* Problem: No direct support for setting socket priority
Solution: Add ZMQ_PRIORITY socket option, which sets the
SO_PRIORITY socket option on the underlying socket. This
socket option is not supported under Windows. Check option
and set socket option on creation of underlying socket.
event_accepted() already accepts fd_t type and there is no reason to cast it to int type
Moreover, on Windows x64 this leads to truncation memsize -> int
* Problem: Still need to port over more files to VxWorks 6.x
Solution: Port more files to VxWorks 6.x
* Problem: Need to port over remaining files to VxWorks 6.x. Also remove POSIX thread dependency for VxWorks (because of priority inversion problem in POSIX mutexes with VxWorks 6.x processes)
Solution: Port over remaining files to VxWorks 6.x. Also removed POSIX thread dependency for VxWorks
* Problem: Needed to modify TCP, UDP, TIPC classes with #ifdefs to be compatible with VxWorks 6.x.
Solution: Modify TCP, UDP, TIPC classes with #ifdefs to be compatible with VxWorks 6.x
Linux now supports Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) as per:
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/networking/vrf.txt
In order for an application to bind or connect to a socket with an
address in a VRF, they need to first bind the socket to the VRF device:
setsockopt(sd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_BINDTODEVICE, dev, strlen(dev)+1);
Note "dev" is the VRF device, eg. VRF "blue", rather than an interface
enslaved to the VRF.
Add a new socket option, ZMQ_BINDTODEVICE, to bind a socket to a device.
In general, if a socket is bound to a device, eg. an interface, only
packets received from that particular device are processed by the socket.
If device is a VRF device, then subsequent binds/connects to that socket
use addresses in the VRF routing table.
* Prevent DOS by asserts in TCP tuning
-Propagates socket option errors from the
tuning functions to the callers.
-Asserts a subset of error conditions during tuning,
excluding external network causes.
-Checks tuning results in 3 call sites and treats
them like failures to connect, accept, etc.
* Fix variable name
* Remove lambda requiring C++11
* add define for windows/UWP
* prevent issue with COM references
* gettickcount not available on uwp
* add compiler definitions
* add convenitnece cmake file
* brute force uwp compilation
* fix compiler version
* cosmetics
Solution: setsockopt returns EINVAL if the connection was closed by
the peer after the accept returned a valid socket. This is a valid
network error and should not cause an assert.
To handle this we have to extract the setsockopt from the stream
engine, as there's no clean way to return an error from the
constructor. Instead, try to set this option before creating the
engine in the callers, and return immediately as if the accept
had failed to avoid churn. Do the same for the connect calls by
setting the option in open_socket, so that the option for that
case is set even before connecting, so there's no possible race
condition.
Since this has to be done in 4 places (tcp/ipc listener, socks
connecter and open_socket) add an utility function in ip.cpp.
Fixes#1442
Linux provides accept4(2) which will return a socket with FD_CLOEXEC set
when called with the SOCK_CLOEXEC flag. So call this when available and
fall back to fcntl(..., FD_CLOEXEC) if not.
Solution: in the Windows-specific ifdef in tcp_listener set_address,
check for error and set errno only after the IPv4 fallback has failed
too, to avoid setting errno when the socket creation succeeds through
the fallback.
Solution: if opening an IPv6 TCP socket fails because IPv6 is not
available, try to open an IPv4 socket instead when creating and
binding a TCP endpoint.
Solution: The Coverity Static Code Analyzer was used on libzmq code and found
many issues with uninitialized member variables, some redefinition of variables
hidding previous instances of same variable name and a couple of functions
where return values were not checked, even though all other occurrences were
checked (e.g. init_size() return).
Solution: parse the value set by the ZMQ_PRE_ALLOCATED_FD sockopt
when creating a new TCP socket and use it if valid.
Add new tests/test_pre_allocated_fd_tcp.cpp unit test.