The routing id (identity) frame return when reading from
a router doesn't have the same metadata as the "real"
message that follows.
For example, The ZAP "User-Id" property is missing.
This patch attach the "data message"'s metadata
to the "identity message" when it is read from the router.
While sending very large messages (far beyond what fits in a the tcp
buffer, so it takes multiple sendto system calls for it to finish),
zmq_close will close the connection regardless of ZMQ_LINGER.
In case no engine is attached, a pipe->check_read() is needed to look
for the delimiter in the pipe and ultimately trigger the pipe
termination.
However, if there *is* an engine attached, the check_read() looks ahead
and finds the delimiter and terminates the connection even though the
engine might actually still be in the middle of sending a message.
This happens because while the io_thread is still busy sending the data,
the pipe can get terminated and the io thread ends up being terminated.
Despite the old comments, re-initing the msg_t leaks a refcount to
metadata in some situations.
v1_decoder looks like it isn't tested any more, but it seems like a good
idea to fix it because it has the exact same piece of buggy code
v2_decoder does.
Fixes not receiving unsubscription messages in XPUB socket with
ZMQ_XPUB_VERBOSE and using a XSUB-XPUB proxy in front.
This adds two modifications:
- It adds a new flag, ZMQ_XPUB_VERBOSE_UNSUBSCRIBE, to enable verbose
unsubscription messages, necessary when using a XSUB/XPUB proxy.
- It adds a boolean switch to zmq::mtrie_t::rm () to control if the
callback is invoked every time or only in the last removal. Necessary
when a pipe is terminated and the verbose mode for unsubscriptions is
enabled.
A memcpy is eliminated when receiving data on a ZMQ_STREAM socket. Instead
of receiving into a static buffer and then copying the data into the
buffer malloced in msg_t::init_size, the raw_decoder allocates the memory
for together with the reference-counter and creates a msg_t object
on top of that memory. This saves the memcpy operation.
For small messages, data is still copied and the receive buffer is reused.