Return 'isc_result_t' type value instead of 'bool' to indicate
the actual failure. Rename the function to something not suggesting
a boolean type result. Make changes in the places where the API
function is being used to check for the result code instead of
a boolean value.
(cherry picked from commit 41dc48bfd7)
The reference counting and isc_timer_attach()/isc_timer_detach()
semantic are actually misleading because it cannot be used under normal
conditions. The usual conditions under which is timer used uses the
object where timer is used as argument to the "timer" itself. This
means that when the caller is using `isc_timer_detach()` it needs the
timer to stop and the isc_timer_detach() does that only if this would be
the last reference. Unfortunately, this also means that if the timer is
attached elsewhere and the timer is fired it will most likely be
use-after-free, because the object used in the timer no longer exists.
Remove the reference counting from the isc_timer unit, remove
isc_timer_attach() function and rename isc_timer_detach() to
isc_timer_destroy() to better reflect how the API needs to be used.
The only caveat is that the already executed event must be destroyed
before the isc_timer_destroy() is called because the timer is no longet
attached to .ev_destroy_arg.
(cherry picked from commit ae01ec2823)
The isc_task_purgerange() was walking through all events on the task to
find a matching task. Instead use the ISC_LINK_LINKED to find whether
the event is active.
Cleanup the related isc_task_unsend() and isc_task_unsendrange()
functions that were not used anywhere.
(cherry picked from commit 17aed2f895)
Previously, an incremental hash table resizing was implemented for the
dns_rbt_t hash table implementation. Using that as a base, also
implement the incremental hash table resizing also for isc_ht API
hashtables:
1. During the resize, allocate the new hash table, but keep the old
table unchanged.
2. In each lookup, delete, or iterator operation, check both tables.
3. Perform insertion operations only in the new table.
4. At each insertion also move <r> elements from the old table to
the new table.
5. When all elements are removed from the old table, deallocate it.
To ensure that the old table is completely copied over before the new
table itself needs to be enlarged, it is necessary to increase the
size of the table by a factor of at least (<r> + 1)/<r> during resizing.
In our implementation <r> is equal to 1.
The downside of this approach is that the old table and the new table
could stay in memory for longer when there are no new insertions into
the hash table for prolonged periods of time as the incremental
rehashing happens only during the insertions.
(cherry picked from commit e42cb1f198)
Additionally to renaming, it changes the function definition so that
it accepts a pointer to pointer instead of returning a pointer to the
new object.
It is mostly done to make it in line with other functions in the
module.
(cherry picked from commit 7962e7f575)
The various factors like NS_PER_MS are now defined in a single place
and the names are no longer inconsistent. I chose the _PER_SEC names
rather than _PER_S because it is slightly more clear in isolation;
but the smaller units are always NS, US, and MS.
(cherry picked from commit 00307fe318)
This commit removes an assertion from the unit test which cannot be
guaranteed.
According to the test, exactly one client send must succeed. However,
it cannot really be guaranteed, as do not start to read data in the
accept callback on the server nor attach to the accepted handle. Thus,
we can expect the connection to be closed soon after we have returned
from the callback.
Interestingly enough, the test would pass just fine on TCP because:
a) there are fewer layers involved and thus there is less processing;
b) it is possible for the data to be sent and end up in an internal OS
socket buffer without being touched by an application's code on the
server. In such a case the client's write callback still would be
called successfully;
There is a chance for the test to succeed over TLS as well (as it
happily did before), but as the code has been changed to close unused
connections as soon as possible, the chance is far slimmer now.
What can be guaranteed is:
* cconnects == 1 (number client connections equals 1);
* saccepts == 1 (number of accepted connections equals 1).
(cherry picked from commit 0f9b6a7bc1)
This commit extends DoT code with TLS client session resumption
support implemented on top of the TLS client session cache.
(cherry picked from commit 86465c1dac)
This commit extends TLS stream code and DoH code with TLS client
session resumption support implemented on top of the TLS client
session cache.
(cherry picked from commit 90bc13a5d5)
The automake was missing reference to uv_wrap.h, so it was not added to
the distribution. Add uv_wrap.h to SOURCES for both doh and netmgr unit
tests.
(cherry picked from commit dec845017b)
The unit tests are now using a common base, which means that
lib/dns/tests/ code now has to include lib/isc/include/isc/test.h and
link with lib/isc/test.c and lib/ns/tests has to include both libisc and
libdns parts.
Instead of cross-linking code between the directories, move the
/lib/<foo>/test.c to /tests/<foo>.c and /lib/<foo>/include/<foo>test.h
to /tests/include/tests/<foo>.h and create a single libtest.la
convenience library in /tests/.
At the same time, move the /lib/<foo>/tests/ to /tests/<foo>/ (but keep
it symlinked to the old location) and adjust paths accordingly. In few
places, we are now using absolute paths instead of relative paths,
because the directory level has changed. By moving the directories
under the /tests/ directory, the test-related code is kept in a single
place and we can avoid referencing files between libns->libdns->libisc
which is unhealthy because they live in a separate Makefile-space.
In the future, the /bin/tests/ should be merged to /tests/ and symlink
kept, and the /fuzz/ directory moved to /tests/fuzz/.
(cherry picked from commit 2c3b2dabe9)