Assert that the request queue is empty when destroying the event loop.
Should catch errors where people call uv_loop_delete() when there are
still in-progress work requests (for example.)
This commit changes the libuv API to return error codes directly rather
than storing them in a loop-global field.
A code snippet like this one:
if (uv_foo(loop) < 0) {
uv_err_t err = uv_last_error(loop);
fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", uv_strerror(err));
}
Should be rewritten like this:
int err = uv_foo(loop);
if (err < 0)
fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", uv_strerror(err));
The rationale for this change is that it should make creating bindings
for other languages a lot easier: dealing with struct return values is
painful with most FFIs and often downright buggy.
This commit renames the various uv_hrtime() implementations to uv__hrtime().
Libuv uses the high-res timer internally in performance-critical code paths.
Calling the non-public version avoids going through the PLT when libuv is
compiled as a shared object.
The exported uv_hrtime() now has a single definition in src/unix/core.c that
calls uv__hrtime().
A future optimization is to lift the uv__hrtime() declarations into header
files so they can be inlined at the call sites. Then again, linking with -flto
should accomplish the same thing.
This reverts commit 209abbab27.
Fixes the following SIGSEGV:
(gdb) f 1
#1 0x00007fc084683aec in uv__async_io (loop=0x7fc0848e0b40,
handle=0x7fc0848e0c78, events=1) at src/unix/async.c:175
175 ASYNC_CB(h)
(gdb) list
170
171 /* If we need to sweep all handles anyway - skip this loop */
172 if (!loop->async_sweep_needed) {
173 for (i = 0; i < end; i += sizeof(h)) {
174 h = *((uv_async_t**) (buf + i));
175 ASYNC_CB(h)
176 }
177 }
178
179 bytes -= end;
(gdb) print *h
$1 = {close_cb = 0x184e1b0, data = 0x18d9520, loop = 0x7fc0848e0b40,
type = 49, handle_queue = {prev = 0x18dae10, next = 0x7860c0}, flags = 32,
next_closing = 0x1863b40, pending = 0, async_cb = 0x31,
queue = {prev = 0x18dae50, next = 0x7860c0}}
(gdb)
It looks like the async handle gets closed or otherwise becomes invalid before
the sweep is executed.
Fixes#603.
Implement a best effort approach to mitigating accept() EMFILE errors.
We have a spare file descriptor stashed away that we close to get below
the EMFILE limit. Next, we accept all pending connections and close them
immediately to signal the clients that we're overloaded - and we are, but
we still keep on trucking.
There is one caveat: it's not reliable in a multi-threaded environment.
The file descriptor limit is per process. Our party trick fails if another
thread opens a file or creates a socket in the time window between us
calling close() and accept().
Fixes#315.
Problem: registering two uv_fs_event_t watchers for the same path, then closing
them, caused a segmentation fault. While active, the watchers didn't work right
either, only one would receive events.
Cause: each watcher has a wd (watch descriptor) that's used as its key in a
binary tree. When you call inotify_watch_add() twice with the same path, the
second call doesn't return a new wd - it returns the existing one. That in turn
resulted in the first handle getting ousted from the binary tree, leaving
dangling pointers.
This commit addresses that by storing the watchers in a queue and storing the
queue in the binary tree instead of storing the watchers directly in the tree.
Fixesjoyent/node#3789.
* replace libev backed timers with a pure libuv implementation
* gut ev_run() and make it take a timeout instead of flags
Incidentally speeds up the loop_count_timed benchmark by about 100%.
The new idle watcher was temporarily disabled in 073a48d due to some semantic
incompatibilities with the previous implementation. This commit resolves those
issues and reactivates the new implementation.
One outstanding bug is that idle watchers can run in a different order
(relative to other handle types) than the old implementation, e.g. (timer, idle)
instead of the expected (idle, timer). This will be fixed in an upcoming commit.
This commit changes how the event loop determines if it needs to stay alive.
Previously, an internal counter was increased whenever a handle got created
and decreased again when the handle was closed.
While conceptually simple, it turned out hard to work with: you often want
to keep the event loop alive only if the handle is actually doing something.
Stopped or inactive handles were a frequent source of hanging event loops.
That's why this commit changes the reference counting scheme to a model where
a handle only references the event loop when it's active. 'Active' means
different things for different handle types, e.g.:
* timers: ticking
* sockets: reading, writing or listening
* processes: always active (for now, subject to change)
* idle, check, prepare: only active when started
This commit also changes how the uv_ref() and uv_unref() functions work: they
now operate on the level of individual handles, not the whole event loop.
The Windows implementation was done by Bert Belder.
Instead of using one port per watch, use one port for all the watches.
This is a cherry-pick of commit 7326962 from v0.6 into master.
Conflicts:
include/uv-private/uv-unix.h
src/unix/core.c
src/unix/sunos.c