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The relationship of these two classes was 1:1.
Thus one of them was obsolete.
Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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With the introduction of subscription forwarding, the first message
sent on a PUB socket using a unidirectional transport (e.g. PGM) is
always lost due to the "subscribe to all" being done asynchronously.
This patch fixes the problem and also refactors the code to have a
single point where the "subscribe to all" is performed.
Signed-off-by: Martin Lucina <martin@lucina.net>
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Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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Older versions of gcc have problems with in-line forward declarations
when there's a naming conflict with a global symbol.
Signed-off-by: AJ Lewis <aj.lewis@quantum.com>
Expand the original patch to all such forward declarations.
Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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This is a preliminary patch allowing for socket-type-specific
functionality in the I/O thread. For example, message format
can be checked asynchronously and misbehaved connections dropped
straight away.
Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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This patch simplifies the whole codebase significantly,
including dropping depedency on libuuid.
Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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So far, the pipe termination code was spread among socket type
classes, fair queuer, load balancer, etc. This patch moves
all the associated logic to a single place.
Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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So far, there was a pair of unidirectional pipes between a socket
and a session (or an inproc peer). This resulted in complex
problems with half-closed states and tracking which inpipe
corresponds to which outpipe.
This patch doesn't add any functionality in itself, but is
essential for further work on features like subscription
forwarding.
Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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This patch addresses serveral issues:
1. It gathers message related functionality scattered over whole
codebase into a single class.
2. It makes zmq_msg_t an opaque datatype. Internals of the class
don't pollute zmq.h header file.
3. zmq_msg_t size decreases from 48 to 32 bytes. That saves ~33%
of memory in scenarios with large amount of small messages.
Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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Threads were so far identified by integers called 'slots'.
This patch renames them to more comprehensible 'tid's (thread IDs).
Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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1. ZMQ_LINGER option can be set/get
2. options are part of own_t base class rather than being declared
separately by individual objects
3. Linger option is propagated with "term" command so that the
newest value of it is used rather than the stored old one.
4. Session sets the linger timer if needed and terminates
as soon as it expires.
5. Corresponding documentation updated.
Signed-off-by: Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com>
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for fq_t and lb_t)
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Sockets may now be migrated between OS threads; sockets may not be used by
more than one thread at any time. To migrate a socket to another thread the
caller must ensure that a full memory barrier is called before using the
socket from the target thread.
The new zmq_close() semantics implement the behaviour discussed at:
http://lists.zeromq.org/pipermail/zeromq-dev/2010-July/004244.html
Specifically, zmq_close() is now deterministic and while it still returns
immediately, it does not discard any data that may still be queued for
sending. Further, zmq_term() will now block until all outstanding data has
been sent.
TODO: Many bugs have been introduced, needs testing. Further, SO_LINGER or
an equivalent mechanism (possibly a configurable timeout to zmq_term())
needs to be implemented.
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definitions as aliases, to be removed in release 3.0. Also renamed the source
files implementing these two socket types. This change does not break existing
applications nor bindings, but allows us to fix the documentation and user guide
now, rather than keeping the old (confusing) names.
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