This has no effect on user code or backward compatibility.
It moves the in-tree public api header libwebsockets.h from ./lib
to ./include, and introduces a dir ./include/libwebsockets/
The single public api header is split out into 31 sub-headers
in ./include/libwebsockets. ./include/libwebsockets.h contains
some core types and platform adaptation code, but the rest of it
is now 31 #include <libwebsockets/...>
At install time, /usr/[local/]include/libwebsockets.h is installed
as before, along now with the 31 sub-headers in ...include/libwebsockets/
There's no net effect on user code.
But the api header is now much easier to maintain and study, with 31
topic-based sub headers.
This is used to confirm that SSL client connections can coexist with
a vhost doing serving.
To set it up,
/*
* This is a bit fiddly...
*
* 0) If you want the wss:// test to work, make sure the vhost is marked with
* enable-client-ssl if using lwsws, or call lws_init_vhost_client_ssl() on
* the vhost if you're doing it by hand.
*
* 1) enable the protocol on a vhost
*
* "ws-protocols": [{
* "client-loopback-test": {
* "status": "ok"
* }, ...
*
* the vhost should listen on 80 (ws://) or 443 (wss://)
*
* 2) mount the http part of the test one level down on the same vhost, eg
* {
* "mountpoint": "/c",
* "origin": "callback://client-loopback-test"
* }
*
* 3) Use a browser to visit the mountpoint with a URI attached for looping
* back, eg, if testing on localhost
*
* http://localhost/c/ws://localhost
* https://localhost/c/wss://localhost
*
* 4) The HTTP part of this test protocol will try to do the requested
* ws client connection, to the same test protocol on the same
* server.
*/
Results should look like this
lwsws[29938]: client connection to localhost:443 with ssl: 1 started
lwsws[29938]: server part: LWS_CALLBACK_ESTABLISHED
lwsws[29938]: checking client ext permessage-deflate
lwsws[29938]: instantiating client ext permessage-deflate
lwsws[29938]: Client connection established
lwsws[29938]: Client connection received 7 from server 'Made it'
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>