Of course people still "can" distributed the sources under the
LGPLv3. However we provide COPYING.LESSER with additional grants.
Solution: specify these grants in the header of each source file.
Specifically:
* zmq_event_t should not be used internally in libzmq, it was
meant to be an outward facing structure.
* In 4.x, zmq_event_t does not correspond to monitor events, so
I removed the structure entirely.
* man page for zmq_socket_monitor is incomplete and the example
code was particularly nasty.
* test_monitor.cpp needed rewriting, it was not clean.
- used msleep (10) in most places instead of zmq_sleep (1)
- may cause failures on slower machines
- to change, modify SETTLE_TIME in testutil.h
- tested down to 1 msec on fast boxes
* Removed redundant Z85 code and include files from project
* Simplified use of headers in test cases (now they all just use testutil.hpp)
* Export zmq_z85_encode() and zmq_z85_decode() in API
* Added man pages for these two functions
* Removed or truncated sleeps so the tests run faster
* Removed dependencies on zmq_utils
* Rewrote a few tests that were confusing
* Minor code cleanups
This change makes sure that even if the tests are built in a
"release" configuration (with optimizations and NDEBUG turned on),
the assertions won't get compiled out of the tests themselves.
The C standard guarantees that the most recent inclusion of
<assert.h> is the one that counts, so it's important that the
"#undef NDEBUG/#include <assert.h>" come as the last thing in
the block of header files.
"testutil.hpp" includes <assert.h>, so I've left <assert.h> out
of any test that #includes "testutil.hpp", just for the sake of
brevity.
This formerly unused parameter actually represents the socket
on which the event was received. As such, we should check that
its value makes sense: it must be either "rep" or "req", and in
the case of some kinds of events, it must be specifically one
or the other.
After this change, "s" is no longer unused.
Both memcmp and strcmp return zero on equal, nonzero on nonequal;
so all of these tests were backwards.
The original committer fixed the failure by comparing 22 bytes instead
of the correct 21, so that the assertions would trigger only if the
22nd byte happened to match exactly --- which was rare.
The correct fix is to compare the right number of bytes with the
right sense. (I think all of the ".addr" fields are null-terminated,
in which case it's more appropriate to use strcmp throughout.)
GCC 4.1.2 on RHEL5 and SLES10 don't like not having a newline at the
end of a source file, and error out if it's missing.
Signed-off-by: AJ Lewis <aj.lewis@quantum.com>
The current ZMQ_MONITOR code does not compile in gcc 4.7, as -pedantic
and -Werror are enabled, and ISO C++ doesn't allow casting between
normal pointers (void*) and function pointers, as pedantically their
size could be different. This caused the library not compilable. This
commit workaround the problem by introducing one more indirection, i.e.
instead of calling
(void *)listener
which is an error, we have to use
*(void **)&listener
which is an undefined behavior :) but works on most platforms
Also, `optval_ = monitor` will not set the parameter in getsockopt(),
and the extra casting caused the LHS to be an rvalue which again makes
the code not compilable. The proper way is to pass a pointer of function
pointer and assign with indirection, i.e. `*optval_ = monitor`.
Also, fixed an asciidoc error in zmq_getsockopt.txt because the `~~~~`
is too long.