| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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I seem to be having a very difficult time getting dual-stack sockets
to function properly on Windows. I've sort of abandoned it for now.
I need to think about how to solve this -- it's not clear to me
right now whether dual stack sockets are the right answer or not.
People do expect these to work, but a tcp6:// url might be more
elegant.
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This gives a better idea of pipe ID uniqueness, and is a step towards
conversion of the API to use IDs instead of pointers.
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This will allow us to use idhash tables to manage id handles a bit more
flexibly. For example, sockets, pipe IDs, etc. can all be generated, and
we can use hash tables to ensure that values do not collide.
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Sleep() on Win32 rounds *down*, leading to truncated timeouts.
What we do is change our sleep routing to start incrementally
sleeping by 1ms until the tick count is reached. This ensures
we don't wake early.
This problem affects condition variables too, which means that some
timeouts may occur up to one clock tick early (15ish ms). This should
not be a problem for most users, who should really only be setting
timeouts in quantities of a second or greater.
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This was the main blocker, I think, for the nanomsg legacy compat
shim. Now that we have this, it should be relatively straight-forward
to implement the legacy nanomsg API, including the SENDFD, RECVFD thing.
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This change provides for a private callback in the message queues,
which can be used to notify the socket, and which than arranges for
the appropriate event thread to run.
Upper layer hooks to access this still need to be written.
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This compiles correctly, but doesn't actually deliver events yet.
As part of this, I've made most of the initializables in nng
safe to tear-down if uninitialized (or set to zero e.g. via calloc).
This makes it loads easier to write the teardown on error code, since
I can deinit everything, without worrying about which things have been
initialized and which have not.
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Test code needs to use the static libraries so that they can get access
to the entire set of symbols, including private ones that are not exported.
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It turns out that I didn't quite understand overlapped I/O. We can and
should always do the GetOverlappedResult(), regardless of how the routine
returns.
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Since we use the tick counter to sleep, we should use the same clock
for validation. The problem is that the high performance tick counter
on the CPU may be slightly out of agreement with the windows clock.
Furthermore, the tick counter is probably lots faster to retrieve since
it is already updated, and needn't be recalculated each time.
(We should consider just switching to millisecond clock resolution
internally as well. It turns out that I don't think that timers that
are shorter than 1ms are very useful.)
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There are lots of changes here, mostly stuff we did in support of
Windows TCP. However, there are some bugs that were fixed, and we
added some new error codes, and generalized the handling of some failures
during accept. Windows IPC (NamedPipes) is still missing.
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Windows is getting there. Needs a couple of more more hours to enable
everything, especially IPC, and most of the work at this point is probably
some combination of debug and tweaking things like error handling.
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As part of this, we've added a way to unblock callers in a message
queue with an error, even without a signal channel. This was necessary
to interrupt blockers upon survey timeout. They will get NNG_ETIMEDOUT,
but afterwards callers get NNG_ESTATE.
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Platforms must seed the pRNGs by offering an nni_plat_seed_prng()
routine. Implementations for POSIX using various options (including
the /dev/urandom device) are supplied.
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This adds the surveyor protocol, and updates the respondent somewhat.
I've switched to using generic names for per-pipe and per-socket protocol
data. Hopefully this will make 'cut-n-paste' from other protocol
implementations easier.
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This should eliminate all need for protocols to do their own
thread management tasks.
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Don't drop the lock in sock_close while holding the pipe reference.
I'm pretty sure this is responsible for the use-after-free race.
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In an attempt to simplify the protocol implementation, and hopefully
track down a close related race, we've made it so that most protocols
need not worry about locks, and can access the socket lock if they do
need a lock. They also let the socket manage their workers, for the
most part. (The req protocol is special, since it needs a top level
work distributor, *and* a resender.)
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