| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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There are no other consumers for this, and reasonably unlikely to
be others for now. (Other use cases are JWTs, but that would be
another whole set of functionality that we're not ready to take on.)
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This also contains the start of some CMakefile refactoring and
clean ups.
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fixes #1035 Convey is awkward -- consider acutest.h
This represents a rather large effort towards cleaning up our
testing and optional configuration infrastructure.
A separate test library is built by default, which is static, and
includes some useful utilities design to make it easier to write
shorter and more robust (not timing dependent) tests. This also means
that we can cover pretty nearly all the tests (protocols etc.) in
every case, even if the shipped image will be minimized.
Subsystems which are optional can now use a few new macros to configure
what they need see nng_sources_if, nng_headers_if, and nng_defines_if.
This goes a long way to making the distributed CMakefiles a lot simpler.
Additionally, tests for different parts of the tree can now be located
outside of the tests/ tree, so that they can be placed next to the code
that they are testing.
Beyond the enabling work, the work has only begun, but these changes
have resolved the most often failing tests for Darwin in the cloud.
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This is a significant refactor of the library configuration.
We use the modern package configuration helper, with a template
script that also does the find_package dance for any of our
dependencies.
We also have restructured the code so that most protocols and
transports have their configuration isolated to their own CMakeLists
file, reducing the size of the global CMakeLists file.
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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 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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