No dependency on test-server.h (just libwebsockets.h and getopt.h / syslog.h)
No need for any user callback code and all in one short file.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
This allows mounts to define the caching policy of the files inside them.
Support is added in lwsws for controlling it from the config files.
The api for serializing a mount struct opaquely is removed and lws_http_mount struct
made public... it was getting out of control trying to hide the options.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
This adds the ability to store apache-compatible logs to a file given at
vhost-creation time.
lwsws conf can set it per-vhost using "access-log": "<filepath>"
The feature defaults to disabled at cmake, it can be set independently but
LWS_WITH_LWSWS set it on.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
After discussion here
https://libwebsockets.org/pipermail/libwebsockets/2016-April/002268.html
scandir usage in
- lwsws conf.c
- lws plugin support
and
- lws plugin apis for dl
are converted to us libuv apis so they can work cross-platform easily.
lws itself remains not requiring libuv, although it's an option.
- LWS_WITH_LWSWS
- LWS_WITH_PLUGINS
now force LWS_WITH_LIBUV if selected... both of these are new features
only in master atm and both are off by default in CMake.
There's a complication libuv can be too old to offer the necessary apis,
this is the case in Travis Trusty instance. In that case, UV_VERSION_MAJOR ==0,
then the unix-only plugin implementation is used instead.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
This adds support for dynamically loaded plugins at runtime, which
can expose their own protocols or extensions transparently.
With these changes lwsws defaults to OFF in cmake, and if enabled it
automatically enables plugins and libuv support.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
polarssl is the old name for mbedtls. Unfortunately the two are confused in eg,
Fedora. For our purposes, polarssl or mbedtls < 2.0 has includes in
/usr/include/polarssl and polarssl_ apis and we call that "polarssl".
polarssl or mbedtls >=2.0 has includes in /usr/include/mbedtls and mbedtls_ apis,
we call that "mbedtls".
This has to be spelled out clearly because eg Fedora has a package "mbedtls" which
is 1.3.x and has the polarssl_ apis and include path. We will deal with that as
"polarssl" despite the package name then.
This patch lets you use LWS_USE_POLARSSL or LWS_USE_MBEDTLS and set the include and
library path like this
cmake .. -DLWS_USE_POLARSSL=1 -DLWS_POLARSSL_INCLUDE_DIRS=/usr/include -DLWS_POLARSSL_LIBRARIES=/usr/lib64/libmbedtls.so.9
This patch adds the cmake support and adapts [private-]libwebsockets.h but doesn't
modify the apis in ssl[-*].c yet.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
Most of ssl.c is under a #ifdef for client or server disabled...
let's get rid of it and have CMake just build the appropriate
files
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
This makes a start on the LibWebSockets WebServer.
The app cmake build support and JSON config parsing are implemented and
the app can start, create the vhosts, listen and serve file:// mounts on
them.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
If you enable -DLWS_WITH_HTTP_PROXY=1 at cmake, the test server has a
new URI path http://localhost:7681/proxytest If you visit here, a client
connection to http://example.com:80 is spawned, and the results piped on
to your original connection.
Also with LWS_WITH_HTTP_PROXY enabled at cmake, lws wants to link to an
additional library, "libhubbub". This allows lws to do html rewriting on the
fly, adjusting proxied urls in a lightweight and fast way.
This gets the libuv stuff plumbed in and working.
Currently it's only workable for some service thread, and there
is an isolated valgrind problem left
==28425== 128 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 3 of 3
==28425== at 0x4C28C50: malloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==28425== by 0x4C2AB1E: realloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==28425== by 0x58BBB27: maybe_resize (core.c:748)
==28425== by 0x58BBB27: uv__io_start (core.c:787)
==28425== by 0x58C1B80: uv__signal_loop_once_init (signal.c:225)
==28425== by 0x58C1B80: uv_signal_init (signal.c:260)
==28425== by 0x58BF7A6: uv_loop_init (loop.c:66)
==28425== by 0x4157F5: lws_uv_initloop (libuv.c:89)
==28425== by 0x405536: main (test-server-libuv.c:284)
libuv wants to sign off on all libuv 'handles' that will close, and
callback to do the close confirmation asynchronously. The wsi close function
is adapted when libuv is in use to work with libuv accordingly and exit the uv
loop the number of remaining wsi is zero.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
This just lets you build lws 1.6 without pthreads if your OS / toolchain
makes that possible, in the case you don't build the test apps
(libwebsockets-test-server-pthreads needs it)
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
This adds support for multithreaded service to lws without adding any
threading or locking code in the library.
At context creation time you can request split the service part of the
context into n service domains, which are load-balanced so that the most
idle one gets the next listen socket accept.
There's a single listen socket on one port still.
User code may then spawn n threads doing n service loops / poll()s
simultaneously. Locking is only required (I think) in the existing
FD lock callbacks already handled by the pthreads server example,
and that locking takes place in user code. So the library remains
completely agnostic about the threading / locking scheme.
And by default, it's completely compatible with one service thread
so no changes are required by people uninterested in multithreaded
service.
However for people interested in extremely lightweight mass http[s]/
ws[s] service with minimum provisioning, the library can now do
everything out of the box.
To test it, just try
$ libwebsockets-test-server-pthreads -j 8
where -j controls the number of service threads
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
Sort the list of source files before passing them to the kernel-doc
script so that it always outputs the discovered functions and
structures in the same order.
This is the initial push of a fuzzing proxy we will use for testing lws.
Run libwebsockets-test-fuzxy and the test server if it's local.
Then run the test client with
http_proxy=localhost:8880 libwebsockets-test-client localhost (or whatever)
Right now he only fuzzes one thing but he is operational as a proxy.
If we enabled libev support, generate a test server variant that uses it.
Libev has sets its face against fixing its warnings and says -Werror is
"stupid". So we work around it for the problems their apis cause in
Travis.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
It saves us ~4KB of lwsl_info / _debug etc strings.
The test app comes in at 114KB then, including 19KB of html, png and ico assets.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
Extend the cleanout caused by wsi having a context pointer
into the public api.
There's no point keeping the 1.5 compatibility work,
we have changed the api in several places and
rebuilt wasn't going to be enough a while ago.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
This changeset adds a few preprocessor macros to lws_config.h to allow
a user of libwebsockets to determine at compile time which version of
lws they are compiling against.
This exposes the already existing LWS_LIBRARY_VERSION_MAJOR and _MINOR
values, and adds LWS_LIBRARY_VERSION_PATCH. This suggests that future
minor bugfix release versions of lws would be e.g. 1.6.0 -> 1.6.1 rather
than the style used previously: 1.2 -> 1.21.
The way this is currently set up means new minor revisions (with
_PATCH==0) always end with .0 but I could change this if preferred.
The most important addition is LWS_LIBRARY_VERSION_NUMBER, which
produces a number of the form 1005001 for version 1.5.1 - i.e. each part
major, minor, patch can extend from 0-999. This macro allows a very easy
compile time comparison of version numbers.
This is off by default, use
-D LWS_WITH_OLD_API_WRAPPERS=1
on cmake to get the old api names exported from the library as wrappers
around the new api names.
This allows the library to continue to be compatible with apps that are
not rebuilt with the new libwebsockets.h api compatibility defines.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>