Using the generic marshaller has drawbacks beyond performance. One such
drawback is that it breaks the stack unwinding from the Linux kernel due
to having unsufficient data to walk past ffi_call_unixt64. That means that
performance profiling by application developers looks grouped among
seemingly unrelated code paths.
While we can't fix the kernel unwinding here, we can provide proper
c_marshallers and va_marshallers for objects within Gio so that
performance profiling of applications is more reliable.
Related to GNOME/Initiatives#10
We miss releasing the async operation's reference on a state object in
one of the error cases.
The call to connection_attempt_remove() (although it calls unref
internally) is not sufficient because this is releasing the reference
that the list owns.
Closes#1774
We are manually tracking the completion state of the connect task
so avoid just calling g_task_return_error_if_cancelled() without
checking that.
Fixes#1747
Currently a new connection will not be attempted until the previous
one has timed out and as the current API only exposes a single
timeout value in practice it often means that it will wait 30 seconds
(or forever with 0 (the default)) on each connection.
This is unacceptable so we are now trying to follow the behavior
RFC 8305 recommends by making multiple connection attempts if
the connection takes longer than 250ms. The first connection
to make it to completion then wins.
If we have an input parameter (or return value) we need to use (nullable).
However, if it is an (inout) or (out) parameter, (optional) is sufficient.
It looks like (nullable) could be used for everything according to the
Annotation documentation, but (optional) is more specific.
g_socket_client_add_application_proxy() claimed "When the indicated
proxy protocol is returned by the #GProxyResolver, #GSocketClient will
consider this protocol as supported but will not try to find a #GProxy
instance to handle handshaking." But in fact, it did the checks in the
wrong order, so GProxy proxies ended up overriding
application-specified ones. Fix that.
Also, simplify the code a bit by making use of g_hash_table_add() and
g_hash_table_contains().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733876
If a g_socket_client_connect_async() operation is cancelled between the
CONNECTING and CONNECTED events (i.e. while in the
g_socket_connection_connect_async() call), the code in
g_socket_client_connected_callback() would previously unconditionally
loop round and try the next socket address from the address enumerator
(by calling enumerator_next_async()). This would correctly handle the
cancellation and return from the overall task — but not before emitting
a spurious RESOLVING event.
Avoid emitting the spurious RESOLVING event by explicitly handling
cancellation at the beginning of g_socket_client_connected_callback().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735179
My application (hotssh) would like to get the resolved address from DNS,
before we start the connect().
We could add a new event, but it's easy enough to just cache it on the
GSocketConnection; this avoids any new API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712547
As it turns out, we have examples of internal functions called
type_name_get_private() in the wild (especially among older libraries),
so we need to use a name for the per-instance private data getter
function that hopefully won't conflict with anything.
Add a proxy-resolver property to GSocketClient, to allow overriding
proxy resolution in situations where you need to force a particular
proxy rather than using the system defaults.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=691105
This can be used for debugging, or for progress UIs ("Connecting to
example.com..."), or to do low-level tweaking on the connection at
various points in the process.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=665805
Previously it was more or less assumed that GSocketConnections were
always connected, although this was not enforced. Make it explicit
that they don't need to be, and add methods to connect them, and
simplify GSocketClient by using those methods.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=665805
The connect_async() calls would never terminated when an application side
proxy was being used. Note we also skip over TLS handshake in this case,
as the application may have to do some proxy handshake before.
The proxy address was not cleared between each attempt. That would lead
to leak or worse, trying to do the proxy handshake on the final
destination address. To make all this safer, I have regroup all the cleanup
where the iterations starts.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=664141
Include the hostname (or proxy hostname if it was the connection to
the proxy server that failed) in the GError message when
g_socket_client_connect* fail.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661266
This adds an extension point for TLS connections to gio, with a
gnutls-based implementation in glib-networking.
Full TLS support is still a work in progress; the current API is
missing some features, and parts of it may still be changed before
2.28.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=588189
GProxyConnection is a class that was added for proxy support;
g_socket_client_connect() returns a GSocketConnection, but in some
cases (eg, encrypted SOCKS), GProxy might return a GIOStream that is
not a GSocketConnection. In that case, GSocketClient would wrap the
stream up in a GProxyConnection, which is a subclass of
GSocketConnection but uses the input/output streams of the wrapped
connection.
GTlsConnection is not a GSocketConnection, so it has the same problem,
so it will need the same treatment. Rename the class to
GTcpWrapperStream, and make it public, so people can extract the base
stream from it when necessary.
(This is not ideal and GSocketClient will need to be revisited as an
API at some point...)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=588189