glib/gio/gdbusprivate.c

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/* GDBus - GLib D-Bus Library
*
2010-05-09 19:14:55 +02:00
* Copyright (C) 2008-2010 Red Hat, Inc.
*
* 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; either
* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* 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., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330,
* Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
*
* Author: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
*/
#include "config.h"
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
#include <unistd.h>
#endif
#include "giotypes.h"
2010-05-06 22:34:23 +02:00
#include "gsocket.h"
#include "gdbusprivate.h"
#include "gdbusmessage.h"
#include "gdbuserror.h"
#include "gdbusintrospection.h"
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#include "gasyncresult.h"
#include "gsimpleasyncresult.h"
#include "ginputstream.h"
#include "gmemoryinputstream.h"
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#include "giostream.h"
#include "gsocketcontrolmessage.h"
#include "gsocketconnection.h"
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
#include "gsocketoutputstream.h"
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#ifdef G_OS_UNIX
#include "gunixfdmessage.h"
#include "gunixconnection.h"
#include "gunixcredentialsmessage.h"
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#endif
#ifdef G_OS_WIN32
#include <windows.h>
#endif
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#include "glibintl.h"
static gboolean _g_dbus_worker_do_initial_read (gpointer data);
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
GDBusMessage: Fix bug when deserializing a message See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621838 for the whole story. The problem was that we ended up reading data from arrays of arrays when we were just supposed to be aligning the buffers. Also add a host of debug infrastructure that was needed to find the root cause. For now it can be turned on only via defining DEBUG_SERIALIZER. In the future we might want to make it work via G_DBUS_DEBUG. In a nutshell, the added debug info looks like this Parsing blob (blob_len = 0x0084 bytes) 0000: 6c 01 00 01 3c 00 00 00 41 00 00 00 37 00 00 00 l...<...A...7... 0010: 08 01 67 00 08 61 61 79 61 7b 73 76 7d 00 00 00 ..g..aaya{sv}... 0020: 01 01 6f 00 08 00 00 00 2f 66 6f 6f 2f 62 61 72 ..o...../foo/bar 0030: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 03 01 73 00 06 00 00 00 ..........s..... 0040: 4d 65 6d 62 65 72 00 00 00 00 00 00 34 00 00 00 Member......4... 0050: 03 00 00 00 63 77 64 00 01 73 00 00 23 00 00 00 ....cwd..s..#... 0060: 2f 68 6f 6d 65 2f 64 61 76 69 64 7a 2f 48 61 63 /home/davidz/Hac 0070: 6b 69 6e 67 2f 67 6c 69 62 2f 67 69 6f 2f 74 65 king/glib/gio/te 0080: 73 74 73 00 sts. Parsing headers (blob_len = 0x0084 bytes) Reading type a{yv} from offset 0x000c: array spans 0x0037 bytes Reading type {yv} from offset 0x0010 Reading type y from offset 0x0010: 0x08 ' Reading type v from offset 0x0011 Reading type g from offset 0x0014: 'aaya{sv}' Reading type {yv} from offset 0x001e Reading type y from offset 0x0020: 0x01 '' Reading type v from offset 0x0021 Reading type o from offset 0x0024: '/foo/bar' Reading type {yv} from offset 0x0031 Reading type y from offset 0x0038: 0x03 '' Reading type v from offset 0x0039 Reading type s from offset 0x003c: 'Member' Parsing body (blob_len = 0x0084 bytes) Reading type (aaya{sv}) from offset 0x0047 Reading type aay from offset 0x0048: array spans 0x0000 bytes Reading type a{sv} from offset 0x004c: array spans 0x0034 bytes Reading type {sv} from offset 0x0050 Reading type s from offset 0x0050: 'cwd' Reading type v from offset 0x0058 Reading type s from offset 0x005b: '/home/davidz/Hacking/glib/gio/tests' OK Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-06-17 23:58:25 +02:00
gchar *
_g_dbus_hexdump (const gchar *data, gsize len, guint indent)
{
guint n, m;
GString *ret;
ret = g_string_new (NULL);
for (n = 0; n < len; n += 16)
{
g_string_append_printf (ret, "%*s%04x: ", indent, "", n);
for (m = n; m < n + 16; m++)
{
if (m > n && (m%4) == 0)
g_string_append_c (ret, ' ');
if (m < len)
g_string_append_printf (ret, "%02x ", (guchar) data[m]);
else
g_string_append (ret, " ");
}
g_string_append (ret, " ");
for (m = n; m < len && m < n + 16; m++)
g_string_append_c (ret, g_ascii_isprint (data[m]) ? data[m] : '.');
g_string_append_c (ret, '\n');
}
return g_string_free (ret, FALSE);
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* Unfortunately ancillary messages are discarded when reading from a
* socket using the GSocketInputStream abstraction. So we provide a
* very GInputStream-ish API that uses GSocket in this case (very
* similar to GSocketInputStream).
*/
typedef struct
{
GSocket *socket;
GCancellable *cancellable;
void *buffer;
gsize count;
GSocketControlMessage ***messages;
gint *num_messages;
GSimpleAsyncResult *simple;
gboolean from_mainloop;
} ReadWithControlData;
static void
read_with_control_data_free (ReadWithControlData *data)
{
g_object_unref (data->socket);
if (data->cancellable != NULL)
g_object_unref (data->cancellable);
g_object_unref (data->simple);
g_free (data);
}
static gboolean
_g_socket_read_with_control_messages_ready (GSocket *socket,
GIOCondition condition,
gpointer user_data)
{
ReadWithControlData *data = user_data;
GError *error;
gssize result;
GInputVector vector;
error = NULL;
vector.buffer = data->buffer;
vector.size = data->count;
result = g_socket_receive_message (data->socket,
NULL, /* address */
&vector,
1,
data->messages,
data->num_messages,
NULL,
data->cancellable,
&error);
if (result >= 0)
{
g_simple_async_result_set_op_res_gssize (data->simple, result);
}
else
{
g_assert (error != NULL);
g_simple_async_result_take_error (data->simple, error);
}
if (data->from_mainloop)
g_simple_async_result_complete (data->simple);
else
g_simple_async_result_complete_in_idle (data->simple);
return FALSE;
}
static void
_g_socket_read_with_control_messages (GSocket *socket,
void *buffer,
gsize count,
GSocketControlMessage ***messages,
gint *num_messages,
gint io_priority,
GCancellable *cancellable,
GAsyncReadyCallback callback,
gpointer user_data)
{
ReadWithControlData *data;
data = g_new0 (ReadWithControlData, 1);
data->socket = g_object_ref (socket);
data->cancellable = cancellable != NULL ? g_object_ref (cancellable) : NULL;
data->buffer = buffer;
data->count = count;
data->messages = messages;
data->num_messages = num_messages;
data->simple = g_simple_async_result_new (G_OBJECT (socket),
callback,
user_data,
_g_socket_read_with_control_messages);
g_simple_async_result_set_check_cancellable (data->simple, cancellable);
if (!g_socket_condition_check (socket, G_IO_IN))
{
GSource *source;
data->from_mainloop = TRUE;
source = g_socket_create_source (data->socket,
G_IO_IN | G_IO_HUP | G_IO_ERR,
cancellable);
g_source_set_callback (source,
(GSourceFunc) _g_socket_read_with_control_messages_ready,
data,
(GDestroyNotify) read_with_control_data_free);
g_source_attach (source, g_main_context_get_thread_default ());
g_source_unref (source);
}
else
{
_g_socket_read_with_control_messages_ready (data->socket, G_IO_IN, data);
read_with_control_data_free (data);
}
}
static gssize
_g_socket_read_with_control_messages_finish (GSocket *socket,
GAsyncResult *result,
GError **error)
{
GSimpleAsyncResult *simple = G_SIMPLE_ASYNC_RESULT (result);
g_return_val_if_fail (G_IS_SOCKET (socket), -1);
g_warn_if_fail (g_simple_async_result_get_source_tag (simple) == _g_socket_read_with_control_messages);
if (g_simple_async_result_propagate_error (simple, error))
return -1;
else
return g_simple_async_result_get_op_res_gssize (simple);
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* Work-around for https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=627724 */
static GPtrArray *ensured_classes = NULL;
static void
ensure_type (GType gtype)
{
g_ptr_array_add (ensured_classes, g_type_class_ref (gtype));
}
static void
release_required_types (void)
{
g_ptr_array_foreach (ensured_classes, (GFunc) g_type_class_unref, NULL);
g_ptr_array_unref (ensured_classes);
ensured_classes = NULL;
}
static void
ensure_required_types (void)
{
g_assert (ensured_classes == NULL);
ensured_classes = g_ptr_array_new ();
ensure_type (G_TYPE_SIMPLE_ASYNC_RESULT);
ensure_type (G_TYPE_MEMORY_INPUT_STREAM);
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
typedef struct
{
volatile gint refcount;
GThread *thread;
GMainContext *context;
GMainLoop *loop;
} SharedThreadData;
static gpointer
gdbus_shared_thread_func (gpointer user_data)
{
SharedThreadData *data = user_data;
g_main_context_push_thread_default (data->context);
g_main_loop_run (data->loop);
g_main_context_pop_thread_default (data->context);
release_required_types ();
return NULL;
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static SharedThreadData *
_g_dbus_shared_thread_ref (void)
{
static gsize shared_thread_data = 0;
SharedThreadData *ret;
if (g_once_init_enter (&shared_thread_data))
{
SharedThreadData *data;
/* Work-around for https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=627724 */
ensure_required_types ();
data = g_new0 (SharedThreadData, 1);
data->refcount = 0;
data->context = g_main_context_new ();
data->loop = g_main_loop_new (data->context, FALSE);
data->thread = g_thread_new ("gdbus",
gdbus_shared_thread_func,
data);
/* We can cast between gsize and gpointer safely */
g_once_init_leave (&shared_thread_data, (gsize) data);
}
ret = (SharedThreadData*) shared_thread_data;
g_atomic_int_inc (&ret->refcount);
return ret;
}
static void
_g_dbus_shared_thread_unref (SharedThreadData *data)
{
/* TODO: actually destroy the shared thread here */
#if 0
g_assert (data != NULL);
if (g_atomic_int_dec_and_test (&data->refcount))
{
g_main_loop_quit (data->loop);
//g_thread_join (data->thread);
g_main_loop_unref (data->loop);
g_main_context_unref (data->context);
}
#endif
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
typedef enum {
PENDING_NONE = 0,
PENDING_WRITE,
PENDING_FLUSH,
PENDING_CLOSE
} OutputPending;
struct GDBusWorker
{
volatile gint ref_count;
SharedThreadData *shared_thread_data;
/* really a boolean, but GLib 2.28 lacks atomic boolean ops */
volatile gint stopped;
/* TODO: frozen (e.g. G_DBUS_CONNECTION_FLAGS_DELAY_MESSAGE_PROCESSING) currently
* only affects messages received from the other peer (since GDBusServer is the
* only user) - we might want it to affect messages sent to the other peer too?
*/
gboolean frozen;
2011-04-12 16:00:03 +02:00
GDBusCapabilityFlags capabilities;
GQueue *received_messages_while_frozen;
GIOStream *stream;
GCancellable *cancellable;
GDBusWorkerMessageReceivedCallback message_received_callback;
GDBusWorkerMessageAboutToBeSentCallback message_about_to_be_sent_callback;
GDBusWorkerDisconnectedCallback disconnected_callback;
gpointer user_data;
/* if not NULL, stream is GSocketConnection */
GSocket *socket;
/* used for reading */
GMutex read_lock;
gchar *read_buffer;
gsize read_buffer_allocated_size;
gsize read_buffer_cur_size;
gsize read_buffer_bytes_wanted;
GUnixFDList *read_fd_list;
GSocketControlMessage **read_ancillary_messages;
gint read_num_ancillary_messages;
/* Whether an async write, flush or close, or none of those, is pending.
* Only the worker thread may change its value, and only with the write_lock.
* Other threads may read its value when holding the write_lock.
* The worker thread may read its value at any time.
*/
OutputPending output_pending;
/* used for writing */
GMutex write_lock;
/* queue of MessageToWriteData, protected by write_lock */
GQueue *write_queue;
/* protected by write_lock */
guint64 write_num_messages_written;
/* number of messages we'd written out last time we flushed;
* protected by write_lock
*/
guint64 write_num_messages_flushed;
/* list of FlushData, protected by write_lock */
GList *write_pending_flushes;
/* list of CloseData, protected by write_lock */
GList *pending_close_attempts;
/* no lock - only used from the worker thread */
gboolean close_expected;
};
static void _g_dbus_worker_unref (GDBusWorker *worker);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
typedef struct
{
GMutex mutex;
GCond cond;
guint64 number_to_wait_for;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
GError *error;
} FlushData;
struct _MessageToWriteData ;
typedef struct _MessageToWriteData MessageToWriteData;
static void message_to_write_data_free (MessageToWriteData *data);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static void read_message_print_transport_debug (gssize bytes_read,
GDBusWorker *worker);
static void write_message_print_transport_debug (gssize bytes_written,
MessageToWriteData *data);
typedef struct {
GDBusWorker *worker;
GCancellable *cancellable;
GSimpleAsyncResult *result;
} CloseData;
static void close_data_free (CloseData *close_data)
{
if (close_data->cancellable != NULL)
g_object_unref (close_data->cancellable);
if (close_data->result != NULL)
g_object_unref (close_data->result);
_g_dbus_worker_unref (close_data->worker);
g_slice_free (CloseData, close_data);
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static GDBusWorker *
_g_dbus_worker_ref (GDBusWorker *worker)
{
g_atomic_int_inc (&worker->ref_count);
return worker;
}
static void
_g_dbus_worker_unref (GDBusWorker *worker)
{
if (g_atomic_int_dec_and_test (&worker->ref_count))
{
g_assert (worker->write_pending_flushes == NULL);
_g_dbus_shared_thread_unref (worker->shared_thread_data);
g_object_unref (worker->stream);
g_mutex_clear (&worker->read_lock);
g_object_unref (worker->cancellable);
if (worker->read_fd_list != NULL)
g_object_unref (worker->read_fd_list);
g_queue_free_full (worker->received_messages_while_frozen, (GDestroyNotify) g_object_unref);
g_mutex_clear (&worker->write_lock);
g_queue_free_full (worker->write_queue, (GDestroyNotify) message_to_write_data_free);
g_free (worker->read_buffer);
g_free (worker);
}
}
static void
_g_dbus_worker_emit_disconnected (GDBusWorker *worker,
gboolean remote_peer_vanished,
GError *error)
{
if (!g_atomic_int_get (&worker->stopped))
worker->disconnected_callback (worker, remote_peer_vanished, error, worker->user_data);
}
static void
_g_dbus_worker_emit_message_received (GDBusWorker *worker,
GDBusMessage *message)
{
if (!g_atomic_int_get (&worker->stopped))
worker->message_received_callback (worker, message, worker->user_data);
}
static GDBusMessage *
_g_dbus_worker_emit_message_about_to_be_sent (GDBusWorker *worker,
GDBusMessage *message)
{
GDBusMessage *ret;
if (!g_atomic_int_get (&worker->stopped))
ret = worker->message_about_to_be_sent_callback (worker, message, worker->user_data);
else
ret = message;
return ret;
}
/* can only be called from private thread with read-lock held - takes ownership of @message */
static void
_g_dbus_worker_queue_or_deliver_received_message (GDBusWorker *worker,
GDBusMessage *message)
{
if (worker->frozen || g_queue_get_length (worker->received_messages_while_frozen) > 0)
{
/* queue up */
g_queue_push_tail (worker->received_messages_while_frozen, message);
}
else
{
/* not frozen, nor anything in queue */
_g_dbus_worker_emit_message_received (worker, message);
g_object_unref (message);
}
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances (without read-lock held) */
static gboolean
unfreeze_in_idle_cb (gpointer user_data)
{
GDBusWorker *worker = user_data;
GDBusMessage *message;
g_mutex_lock (&worker->read_lock);
if (worker->frozen)
{
while ((message = g_queue_pop_head (worker->received_messages_while_frozen)) != NULL)
{
_g_dbus_worker_emit_message_received (worker, message);
g_object_unref (message);
}
worker->frozen = FALSE;
}
else
{
g_assert (g_queue_get_length (worker->received_messages_while_frozen) == 0);
}
g_mutex_unlock (&worker->read_lock);
return FALSE;
}
/* can be called from any thread */
void
_g_dbus_worker_unfreeze (GDBusWorker *worker)
{
GSource *idle_source;
idle_source = g_idle_source_new ();
g_source_set_priority (idle_source, G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT);
g_source_set_callback (idle_source,
unfreeze_in_idle_cb,
_g_dbus_worker_ref (worker),
(GDestroyNotify) _g_dbus_worker_unref);
g_source_attach (idle_source, worker->shared_thread_data->context);
g_source_unref (idle_source);
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static void _g_dbus_worker_do_read_unlocked (GDBusWorker *worker);
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances (without read-lock held) */
static void
_g_dbus_worker_do_read_cb (GInputStream *input_stream,
GAsyncResult *res,
gpointer user_data)
{
GDBusWorker *worker = user_data;
GError *error;
gssize bytes_read;
g_mutex_lock (&worker->read_lock);
/* If already stopped, don't even process the reply */
if (g_atomic_int_get (&worker->stopped))
goto out;
error = NULL;
if (worker->socket == NULL)
bytes_read = g_input_stream_read_finish (g_io_stream_get_input_stream (worker->stream),
res,
&error);
else
bytes_read = _g_socket_read_with_control_messages_finish (worker->socket,
res,
&error);
if (worker->read_num_ancillary_messages > 0)
{
gint n;
for (n = 0; n < worker->read_num_ancillary_messages; n++)
{
GSocketControlMessage *control_message = G_SOCKET_CONTROL_MESSAGE (worker->read_ancillary_messages[n]);
if (FALSE)
{
}
#ifdef G_OS_UNIX
else if (G_IS_UNIX_FD_MESSAGE (control_message))
{
GUnixFDMessage *fd_message;
gint *fds;
gint num_fds;
fd_message = G_UNIX_FD_MESSAGE (control_message);
fds = g_unix_fd_message_steal_fds (fd_message, &num_fds);
if (worker->read_fd_list == NULL)
{
worker->read_fd_list = g_unix_fd_list_new_from_array (fds, num_fds);
}
else
{
gint n;
for (n = 0; n < num_fds; n++)
{
/* TODO: really want a append_steal() */
g_unix_fd_list_append (worker->read_fd_list, fds[n], NULL);
close (fds[n]);
}
}
g_free (fds);
}
else if (G_IS_UNIX_CREDENTIALS_MESSAGE (control_message))
{
/* do nothing */
}
#endif
else
{
if (error == NULL)
{
g_set_error (&error,
G_IO_ERROR,
G_IO_ERROR_FAILED,
"Unexpected ancillary message of type %s received from peer",
g_type_name (G_TYPE_FROM_INSTANCE (control_message)));
_g_dbus_worker_emit_disconnected (worker, TRUE, error);
g_error_free (error);
g_object_unref (control_message);
n++;
while (n < worker->read_num_ancillary_messages)
g_object_unref (worker->read_ancillary_messages[n++]);
g_free (worker->read_ancillary_messages);
goto out;
}
}
g_object_unref (control_message);
}
g_free (worker->read_ancillary_messages);
}
if (bytes_read == -1)
{
if (G_UNLIKELY (_g_dbus_debug_transport ()))
{
_g_dbus_debug_print_lock ();
g_print ("========================================================================\n"
"GDBus-debug:Transport:\n"
" ---- READ ERROR on stream of type %s:\n"
" ---- %s %d: %s\n",
g_type_name (G_TYPE_FROM_INSTANCE (g_io_stream_get_input_stream (worker->stream))),
g_quark_to_string (error->domain), error->code,
error->message);
_g_dbus_debug_print_unlock ();
}
/* Every async read that uses this callback uses worker->cancellable
* as its GCancellable. worker->cancellable gets cancelled if and only
* if the GDBusConnection tells us to close (either via
* _g_dbus_worker_stop, which is called on last-unref, or directly),
* so a cancelled read must mean our connection was closed locally.
*
* If we're closing, other errors are possible - notably,
* G_IO_ERROR_CLOSED can be seen if we close the stream with an async
* read in-flight. It seems sensible to treat all read errors during
* closing as an expected thing that doesn't trip exit-on-close.
*
* Because close_expected can't be set until we get into the worker
* thread, but the cancellable is signalled sooner (from another
* thread), we do still need to check the error.
*/
if (worker->close_expected ||
g_error_matches (error, G_IO_ERROR, G_IO_ERROR_CANCELLED))
_g_dbus_worker_emit_disconnected (worker, FALSE, NULL);
else
_g_dbus_worker_emit_disconnected (worker, TRUE, error);
g_error_free (error);
goto out;
}
#if 0
g_debug ("read %d bytes (is_closed=%d blocking=%d condition=0x%02x) stream %p, %p",
(gint) bytes_read,
g_socket_is_closed (g_socket_connection_get_socket (G_SOCKET_CONNECTION (worker->stream))),
g_socket_get_blocking (g_socket_connection_get_socket (G_SOCKET_CONNECTION (worker->stream))),
g_socket_condition_check (g_socket_connection_get_socket (G_SOCKET_CONNECTION (worker->stream)),
G_IO_IN | G_IO_OUT | G_IO_HUP),
worker->stream,
worker);
#endif
/* TODO: hmm, hmm... */
if (bytes_read == 0)
{
g_set_error (&error,
G_IO_ERROR,
G_IO_ERROR_FAILED,
"Underlying GIOStream returned 0 bytes on an async read");
_g_dbus_worker_emit_disconnected (worker, TRUE, error);
g_error_free (error);
goto out;
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
read_message_print_transport_debug (bytes_read, worker);
worker->read_buffer_cur_size += bytes_read;
if (worker->read_buffer_bytes_wanted == worker->read_buffer_cur_size)
{
/* OK, got what we asked for! */
if (worker->read_buffer_bytes_wanted == 16)
{
gssize message_len;
/* OK, got the header - determine how many more bytes are needed */
error = NULL;
message_len = g_dbus_message_bytes_needed ((guchar *) worker->read_buffer,
16,
&error);
if (message_len == -1)
{
g_warning ("_g_dbus_worker_do_read_cb: error determing bytes needed: %s", error->message);
_g_dbus_worker_emit_disconnected (worker, FALSE, error);
g_error_free (error);
goto out;
}
worker->read_buffer_bytes_wanted = message_len;
_g_dbus_worker_do_read_unlocked (worker);
}
else
{
GDBusMessage *message;
error = NULL;
/* TODO: use connection->priv->auth to decode the message */
message = g_dbus_message_new_from_blob ((guchar *) worker->read_buffer,
worker->read_buffer_cur_size,
worker->capabilities,
&error);
if (message == NULL)
{
gchar *s;
GDBusMessage: Fix bug when deserializing a message See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621838 for the whole story. The problem was that we ended up reading data from arrays of arrays when we were just supposed to be aligning the buffers. Also add a host of debug infrastructure that was needed to find the root cause. For now it can be turned on only via defining DEBUG_SERIALIZER. In the future we might want to make it work via G_DBUS_DEBUG. In a nutshell, the added debug info looks like this Parsing blob (blob_len = 0x0084 bytes) 0000: 6c 01 00 01 3c 00 00 00 41 00 00 00 37 00 00 00 l...<...A...7... 0010: 08 01 67 00 08 61 61 79 61 7b 73 76 7d 00 00 00 ..g..aaya{sv}... 0020: 01 01 6f 00 08 00 00 00 2f 66 6f 6f 2f 62 61 72 ..o...../foo/bar 0030: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 03 01 73 00 06 00 00 00 ..........s..... 0040: 4d 65 6d 62 65 72 00 00 00 00 00 00 34 00 00 00 Member......4... 0050: 03 00 00 00 63 77 64 00 01 73 00 00 23 00 00 00 ....cwd..s..#... 0060: 2f 68 6f 6d 65 2f 64 61 76 69 64 7a 2f 48 61 63 /home/davidz/Hac 0070: 6b 69 6e 67 2f 67 6c 69 62 2f 67 69 6f 2f 74 65 king/glib/gio/te 0080: 73 74 73 00 sts. Parsing headers (blob_len = 0x0084 bytes) Reading type a{yv} from offset 0x000c: array spans 0x0037 bytes Reading type {yv} from offset 0x0010 Reading type y from offset 0x0010: 0x08 ' Reading type v from offset 0x0011 Reading type g from offset 0x0014: 'aaya{sv}' Reading type {yv} from offset 0x001e Reading type y from offset 0x0020: 0x01 '' Reading type v from offset 0x0021 Reading type o from offset 0x0024: '/foo/bar' Reading type {yv} from offset 0x0031 Reading type y from offset 0x0038: 0x03 '' Reading type v from offset 0x0039 Reading type s from offset 0x003c: 'Member' Parsing body (blob_len = 0x0084 bytes) Reading type (aaya{sv}) from offset 0x0047 Reading type aay from offset 0x0048: array spans 0x0000 bytes Reading type a{sv} from offset 0x004c: array spans 0x0034 bytes Reading type {sv} from offset 0x0050 Reading type s from offset 0x0050: 'cwd' Reading type v from offset 0x0058 Reading type s from offset 0x005b: '/home/davidz/Hacking/glib/gio/tests' OK Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-06-17 23:58:25 +02:00
s = _g_dbus_hexdump (worker->read_buffer, worker->read_buffer_cur_size, 2);
g_warning ("Error decoding D-Bus message of %" G_GSIZE_FORMAT " bytes\n"
"The error is: %s\n"
"The payload is as follows:\n"
"%s\n",
worker->read_buffer_cur_size,
error->message,
s);
g_free (s);
_g_dbus_worker_emit_disconnected (worker, FALSE, error);
g_error_free (error);
goto out;
}
#ifdef G_OS_UNIX
if (worker->read_fd_list != NULL)
{
g_dbus_message_set_unix_fd_list (message, worker->read_fd_list);
g_object_unref (worker->read_fd_list);
worker->read_fd_list = NULL;
}
#endif
if (G_UNLIKELY (_g_dbus_debug_message ()))
{
gchar *s;
_g_dbus_debug_print_lock ();
g_print ("========================================================================\n"
"GDBus-debug:Message:\n"
" <<<< RECEIVED D-Bus message (%" G_GSIZE_FORMAT " bytes)\n",
worker->read_buffer_cur_size);
s = g_dbus_message_print (message, 2);
g_print ("%s", s);
g_free (s);
if (G_UNLIKELY (_g_dbus_debug_payload ()))
{
s = _g_dbus_hexdump (worker->read_buffer, worker->read_buffer_cur_size, 2);
g_print ("%s\n", s);
g_free (s);
}
_g_dbus_debug_print_unlock ();
}
/* yay, got a message, go deliver it */
_g_dbus_worker_queue_or_deliver_received_message (worker, message);
/* start reading another message! */
worker->read_buffer_bytes_wanted = 0;
worker->read_buffer_cur_size = 0;
_g_dbus_worker_do_read_unlocked (worker);
}
}
else
{
/* didn't get all the bytes we requested - so repeat the request... */
_g_dbus_worker_do_read_unlocked (worker);
}
out:
g_mutex_unlock (&worker->read_lock);
/* gives up the reference acquired when calling g_input_stream_read_async() */
_g_dbus_worker_unref (worker);
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances (with read-lock held) */
static void
_g_dbus_worker_do_read_unlocked (GDBusWorker *worker)
{
/* Note that we do need to keep trying to read even if close_expected is
* true, because only failing a read causes us to signal 'closed'.
*/
/* if bytes_wanted is zero, it means start reading a message */
if (worker->read_buffer_bytes_wanted == 0)
{
worker->read_buffer_cur_size = 0;
worker->read_buffer_bytes_wanted = 16;
}
/* ensure we have a (big enough) buffer */
if (worker->read_buffer == NULL || worker->read_buffer_bytes_wanted > worker->read_buffer_allocated_size)
{
/* TODO: 4096 is randomly chosen; might want a better chosen default minimum */
worker->read_buffer_allocated_size = MAX (worker->read_buffer_bytes_wanted, 4096);
worker->read_buffer = g_realloc (worker->read_buffer, worker->read_buffer_allocated_size);
}
if (worker->socket == NULL)
g_input_stream_read_async (g_io_stream_get_input_stream (worker->stream),
worker->read_buffer + worker->read_buffer_cur_size,
worker->read_buffer_bytes_wanted - worker->read_buffer_cur_size,
G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT,
worker->cancellable,
(GAsyncReadyCallback) _g_dbus_worker_do_read_cb,
_g_dbus_worker_ref (worker));
else
{
worker->read_ancillary_messages = NULL;
worker->read_num_ancillary_messages = 0;
_g_socket_read_with_control_messages (worker->socket,
worker->read_buffer + worker->read_buffer_cur_size,
worker->read_buffer_bytes_wanted - worker->read_buffer_cur_size,
&worker->read_ancillary_messages,
&worker->read_num_ancillary_messages,
G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT,
worker->cancellable,
(GAsyncReadyCallback) _g_dbus_worker_do_read_cb,
_g_dbus_worker_ref (worker));
}
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances (without read-lock held) */
static gboolean
_g_dbus_worker_do_initial_read (gpointer data)
{
GDBusWorker *worker = data;
g_mutex_lock (&worker->read_lock);
_g_dbus_worker_do_read_unlocked (worker);
g_mutex_unlock (&worker->read_lock);
return FALSE;
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
struct _MessageToWriteData
{
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
GDBusWorker *worker;
GDBusMessage *message;
gchar *blob;
gsize blob_size;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
gsize total_written;
GSimpleAsyncResult *simple;
};
static void
message_to_write_data_free (MessageToWriteData *data)
{
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
_g_dbus_worker_unref (data->worker);
if (data->message)
g_object_unref (data->message);
g_free (data->blob);
g_free (data);
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static void write_message_continue_writing (MessageToWriteData *data);
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is not held on entry
* output_pending is PENDING_WRITE on entry
*/
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static void
write_message_async_cb (GObject *source_object,
GAsyncResult *res,
gpointer user_data)
{
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
MessageToWriteData *data = user_data;
GSimpleAsyncResult *simple;
gssize bytes_written;
GError *error;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
/* Note: we can't access data->simple after calling g_async_result_complete () because the
* callback can free @data and we're not completing in idle. So use a copy of the pointer.
*/
simple = data->simple;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
error = NULL;
bytes_written = g_output_stream_write_finish (G_OUTPUT_STREAM (source_object),
res,
&error);
if (bytes_written == -1)
{
g_simple_async_result_take_error (simple, error);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
g_simple_async_result_complete (simple);
g_object_unref (simple);
goto out;
}
g_assert (bytes_written > 0); /* zero is never returned */
write_message_print_transport_debug (bytes_written, data);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
data->total_written += bytes_written;
g_assert (data->total_written <= data->blob_size);
if (data->total_written == data->blob_size)
{
g_simple_async_result_complete (simple);
g_object_unref (simple);
goto out;
}
write_message_continue_writing (data);
out:
;
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is not held on entry
* output_pending is PENDING_WRITE on entry
*/
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static gboolean
on_socket_ready (GSocket *socket,
GIOCondition condition,
gpointer user_data)
{
MessageToWriteData *data = user_data;
write_message_continue_writing (data);
return FALSE; /* remove source */
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is not held on entry
* output_pending is PENDING_WRITE on entry
*/
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static void
write_message_continue_writing (MessageToWriteData *data)
{
GOutputStream *ostream;
GSimpleAsyncResult *simple;
#ifdef G_OS_UNIX
GUnixFDList *fd_list;
#endif
/* Note: we can't access data->simple after calling g_async_result_complete () because the
* callback can free @data and we're not completing in idle. So use a copy of the pointer.
*/
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
simple = data->simple;
ostream = g_io_stream_get_output_stream (data->worker->stream);
#ifdef G_OS_UNIX
fd_list = g_dbus_message_get_unix_fd_list (data->message);
#endif
g_assert (!g_output_stream_has_pending (ostream));
g_assert_cmpint (data->total_written, <, data->blob_size);
if (FALSE)
{
}
#ifdef G_OS_UNIX
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
else if (G_IS_SOCKET_OUTPUT_STREAM (ostream) && data->total_written == 0)
{
GOutputVector vector;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
GSocketControlMessage *control_message;
gssize bytes_written;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
GError *error;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
vector.buffer = data->blob;
vector.size = data->blob_size;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
control_message = NULL;
if (fd_list != NULL && g_unix_fd_list_get_length (fd_list) > 0)
{
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
if (!(data->worker->capabilities & G_DBUS_CAPABILITY_FLAGS_UNIX_FD_PASSING))
{
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
g_simple_async_result_set_error (simple,
G_IO_ERROR,
G_IO_ERROR_FAILED,
"Tried sending a file descriptor but remote peer does not support this capability");
g_simple_async_result_complete (simple);
g_object_unref (simple);
goto out;
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
control_message = g_unix_fd_message_new_with_fd_list (fd_list);
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
error = NULL;
bytes_written = g_socket_send_message (data->worker->socket,
NULL, /* address */
&vector,
1,
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
control_message != NULL ? &control_message : NULL,
control_message != NULL ? 1 : 0,
G_SOCKET_MSG_NONE,
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
data->worker->cancellable,
&error);
if (control_message != NULL)
g_object_unref (control_message);
if (bytes_written == -1)
{
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
/* Handle WOULD_BLOCK by waiting until there's room in the buffer */
if (g_error_matches (error, G_IO_ERROR, G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK))
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
{
GSource *source;
source = g_socket_create_source (data->worker->socket,
G_IO_OUT | G_IO_HUP | G_IO_ERR,
data->worker->cancellable);
g_source_set_callback (source,
(GSourceFunc) on_socket_ready,
data,
NULL); /* GDestroyNotify */
g_source_attach (source, g_main_context_get_thread_default ());
g_source_unref (source);
g_error_free (error);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
goto out;
}
g_simple_async_result_take_error (simple, error);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
g_simple_async_result_complete (simple);
g_object_unref (simple);
goto out;
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
g_assert (bytes_written > 0); /* zero is never returned */
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
write_message_print_transport_debug (bytes_written, data);
data->total_written += bytes_written;
g_assert (data->total_written <= data->blob_size);
if (data->total_written == data->blob_size)
{
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
g_simple_async_result_complete (simple);
g_object_unref (simple);
goto out;
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
write_message_continue_writing (data);
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
#endif
else
{
#ifdef G_OS_UNIX
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
if (fd_list != NULL)
{
g_simple_async_result_set_error (simple,
G_IO_ERROR,
G_IO_ERROR_FAILED,
"Tried sending a file descriptor on unsupported stream of type %s",
g_type_name (G_TYPE_FROM_INSTANCE (ostream)));
g_simple_async_result_complete (simple);
g_object_unref (simple);
goto out;
}
#endif
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
g_output_stream_write_async (ostream,
(const gchar *) data->blob + data->total_written,
data->blob_size - data->total_written,
G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT,
data->worker->cancellable,
write_message_async_cb,
data);
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
out:
;
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is not held on entry
* output_pending is PENDING_WRITE on entry
*/
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static void
write_message_async (GDBusWorker *worker,
MessageToWriteData *data,
GAsyncReadyCallback callback,
gpointer user_data)
{
data->simple = g_simple_async_result_new (NULL,
callback,
user_data,
write_message_async);
data->total_written = 0;
write_message_continue_writing (data);
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances (with write-lock held) */
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static gboolean
write_message_finish (GAsyncResult *res,
GError **error)
{
g_warn_if_fail (g_simple_async_result_get_source_tag (G_SIMPLE_ASYNC_RESULT (res)) == write_message_async);
if (g_simple_async_result_propagate_error (G_SIMPLE_ASYNC_RESULT (res), error))
return FALSE;
else
return TRUE;
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static void continue_writing (GDBusWorker *worker);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
typedef struct
{
GDBusWorker *worker;
GList *flushers;
} FlushAsyncData;
static void
flush_data_list_complete (const GList *flushers,
const GError *error)
{
const GList *l;
for (l = flushers; l != NULL; l = l->next)
{
FlushData *f = l->data;
f->error = error != NULL ? g_error_copy (error) : NULL;
g_mutex_lock (&f->mutex);
g_cond_signal (&f->cond);
g_mutex_unlock (&f->mutex);
}
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is not held on entry
* output_pending is PENDING_FLUSH on entry
*/
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static void
ostream_flush_cb (GObject *source_object,
GAsyncResult *res,
gpointer user_data)
{
FlushAsyncData *data = user_data;
GError *error;
error = NULL;
g_output_stream_flush_finish (G_OUTPUT_STREAM (source_object),
res,
&error);
if (error == NULL)
{
if (G_UNLIKELY (_g_dbus_debug_transport ()))
{
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
_g_dbus_debug_print_lock ();
g_print ("========================================================================\n"
"GDBus-debug:Transport:\n"
" ---- FLUSHED stream of type %s\n",
g_type_name (G_TYPE_FROM_INSTANCE (g_io_stream_get_output_stream (data->worker->stream))));
_g_dbus_debug_print_unlock ();
}
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
g_assert (data->flushers != NULL);
flush_data_list_complete (data->flushers, error);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
g_list_free (data->flushers);
if (error != NULL)
g_error_free (error);
/* Make sure we tell folks that we don't have additional
flushes pending */
g_mutex_lock (&data->worker->write_lock);
data->worker->write_num_messages_flushed = data->worker->write_num_messages_written;
g_assert (data->worker->output_pending == PENDING_FLUSH);
data->worker->output_pending = PENDING_NONE;
g_mutex_unlock (&data->worker->write_lock);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
/* OK, cool, finally kick off the next write */
continue_writing (data->worker);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
_g_dbus_worker_unref (data->worker);
g_free (data);
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is not held on entry
* output_pending is PENDING_FLUSH on entry
*/
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static void
start_flush (FlushAsyncData *data)
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
{
g_output_stream_flush_async (g_io_stream_get_output_stream (data->worker->stream),
G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT,
data->worker->cancellable,
ostream_flush_cb,
data);
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is held on entry
* output_pending is PENDING_NONE on entry
*/
static void
message_written_unlocked (GDBusWorker *worker,
MessageToWriteData *message_data)
{
if (G_UNLIKELY (_g_dbus_debug_message ()))
{
gchar *s;
_g_dbus_debug_print_lock ();
g_print ("========================================================================\n"
"GDBus-debug:Message:\n"
" >>>> SENT D-Bus message (%" G_GSIZE_FORMAT " bytes)\n",
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
message_data->blob_size);
s = g_dbus_message_print (message_data->message, 2);
g_print ("%s", s);
g_free (s);
if (G_UNLIKELY (_g_dbus_debug_payload ()))
{
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
s = _g_dbus_hexdump (message_data->blob, message_data->blob_size, 2);
g_print ("%s\n", s);
g_free (s);
}
_g_dbus_debug_print_unlock ();
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
worker->write_num_messages_written += 1;
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is held on entry
* output_pending is PENDING_NONE on entry
*
* Returns: non-%NULL, setting @output_pending, if we need to flush now
*/
static FlushAsyncData *
prepare_flush_unlocked (GDBusWorker *worker)
{
GList *l;
GList *ll;
GList *flushers;
flushers = NULL;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
for (l = worker->write_pending_flushes; l != NULL; l = ll)
{
FlushData *f = l->data;
ll = l->next;
if (f->number_to_wait_for == worker->write_num_messages_written)
{
flushers = g_list_append (flushers, f);
worker->write_pending_flushes = g_list_delete_link (worker->write_pending_flushes, l);
}
}
if (flushers != NULL)
{
g_assert (worker->output_pending == PENDING_NONE);
worker->output_pending = PENDING_FLUSH;
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
if (flushers != NULL)
{
FlushAsyncData *data;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
data = g_new0 (FlushAsyncData, 1);
data->worker = _g_dbus_worker_ref (worker);
data->flushers = flushers;
return data;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
}
return NULL;
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is not held on entry
* output_pending is PENDING_WRITE on entry
*/
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static void
write_message_cb (GObject *source_object,
GAsyncResult *res,
gpointer user_data)
{
MessageToWriteData *data = user_data;
GError *error;
g_mutex_lock (&data->worker->write_lock);
g_assert (data->worker->output_pending == PENDING_WRITE);
data->worker->output_pending = PENDING_NONE;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
error = NULL;
if (!write_message_finish (res, &error))
{
g_mutex_unlock (&data->worker->write_lock);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
/* TODO: handle */
_g_dbus_worker_emit_disconnected (data->worker, TRUE, error);
g_error_free (error);
g_mutex_lock (&data->worker->write_lock);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
}
message_written_unlocked (data->worker, data);
g_mutex_unlock (&data->worker->write_lock);
continue_writing (data->worker);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
message_to_write_data_free (data);
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is not held on entry
* output_pending is PENDING_CLOSE on entry
*/
static void
iostream_close_cb (GObject *source_object,
GAsyncResult *res,
gpointer user_data)
{
GDBusWorker *worker = user_data;
GError *error = NULL;
GList *pending_close_attempts, *pending_flush_attempts;
GQueue *send_queue;
g_io_stream_close_finish (worker->stream, res, &error);
g_mutex_lock (&worker->write_lock);
pending_close_attempts = worker->pending_close_attempts;
worker->pending_close_attempts = NULL;
pending_flush_attempts = worker->write_pending_flushes;
worker->write_pending_flushes = NULL;
send_queue = worker->write_queue;
worker->write_queue = g_queue_new ();
g_assert (worker->output_pending == PENDING_CLOSE);
worker->output_pending = PENDING_NONE;
g_mutex_unlock (&worker->write_lock);
while (pending_close_attempts != NULL)
{
CloseData *close_data = pending_close_attempts->data;
pending_close_attempts = g_list_delete_link (pending_close_attempts,
pending_close_attempts);
if (close_data->result != NULL)
{
if (error != NULL)
g_simple_async_result_set_from_error (close_data->result, error);
/* this must be in an idle because the result is likely to be
* intended for another thread
*/
g_simple_async_result_complete_in_idle (close_data->result);
}
close_data_free (close_data);
}
g_clear_error (&error);
/* all messages queued for sending are discarded */
g_queue_free_full (send_queue, (GDestroyNotify) message_to_write_data_free);
/* all queued flushes fail */
error = g_error_new (G_IO_ERROR, G_IO_ERROR_CANCELLED,
_("Operation was cancelled"));
flush_data_list_complete (pending_flush_attempts, error);
g_list_free (pending_flush_attempts);
g_clear_error (&error);
_g_dbus_worker_unref (worker);
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is not held on entry
* output_pending must be PENDING_NONE on entry
*/
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static void
continue_writing (GDBusWorker *worker)
{
MessageToWriteData *data;
FlushAsyncData *flush_async_data;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
write_next:
/* we mustn't try to write two things at once */
g_assert (worker->output_pending == PENDING_NONE);
g_mutex_lock (&worker->write_lock);
data = NULL;
flush_async_data = NULL;
/* if we want to close the connection, that takes precedence */
if (worker->pending_close_attempts != NULL)
{
worker->close_expected = TRUE;
worker->output_pending = PENDING_CLOSE;
g_io_stream_close_async (worker->stream, G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT,
NULL, iostream_close_cb,
_g_dbus_worker_ref (worker));
}
else
{
flush_async_data = prepare_flush_unlocked (worker);
if (flush_async_data == NULL)
{
data = g_queue_pop_head (worker->write_queue);
if (data != NULL)
worker->output_pending = PENDING_WRITE;
}
}
g_mutex_unlock (&worker->write_lock);
/* Note that write_lock is only used for protecting the @write_queue
* and @output_pending fields of the GDBusWorker struct ... which we
* need to modify from arbitrary threads in _g_dbus_worker_send_message().
*
* Therefore, it's fine to drop it here when calling back into user
* code and then writing the message out onto the GIOStream since this
* function only runs on the worker thread.
*/
if (flush_async_data != NULL)
{
start_flush (flush_async_data);
g_assert (data == NULL);
}
else if (data != NULL)
{
GDBusMessage *old_message;
guchar *new_blob;
gsize new_blob_size;
GError *error;
old_message = data->message;
data->message = _g_dbus_worker_emit_message_about_to_be_sent (worker, data->message);
if (data->message == old_message)
{
/* filters had no effect - do nothing */
}
else if (data->message == NULL)
{
/* filters dropped message */
g_mutex_lock (&worker->write_lock);
worker->output_pending = PENDING_NONE;
g_mutex_unlock (&worker->write_lock);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
message_to_write_data_free (data);
goto write_next;
}
else
{
/* filters altered the message -> reencode */
error = NULL;
new_blob = g_dbus_message_to_blob (data->message,
&new_blob_size,
worker->capabilities,
&error);
if (new_blob == NULL)
{
/* if filter make the GDBusMessage unencodeable, just complain on stderr and send
* the old message instead
*/
g_warning ("Error encoding GDBusMessage with serial %d altered by filter function: %s",
g_dbus_message_get_serial (data->message),
error->message);
g_error_free (error);
}
else
{
g_free (data->blob);
data->blob = (gchar *) new_blob;
data->blob_size = new_blob_size;
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
}
write_message_async (worker,
data,
write_message_cb,
data);
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
}
/* called in private thread shared by all GDBusConnection instances
*
* write-lock is not held on entry
* output_pending may be anything
*/
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static gboolean
continue_writing_in_idle_cb (gpointer user_data)
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
{
GDBusWorker *worker = user_data;
/* Because this is the worker thread, we can read this struct member
* without holding the lock: no other thread ever modifies it.
*/
if (worker->output_pending == PENDING_NONE)
continue_writing (worker);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
return FALSE;
}
/*
* @write_data: (transfer full) (allow-none):
* @flush_data: (transfer full) (allow-none):
* @close_data: (transfer full) (allow-none):
*
* Can be called from any thread
*
* write_lock is held on entry
* output_pending may be anything
*/
static void
schedule_writing_unlocked (GDBusWorker *worker,
MessageToWriteData *write_data,
FlushData *flush_data,
CloseData *close_data)
{
if (write_data != NULL)
g_queue_push_tail (worker->write_queue, write_data);
if (flush_data != NULL)
worker->write_pending_flushes = g_list_prepend (worker->write_pending_flushes, flush_data);
if (close_data != NULL)
worker->pending_close_attempts = g_list_prepend (worker->pending_close_attempts,
close_data);
/* If we had output pending, the next bit of output will happen
* automatically when it finishes, so we only need to do this
* if nothing was pending.
*
* The idle callback will re-check that output_pending is still
* PENDING_NONE, to guard against output starting before the idle.
*/
if (worker->output_pending == PENDING_NONE)
{
GSource *idle_source;
idle_source = g_idle_source_new ();
g_source_set_priority (idle_source, G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT);
g_source_set_callback (idle_source,
continue_writing_in_idle_cb,
_g_dbus_worker_ref (worker),
(GDestroyNotify) _g_dbus_worker_unref);
g_source_attach (idle_source, worker->shared_thread_data->context);
g_source_unref (idle_source);
}
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* can be called from any thread - steals blob
*
* write_lock is not held on entry
* output_pending may be anything
*/
void
_g_dbus_worker_send_message (GDBusWorker *worker,
GDBusMessage *message,
gchar *blob,
gsize blob_len)
{
MessageToWriteData *data;
g_return_if_fail (G_IS_DBUS_MESSAGE (message));
g_return_if_fail (blob != NULL);
g_return_if_fail (blob_len > 16);
data = g_new0 (MessageToWriteData, 1);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
data->worker = _g_dbus_worker_ref (worker);
data->message = g_object_ref (message);
data->blob = blob; /* steal! */
data->blob_size = blob_len;
g_mutex_lock (&worker->write_lock);
schedule_writing_unlocked (worker, data, NULL, NULL);
g_mutex_unlock (&worker->write_lock);
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
GDBusWorker *
_g_dbus_worker_new (GIOStream *stream,
GDBusCapabilityFlags capabilities,
gboolean initially_frozen,
GDBusWorkerMessageReceivedCallback message_received_callback,
GDBusWorkerMessageAboutToBeSentCallback message_about_to_be_sent_callback,
GDBusWorkerDisconnectedCallback disconnected_callback,
gpointer user_data)
{
GDBusWorker *worker;
GSource *idle_source;
g_return_val_if_fail (G_IS_IO_STREAM (stream), NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (message_received_callback != NULL, NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (message_about_to_be_sent_callback != NULL, NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (disconnected_callback != NULL, NULL);
worker = g_new0 (GDBusWorker, 1);
worker->ref_count = 1;
g_mutex_init (&worker->read_lock);
worker->message_received_callback = message_received_callback;
worker->message_about_to_be_sent_callback = message_about_to_be_sent_callback;
worker->disconnected_callback = disconnected_callback;
worker->user_data = user_data;
worker->stream = g_object_ref (stream);
worker->capabilities = capabilities;
worker->cancellable = g_cancellable_new ();
worker->output_pending = PENDING_NONE;
worker->frozen = initially_frozen;
worker->received_messages_while_frozen = g_queue_new ();
g_mutex_init (&worker->write_lock);
worker->write_queue = g_queue_new ();
if (G_IS_SOCKET_CONNECTION (worker->stream))
worker->socket = g_socket_connection_get_socket (G_SOCKET_CONNECTION (worker->stream));
worker->shared_thread_data = _g_dbus_shared_thread_ref ();
/* begin reading */
idle_source = g_idle_source_new ();
g_source_set_priority (idle_source, G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT);
g_source_set_callback (idle_source,
_g_dbus_worker_do_initial_read,
_g_dbus_worker_ref (worker),
(GDestroyNotify) _g_dbus_worker_unref);
g_source_attach (idle_source, worker->shared_thread_data->context);
g_source_unref (idle_source);
return worker;
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* can be called from any thread
*
* write_lock is not held on entry
* output_pending may be anything
*/
void
_g_dbus_worker_close (GDBusWorker *worker,
GCancellable *cancellable,
GSimpleAsyncResult *result)
{
CloseData *close_data;
close_data = g_slice_new0 (CloseData);
close_data->worker = _g_dbus_worker_ref (worker);
close_data->cancellable =
(cancellable == NULL ? NULL : g_object_ref (cancellable));
close_data->result = (result == NULL ? NULL : g_object_ref (result));
/* Don't set worker->close_expected here - we're in the wrong thread.
* It'll be set before the actual close happens.
*/
g_cancellable_cancel (worker->cancellable);
g_mutex_lock (&worker->write_lock);
schedule_writing_unlocked (worker, NULL, NULL, close_data);
g_mutex_unlock (&worker->write_lock);
}
/* This can be called from any thread - frees worker. Note that
* callbacks might still happen if called from another thread than the
* worker - use your own synchronization primitive in the callbacks.
*
* write_lock is not held on entry
* output_pending may be anything
*/
void
_g_dbus_worker_stop (GDBusWorker *worker)
{
g_atomic_int_set (&worker->stopped, TRUE);
/* Cancel any pending operations and schedule a close of the underlying I/O
* stream in the worker thread
*/
_g_dbus_worker_close (worker, NULL, NULL);
/* _g_dbus_worker_close holds a ref until after an idle in the the worker
* thread has run, so we no longer need to unref in an idle like in
* commit 322e25b535
*/
_g_dbus_worker_unref (worker);
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* can be called from any thread (except the worker thread) - blocks
* calling thread until all queued outgoing messages are written and
* the transport has been flushed
*
* write_lock is not held on entry
* output_pending may be anything
*/
gboolean
_g_dbus_worker_flush_sync (GDBusWorker *worker,
GCancellable *cancellable,
GError **error)
{
gboolean ret;
FlushData *data;
guint64 pending_writes;
data = NULL;
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
ret = TRUE;
g_mutex_lock (&worker->write_lock);
/* if the queue is empty, no write is in-flight and we haven't written
* anything since the last flush, then there's nothing to wait for
*/
pending_writes = g_queue_get_length (worker->write_queue);
/* if a write is in-flight, we shouldn't be satisfied until the first
* flush operation that follows it
*/
if (worker->output_pending == PENDING_WRITE)
pending_writes += 1;
if (pending_writes > 0 ||
worker->write_num_messages_written != worker->write_num_messages_flushed)
{
data = g_new0 (FlushData, 1);
g_mutex_init (&data->mutex);
g_cond_init (&data->cond);
data->number_to_wait_for = worker->write_num_messages_written + pending_writes;
g_mutex_lock (&data->mutex);
schedule_writing_unlocked (worker, NULL, data, NULL);
}
g_mutex_unlock (&worker->write_lock);
if (data != NULL)
{
g_cond_wait (&data->cond, &data->mutex);
g_mutex_unlock (&data->mutex);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
/* note:the element is removed from worker->write_pending_flushes in flush_cb() above */
g_cond_clear (&data->cond);
g_mutex_clear (&data->mutex);
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
if (data->error != NULL)
{
ret = FALSE;
g_propagate_error (error, data->error);
}
g_free (data);
}
return ret;
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#define G_DBUS_DEBUG_AUTHENTICATION (1<<0)
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
#define G_DBUS_DEBUG_TRANSPORT (1<<1)
#define G_DBUS_DEBUG_MESSAGE (1<<2)
#define G_DBUS_DEBUG_PAYLOAD (1<<3)
#define G_DBUS_DEBUG_CALL (1<<4)
#define G_DBUS_DEBUG_SIGNAL (1<<5)
#define G_DBUS_DEBUG_INCOMING (1<<6)
#define G_DBUS_DEBUG_RETURN (1<<7)
#define G_DBUS_DEBUG_EMISSION (1<<8)
#define G_DBUS_DEBUG_ADDRESS (1<<9)
static gint _gdbus_debug_flags = 0;
gboolean
_g_dbus_debug_authentication (void)
{
_g_dbus_initialize ();
return (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_AUTHENTICATION) != 0;
}
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
gboolean
_g_dbus_debug_transport (void)
{
_g_dbus_initialize ();
return (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_TRANSPORT) != 0;
}
gboolean
_g_dbus_debug_message (void)
{
_g_dbus_initialize ();
return (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_MESSAGE) != 0;
}
gboolean
_g_dbus_debug_payload (void)
{
_g_dbus_initialize ();
return (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_PAYLOAD) != 0;
}
gboolean
_g_dbus_debug_call (void)
{
_g_dbus_initialize ();
return (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_CALL) != 0;
}
gboolean
_g_dbus_debug_signal (void)
{
_g_dbus_initialize ();
return (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_SIGNAL) != 0;
}
gboolean
_g_dbus_debug_incoming (void)
{
_g_dbus_initialize ();
return (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_INCOMING) != 0;
}
GDBus: Add `return' debug option This prints all GDBusMethodInvocation API usage and is normally used with the `incoming' option. Example: # G_DBUS_DEBUG=incoming,return ./polkitd --replace Entering main event loop Connected to the system bus Registering null backend at priority -10 [...] Acquired the name org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1 [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Incoming: <<<< METHOD INVOCATION org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent() on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority invoked by name :1.26 serial 299 ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Return: >>>> METHOD ERROR org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Error.Failed message `Cannot determine session the caller is in' in response to org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent() on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority to name :1.26 reply-serial 299 [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Incoming: <<<< METHOD INVOCATION org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent() on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority invoked by name :1.2402 serial 25 ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Return: >>>> METHOD RETURN in response to org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent() on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority to name :1.2402 reply-serial 25 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-04 22:59:26 +02:00
gboolean
_g_dbus_debug_return (void)
{
_g_dbus_initialize ();
return (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_RETURN) != 0;
}
gboolean
_g_dbus_debug_emission (void)
{
_g_dbus_initialize ();
return (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_EMISSION) != 0;
}
GDBus: Handle autolaunching on UNIX/Freedesktop OSes Also add a 'address' G_DBUS_DEBUG option that will print out useful debug information such as GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14542: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14542: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14542: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14542: === Parent dbus-launch continues 14542: Waiting for babysitter's intermediate parent 14542: Reading address from bus 14542: Reading PID from daemon 14542: Saving x11 address 14542: Created window 88080385 14542: session file: /root/.dbus/session-bus/05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7-0 14542: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' and GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14549: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14549: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14549: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14549: dbus-daemon is already running. Returning existing parameters. 14549: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' Note that things work exactly like libdbus, e.g. from the dbus-launch(1) man page: Whenever an autolaunch occurs, the application that had to start a new bus will be in its own little world; it can effectively end up starting a whole new session if it tries to use a lot of bus services. This can be suboptimal or even totally broken, depending on the app and what it tries to do. [...] You can always avoid autolaunch by manually setting DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. Autolaunch happens because the default address if none is set is "autolaunch:", so if any other address is set there will be no autolaunch. You can however include autolaunch in an explicit session bus address as a fallback, for example DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="something:,autolaunch:" - in that case if the first address doesn't work, processes will autolaunch. (The bus address variable contains a comma-separated list of addresses to try.) Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-07-06 22:57:28 +02:00
gboolean
_g_dbus_debug_address (void)
{
_g_dbus_initialize ();
return (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_ADDRESS) != 0;
}
G_LOCK_DEFINE_STATIC (print_lock);
void
_g_dbus_debug_print_lock (void)
{
G_LOCK (print_lock);
}
void
_g_dbus_debug_print_unlock (void)
{
G_UNLOCK (print_lock);
}
2010-05-06 22:02:08 +02:00
/*
* _g_dbus_initialize:
*
* Does various one-time init things such as
*
* - registering the G_DBUS_ERROR error domain
* - parses the G_DBUS_DEBUG environment variable
*/
void
_g_dbus_initialize (void)
{
static volatile gsize initialized = 0;
if (g_once_init_enter (&initialized))
{
volatile GQuark g_dbus_error_domain;
const gchar *debug;
g_dbus_error_domain = G_DBUS_ERROR;
(g_dbus_error_domain); /* To avoid -Wunused-but-set-variable */
debug = g_getenv ("G_DBUS_DEBUG");
if (debug != NULL)
{
const GDebugKey keys[] = {
{ "authentication", G_DBUS_DEBUG_AUTHENTICATION },
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
{ "transport", G_DBUS_DEBUG_TRANSPORT },
{ "message", G_DBUS_DEBUG_MESSAGE },
{ "payload", G_DBUS_DEBUG_PAYLOAD },
{ "call", G_DBUS_DEBUG_CALL },
{ "signal", G_DBUS_DEBUG_SIGNAL },
{ "incoming", G_DBUS_DEBUG_INCOMING },
GDBus: Add `return' debug option This prints all GDBusMethodInvocation API usage and is normally used with the `incoming' option. Example: # G_DBUS_DEBUG=incoming,return ./polkitd --replace Entering main event loop Connected to the system bus Registering null backend at priority -10 [...] Acquired the name org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1 [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Incoming: <<<< METHOD INVOCATION org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent() on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority invoked by name :1.26 serial 299 ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Return: >>>> METHOD ERROR org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Error.Failed message `Cannot determine session the caller is in' in response to org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent() on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority to name :1.26 reply-serial 299 [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Incoming: <<<< METHOD INVOCATION org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent() on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority invoked by name :1.2402 serial 25 ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Return: >>>> METHOD RETURN in response to org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent() on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority to name :1.2402 reply-serial 25 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-04 22:59:26 +02:00
{ "return", G_DBUS_DEBUG_RETURN },
{ "emission", G_DBUS_DEBUG_EMISSION },
{ "address", G_DBUS_DEBUG_ADDRESS }
};
_gdbus_debug_flags = g_parse_debug_string (debug, keys, G_N_ELEMENTS (keys));
if (_gdbus_debug_flags & G_DBUS_DEBUG_PAYLOAD)
_gdbus_debug_flags |= G_DBUS_DEBUG_MESSAGE;
}
g_once_init_leave (&initialized, 1);
}
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
GVariantType *
_g_dbus_compute_complete_signature (GDBusArgInfo **args)
{
const GVariantType *arg_types[256];
guint n;
if (args)
for (n = 0; args[n] != NULL; n++)
{
/* DBus places a hard limit of 255 on signature length.
* therefore number of args must be less than 256.
*/
g_assert (n < 256);
arg_types[n] = G_VARIANT_TYPE (args[n]->signature);
if G_UNLIKELY (arg_types[n] == NULL)
return NULL;
}
else
n = 0;
return g_variant_type_new_tuple (arg_types, n);
}
2010-05-06 23:31:51 +02:00
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#ifdef G_OS_WIN32
extern BOOL WINAPI ConvertSidToStringSidA (PSID Sid, LPSTR *StringSid);
gchar *
_g_dbus_win32_get_user_sid (void)
{
HANDLE h;
TOKEN_USER *user;
DWORD token_information_len;
PSID psid;
gchar *sid;
gchar *ret;
ret = NULL;
user = NULL;
h = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
if (!OpenProcessToken (GetCurrentProcess (), TOKEN_QUERY, &h))
{
g_warning ("OpenProcessToken failed with error code %d", (gint) GetLastError ());
goto out;
}
/* Get length of buffer */
token_information_len = 0;
if (!GetTokenInformation (h, TokenUser, NULL, 0, &token_information_len))
{
if (GetLastError () != ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)
{
g_warning ("GetTokenInformation() failed with error code %d", (gint) GetLastError ());
goto out;
}
}
user = g_malloc (token_information_len);
if (!GetTokenInformation (h, TokenUser, user, token_information_len, &token_information_len))
{
g_warning ("GetTokenInformation() failed with error code %d", (gint) GetLastError ());
goto out;
}
psid = user->User.Sid;
if (!IsValidSid (psid))
{
g_warning ("Invalid SID");
goto out;
}
if (!ConvertSidToStringSidA (psid, &sid))
{
g_warning ("Invalid SID");
goto out;
}
ret = g_strdup (sid);
LocalFree (sid);
out:
g_free (user);
if (h != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
CloseHandle (h);
return ret;
}
#endif
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
GDBus: Handle autolaunching on UNIX/Freedesktop OSes Also add a 'address' G_DBUS_DEBUG option that will print out useful debug information such as GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14542: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14542: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14542: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14542: === Parent dbus-launch continues 14542: Waiting for babysitter's intermediate parent 14542: Reading address from bus 14542: Reading PID from daemon 14542: Saving x11 address 14542: Created window 88080385 14542: session file: /root/.dbus/session-bus/05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7-0 14542: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' and GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14549: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14549: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14549: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14549: dbus-daemon is already running. Returning existing parameters. 14549: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' Note that things work exactly like libdbus, e.g. from the dbus-launch(1) man page: Whenever an autolaunch occurs, the application that had to start a new bus will be in its own little world; it can effectively end up starting a whole new session if it tries to use a lot of bus services. This can be suboptimal or even totally broken, depending on the app and what it tries to do. [...] You can always avoid autolaunch by manually setting DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. Autolaunch happens because the default address if none is set is "autolaunch:", so if any other address is set there will be no autolaunch. You can however include autolaunch in an explicit session bus address as a fallback, for example DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="something:,autolaunch:" - in that case if the first address doesn't work, processes will autolaunch. (The bus address variable contains a comma-separated list of addresses to try.) Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-07-06 22:57:28 +02:00
gchar *
_g_dbus_get_machine_id (GError **error)
{
#ifdef G_OS_WIN32
HW_PROFILE_INFOA info;
char *src, *dest, *res;
int i;
if (!GetCurrentHwProfileA (&info))
{
char *message = g_win32_error_message (GetLastError ());
g_set_error (error,
G_IO_ERROR,
G_IO_ERROR_FAILED,
_("Unable to get Hardware profile: %s"), message);
g_free (message);
return NULL;
}
/* Form: {12340001-4980-1920-6788-123456789012} */
src = &info.szHwProfileGuid[0];
res = g_malloc (32+1);
dest = res;
src++; /* Skip { */
for (i = 0; i < 8; i++)
*dest++ = *src++;
src++; /* Skip - */
for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
*dest++ = *src++;
src++; /* Skip - */
for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
*dest++ = *src++;
src++; /* Skip - */
for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
*dest++ = *src++;
src++; /* Skip - */
for (i = 0; i < 12; i++)
*dest++ = *src++;
*dest = 0;
return res;
#else
GDBus: Handle autolaunching on UNIX/Freedesktop OSes Also add a 'address' G_DBUS_DEBUG option that will print out useful debug information such as GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14542: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14542: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14542: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14542: === Parent dbus-launch continues 14542: Waiting for babysitter's intermediate parent 14542: Reading address from bus 14542: Reading PID from daemon 14542: Saving x11 address 14542: Created window 88080385 14542: session file: /root/.dbus/session-bus/05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7-0 14542: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' and GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14549: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14549: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14549: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14549: dbus-daemon is already running. Returning existing parameters. 14549: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' Note that things work exactly like libdbus, e.g. from the dbus-launch(1) man page: Whenever an autolaunch occurs, the application that had to start a new bus will be in its own little world; it can effectively end up starting a whole new session if it tries to use a lot of bus services. This can be suboptimal or even totally broken, depending on the app and what it tries to do. [...] You can always avoid autolaunch by manually setting DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. Autolaunch happens because the default address if none is set is "autolaunch:", so if any other address is set there will be no autolaunch. You can however include autolaunch in an explicit session bus address as a fallback, for example DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="something:,autolaunch:" - in that case if the first address doesn't work, processes will autolaunch. (The bus address variable contains a comma-separated list of addresses to try.) Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-07-06 22:57:28 +02:00
gchar *ret;
GError *first_error;
GDBus: Handle autolaunching on UNIX/Freedesktop OSes Also add a 'address' G_DBUS_DEBUG option that will print out useful debug information such as GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14542: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14542: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14542: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14542: === Parent dbus-launch continues 14542: Waiting for babysitter's intermediate parent 14542: Reading address from bus 14542: Reading PID from daemon 14542: Saving x11 address 14542: Created window 88080385 14542: session file: /root/.dbus/session-bus/05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7-0 14542: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' and GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14549: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14549: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14549: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14549: dbus-daemon is already running. Returning existing parameters. 14549: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' Note that things work exactly like libdbus, e.g. from the dbus-launch(1) man page: Whenever an autolaunch occurs, the application that had to start a new bus will be in its own little world; it can effectively end up starting a whole new session if it tries to use a lot of bus services. This can be suboptimal or even totally broken, depending on the app and what it tries to do. [...] You can always avoid autolaunch by manually setting DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. Autolaunch happens because the default address if none is set is "autolaunch:", so if any other address is set there will be no autolaunch. You can however include autolaunch in an explicit session bus address as a fallback, for example DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="something:,autolaunch:" - in that case if the first address doesn't work, processes will autolaunch. (The bus address variable contains a comma-separated list of addresses to try.) Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-07-06 22:57:28 +02:00
/* TODO: use PACKAGE_LOCALSTATEDIR ? */
ret = NULL;
first_error = NULL;
GDBus: Handle autolaunching on UNIX/Freedesktop OSes Also add a 'address' G_DBUS_DEBUG option that will print out useful debug information such as GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14542: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14542: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14542: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14542: === Parent dbus-launch continues 14542: Waiting for babysitter's intermediate parent 14542: Reading address from bus 14542: Reading PID from daemon 14542: Saving x11 address 14542: Created window 88080385 14542: session file: /root/.dbus/session-bus/05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7-0 14542: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' and GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14549: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14549: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14549: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14549: dbus-daemon is already running. Returning existing parameters. 14549: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' Note that things work exactly like libdbus, e.g. from the dbus-launch(1) man page: Whenever an autolaunch occurs, the application that had to start a new bus will be in its own little world; it can effectively end up starting a whole new session if it tries to use a lot of bus services. This can be suboptimal or even totally broken, depending on the app and what it tries to do. [...] You can always avoid autolaunch by manually setting DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. Autolaunch happens because the default address if none is set is "autolaunch:", so if any other address is set there will be no autolaunch. You can however include autolaunch in an explicit session bus address as a fallback, for example DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="something:,autolaunch:" - in that case if the first address doesn't work, processes will autolaunch. (The bus address variable contains a comma-separated list of addresses to try.) Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-07-06 22:57:28 +02:00
if (!g_file_get_contents ("/var/lib/dbus/machine-id",
&ret,
NULL,
&first_error) &&
!g_file_get_contents ("/etc/machine-id",
&ret,
NULL,
NULL))
GDBus: Handle autolaunching on UNIX/Freedesktop OSes Also add a 'address' G_DBUS_DEBUG option that will print out useful debug information such as GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14542: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14542: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14542: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14542: === Parent dbus-launch continues 14542: Waiting for babysitter's intermediate parent 14542: Reading address from bus 14542: Reading PID from daemon 14542: Saving x11 address 14542: Created window 88080385 14542: session file: /root/.dbus/session-bus/05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7-0 14542: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' and GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14549: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14549: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14549: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14549: dbus-daemon is already running. Returning existing parameters. 14549: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' Note that things work exactly like libdbus, e.g. from the dbus-launch(1) man page: Whenever an autolaunch occurs, the application that had to start a new bus will be in its own little world; it can effectively end up starting a whole new session if it tries to use a lot of bus services. This can be suboptimal or even totally broken, depending on the app and what it tries to do. [...] You can always avoid autolaunch by manually setting DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. Autolaunch happens because the default address if none is set is "autolaunch:", so if any other address is set there will be no autolaunch. You can however include autolaunch in an explicit session bus address as a fallback, for example DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="something:,autolaunch:" - in that case if the first address doesn't work, processes will autolaunch. (The bus address variable contains a comma-separated list of addresses to try.) Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-07-06 22:57:28 +02:00
{
g_propagate_prefixed_error (error, first_error,
_("Unable to load /var/lib/dbus/machine-id or /etc/machine-id: "));
GDBus: Handle autolaunching on UNIX/Freedesktop OSes Also add a 'address' G_DBUS_DEBUG option that will print out useful debug information such as GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14542: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14542: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14542: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14542: === Parent dbus-launch continues 14542: Waiting for babysitter's intermediate parent 14542: Reading address from bus 14542: Reading PID from daemon 14542: Saving x11 address 14542: Created window 88080385 14542: session file: /root/.dbus/session-bus/05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7-0 14542: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' and GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14549: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14549: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14549: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14549: dbus-daemon is already running. Returning existing parameters. 14549: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' Note that things work exactly like libdbus, e.g. from the dbus-launch(1) man page: Whenever an autolaunch occurs, the application that had to start a new bus will be in its own little world; it can effectively end up starting a whole new session if it tries to use a lot of bus services. This can be suboptimal or even totally broken, depending on the app and what it tries to do. [...] You can always avoid autolaunch by manually setting DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. Autolaunch happens because the default address if none is set is "autolaunch:", so if any other address is set there will be no autolaunch. You can however include autolaunch in an explicit session bus address as a fallback, for example DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="something:,autolaunch:" - in that case if the first address doesn't work, processes will autolaunch. (The bus address variable contains a comma-separated list of addresses to try.) Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-07-06 22:57:28 +02:00
}
else
{
/* ignore the error from the first try, if any */
g_clear_error (&first_error);
GDBus: Handle autolaunching on UNIX/Freedesktop OSes Also add a 'address' G_DBUS_DEBUG option that will print out useful debug information such as GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14542: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14542: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14542: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14542: === Parent dbus-launch continues 14542: Waiting for babysitter's intermediate parent 14542: Reading address from bus 14542: Reading PID from daemon 14542: Saving x11 address 14542: Created window 88080385 14542: session file: /root/.dbus/session-bus/05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7-0 14542: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' and GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14549: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14549: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14549: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14549: dbus-daemon is already running. Returning existing parameters. 14549: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' Note that things work exactly like libdbus, e.g. from the dbus-launch(1) man page: Whenever an autolaunch occurs, the application that had to start a new bus will be in its own little world; it can effectively end up starting a whole new session if it tries to use a lot of bus services. This can be suboptimal or even totally broken, depending on the app and what it tries to do. [...] You can always avoid autolaunch by manually setting DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. Autolaunch happens because the default address if none is set is "autolaunch:", so if any other address is set there will be no autolaunch. You can however include autolaunch in an explicit session bus address as a fallback, for example DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="something:,autolaunch:" - in that case if the first address doesn't work, processes will autolaunch. (The bus address variable contains a comma-separated list of addresses to try.) Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-07-06 22:57:28 +02:00
/* TODO: validate value */
g_strstrip (ret);
}
return ret;
#endif
GDBus: Handle autolaunching on UNIX/Freedesktop OSes Also add a 'address' G_DBUS_DEBUG option that will print out useful debug information such as GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14542: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14542: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14542: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14542: === Parent dbus-launch continues 14542: Waiting for babysitter's intermediate parent 14542: Reading address from bus 14542: Reading PID from daemon 14542: Saving x11 address 14542: Created window 88080385 14542: session file: /root/.dbus/session-bus/05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7-0 14542: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' and GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session' GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching) GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output: 0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t 0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR 0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3 0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c 0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@ 0050: 05 00 00 00 00 ..... GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output: 14549: Autolaunch enabled (using X11). 14549: --exit-with-session automatically enabled 14549: Connected to X11 display ':0.0' 14549: dbus-daemon is already running. Returning existing parameters. 14549: dbus-launch exiting GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session' Note that things work exactly like libdbus, e.g. from the dbus-launch(1) man page: Whenever an autolaunch occurs, the application that had to start a new bus will be in its own little world; it can effectively end up starting a whole new session if it tries to use a lot of bus services. This can be suboptimal or even totally broken, depending on the app and what it tries to do. [...] You can always avoid autolaunch by manually setting DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. Autolaunch happens because the default address if none is set is "autolaunch:", so if any other address is set there will be no autolaunch. You can however include autolaunch in an explicit session bus address as a fallback, for example DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="something:,autolaunch:" - in that case if the first address doesn't work, processes will autolaunch. (The bus address variable contains a comma-separated list of addresses to try.) Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-07-06 22:57:28 +02:00
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
gchar *
_g_dbus_enum_to_string (GType enum_type, gint value)
{
gchar *ret;
GEnumClass *klass;
GEnumValue *enum_value;
klass = g_type_class_ref (enum_type);
enum_value = g_enum_get_value (klass, value);
if (enum_value != NULL)
ret = g_strdup (enum_value->value_nick);
else
ret = g_strdup_printf ("unknown (value %d)", value);
g_type_class_unref (klass);
return ret;
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
Bug 626748 – Use async methods for writing and handle EAGAIN If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write() and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up others. It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as g_socket_send_message() is used. We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at /gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit. Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message. Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to inspect partial writes: $ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: >>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream [...] ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream ======================================================================== GDBus-debug:Transport: <<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream OK https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748 Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
2010-08-16 19:43:35 +02:00
static void
write_message_print_transport_debug (gssize bytes_written,
MessageToWriteData *data)
{
if (G_LIKELY (!_g_dbus_debug_transport ()))
goto out;
_g_dbus_debug_print_lock ();
g_print ("========================================================================\n"
"GDBus-debug:Transport:\n"
" >>>> WROTE %" G_GSIZE_FORMAT " bytes of message with serial %d and\n"
" size %" G_GSIZE_FORMAT " from offset %" G_GSIZE_FORMAT " on a %s\n",
bytes_written,
g_dbus_message_get_serial (data->message),
data->blob_size,
data->total_written,
g_type_name (G_TYPE_FROM_INSTANCE (g_io_stream_get_output_stream (data->worker->stream))));
_g_dbus_debug_print_unlock ();
out:
;
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static void
read_message_print_transport_debug (gssize bytes_read,
GDBusWorker *worker)
{
gsize size;
gint32 serial;
gint32 message_length;
if (G_LIKELY (!_g_dbus_debug_transport ()))
goto out;
size = bytes_read + worker->read_buffer_cur_size;
serial = 0;
message_length = 0;
if (size >= 16)
message_length = g_dbus_message_bytes_needed ((guchar *) worker->read_buffer, size, NULL);
if (size >= 1)
{
switch (worker->read_buffer[0])
{
case 'l':
if (size >= 12)
serial = GUINT32_FROM_LE (((guint32 *) worker->read_buffer)[2]);
break;
case 'B':
if (size >= 12)
serial = GUINT32_FROM_BE (((guint32 *) worker->read_buffer)[2]);
break;
default:
/* an error will be set elsewhere if this happens */
goto out;
}
}
_g_dbus_debug_print_lock ();
g_print ("========================================================================\n"
"GDBus-debug:Transport:\n"
" <<<< READ %" G_GSIZE_FORMAT " bytes of message with serial %d and\n"
" size %d to offset %" G_GSIZE_FORMAT " from a %s\n",
bytes_read,
serial,
message_length,
worker->read_buffer_cur_size,
g_type_name (G_TYPE_FROM_INSTANCE (g_io_stream_get_input_stream (worker->stream))));
_g_dbus_debug_print_unlock ();
out:
;
}
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
gboolean
_g_signal_accumulator_false_handled (GSignalInvocationHint *ihint,
GValue *return_accu,
const GValue *handler_return,
gpointer dummy)
{
gboolean continue_emission;
gboolean signal_return;
signal_return = g_value_get_boolean (handler_return);
g_value_set_boolean (return_accu, signal_return);
continue_emission = signal_return;
return continue_emission;
}