Merge the following patches from Kevin Beswick:
* fixed location to copy apachetools.h from ...
* another typo...
* fixed directory error in copying of header file.
* move one more copy instruction for a header file.
* create the perldir and jsdir
* changed the place where headers are copied... fixed an error which caused them to be copied wrong.
* fixed a capitalization typo issue in src/Makefile.am
* updated opensrf.xml.example to use C math and dbmath implementation rather than Perl
* fixed make distcheck problems -- builddir needed to be changed to srcdir
* fixed directory replacement in .c file problem stopped the command added in the previous revision from running multiple times, fixed the location of the file to execute the command on.
* changed where the directory replacement happens for osrf_json_gateway.c (it was after it was compiled rather than before)
* corrected another error with installing header files ( can't install directories recursively through the 'prefix_PRIMARY = files' apparently)
* went back to old way of copying perlmods and javascript. it will still be included in dist due to EXTRA_DIST in root makefile
* fix install of src/javascript and src/perlmods
* nobase_dist_lib_DATA defined twice... oops!
* fixed problem with order of execution of targets (install-data-local was being executed before files were copied. resulted in an error)
* fixed make dist, and changed ways that files are copied to their installed locations
* fixed path substitution for the rest of the files with hardcoded paths to ensure correct default functionality of opensrf
A little more autotools love:
* Avoid the use of tmp dir by using noinst_ prefix for timejson
* Remove DEF_LDLIBS usage (it enabled compiling, but did not link to the
libraries) and replace with specific LDADD and LIBADD options
dbs [Mon, 30 Jun 2008 19:46:08 +0000 (19:46 +0000)]
Patch from Kevin Beswick (kbeswick00@gmail.com) to address various problems with the autotools:
* src/libopensrf/Makefile.am:
* Fix typo for -I (includes) vs. -L (linking libraries) compile option
* src/Makefile.am:
* Propagate NDEBUG compile flag to all other makefiles
* Create target directories
* Set directories in example config files to match configured options
* configure.ac:
* Set default prefix to /opensrf/ instead of /openils/
* bin/osrf_config.in:
* Add --localstatedir option for osrf_config
* Correct output value for --apxs
* bin/osrf_ctl.sh
* Set default PID dir to localstatedir rather than sysconfdir
* Makefile.am:
* Propagate NDEBUG compile flag to all other makefiles
* Remove explicit rpath option, automake will figure that out for us (supposedly)
* examples/opensrf_core.xml.example, examples/opensrf.xml.example, examples/srfsh.xml.example:
* Set directories in example config files to match configured options
dbs [Wed, 25 Jun 2008 18:50:00 +0000 (18:50 +0000)]
Patch from Kevin Beswick to use autotools for OpenSRF configuration and build
Included is a patch for a working implementation of the GNU Autotools
to OpenSRF. Some of the perks of this system are: the user is given
the ability to install OpenSRF to non-standard locations,
dependency/library checking, gives a user the ability to only install
certain components, more portable to other operating systems, etc.
To test, simply run:
autogen.sh
configure
make
make install
Options for configure can be found using:
./configure --help
Also, the patch contains a new file, osrf_config, which is generated
by running the configure script. Running this file will print all
build options a user has chosen when compiling/installing Opensrf.
Command line arguments can be added to return each single build option
as well. This is useful to developers in that they are able to locate
a certain installation directory on a non-standard installation of
OpenSRF. To see the available command line options, run: osrf_config --help
erickson [Tue, 20 May 2008 19:43:13 +0000 (19:43 +0000)]
added new disconnected exception. added some error condition logging. no longer disconnecting on network handle clear, because parent process may be using the handle.
erickson [Sun, 18 May 2008 23:42:17 +0000 (23:42 +0000)]
No longer globally setting the network recv_callback handler to None
because it clobbers the callbacks of other python clients running
in the same within the same process. Now we capture the existing
callback and replace it after the request has been processed
erickson [Fri, 16 May 2008 12:45:11 +0000 (12:45 +0000)]
Patch from Scott McKellar:
These patches provide a new and more efficient implementation of
osrfHash, using a hash table for random lookups and a doubly linked
list for iterations.
It is more efficient for two main reasons. First, for iterations
it doesn't maintain a separate copy of the keys, that then have to go
through the hashing algorithm. Second, when updating an existing
item, it updates it in place rather than deleting it and creating
a new one.
erickson [Thu, 15 May 2008 20:55:02 +0000 (20:55 +0000)]
Patch from Scott McKellar:
This patch tweaks a few things.
1. In json_parse_json_string() we declare a character array buff[],
fill it with nuls, and never refer to it again. I eliminated it.
2. A few lines below that, we use memset() to clear a three-character
buffer. I replaced the memset() with an initializer clause.
3. in json_handle_error() we were relying on the osrf_clearbuf macro
to add a terminal nul. However the plan is for this macro to become
a no-op someday. I added the nul manually.
erickson [Thu, 15 May 2008 20:46:15 +0000 (20:46 +0000)]
Patch from Scott McKellar:
This patch tweaks the jid_get_* functions, which copy various
fragments of an jabber id into a buffer supplied by the caller.
If these functions don't find the fragments they're looking for, they
now return an empty string in the buffer. Earlier they would leave
the buffer unchanged, leaving it to the calling code to initialize
the buffer.
erickson [Thu, 15 May 2008 13:36:32 +0000 (13:36 +0000)]
Patch from Scott McKellar:
This patch is mostly a performance tweak, but also tidies up a few
things.
In apacheParseParms() we load POST data and GET data into the same
buffer, with the GET data coming first. However the old code loads
the POST data first. If there is also some GET data, we juggle some
buffers in order to get the GET and POST data into the right order.
The new code loads the GET data first, and then appends the POST
data onto it. Besides being simpler, the new code avoids a layer
of copying, as well as and two round trips through malloc() and
free().
Other details:
1. I rearranged the declarations of the variables sarray, buffer,
key, and val, so as to narrow their scope. In the case of sarray
this rearrangement avoids a potential memory leak in the case of an
error exit (where the POST data is excessive).
2. I append a terminal null to the input buffer instead of using
memset() to fill the entire buffer.
3. Since the bread variable is a long rather than an int, I corrected
the format specifier accordingly in one of the debug messages.
4. I eliminated some redundant casts in a couple of calls to
ap_unescape(), since the variables so cast are already the right
types.
5. The final debug message was being issued only when sarray was
not NULL. However at this spot sarray cannot be NULL anyway, so I
eliminated the test of sarray.
At long last, removing old objson sources. This will not affect the legacy
libobjson.so support, since that's all handled by libopensrf/osrf_legacy_json.c
These patches add two new functions to the osrfHash routines, and
apply them in several modules. THe purpose is to eliminate the
access of an osrfHash's internals by the client code, so that the
internals can be replaced more readily.
Those internals haven't changed yet, but they will.
This patch adds a new function so that code outside of osrf_hash.c
doesn't have to directly access the "current" member of an
osrfHashIterator. This bit of encapsulation will make it easier
to refactor the osrfHash code.
This patch boosts the performance of an osrfHashIterator a bit, by
reusing the "current" buffer whenever possible instead of freeing and
reallocating it on every iteration.
I wrote a benchmark that repeatedly traverses a 27-item hash table.
The new version is about 10% faster. This improvement is not as
dramatic as I had hoped for, but it's easy to get, and it won't hurt.
These three patches are independent of each other, but they all do the
same thing.
In each case, we had been getting the local host name by reading the
environmental variable $HOSTNAME. This approach normally works, but
it is vulnerable to abuse or error by a user who modifies the value
of that variable, or even unsets it altogether.
With these patches we will instead call gethostname(), which is not
affected by changes in the environment.
Patch from Scott McKellar (with commentary on future plans):
This patch applies the const qualifier to several variables, each of
them a copy of the "current" member of an osrfHashIterator.
**********************
While this patch is pretty inconsequential on its own, it is part of a
larger plan to streamline the use of osrfHashIterators.
The "current" member points to a dynamically allocated string. Every
time we advance the iterator, we free the string and allocate another
one to replace it.
My plan is to reuse the buffer whenever possible so as to reduce the
churning of memory through malloc() and free(). This approach will
require an additional member to keep track of the current capacity of
the buffer, rather like the "size" member of a growing_buffer.
It will also require that all code using osrfHashIterators treat the
"current" member as read-only. If somebody frees and replaces the
buffer outside of the proper interface, then buffer management will
get very confused.
I doubt that any code does anything so perfidious, but I'm going
through the files to make sure. Adding the const qualifier is an
easy way not only to verify that nothing bad is happening, but also
to make it less likely that something bad will happen in the future.
This patch elinminates the use of the osrf_clearbuf macro in several
spots. In each case, the buffer needs to be initialized to an empty
string, because the call to jid_get_* doesn't necessarily populate it
with anything else. In debugging mode, osrf_clearbuf() will fill the
field with exclamation points, which is not helpful in this context.
erickson [Mon, 31 Mar 2008 20:47:41 +0000 (20:47 +0000)]
This patch replaces the regex-based XML stream parsing mechanism with an XML::Parser (expat) based parser.
The API and parsing behavior should behave identically
This requires a new OpenSRF Perl dependency -> FreezeThaw
erickson [Tue, 11 Mar 2008 14:40:55 +0000 (14:40 +0000)]
rolling back change in changeset 1277 for default osrf_clearbuf handling. not sure of the exact problem yet, suffice to say the services wont start with the "!!!..." version of clearbuf enabled
miker [Mon, 10 Mar 2008 13:32:28 +0000 (13:32 +0000)]
Patch from Scott McKellar:
1. Pedantic: I changed child_dead from an int to a sig_atomic_t, since
we set it from a signal handler.
2. In check_children() and prefork_child_wait(), we prepare an input
buffer for a read() by calling the osrf_clearbuf macro. Depending on
the existence of NDEBUG, this macro may or may not do the right thing.
If it does the wrong thing, it will pad the input data with
exclamation points, up to the maximimum length.
I added code to explicitly add a terminal nul, thus rendering
the osrf_clearbuf macro both harmless and superfluous.
This issue is the same one that I mentioned yesterday in connection
with socket_bundle.c, so I shall not belabor it here.
3. In addition: in check_children() I arranged to issue the debug
message only if the read is successful.
miker [Mon, 10 Mar 2008 13:10:59 +0000 (13:10 +0000)]
Parially, a patch from Scott McKellar:
1. In socket_open_unix_server() and socket_open_unix_client(), I added
checks to make sure that the path parameter doesn't point to aomething
too big to fit into the receiving buffer of the struct sockaddr_un.
2. In _socket_handle_client_data() I add a terminal nul to the data
received by recv().
Also, reversing the semantics and default of NDEBUG per. To turn on debugging
code, set DEBUG to 1 durring the build:
miker [Mon, 10 Mar 2008 12:04:57 +0000 (12:04 +0000)]
Patch from Scott McKellar:
This patch replaces several calls to fprintf() or printf() with calls
to fputs(), where we don't use conversion specifications.
Since fputs() doesn't have to parse the output text for conversions,
it should be marginally more efficient than fprintf() or printf().
More importantly: in one case the output text comes in part from an
input message, and may conceivably contain conversion specifications,
whether inadvertently or maliciously. In that case, fprintf() would
look for non-existent parameters to format into the output, resulting
in undefined behavior.