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264 lines
13 KiB
C++
264 lines
13 KiB
C++
#pragma once
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/*
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Copyright (c) 2018 Contributors as noted in the AUTHORS file
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This file is part of libzmq, the ZeroMQ core engine in C++.
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libzmq is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
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the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) as published
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by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
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(at your option) any later version.
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As a special exception, the Contributors give you permission to link
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this library with independent modules to produce an executable,
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regardless of the license terms of these independent modules, and to
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copy and distribute the resulting executable under terms of your choice,
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provided that you also meet, for each linked independent module, the
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terms and conditions of the license of that module. An independent
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module is a module which is not derived from or based on this library.
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If you modify this library, you must extend this exception to your
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version of the library.
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libzmq is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
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ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
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FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public
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License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
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along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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*/
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#include "../include/zmq.h"
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#include "testutil.hpp"
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#include <unity.h>
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// Internal helper functions that are not intended to be directly called from
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// tests. They must be declared in the header since they are used by macros.
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int test_assert_success_message_errno_helper (int rc_,
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const char *msg_,
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const char *expr_);
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int test_assert_success_message_raw_errno_helper (int rc_,
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const char *msg_,
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const char *expr_);
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int test_assert_failure_message_raw_errno_helper (int rc_,
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int expected_errno_,
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const char *msg_,
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const char *expr_);
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Macros extending Unity's TEST_ASSERT_* macros in a similar fashion.
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// For TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS_ERRNO, TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS_MESSAGE_ERRNO and
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// TEST_ASSERT_FAILURE_ERRNO, 'expr' must be an expression evaluating
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// to a result in the style of a libzmq API function, i.e. an integer which
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// is non-negative in case of success, and -1 in case of a failure, and sets
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// the value returned by zmq_errno () to the error code.
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// TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS_RAW_ERRNO and TEST_ASSERT_FAILURE_RAW_ERRNO are similar,
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// but used with the native socket API functions, and expect that the error
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// code can be retrieved in the native way (i.e. WSAGetLastError on Windows,
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// and errno otherwise).
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// Asserts that the libzmq API 'expr' is successful. In case of a failure, the
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// assertion message includes the literal 'expr', the error number as
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// determined by zmq_errno(), and the additional 'msg'.
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// In case of success, the result of the macro is the result of 'expr'.
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#define TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS_MESSAGE_ERRNO(expr, msg) \
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test_assert_success_message_errno_helper (expr, msg, #expr)
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// Asserts that the libzmq API 'expr' is successful. In case of a failure, the
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// assertion message includes the literal 'expr' and the error code.
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// A typical use would be:
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// TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS_ERRNO (zmq_connect (socket, endpoint));
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// In case of success, the result of the macro is the result of 'expr'.
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//
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// If an additional message should be displayed in case of a failure, use
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// TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS_MESSAGE_ERRNO.
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#define TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS_ERRNO(expr) \
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test_assert_success_message_errno_helper (expr, NULL, #expr)
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// Asserts that the socket API 'expr' is successful. In case of a failure, the
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// assertion message includes the literal 'expr' and the error code.
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// A typical use would be:
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// TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS_RAW_ERRNO (send (fd, buffer, 64, 0));
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// In case of success, the result of the macro is the result of 'expr'.
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#define TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS_RAW_ERRNO(expr) \
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test_assert_success_message_raw_errno_helper (expr, NULL, #expr)
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// Asserts that the socket API 'expr' is not successful, and the error code is
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// 'error_code'. In case of an unexpected succces, or a failure with an
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// unexpected error code, the assertion message includes the literal 'expr'
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// and, in case of a failure, the actual error code.
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#define TEST_ASSERT_FAILURE_RAW_ERRNO(error_code, expr) \
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test_assert_failure_message_raw_errno_helper (expr, error_code, NULL, #expr)
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// Asserts that the libzmq API 'expr' is not successful, and the error code is
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// 'error_code'. In case of an unexpected succces, or a failure with an
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// unexpected error code, the assertion message includes the literal 'expr'
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// and, in case of a failure, the actual error code.
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#define TEST_ASSERT_FAILURE_ERRNO(error_code, expr) \
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{ \
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int _rc = (expr); \
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TEST_ASSERT_EQUAL_INT (-1, _rc); \
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TEST_ASSERT_EQUAL_INT (error_code, errno); \
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}
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Utility functions for testing sending and receiving.
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Sends a string via a libzmq socket, and expects the operation to be
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// successful (the meaning of which depends on the socket type and configured
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// options, and might include dropping the message). Otherwise, a Unity test
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// assertion is triggered.
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// 'socket_' must be the libzmq socket to use for sending.
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// 'str_' must be a 0-terminated string.
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// 'flags_' are as documented by the zmq_send function.
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void send_string_expect_success (void *socket_, const char *str_, int flags_);
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// Receives a message via a libzmq socket, and expects the operation to be
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// successful, and the message to be a given string. Otherwise, a Unity test
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// assertion is triggered.
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// 'socket_' must be the libzmq socket to use for receiving.
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// 'str_' must be a 0-terminated string.
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// 'flags_' are as documented by the zmq_recv function.
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void recv_string_expect_success (void *socket_, const char *str_, int flags_);
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// Sends a byte array via a libzmq socket, and expects the operation to be
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// successful (the meaning of which depends on the socket type and configured
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// options, and might include dropping the message). Otherwise, a Unity test
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// assertion is triggered.
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// 'socket_' must be the libzmq socket to use for sending.
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// 'array_' must be a C uint8_t array. The array size is automatically
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// determined via template argument deduction.
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// 'flags_' are as documented by the zmq_send function.
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template <size_t SIZE>
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void send_array_expect_success (void *socket_,
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const uint8_t (&array_)[SIZE],
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int flags_)
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{
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const int rc = zmq_send (socket_, array_, SIZE, flags_);
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TEST_ASSERT_EQUAL_INT (static_cast<int> (SIZE), rc);
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}
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// Receives a message via a libzmq socket, and expects the operation to be
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// successful, and the message to be a given byte array. Otherwise, a Unity
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// test assertion is triggered.
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// 'socket_' must be the libzmq socket to use for receiving.
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// 'array_' must be a C uint8_t array. The array size is automatically
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// determined via template argument deduction.
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// 'flags_' are as documented by the zmq_recv function.
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template <size_t SIZE>
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void recv_array_expect_success (void *socket_,
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const uint8_t (&array_)[SIZE],
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int flags_)
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{
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char buffer[255];
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TEST_ASSERT_LESS_OR_EQUAL_MESSAGE (sizeof (buffer), SIZE,
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"recv_string_expect_success cannot be "
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"used for strings longer than 255 "
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"characters");
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const int rc = TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS_ERRNO (
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zmq_recv (socket_, buffer, sizeof (buffer), flags_));
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TEST_ASSERT_EQUAL_INT (static_cast<int> (SIZE), rc);
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TEST_ASSERT_EQUAL_UINT8_ARRAY (array_, buffer, SIZE);
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}
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Utility function for handling a test libzmq context, that is set up and
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// torn down for each Unity test case, such that a clean context is available
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// for each test case, and some consistency checks can be performed.
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Use this is an test executable to perform a default setup and teardown of
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// the test context, which is appropriate for many libzmq test cases.
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#define SETUP_TEARDOWN_TESTCONTEXT \
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void setUp () { setup_test_context (); } \
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void tearDown () { teardown_test_context (); }
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// The maximum number of sockets that can be managed by the test context.
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#define MAX_TEST_SOCKETS 128
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// Expected to be called during Unity's setUp function.
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void setup_test_context ();
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// Returns the test context, e.g. to create sockets in another thread using
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// zmq_socket, or set context options.
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void *get_test_context ();
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// Expected to be called during Unity's tearDown function. Checks that all
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// sockets created via test_context_socket have been properly closed using
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// test_context_socket_close or test_context_socket_close_zero_linger, and generates a warning otherwise.
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void teardown_test_context ();
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// Creates a libzmq socket on the test context, and tracks its lifecycle.
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// You MUST use test_context_socket_close or test_context_socket_close_zero_linger
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// to close a socket created via this function, otherwise undefined behaviour
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// will result.
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// CAUTION: this function is not thread-safe, and may only be used from the
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// main thread.
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void *test_context_socket (int type_);
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// Closes a socket created via test_context_socket.
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// CAUTION: this function is not thread-safe, and may only be used from the
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// main thread.
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void *test_context_socket_close (void *socket_);
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// Closes a socket created via test_context_socket after setting its linger
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// timeout to 0.
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// CAUTION: this function is not thread-safe, and may only be used from the
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// main thread.
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void *test_context_socket_close_zero_linger (void *socket_);
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Utility function for handling wildcard binds.
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// All function binds a socket to some wildcard address, and retrieve the bound
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// endpoint via the ZMQ_LAST_ENDPOINT socket option to a given buffer.
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// Triggers a Unity test assertion in case of a failure (including the buffer
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// being too small for the resulting endpoint string).
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// Binds to an explicitly given (wildcard) address.
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// TODO redesign such that this function is not necessary to be exposed, but
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// the protocol to use is rather specified via an enum value
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void test_bind (void *socket_,
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const char *bind_address_,
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char *my_endpoint_,
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size_t len_);
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// Binds to a tcp endpoint using the ipv4 or ipv6 loopback wildcard address.
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void bind_loopback (void *socket_, int ipv6_, char *my_endpoint_, size_t len_);
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typedef void (*bind_function_t) (void *socket_,
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char *my_endpoint_,
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size_t len_);
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// Binds to a tcp endpoint using the ipv4 loopback wildcard address.
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void bind_loopback_ipv4 (void *socket_, char *my_endpoint_, size_t len_);
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// Binds to a tcp endpoint using the ipv6 loopback wildcard address.
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void bind_loopback_ipv6 (void *socket_, char *my_endpoint_, size_t len_);
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// Binds to an ipc endpoint using the ipc wildcard address.
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// Note that the returned address cannot be reused to bind a second socket.
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// If you need to do this, use make_random_ipc_endpoint instead.
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void bind_loopback_ipc (void *socket_, char *my_endpoint_, size_t len_);
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// Binds to an ipc endpoint using the tipc wildcard address.
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void bind_loopback_tipc (void *socket_, char *my_endpoint_, size_t len_);
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#if !defined(ZMQ_HAVE_WINDOWS) && !defined(ZMQ_HAVE_GNU)
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// utility function to create a random IPC endpoint, similar to what a ipc://*
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// wildcard binding does, but in a way it can be reused for multiple binds
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// TODO also add a len parameter here
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void make_random_ipc_endpoint (char *out_endpoint_);
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#endif
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