These functions can return 0 code but still store NULL in result, if no matching group or username found.
Also the buffer of 64 size could be too small to store all string fields in result.
Otherwise sai is sometimes failing to get the correct process exit code
spawn: use WEXITSTATUS macro
On openbsd at least, the process retcode isn't in the low 8 bits, but must
be recovered using the official macro.
There are a few build options that are trying to keep and report
various statistics
- DETAILED_LATENCY
- SERVER_STATUS
- WITH_STATS
remove all those and establish a generic rplacement, lws_metrics.
lws_metrics makes its stats available via an lws_system ops function
pointer that the user code can set.
Openmetrics export is supported, for, eg, prometheus scraping.
Also prioritize LD_LIBRARY_PATH check for plugins first
Iterate through paths in LD_LIBRARY_PATH in order
Warn on failed plugins init but continue protocol init
This is a huge patch that should be a global NOP.
For unix type platforms it enables -Wconversion to issue warnings (-> error)
for all automatic casts that seem less than ideal but are normally concealed
by the toolchain.
This is things like passing an int to a size_t argument. Once enabled, I
went through all args on my default build (which build most things) and
tried to make the removed default cast explicit.
With that approach it neither change nor bloat the code, since it compiles
to whatever it was doing before, just with the casts made explicit... in a
few cases I changed some length args from int to size_t but largely left
the causes alone.
From now on, new code that is relying on less than ideal casting
will complain and nudge me to improve it by warnings.
This adds some new objects and helpers for keeping and logging
info on grouped allocations, a group is, eg, SS handles or client
wsis.
Allocated objects get a context-unique "tag" string intended to replace
%p / wsi pointers etc. Pointers quickly become confusing when
allocations are freed and reused, the tag string won't repeat
until you produce 2^64 objects in a context.
In addition the tag string documents the object group, with prefixes
like "wsi-" or "vh-" and contain object-specific additional
information like the vhost name, address / port or the role of the wsi.
At creation time the lws code can use a format string and args
to add whatever group-specific info makes sense, eg, a wsi bound
to a secure stream can also append the guid of the secure stream,
it's copied into the new object tag and so is still available
cleanly after the stream is destroyed if the wsi outlives it.
A few different places want to create wsis and basically repeat their
own versions of the flow. Let's unify it into one helper in wsi.c
Also require the context lock held (this only impacts LWS_MAX_SMP > 1)
C++ APIs wrapping SS client
These are intended to provide an experimental protocol-independent c++
api even more abstracted than secure streams, along the lines of
"wget -Omyfile https://example.com/thing"
WIP
CTest does not directly support daemon spawn as part of the test flow,
we have to specify it as a "fixture" dependency and then hack up daemonization
in a shellscript... this last part unfortunately limits its ability to run to
unix type platforms.
On those though, if the PROXY_API cmake option is enabled, the ctest flow will
spawn the proxy and run lws-minimal-secure-strems-client against it
OSX changed to blow a segfault on write to .rodata, exposing that
we're dropping a NUL in what can be .rodata to set the environment
manually. We don't do this on Linux typically because we take the
code path where execvpe() is available to do the env for us.
Adapt the code to treat it as const, and underscore it by changing
its type to be const char ** in the info struct.
This creates a role for RFC3549 Netlink monitoring.
If the OS supports it (currently, linux) then each pt creates a wsi
with the netlink role and dumps the current routing table at pt init.
It then maintains a cache of the routing table in each pt.
Upon routing table changes an SMD message is issued as an event, and
Captive Portal Detection is triggered.
All of the pt's current connections are reassessed for routability under
the changed routing table, those that no longer have a valid route or
gateway are closed.
The type of the fields in rtentry is sockaddr, and it is
casted to sockaddr_in. Size-wise it is ok, they should both
be the same size. But casting a pointer breaks build with
optimizations with the following error:
unix-sockets.c:434: error: dereferencing pointer 'addr' does break strict-aliasing rules
Amends commit 3c95483518.
Event lib support as it has been isn't scaling well, at the low level
libevent and libev headers have a namespace conflict so they can't
both be built into the same image, and at the distro level, binding
all the event libs to libwebsockets.so makes a bloaty situation for
packaging, lws will drag in all the event libs every time.
This patch implements the plan discussed here
https://github.com/warmcat/libwebsockets/issues/1980
and refactors the event lib support so they are built into isolated
plugins and bound at runtime according to what the application says
it wants to use. The event lib plugins can be packaged individually
so that only the needed sets of support are installed (perhaps none
of them if the user code is OK with the default poll() loop). And
dependent user code can mark the specific event loop plugin package
as required so pieces are added as needed.
The eventlib-foreign example is also refactored to build the selected
lib support isolated.
A readme is added detailing the changes and how to use them.
https://libwebsockets.org/git/libwebsockets/tree/READMEs/README.event-libs.md
Move the common plugin scanning dir stuff to be based on lws_dir, which
already builds for windows. Previously this was done via dirent for unix
and libuv for windows.
Reduce the dl plat stuff to just wrap instantiation and destruction of
dynlibs, establish common code in lib/misc/dir.c for plugin scanning
itself.
Migrate the libuv windows dl stuff to windows-plugins.c, so that he's
available even if later libuv loop support becomes and event lib plugin.
Remove the existing api exports scheme for plugins, just export a const struct
now which has a fixed header type but then whatever you want afterwards depending
on the class / purpose of the plugin. Place a "class" string in the header so
there can be different kinds of plugins implying different types exported.
Make the plugin apis public and add support for filter by class string, and
per instantation / destruction callbacks so the subclassed header type can
do its thing for the plugin class. The user provides a linked-list base
for his class of plugins, so he can manage them completely separately and
in user code / user export types.
Rip out some last hangers-on from generic sessions / tables.
This is all aimed at making the plugins support general enough so it can
provide event lib plugins later.