Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alfred Perlstein
f132072368 Redo the sigio locking.
Turn the sigio sx into a mutex.

Sigio lock is really only needed to protect interrupts from dereferencing
the sigio pointer in an object when the sigio itself is being destroyed.

In order to do this in the most unintrusive manner change pgsigio's
sigio * argument into a **, that way we can lock internally to the
function.
2002-05-01 20:44:46 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
59017610b2 Fix some edge cases where bad string handling could occur.
Submitted by: ps
2002-05-01 08:29:41 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
ef1047305e cleanup:
fix line wraps, add some comments, fix macro definitions, fix for(;;) loops.
2002-05-01 08:08:24 +00:00
Seigo Tanimura
960ed29c4b Revert the change of #includes in sys/filedesc.h and sys/socketvar.h.
Requested by:	bde

Since locking sigio_lock is usually followed by calling pgsigio(),
move the declaration of sigio_lock and the definitions of SIGIO_*() to
sys/signalvar.h.

While I am here, sort include files alphabetically, where possible.
2002-04-30 01:54:54 +00:00
Seigo Tanimura
d48d4b2501 Add a global sx sigio_lock to protect the pointer to the sigio object
of a socket.  This avoids lock order reversal caused by locking a
process in pgsigio().

sowakeup() and the callers of it (sowwakeup, soisconnected, etc.) now
require sigio_lock to be locked.  Provide sowwakeup_locked(),
soisconnected_locked(), and so on in case where we have to modify a
socket and wake up a process atomically.
2002-04-27 08:24:29 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
da289f07ee Fix incorrect logic wouldn't disconnect incomming connections that had been
disconnected because they were not full.

Submitted by: David Filo
2001-01-03 19:50:23 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
53ce36d17a Remove unneeded #include <sys/proc.h> lines. 2000-10-29 13:57:19 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
abbfaeb87b Remove headers not needed.
Pointed out by: phk
2000-10-07 23:15:17 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
34b94e8b82 Accept filter maintainance
Update copyrights.

Introduce a new sysctl node:
  net.inet.accf

Although acceptfilters need refcounting to be properly (safely) unloaded
as a temporary hack allow them to be unloaded if the sysctl
net.inet.accf.unloadable is set, this is really for developers who want
to work on thier own filters.

A near complete re-write of the accf_http filter:
  1) Parse check if the request is HTTP/1.0 or HTTP/1.1 if not dump
     to the application.
     Because of the performance implications of this there is a sysctl
     'net.inet.accf.http.parsehttpversion' that when set to non-zero
     parses the HTTP version.
     The default is to parse the version.
  2) Check if a socket has filled and dump to the listener
  3) optimize the way that mbuf boundries are handled using some voodoo
  4) even though you'd expect accept filters to only be used on TCP
     connections that don't use m_nextpkt I've fixed the accept filter
     for socket connections that use this.

This rewrite of accf_http should allow someone to use them and maintain
full HTTP compliance as long as net.inet.accf.http.parsehttpversion is
set.
2000-09-06 18:49:13 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
a79b71281c return of the accept filter part II
accept filters are now loadable as well as able to be compiled into
the kernel.

two accept filters are provided, one that returns sockets when data
arrives the other when an http request is completed (doesn't work
with 0.9 requests)

Reviewed by: jmg
2000-06-20 01:09:23 +00:00