The guy calling the callback with LADNS_RET_FAILED is going to
inform his caller that it failed... let him decide to close and
fail the connection attempt.
Allow selection of Unix Domain Sockets on windows since it is supported
for the last couple of years on windows 10
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/af_unix-comes-to-windows/
... if only they could add a full set of posix pieces to go with it
(and abstract namespace UDS which doesn't work apparently) so that
the parts dealing with uid / gid don't have to be disabled.
Establish a new distributed CMake architecture with CMake code related to
a source directory moving to be in the subdir in its own CMakeLists.txt.
In particular, there's now one in ./lib which calls through to ones
further down the directory tree like ./lib/plat/xxx, ./lib/roles/xxx etc.
This cuts the main CMakelists.txt from 98KB -> 33KB, about a 66% reduction,
and it's much easier to maintain sub-CMakeLists.txt that are in the same
directory as the sources they manage, and conceal all the details that that
level.
Child CMakelists.txt become responsible for:
- include_directories() definition (this is not supported by CMake
directly, it passes it back up via PARENT_SCOPE vars in helper
macros)
- Addition child CMakeLists.txt inclusion, for example toplevel ->
role -> role subdir
- Source file addition to the build
- Dependent library path resolution... this is now a private thing
in the child CMakeLists.txt, it just passes back any adaptations
to include_directories() and the LIB_LIST without filling the
parent namespace with the details
Esp-idf has an improved but still kind of abused cmake-
based build system now.
If we see ESP_PLATFORM coming as a cmake var, we can know we
are being built from inside the esp-idf config system.
Leave the existing esp32 arrangements alone but triggered off
ESP_PLATFORM, adapt to use the cross toolchain file and
various quirks automatically.
In this way you can build lws a part of your project in a
much cleaner way.
Prepare a minimal esp32 test app for use in Sai
Adapt .sai.json to build for esp32
If you encounter an h1 transaction with no content length and you
parsed the headers, it actually means a hangup subsequently is an
indication of a correct transaction completion. So take care to
do the _COMPLETION callback under those circumstances too.
Unlike any other sockaddr variant it turns out when sockaddr_un reports its
sizeof() to connect() or listen(), it is trimmed to the used length of the
sun_path[] member not including any trailing 0x00.
Until now we worked fine, but our actual UDS paths have a large number of
trailing 0x00 (shown as @ in most tools). Clients and servers can still
interoperate if they both have this broken name.
This patch fixes it to trim the sockaddr_un to the path length so the name
is as you would expect.
POSIX connect() specifies it will signal POLLOUT available when
the connect result is available. But windows has some non-posix
nonsense.
Improve the plat support to simulate the missing POLLOUT.
Add a member to the vh init struct allowing control of the overall
connection wait introduced in an earlier patch. Set it to 20s
by default.
The timeout_secs member controls the individual DNS result
connect timeout and is reduced to 5s by default.
This patch allows client connections to recover from a nonresponsive
(ie, does not complete connect()) peer and continue to try subsequent
DNS results.
Replace the bash selftest plumbing with CTest.
To use the selftests, build with -DLWS_WITH_MINIMAL_EXAMPLES=1
and `CTEST_OUTPUT_ON_FAILURE=1 make test` or just
`make test`.
To disable tests that require internet access, also give
-DLWS_CTEST_INTERNET_AVAILABLE=0
Remove travis and appveyor scripts on master.
Remove travis and appveyor decals on README.md.
lejp_parse() return type is an int... but in the function, the temp
for it is a char. This leads to badness that is currently worked
around by casting the return through a signed char type.
But that leads to more badness since if there's >127 bytes of buffer
left after the end of the JSON object, we misreport it.
Bite the bullet and fix the temp type, and fix up all the guys
who were working around it at the caller return casting to use the
resulting straight int.
If you are using this api, remove any casting you may have cut-
and-pasted like this
n = (int)(signed char)lejp_parse(...);
... to just be like this...
n = lejp_parse(...);
There is no way to allocate a client wsi mux sid before the headers are
send, because we don't know the order in which new wsi headers will be sent
and so seen by the peer.
The peer inisists that sid indexes only increase... we cannot allocat sids
monotonically at the client and then send them disordered...
Lws now strips out http headers releated to h2, ws and unusual headers
based on cmake config settings for those features... it saves some heap
for the ah and reduces the table size in .rodata.
It's possible code might have some external dependency on the original
header indexes, but, eg, you don't enable h2 so those indexes are
optimized with the h2 ones taken out.
This introduces a cmake option "LWS_HTTP_HEADERS_ALL", default-OFF, that
defeats the header table optimization for compatibility with older
versions in the case the client software can't be adapted to use the
lws-exported matching header enums.
You probably don't need this.
If we are slow and we can complete the tls connection quickly,
if we want to send a hs we must use H1C...HANDSHAKE2 now we
have the tls negotiation done.
GCC -fanalyzer did find a real issue (unchecked malloc return)
but it mainly reported things that weren't true due to what
was happening outside of the particular compilation unit that
it could see.
read has a tight leash on the states it's happy to turn up there,
it's good to be like that but it turns out LRS_FLUSHING_BEFORE_CLOSE
should be whitelisted since it can happen under some transient
conditions and is valid.
https://github.com/warmcat/libwebsockets/issues/1872
If a user sets a default filename for a http mount (.def in lws_http_mount),
eg. 'default.html', then a GET request for '/' correctly forwards to
'/default.html'.
However, without this commit the default filename is not taken into account for subdirectories. Thus,
GET subdir/
will forward to
'subdir/index.html'
instead of the expected
'subdir/default.html'
This commit changes the behavior such that the user-provided default filename is also used for subdirectories.
Implement Captive Portal detection support in lws, with the actual
detection happening in platform code hooked up by lws_system_ops_t.
Add an implementation using Secure Streams as well, if the policy
defines captive_portal_detect streamtype, a SS using that streamtype
is used to probe if it's behind a captive portal.
Process HTTP headers related to content length for ws connections
and make 1 callback before continuing to the ws upgrade code.
This gives one last opportunity to ws protocols to inspect server reply
before the ws upgrade code discard it. ie: download reply body in case
of any other response code than 101.
This leads to problems at the moment with sticky mux.requested_POLLOUT
causing writeable to not be sent.
Remove it and always set writeable on parents for now.
Secure Streams is an optional layer on top of lws that separates policy
like endpoint selection and tls cert validation into a device JSON
policy document.
Code that wants to open a client connection just specifies a streamtype name,
and no longer deals with details like the endpoint, the protocol (!) or anything
else other than payloads and optionally generic metadata; the JSON policy
contains all the details for each streamtype. h1, h2, ws and mqtt client
connections are supported.
Logical secure streams outlive any particular connection and supports "nailed-up"
connectivity regardless of underlying connection stability.
Adds client support for MQTT QoS0 and QoS1, compatible with AWS IoT
Supports stream binding where independent client connections to the
same endpoint can mux on a single tcp + tls connection with topic
routing managed internally.
Headers related to ws or h2 are now elided if the ws or h2 role
is not enabled for build. In addition, a new build-time option
LWS_WITH_HTTP_UNCOMMON_HEADERS on by default allows removal of
less-common http headers to shrink the parser footprint.
Minilex is adapted to produce 8 different versions of the lex
table, chosen at build-time according to which headers are
included in the build.
If you don't need the unusual headers, or aren't using h2 or ws,
this chops down the size of the ah and the rodata needed to hold
the parsing table from 87 strings / pointers to 49, and the
parsing table from 1177 to 696 bytes.