| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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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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fixes #275 nng_pipe_getopt_ptr() missing?
fixes #285 nng_setopt_ptr MIS
fixes #297 nng_listener/dialer_close does not validate mode
This change adds some missing APIs, and changes others.
In particular, certain options are now of type bool, with size
of just one. This is a *breaking* change for code that uses those
options -- NNG_OPT_RAW, NNG_OPT_PAIR1_POLY, NNG_OPT_TLS_VERIFIED.
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While here we documented that certain options are not supported in the
compatibility layer.
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fixes #290 sockaddr improvements
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The first problem was that using nng_sleep_aio
was found to reset the timeout, and this caused subsequent
operations to start failing with timeouts when reusing
the AIO for other operations.
The second thing is that we think it would be nicer if the
presence of real aio timeouts were still honored, so that
if the timeout is shorter than the sleep time, then we get
back an NNG_ETIMEDOUT like every other operation, and we
get back a 0 if the logical sleep operation completes
normally.
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This does a few things. First it closes a case where a dropped
message could prevent subsequent connection attempts from getting through.
Second, it changes the rate at which we retry, and the timeout, to be
a lot more aggressive when attempting to establish a connection. We
retry every 500 ms, for up to 2 minutes, before giving up. This gives
a lot more resilience in the face of message loss that is typical of
ZeroTier in some environments when first establishing communication.
Third, makes the values for the connection attempts *tunable*, so
that applications can adjust for different deployment scenarios.
Fourth, it includes the ability to get the UDP socket name. This was
needed during some debug, and may be useful for a real UDP transport
later, so we're keeping it.
Finally, we added documentation for the above items.
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fixes #267 zerotier transport should lock ZT_HOME
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This causes TCP, TLS, and ZT endpoints to resolve any
wildcards, and even IP addresses, when reporting the listen
URL. The dialer URL is reported unresolved. Test cases
for this are added as well, and nngcat actually reports this
if --verbose is supplied.
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While here we also fixed a bug in the --file handling that we noticed
while writing the TLS handling.
We also fixed a warning in the core (msgqueue) for set but unused variables.
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This introduces portable primitives for time, random numbers,
synchronization primitives, and threading. These are somewhat
primitive (least common denominiators), but they can help with writing
portable applications, especially our own demo apps.
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We enabled verbose compiler warnings, and found a lot of issues.
Some of these were even real bugs. As a bonus, we actually save
some initialization steps in the compat layer, and avoid passing
some variables we don't need.
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This addresses the use of the pipe special field, and eliminates it.
The message APIs (recvmsg, sendmsg) need to be updated as well still,
but I want to handle that as part of a separate issue.
While here we fixed various compiler warnings, etc.
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This member is the value passed in actual HTTP protocol, so it
is useful with the function nng_http_req_set_uri().
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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 eliminates a bunch of redundant URL parsing, using the common
URL logic we already have in place.
While here I fixed a problem with the TLS and WSS test suites that
was failing on older Ubuntu -- apparently older versions of mbedTLS
were unhappy if selecting OPTIONAL verification without a validate
certificate chain.
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This changes the backend (internal) HTTP API to provide a much more
sensible handler scheme, where the handlers are opaque objects and we
can allocate a handler for different types of tasks.
We've also added support serving up directories of static content, and
added code to validate that the directory serving is working as intended.
This is a key enabling step towards the public API.
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fixes #210 Want NNG_OPT_TLS_* options for TLS transport
fixes #212 Eliminate a_endpt member of aio
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This refactor of the file API provides a simpler and easier to use
interface for our needs (and simpler to implement) in both the
ZeroTier transport and the HTTP/TLS file accesses. It also removes
some restrictions present on the old one, although it is still not
suitable for working with large files. (It will work, just be
very inefficient as the entire file must be loaded into memory.)
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This also fixes a use-after-free bug in the HTTP framework, where the
handler could be deleted why callbacks were still using it. (We now
reference count the handlers.)
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I'm pretty sure I need to go back and review the handling of
send messages for websocket too. We still have a receive leak
in websocket and leaks caused by the new URL parsing code which
needs to be refactored.
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This introduces the wss:// scheme, which is available and works like
the ws:// scheme if TLS is enabled in the library.
The library modularization is refactored somewhat, to make it easier
to use. There is now a single NNG_ENABLE_TLS that enables TLS support
under the hood.
This also adds a new option for the TLS transport, NNG_OPT_TLS_CONFIG
(and a similar one for WSS, NNG_OPT_TLS_WSS_CONFIG) that offer access
to the underlying TLS configuration object, which now has a public API
to go with it as well.
Note that it is also possible to use pure HTTPS using the *private*
API, which will be exposed in a public form soon.
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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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This introduces a new transport (compatible with the TLS
transport from mangos), using TLS v1.2.
To use the new transport, you must have the mbed TLS library
available on your system (Xenial libmbedtls-dev). You can use
version 2.x or newer -- 1.3.x and PolarSSL versions are not
supported.
You enable the TLS transport with -DNNG_TRANSPORT_TLS=ON in the CMake
configuration.
You must configure the server certificate by default, and this can only
be done using nng options. See the nng_tls man page for details.
This work is experimental, and was made possible by Capitar IT Group BV,
and Staysail Systems, Inc.
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fixes #155 POSIX TCP & IPC could avoid a lot of context switches
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This makes all the protocols and transports optional. All
of them except ZeroTier are enabled by default, but you can
now disable them (remove from the build) with cmake options.
The test suite is modified so that tests still run as much
as they can, but skip over things caused by missing functionality
from the library (due to configuration).
Further, the constant definitions and prototypes for functions
that are specific to transports or protocols are moved into
appropriate headers, which should be included directly by
applications wishing to use these.
We have also added and improved documentation -- all of the
transports are documented, and several more man pages for
protocols have been added. (Req/Rep and Surveyor are still
missing.)
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This eliminates the separate threads used for devices, letting them
benefit from the new aio framework. It also eliminates the legacy
nni_sock_sendmsg and nni_sock_recvmsg internal APIs.
It would appear that there is an opportunity here to provide asynchronous
device support out to userland as well, exposing an aio to them. That
work is deferred to later.
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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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We added nng_inproc man page, and a header with an explicit
registration method for it. We also fixed up the markup on
several other pages, and corrected the include statements for
nng_zerotier.
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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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