haproxy/include/types/fd.h

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/*
* include/types/fd.h
MAJOR: polling: rework the whole polling system This commit heavily changes the polling system in order to definitely fix the frequent breakage of SSL which needs to remember the last EAGAIN before deciding whether to poll or not. Now we have a state per direction for each FD, as opposed to a previous and current state previously. An FD can have up to 8 different states for each direction, each of which being the result of a 3-bit combination. These 3 bits indicate a wish to access the FD, the readiness of the FD and the subscription of the FD to the polling system. This means that it will now be possible to remember the state of a file descriptor across disable/enable sequences that generally happen during forwarding, where enabling reading on a previously disabled FD would result in forgetting the EAGAIN flag it met last time. Several new state manipulation functions have been introduced or adapted : - fd_want_{recv,send} : enable receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (sets the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_stop_{recv,send} : stop receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (clears the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_cant_{recv,send} : report a failure to receive/send on the FD corresponding to EAGAIN (clears the READY flag) ; - fd_may_{recv,send} : report the ability to receive/send on the FD as reported by poll() (sets the READY flag) ; Some functions are used to report the current FD status : - fd_{recv,send}_active - fd_{recv,send}_ready - fd_{recv,send}_polled Some functions were removed : - fd_ev_clr(), fd_ev_set(), fd_ev_rem(), fd_ev_wai() The POLLHUP/POLLERR flags are now reported as ready so that the I/O layers knows it can try to access the file descriptor to get this information. In order to simplify the conditions to add/remove cache entries, a new function fd_alloc_or_release_cache_entry() was created to be used from pollers while scanning for updates. The following pollers have been updated : ev_select() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_poll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_epoll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 & 3.13 ev_kqueue() : done, built, tested on OpenBSD 5.2
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* File descriptors states - check src/fd.c for explanations.
*
MAJOR: polling: rework the whole polling system This commit heavily changes the polling system in order to definitely fix the frequent breakage of SSL which needs to remember the last EAGAIN before deciding whether to poll or not. Now we have a state per direction for each FD, as opposed to a previous and current state previously. An FD can have up to 8 different states for each direction, each of which being the result of a 3-bit combination. These 3 bits indicate a wish to access the FD, the readiness of the FD and the subscription of the FD to the polling system. This means that it will now be possible to remember the state of a file descriptor across disable/enable sequences that generally happen during forwarding, where enabling reading on a previously disabled FD would result in forgetting the EAGAIN flag it met last time. Several new state manipulation functions have been introduced or adapted : - fd_want_{recv,send} : enable receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (sets the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_stop_{recv,send} : stop receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (clears the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_cant_{recv,send} : report a failure to receive/send on the FD corresponding to EAGAIN (clears the READY flag) ; - fd_may_{recv,send} : report the ability to receive/send on the FD as reported by poll() (sets the READY flag) ; Some functions are used to report the current FD status : - fd_{recv,send}_active - fd_{recv,send}_ready - fd_{recv,send}_polled Some functions were removed : - fd_ev_clr(), fd_ev_set(), fd_ev_rem(), fd_ev_wai() The POLLHUP/POLLERR flags are now reported as ready so that the I/O layers knows it can try to access the file descriptor to get this information. In order to simplify the conditions to add/remove cache entries, a new function fd_alloc_or_release_cache_entry() was created to be used from pollers while scanning for updates. The following pollers have been updated : ev_select() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_poll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_epoll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 & 3.13 ev_kqueue() : done, built, tested on OpenBSD 5.2
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* Copyright (C) 2000-2014 Willy Tarreau - w@1wt.eu
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation, version 2.1
* exclusively.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
*/
#ifndef _TYPES_FD_H
#define _TYPES_FD_H
#include <common/config.h>
#include <types/port_range.h>
/* Direction for each FD event update */
enum {
DIR_RD=0,
DIR_WR=1,
};
/* Polling status flags returned in fdtab[].ev :
* FD_POLL_IN remains set as long as some data is pending for read.
* FD_POLL_OUT remains set as long as the fd accepts to write data.
* FD_POLL_ERR and FD_POLL_ERR remain set forever (until processed).
*/
#define FD_POLL_IN 0x01
#define FD_POLL_PRI 0x02
#define FD_POLL_OUT 0x04
#define FD_POLL_ERR 0x08
#define FD_POLL_HUP 0x10
#define FD_POLL_DATA (FD_POLL_IN | FD_POLL_OUT)
#define FD_POLL_STICKY (FD_POLL_ERR | FD_POLL_HUP)
#define FD_EV_ACTIVE 1U
MAJOR: polling: rework the whole polling system This commit heavily changes the polling system in order to definitely fix the frequent breakage of SSL which needs to remember the last EAGAIN before deciding whether to poll or not. Now we have a state per direction for each FD, as opposed to a previous and current state previously. An FD can have up to 8 different states for each direction, each of which being the result of a 3-bit combination. These 3 bits indicate a wish to access the FD, the readiness of the FD and the subscription of the FD to the polling system. This means that it will now be possible to remember the state of a file descriptor across disable/enable sequences that generally happen during forwarding, where enabling reading on a previously disabled FD would result in forgetting the EAGAIN flag it met last time. Several new state manipulation functions have been introduced or adapted : - fd_want_{recv,send} : enable receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (sets the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_stop_{recv,send} : stop receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (clears the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_cant_{recv,send} : report a failure to receive/send on the FD corresponding to EAGAIN (clears the READY flag) ; - fd_may_{recv,send} : report the ability to receive/send on the FD as reported by poll() (sets the READY flag) ; Some functions are used to report the current FD status : - fd_{recv,send}_active - fd_{recv,send}_ready - fd_{recv,send}_polled Some functions were removed : - fd_ev_clr(), fd_ev_set(), fd_ev_rem(), fd_ev_wai() The POLLHUP/POLLERR flags are now reported as ready so that the I/O layers knows it can try to access the file descriptor to get this information. In order to simplify the conditions to add/remove cache entries, a new function fd_alloc_or_release_cache_entry() was created to be used from pollers while scanning for updates. The following pollers have been updated : ev_select() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_poll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_epoll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 & 3.13 ev_kqueue() : done, built, tested on OpenBSD 5.2
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#define FD_EV_READY 2U
#define FD_EV_POLLED 4U
MAJOR: polling: rework the whole polling system This commit heavily changes the polling system in order to definitely fix the frequent breakage of SSL which needs to remember the last EAGAIN before deciding whether to poll or not. Now we have a state per direction for each FD, as opposed to a previous and current state previously. An FD can have up to 8 different states for each direction, each of which being the result of a 3-bit combination. These 3 bits indicate a wish to access the FD, the readiness of the FD and the subscription of the FD to the polling system. This means that it will now be possible to remember the state of a file descriptor across disable/enable sequences that generally happen during forwarding, where enabling reading on a previously disabled FD would result in forgetting the EAGAIN flag it met last time. Several new state manipulation functions have been introduced or adapted : - fd_want_{recv,send} : enable receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (sets the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_stop_{recv,send} : stop receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (clears the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_cant_{recv,send} : report a failure to receive/send on the FD corresponding to EAGAIN (clears the READY flag) ; - fd_may_{recv,send} : report the ability to receive/send on the FD as reported by poll() (sets the READY flag) ; Some functions are used to report the current FD status : - fd_{recv,send}_active - fd_{recv,send}_ready - fd_{recv,send}_polled Some functions were removed : - fd_ev_clr(), fd_ev_set(), fd_ev_rem(), fd_ev_wai() The POLLHUP/POLLERR flags are now reported as ready so that the I/O layers knows it can try to access the file descriptor to get this information. In order to simplify the conditions to add/remove cache entries, a new function fd_alloc_or_release_cache_entry() was created to be used from pollers while scanning for updates. The following pollers have been updated : ev_select() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_poll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_epoll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 & 3.13 ev_kqueue() : done, built, tested on OpenBSD 5.2
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#define FD_EV_STATUS (FD_EV_ACTIVE | FD_EV_POLLED | FD_EV_READY)
#define FD_EV_STATUS_R (FD_EV_STATUS)
MAJOR: polling: rework the whole polling system This commit heavily changes the polling system in order to definitely fix the frequent breakage of SSL which needs to remember the last EAGAIN before deciding whether to poll or not. Now we have a state per direction for each FD, as opposed to a previous and current state previously. An FD can have up to 8 different states for each direction, each of which being the result of a 3-bit combination. These 3 bits indicate a wish to access the FD, the readiness of the FD and the subscription of the FD to the polling system. This means that it will now be possible to remember the state of a file descriptor across disable/enable sequences that generally happen during forwarding, where enabling reading on a previously disabled FD would result in forgetting the EAGAIN flag it met last time. Several new state manipulation functions have been introduced or adapted : - fd_want_{recv,send} : enable receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (sets the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_stop_{recv,send} : stop receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (clears the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_cant_{recv,send} : report a failure to receive/send on the FD corresponding to EAGAIN (clears the READY flag) ; - fd_may_{recv,send} : report the ability to receive/send on the FD as reported by poll() (sets the READY flag) ; Some functions are used to report the current FD status : - fd_{recv,send}_active - fd_{recv,send}_ready - fd_{recv,send}_polled Some functions were removed : - fd_ev_clr(), fd_ev_set(), fd_ev_rem(), fd_ev_wai() The POLLHUP/POLLERR flags are now reported as ready so that the I/O layers knows it can try to access the file descriptor to get this information. In order to simplify the conditions to add/remove cache entries, a new function fd_alloc_or_release_cache_entry() was created to be used from pollers while scanning for updates. The following pollers have been updated : ev_select() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_poll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_epoll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 & 3.13 ev_kqueue() : done, built, tested on OpenBSD 5.2
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#define FD_EV_STATUS_W (FD_EV_STATUS << 4)
#define FD_EV_POLLED_R (FD_EV_POLLED)
MAJOR: polling: rework the whole polling system This commit heavily changes the polling system in order to definitely fix the frequent breakage of SSL which needs to remember the last EAGAIN before deciding whether to poll or not. Now we have a state per direction for each FD, as opposed to a previous and current state previously. An FD can have up to 8 different states for each direction, each of which being the result of a 3-bit combination. These 3 bits indicate a wish to access the FD, the readiness of the FD and the subscription of the FD to the polling system. This means that it will now be possible to remember the state of a file descriptor across disable/enable sequences that generally happen during forwarding, where enabling reading on a previously disabled FD would result in forgetting the EAGAIN flag it met last time. Several new state manipulation functions have been introduced or adapted : - fd_want_{recv,send} : enable receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (sets the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_stop_{recv,send} : stop receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (clears the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_cant_{recv,send} : report a failure to receive/send on the FD corresponding to EAGAIN (clears the READY flag) ; - fd_may_{recv,send} : report the ability to receive/send on the FD as reported by poll() (sets the READY flag) ; Some functions are used to report the current FD status : - fd_{recv,send}_active - fd_{recv,send}_ready - fd_{recv,send}_polled Some functions were removed : - fd_ev_clr(), fd_ev_set(), fd_ev_rem(), fd_ev_wai() The POLLHUP/POLLERR flags are now reported as ready so that the I/O layers knows it can try to access the file descriptor to get this information. In order to simplify the conditions to add/remove cache entries, a new function fd_alloc_or_release_cache_entry() was created to be used from pollers while scanning for updates. The following pollers have been updated : ev_select() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_poll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_epoll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 & 3.13 ev_kqueue() : done, built, tested on OpenBSD 5.2
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#define FD_EV_POLLED_W (FD_EV_POLLED << 4)
#define FD_EV_POLLED_RW (FD_EV_POLLED_R | FD_EV_POLLED_W)
#define FD_EV_ACTIVE_R (FD_EV_ACTIVE)
MAJOR: polling: rework the whole polling system This commit heavily changes the polling system in order to definitely fix the frequent breakage of SSL which needs to remember the last EAGAIN before deciding whether to poll or not. Now we have a state per direction for each FD, as opposed to a previous and current state previously. An FD can have up to 8 different states for each direction, each of which being the result of a 3-bit combination. These 3 bits indicate a wish to access the FD, the readiness of the FD and the subscription of the FD to the polling system. This means that it will now be possible to remember the state of a file descriptor across disable/enable sequences that generally happen during forwarding, where enabling reading on a previously disabled FD would result in forgetting the EAGAIN flag it met last time. Several new state manipulation functions have been introduced or adapted : - fd_want_{recv,send} : enable receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (sets the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_stop_{recv,send} : stop receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (clears the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_cant_{recv,send} : report a failure to receive/send on the FD corresponding to EAGAIN (clears the READY flag) ; - fd_may_{recv,send} : report the ability to receive/send on the FD as reported by poll() (sets the READY flag) ; Some functions are used to report the current FD status : - fd_{recv,send}_active - fd_{recv,send}_ready - fd_{recv,send}_polled Some functions were removed : - fd_ev_clr(), fd_ev_set(), fd_ev_rem(), fd_ev_wai() The POLLHUP/POLLERR flags are now reported as ready so that the I/O layers knows it can try to access the file descriptor to get this information. In order to simplify the conditions to add/remove cache entries, a new function fd_alloc_or_release_cache_entry() was created to be used from pollers while scanning for updates. The following pollers have been updated : ev_select() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_poll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_epoll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 & 3.13 ev_kqueue() : done, built, tested on OpenBSD 5.2
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#define FD_EV_ACTIVE_W (FD_EV_ACTIVE << 4)
#define FD_EV_ACTIVE_RW (FD_EV_ACTIVE_R | FD_EV_ACTIVE_W)
MAJOR: polling: rework the whole polling system This commit heavily changes the polling system in order to definitely fix the frequent breakage of SSL which needs to remember the last EAGAIN before deciding whether to poll or not. Now we have a state per direction for each FD, as opposed to a previous and current state previously. An FD can have up to 8 different states for each direction, each of which being the result of a 3-bit combination. These 3 bits indicate a wish to access the FD, the readiness of the FD and the subscription of the FD to the polling system. This means that it will now be possible to remember the state of a file descriptor across disable/enable sequences that generally happen during forwarding, where enabling reading on a previously disabled FD would result in forgetting the EAGAIN flag it met last time. Several new state manipulation functions have been introduced or adapted : - fd_want_{recv,send} : enable receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (sets the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_stop_{recv,send} : stop receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (clears the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_cant_{recv,send} : report a failure to receive/send on the FD corresponding to EAGAIN (clears the READY flag) ; - fd_may_{recv,send} : report the ability to receive/send on the FD as reported by poll() (sets the READY flag) ; Some functions are used to report the current FD status : - fd_{recv,send}_active - fd_{recv,send}_ready - fd_{recv,send}_polled Some functions were removed : - fd_ev_clr(), fd_ev_set(), fd_ev_rem(), fd_ev_wai() The POLLHUP/POLLERR flags are now reported as ready so that the I/O layers knows it can try to access the file descriptor to get this information. In order to simplify the conditions to add/remove cache entries, a new function fd_alloc_or_release_cache_entry() was created to be used from pollers while scanning for updates. The following pollers have been updated : ev_select() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_poll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_epoll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 & 3.13 ev_kqueue() : done, built, tested on OpenBSD 5.2
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#define FD_EV_READY_R (FD_EV_READY)
#define FD_EV_READY_W (FD_EV_READY << 4)
#define FD_EV_READY_RW (FD_EV_READY_R | FD_EV_READY_W)
enum fd_states {
FD_ST_DISABLED = 0,
FD_ST_MUSTPOLL,
FD_ST_STOPPED,
FD_ST_ACTIVE,
FD_ST_ABORT,
FD_ST_POLLED,
FD_ST_PAUSED,
FD_ST_READY
};
/* This is the value used to mark a file descriptor as dead. This value is
* negative, this is important so that tests on fd < 0 properly match. It
* also has the nice property of being highly negative but not overflowing
* nor changing sign on 32-bit machines when multipled by sizeof(fdtab).
* This ensures that any unexpected dereference of such an uninitialized
* file descriptor will lead to so large a dereference that it will crash
* the process at the exact location of the bug with a clean stack trace
* instead of causing silent manipulation of other FDs. And it's readable
* when found in a dump.
*/
#define DEAD_FD_MAGIC 0xFDDEADFD
/* info about one given fd */
struct fdtab {
void (*iocb)(int fd); /* I/O handler */
void *owner; /* the connection or listener associated with this fd, NULL if closed */
unsigned int cache; /* position+1 in the FD cache. 0=not in cache. */
MAJOR: polling: rework the whole polling system This commit heavily changes the polling system in order to definitely fix the frequent breakage of SSL which needs to remember the last EAGAIN before deciding whether to poll or not. Now we have a state per direction for each FD, as opposed to a previous and current state previously. An FD can have up to 8 different states for each direction, each of which being the result of a 3-bit combination. These 3 bits indicate a wish to access the FD, the readiness of the FD and the subscription of the FD to the polling system. This means that it will now be possible to remember the state of a file descriptor across disable/enable sequences that generally happen during forwarding, where enabling reading on a previously disabled FD would result in forgetting the EAGAIN flag it met last time. Several new state manipulation functions have been introduced or adapted : - fd_want_{recv,send} : enable receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (sets the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_stop_{recv,send} : stop receiving/sending on the FD regardless of its state (clears the ACTIVE flag) ; - fd_cant_{recv,send} : report a failure to receive/send on the FD corresponding to EAGAIN (clears the READY flag) ; - fd_may_{recv,send} : report the ability to receive/send on the FD as reported by poll() (sets the READY flag) ; Some functions are used to report the current FD status : - fd_{recv,send}_active - fd_{recv,send}_ready - fd_{recv,send}_polled Some functions were removed : - fd_ev_clr(), fd_ev_set(), fd_ev_rem(), fd_ev_wai() The POLLHUP/POLLERR flags are now reported as ready so that the I/O layers knows it can try to access the file descriptor to get this information. In order to simplify the conditions to add/remove cache entries, a new function fd_alloc_or_release_cache_entry() was created to be used from pollers while scanning for updates. The following pollers have been updated : ev_select() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_poll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 ev_epoll() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 & 3.13 ev_kqueue() : done, built, tested on OpenBSD 5.2
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unsigned char state; /* FD state for read and write directions (2*3 bits) */
unsigned char ev; /* event seen in return of poll() : FD_POLL_* */
MAJOR: sepoll: make the poller totally event-driven At the moment sepoll is not 100% event-driven, because a call to fd_set() on an event which is already being polled will not change its state. This causes issues with OpenSSL because if some I/O processing is interrupted after clearing the I/O event (eg: read all data from a socket, can't put it all into the buffer), then there is no way to call the SSL_read() again once the buffer releases some space. The only real solution is to go 100% event-driven. The principle is to use the spec list as an event cache and that each time an I/O event is reported by epoll_wait(), this event is automatically scheduled for addition to the spec list for future calls until the consumer explicitly asks for polling or stopping. Doing this is a bit tricky because sepoll used to provide a substantial number of optimizations such as event merging. These optimizations have been maintained : a dedicated update list is affected when events change, but not the event list, so that updates may cancel themselves without any side effect such as displacing events. A specific case was considered for handling newly created FDs as soon as they are detected from within the poll loop. This ensures that their read or write operation will always be attempted as soon as possible, thus reducing the number of poll loops and process_session wakeups. This is especially true for newly accepted fds which immediately perform their first recv() call. Two new flags were added to the fdtab[] struct to tag the fact that a file descriptor already exists in the update list. One flag indicates that a file descriptor is new and has just been created (fdtab[].new) and the other one indicates that a file descriptor is already referenced by the update list (fdtab[].updated). Even if the FD state changes during operations or if the fd is closed and replaced, it's not an issue because the update flag remains and is easily spotted during list walks. The flag must absolutely reflect the presence of the fd in the update list in order to avoid overflowing the update list with more events than there are distinct fds. Note that this change also recovers the small performance loss introduced by its connection counter-part and goes even beyond.
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unsigned char new:1; /* 1 if this fd has just been created */
unsigned char updated:1; /* 1 if this fd is already in the update list */
unsigned char linger_risk:1; /* 1 if we must kill lingering before closing */
unsigned char cloned:1; /* 1 if a cloned socket, requires EPOLL_CTL_DEL on close */
};
/* less often used information */
struct fdinfo {
struct port_range *port_range; /* optional port range to bind to */
int local_port; /* optional local port */
};
/*
* Poller descriptors.
* - <name> is initialized by the poller's register() function, and should not
* be allocated, just linked to.
* - <pref> is initialized by the poller's register() function. It is set to 0
* by default, meaning the poller is disabled. init() should set it to 0 in
* case of failure. term() must set it to 0. A generic unoptimized select()
* poller should set it to 100.
* - <private> is initialized by the poller's init() function, and cleaned by
* the term() function.
* - clo() should be used to do indicate the poller that fd will be closed.
* - poll() calls the poller, expiring at <exp>
*/
struct poller {
void *private; /* any private data for the poller */
void REGPRM1 (*clo)(const int fd); /* mark <fd> as closed */
void REGPRM2 (*poll)(struct poller *p, int exp); /* the poller itself */
int REGPRM1 (*init)(struct poller *p); /* poller initialization */
void REGPRM1 (*term)(struct poller *p); /* termination of this poller */
int REGPRM1 (*test)(struct poller *p); /* pre-init check of the poller */
int REGPRM1 (*fork)(struct poller *p); /* post-fork re-opening */
const char *name; /* poller name */
int pref; /* try pollers with higher preference first */
};
extern struct poller cur_poller; /* the current poller */
extern int nbpollers;
#define MAX_POLLERS 10
extern struct poller pollers[MAX_POLLERS]; /* all registered pollers */
extern struct fdtab *fdtab; /* array of all the file descriptors */
extern struct fdinfo *fdinfo; /* less-often used infos for file descriptors */
extern int maxfd; /* # of the highest fd + 1 */
extern int totalconn; /* total # of terminated sessions */
extern int actconn; /* # of active sessions */
#endif /* _TYPES_FD_H */
/*
* Local variables:
* c-indent-level: 8
* c-basic-offset: 8
* End:
*/