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- fix rep_inet_ntoa() for IRIX
- lib/signal.c needs system/wait.h
- some systems define a macro "accept", which breaks the lib/socket/ structures.
use fn_ as a prefix for the structure elements to avoid the problem
(This used to be commit ced1a0fcdc8d8e47755ce4391c19f8b12862eb60)
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you set this option (either on the command line using --option or in
smb.conf) then every socket recv or send will return short by random
amounts. This allows you to test that the non-blocking socket logic in
your code works correctly.
I also removed the flags argument to socket_accept(), and instead made
the new socket inherit the flags of the old socket, which makes more
sense to me.
(This used to be commit 406d356e698da01c84e8aa5b7894752b4403f63c)
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SOCKET_FLAG_BLOCK is set.
(This used to be commit a2d92aa431e0e9752387eebe741d9e6f376f74d7)
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The main change is to make socket_recv() take a pre-allocated buffer,
rather than allocating one itself. This allows non-blocking users of
this API to avoid a memcpy(). As a result our messaging code is now
about 10% faster, and the ncacn_ip_tcp and ncalrpc code is also
faster.
The second change was to remove the unused mem_ctx argument from
socket_send(). Having it there implied that memory could be allocated,
which meant the caller had to worry about freeing that memory (if for
example it is sending in a tight loop using the same memory
context). Removing that unused argument keeps life simpler for users.
(This used to be commit a16e4756cd68ca8aab4ffc59d4d9db0b6e44dbd1)
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If a socket is non-blocking then adding MSG_DONTWAIT is pointless (it
does nothing), so all we lose is the ability to set non-blocking on a
packet-by-packet basis, which is not a very useful thing to have
anyway
if the socket is blocking then the code already adds MSG_WAITALL, so
MSG_DONTWAIT is also not needed in that case.
(This used to be commit b8a2afae67691a609b4a7a577fee3f9518adc9d2)
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rather than doing everything itself. This greatly simplifies the
code, although I really don't like the socket_recv() interface (it
always allocates memory for you, which means an extra memcpy in this
code)
- fixed several bugs in the socket_ipv4.c code, in particular client
side code used a non-blocking connect but didn't handle EINPROGRESS,
so it had no chance of working. Also fixed the error codes, using
map_nt_error_from_unix()
- cleaned up and expanded map_nt_error_from_unix()
- changed interpret_addr2() to not take a mem_ctx. It makes absolutely
no sense to allocate a fixed size 4 byte structure like this. Dozens
of places in the code were also using interpret_addr2() incorrectly
(precisely because the allocation made no sense)
(This used to be commit 7f2c771b0e0e98c5c9e5cf662592d64d34ff1205)
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socket options are really meant for tcp)
(This used to be commit 238febb0088f85933c869052f4f83ff31f164df1)
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destructor
(This used to be commit ab222b236a091d31b1f5f2cba150a11585ab5836)
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process
exits. Commenting it out until we have a clean way of doing this.
(This used to be commit fa0760dd5fa361be3b72dc4adc8b736e8a862606)
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(This used to be commit 64514ff5b7734667a1364de925114091fe208b3a)
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- added the new messaging system, based on unix domain sockets. It
gets over 10k messages/second on my laptop without any socket
cacheing, which is better than I expected.
- added a LOCAL-MESSAGING torture test
(This used to be commit 3af06478da7ab34a272226d8d9ac87e0a4940cfb)
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will shortly be using this for a rewrite of the intra-smbd messaging
library, which is needed to get lock timeouts working properly (and
share modes, oplocks etc)
(This used to be commit 6f4926d846965a901e40d24546eab356c4a537c7)
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