
considerably, and so these are not part of the public API yet.
Property support for the websocket transport (in particular address
properties) is still missing, as is support for TLS.
The websocket transport here is a bit more robust than the original
nanomsg implementation, as it supports multiple sockets listening at
the same port sharing the same HTTP server instance, discriminating
between them based on URI (and possibly the virtual host).
Websocket is enabled by default at present, and work to conditionalize
HTTP and websocket further (to minimize bloat) is still pending.
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While here we added a test for the aio stuff, and cleaned up some dead
code for the old fd notifications. There were a few improvements to
shorten & clean code elsewhere, such as short-circuiting task wait
when the task has no callback.
The legacy sendmsg() and recvmsg() APIs are still in the socket core
until we convert the device code to use the aios.
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This eliminates the "quasi-functional" notify API altogether.
The aio framework will be coming soon to replace it.
As a bonus, apps (legacy apps) that use the notification FDs
will see improved performance, since we don't have to context
switch to give them a notification.
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This makes the APIs use string keys, and largely eliminates the use of
integer option IDs altogether. The underlying registration for options
is also now a bit richer, letting protcols and transports declare the
actual options they use, rather than calling down into each entry point
carte blanche and relying on ENOTSUP.
This code may not be as fast as the integers was, but it is more intuitive,
easier to extend, and is not on any hot code paths. (If you're diddling
options on a hot code path you're doing something wrong.)
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This supports creating listeners and dialers, managing options
on them (though only a few options are supported at present),
starting them and closing them, all independently.
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We enable a few flags, but now the details of the socket internals
are completely private to the socket.
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fixes #66 Make pipe and endpoint structures private
This changes a number of things, refactoring endpoints and supporting
code to keep their internals private, and making endpoint close
synchronous. This will allow us to add a consumer facing API for
nng_ep_close(), as well as property APIs, etc.
While here a bunch of convoluted and dead code was cleaned up.
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fixes #23 Restore the old idhash logic for sockets
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fixes #38 Make protocols "pluggable", or at least optional
This is a breaking change, as we've done away with the central
registered list of protocols, and instead demand the user call
nng_xxx_open() where xxx is a protocol name. (We did keep a
table around in the compat framework though.)
There is a nice way for protocols to plug in via
an nni_proto_open(), where they can use a generic constructor
that they use to build a protocol specific constructor (passing
their ops vector in.)
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Hop counts for REQ were busted (bad TTL), and imported the
compat_reqtll test. At the same time, added code to nn_term
to shut down completely, discarding sockets. (Note that some
things, such as globals, may still be left around; that's ok.)
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We need to remember that protocol stops can run synchronously, and
therefore we need to wait for the aio to complete. Further, we need
to break apart shutting down aio activity from deallocation, as we need
to shut down *all* async activity before deallocating *anything*.
Noticed that we had a pipe race in the surveyor pattern too.
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This cleans up the pipe creation logic greatly, and eliminates
a nasty potential deadlock (lock-order incorrect.) It also
adds a corret binary exponential and randomized backoff on both
accept and connect.
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This actually is breaking at the moment, because we don't have
good integration with timeouts, and there are some frustrating
races with timeouts at points that can cause apparent hangs.
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This logic leaves a race condition in the dial side, which will
be fixed with a subsequent change to convert that to fully asynchronous
as well.
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We still have endpoint related races apparently; we need to examine
the possibility of handling endpoints much like we do pipes, which seem
to be race free.
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