Add a new function to get the current time in microseconds, since gettimeofday() does not exist on Windows.
Keep the current implementation for the test applications.
f975f73640 introduced inclusion of endian.h,
which is not a standard header. Only include it on Linux machines and
add similar includes for Apple and FreeBSD.
C89 which Microsofts compiler only support does not allow variable
declarations anywhere but at the start of a scope.
Also, only try to copy the test-server files if they actually exists. For
instance the OpenSSL cert generation fails if you run cmake under the git
bash shell on Windows (won't work with the unix method either) so that
file will be missing... This would result in a compilation error when
tests where turned on.
At the time callback LWS_CALLBACK_FILTER_NETWORK_CONNECTION is called,
there is no client connection information yet, so the parameter wsi
still pointing to the main server connection. Add an description of
this behavior to the documentation.
To enable this code you need to force LWS_HAS_PPOLL to de defined.
#defining it at the top of libwebsockets.c is enough.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
This provides a single place for pollfd event changing,
external locking for that and extpoll management.
It saves about 85 lines of duplication and simplifies the callers.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
This adds two new callbacks in protocols[0] that are optional for allowing limited thread
access to libwebsockets, LWS_CALLBACK_LOCK_POLL and LWS_CALLBACK_UNLOCK_POLL.
If you use them, they protect internal and external poll list changes, but if you want to use
external thread access to libwebsocket_callback_on_writable() you have to implement your
locking here even if you don't use external poll support.
If you will use another thread for this, take a lot of care about managing your list of
live wsi by doing it from ESTABLISHED and CLOSED callbacks (with your own locking).
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
If enabled one listening socket will accept both SSL and plain HTTP connections.
Do not enable if you regard SSL handshake as some kind of security, eg, use
client-side certs to restrict access.
AG: changed flag names, added extra comments, changelog, add -a in test server
Signed-off-by: James Devine <fxmulder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>