For typed hash tables, enforce the correct type in the arguments to the
hashing and equality functions.
Adapt existing affected callback functions and change their arguments
from void* to the respective types.
Add reverse casts to GHashFunc and GEqualFunc in instances where these
functions are used in non-typed hash tables (that should be converted at
a later point).
Add convenience macro to create typed wrapper functions for hash tables
that use "direct" hashing (i.e. the pointer value).
Add wrappers for existing GLib functions that have generic arguments so
that they can be used in typed hash tables.
Change-Id: I43bb32969208f4aae49584d95c0df8353df6e2a0
To support asynchronous pollers which may hold references on underlying
sockets, let the poller close the socket after it has released its
references. This prevents cases of file descriptor re-use while an
underlying socket is still open.
Add reset_socket() to be used in place of close_socket() which does the
same thing except the actual closing of the socket.
Add poller_del_item_callback() for cases where more action than just
closing the file descriptor is needed.
Change-Id: Iefda1487ecb89263729120ecb964436dd79b2a0e
The poller-per-thread feature was broken with a division by zero. Take
the opportunity to rework it and eliminate the poller_map object. Use a
simple array of pollers for media sockets, plus one global poller for
control sockets. In the regular case only one poller is created and
everything points to that poller. In the poller-per-thread case, one
poller per thread is created, plus one poller (also with its own single
thread) for control connections. All control sockets use the single
control poller, while all media sockets get assigned one poller from the
pool in a round-robin fashion.
closes#1801
Change-Id: Iae91a3e10b7206455c6df33b1a472254c700ce21
We have long switched to having a single primary global poller, so
there's no point in passing the poller pointer around and storing it in
associated objects. Remove all remnants of non-global pollers.
Change-Id: I5a3fd217d5de51e839e2b04fec7e23643ee83631
All timers have been moved to their dedicated timer threads, making this
mechanism obsolete.
The only victim is the timeout handling for TCP control streams. Since
other TCP streams aren't using timeout handling either, and the TCP
control socket is barely used by anyone, we can live with not having a
dedicated timeout for these streams for now.
Change-Id: I83d9b9a844f4f494ad37b44f5d1312f272beff3f
To safeguard against leftover log info pieces, add additional resets
within loops that might run repeatedly.
Relevant to #1511
Change-Id: I875f1683b7dc8cee359469e8062c08c3c3e48a9d
When ports are closed early (while the call is still running), we must
first update a slave rtpengine with this new information (that these
ports are now closed) before actually releasing the ports ourselves. Not
doing so leads to a race condition where the master instance re-uses a
port that was just closed before the slave instance knows about the port
being closed.
We implement this using a thread-local list to keep track of ports that
were released while processing a control message, and process this list
to actually close the ports only after Redis has been updated.
Additional calls to the function to close the ports are placed in
strategic locations to make sure this is triggered in every code path.
closes#1495
Change-Id: I803f4594f30ca315da0b84c6e76893f54ca3a7c9