OpenSSL uses something like this to implement get/set access for
properties on its BIOs, so that it doesn't need to add a pair of
get/set functions to the vtable struct for every new abstract property
it provides an accessor for.
Doing this lets us make bufferevent_setfd abstract, and implement an
abstract bufferevent_getfd.
svn:r1284
This is a bit of an interface doozy, but it's really needed in order
to be able to document this stuff without apologizing it. This patch
does the following renamings:
evbuffercb -> bufferevent_data_cb
everrorcb -> bufferevent_event_cb
EVBUFFER_(READ,WRITE,...) -> BEV_EVENT_(...)
EVBUFFER_(INPUT,OUTPUT) -> bufferevent_get_(input,output)
All the old names are available in event2/bufferevent_compat.h
svn:r1283
This is stuff that it's easy to get wrong (as I noticed when writing
bench_http), and that takes up a fair amount of space (see http.c).
Also, it's something that we'll eventually want to abstract to use
IOCP, where available.
svn:r1272
This way we don't expose more of a bufferevent than we need to. One
motivation is to make it easier to automatically get deferred callbacks
with a bufferevent without exposing the deferred_cb structure.
svn:r1169
The new bufferevent_pair abstraction works like a set of buferevent_sockets
connected by a socketpair, except that it doesn't require a socketpair,
and therefore doesn't need to get the kernel involved.
It's also a good way to make sure that deferred callbacks work. It's a good
use case for deferred callbacks: before I implemented them, the recursive
relationship between the evbuffer callback and the read callback would
make the unit tests overflow the stack.
svn:r1152
In particular, we don't allow adding any data to end front of inbuf
(we do that when we read), or removing it from the front of outbuf (we
drain data only when we write).
svn:r1144