This patch allows to change timeout for next events read/write/connect
separatelly, using new API:
- client:
evhttp_connection_set_connect_timeout_tv() -- for connect
evhttp_connection_set_read_timeout_tv() -- for read
evhttp_connection_set_write_timeout_tv() -- for write
- server:
evhttp_set_read_timeout_tv() -- for read
evhttp_set_write_timeout_tv() -- for write
It also changes a logic a little, before there was next fallbacks which
does not handled in new API:
- HTTP_CONNECT_TIMEOUT
- HTTP_WRITE_TIMEOUT
- HTTP_READ_TIMEOUT
And introduce another internal flag (EVHTTP_CON_TIMEOUT_ADJUSTED) that
will be used in evrpc, which adjust evhttp_connection timeout only if it
is not default.
Fixes: #692Fixes: #715
* evbuffer-empty-chain-handling:
buffer: do not rely on ->off in advance_last_with_data()
buffer: fix evbuffer_remove_buffer() with empty chain in front
test: verify content of the buffer in evbuffer/remove_buffer_with_empty*
advance_last_with_data() adjusts evbuffer.last_with_datap, and if we
will have empty chain in the middle advance_last_with_data() will stop,
while it should not, since while empty chains is not regular thing they
can pops up in various places like, and while I did not look through all
of them the most tricky I would say is:
evbuffer_reverse_space()/evbuffer_commit_space()
evbuffer_add_reference()
Test case from:
https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy/pull/6062Fixes: #778
v2: keep last_with_datap really last with data, i.e. update only if
chain has data in it
In case we have empty chain (chain that do not have any data, i.e. ->off
== 0) at the beginning of the buffer, and no more full chains to move to
the dst, we will skip moving of this empty chain, and hence
last_with_datap will not be adjusted, and things will be broken after.
Fix this by not relying on ->off, just count if we have something to
move that's it.
Test case from:
https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy/pull/6062Fixes: #774
Although `_GNU_SOURCE` can be defined as an arbitrary #define per the
glibc docs [1], it's best to define it in a manner consistent with the way
that autoconf defines it, i.e., `1`.
While this shouldn't matter in most cases, it does when the headers from
other projects follow the poorly defined GNU convention implemented by
autoconf and are included after the libevent's util.h header. An example
failure with clang, similar to the failure I encountered, is as follows:
```
$ printf "#define _GNU_SOURCE\n#define _GNU_SOURCE 1" | clang -c -x c -
<stdin>:2:9: warning: '_GNU_SOURCE' macro redefined [-Wmacro-redefined]
^
<stdin>:1:9: note: previous definition is here
^
1 warning generated.
```
This happened when compiling python [2] with a stale homebrew util.h file from
libevent (which admittedly would not happen in a correct libevent install, as the
header should be installed under /usr/local/include/event2/util.h). However, if
both headers had been combined (which is more likely), it would have failed as
shown above.
Removing the ad hoc definition unbreaks compiling python's pyconfig.h.in header
when included after util.h from libevent.
1. http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Feature-Test-Macros.html
2. https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/master/configure.ac#L126Closes: #773 (cherry-picked)
Signed-off-by: Enji Cooper <yaneurabeya@gmail.com>
After we started to use kill() over raise() everything should work just
fine.
This reverts commit a86f89d333d870e6714bd28c695ba1774df3d7f5.
Fixed-in: 728c5dc1 ("Use kill() over raise() for raising the signal (fixes osx 10.14 with kqueue)")
Fixes: #747
On OSX 10.14+ the raise() uses pthread_kill() (verified with dtruss) and
by some reason signals that has been raised with pthread_kill() do not
received by kqueue EVFILT_SIGNAL.
While on OSX 10.11 the raise()/pthread_kill() uses plain kill() and
everything work just fine (linux also does the same, but instead of
kill() it uses tgkill())
Here is a simple reproducer that installs alarm to show that the signal
does not received by the kqueue backend:
https://gist.github.com/azat/73638b8e3b0fa563a20dadcca9e652a1
Refs: #747Fixes: #765
Currently, we do a lot of data munging with manual hex. This is ugly
and can lead to bugs. I defined the following:
_QR_MASK 0x8000U
_OP_MASK 0x7800U
_AA_MASK 0x0400U
_TC_MASK 0x0200U
_RD_MASK 0x0100U
_RA_MASK 0x0080U
_Z_MASK 0x0040U
_AD_MASK 0x0020U
_CD_MASK 0x0010U
_RCODE_MASK 0x000fU
So that we can more easily twiddle flags.
v2: make evdns flag masks unsigned literal
Closes: #756 (cherry-picked)
There can be tricky cases (that can be reproduced by reducing
SO_RCVBUF/SO_SNDBUF to 6144, on linux, and be aware, since linux doubles
this const), when there is still write event pending, although we read
enough.
This should be fixed in a more sophisticated way, but to backport the
patch, let's simply break the loop manually.
The ssl/bufferevent_wm originally failed on solaris.
windows has intptr_t instead of regular int.
Also tt_fd_op() had been introduced, since we cannot use tt_int_op() for
comparing fd, since it is not always int.
Next code will not work correctly under win x64:
evutil_socket_t very_long_pair_name[2];
int *pair = very_long_pair_name; // <-- accessing the second word of the first element
Because sizeof(evutil_socket_t) == sizeof(intptr_t) == 8
P.S. in the 5334762f another test had been fixed instead of the one that
really fails.
Fixes: 5334762f ("test/et/et: fix it by using appropriate type for the SOCKET (evutil_socket_t)")
Refs: #750
* win64-fixes:
test/et/et: fix it by using appropriate type for the SOCKET (evutil_socket_t)
test/et/et: verify return codes
appveyor: switch to new VS/MinGW and x64
* http-EVHTTP_CON_READ_ON_WRITE_ERROR-fixes-v2:
http: try to read existing data in buffer under EVHTTP_CON_READ_ON_WRITE_ERROR
test: add logging for http/read_on_write_error and rearrange code
http: do not call deferred readcb if readcb is not set
Refs: #749
There are two possible ways of getting response from the server:
- processing existing bufferevent buffer
- reading from the socket (even after write() errored with -1, it is
still possible)
But we did not tried the first option, only the second one.
Fixes: http/read_on_write_error (on freebsd/osx)
In 755fbf16c ("Add void* arguments to request_new and reply_new
evrpc hooks") this new functions had been introduced, but newer used,
what for? So let's use them.