* Problem: In rare cases, afunix.h doesn't contain a definition for struct sockaddr_un
According to https://github.com/microsoft/vcpkg/issues/21623,
struct sockaddr_un might be unavailable on some machines even afunix.h exists.
For example, on some machines, the content of afunix.h looks like this:
typedef struct _SOCKADDR_UN
{
ADDRESS_FAMILY Family;
wchar_t Path[63];
} SOCKADDR_UN, *PSOCKADDR_UN;
but on other machines, it may looks like this:
#define UNIX_PATH_MAX 108
typedef struct sockaddr_un
{
ADDRESS_FAMILY sun_family;
char sun_path[UNIX_PATH_MAX];
} SOCKADDR_UN, *PSOCKADDR_UN;
Fixes#3949
References:
- [Enable Unix-domain sockets support on Windows](8f3ec75de4)
- [AF_UNIX equivalent for Windows](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9029174/af-unix-equivalent-for-windows)
- https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/af_unix-comes-to-windows/
zmq_ppoll mostly mimics zmq_poll behavior, except for the added feature of being able to specify a signal mask. Signals in this mask will be blocked during execution of zmq_ppoll. Switching of the process' active signal mask happens atomically with the actual poll call, so that no race conditions can occur. This behavior is useful when one wants to gracefully handle POSIX signals without race conditions. See e.g. the discussion below https://250bpm.com/blog:12/ for an explanation.
Also includes two new tests:
1. test_zmq_ppoll_fd does the same thing as test_zmq_poll_fd, demonstrating backwards compatibility with zmq_poll when used with a default signal mask.
2. test_zmq_ppoll_signals demonstrates the use of zmq_ppoll with a signal mask, blocking out SIGTERM everywhere except in zmq_ppoll, allowing to handle the signal in one place without having to worry about race conditions.
Solution: switch to Github Actions
Travis recently started enforcing credits for OSS projects without
any funding. While it is possible to get free credits, it is a manual
step that involves contacting customer support via email and asking to
add them, every week. While this does not require money, it requires
something far scarcer: volunteers time.
Drop Travis and migrate to Github Actions.
* Problem: No direct support for setting socket priority
Solution: Add ZMQ_PRIORITY socket option, which sets the
SO_PRIORITY socket option on the underlying socket. This
socket option is not supported under Windows. Check option
and set socket option on creation of underlying socket.
* build_ios.sh now build for different archs
* change typo on build_ios.sh
Co-authored-by: Roberto Santacroce Martins <roberto.martins@transferoswiss.ch>
Solution: move all corpora to the zeromq/libzmq-fuzz-corpora repository
for easier handling, and to avoid inflating the size of zeromq/libzmq.
Clone it for the CI on the fly.
* Allow CMAKE to generate ws and wss transports
I guess there is little use of just ws transport, so by default
GnuTLS (and libsodium) are enabled
* cmake libzmq including wss transport (ubuntu 19.10 and ubuntu 19.10 + wsl 1.0)
test_security_fails (libsodium assert !?)
* updated relicense
* make external libs gnutls nss sodium optional
* #ifdef WSS classes and functions, build test*ws* only if correct libs are included, warning if libs not present
* make libsodium optional
* cmake fix tests TIPC transport
* clang-format pointed out a wrongly placed #ifdef
* GnuTLS before 3.6.7 is not safe
* msvc doesn't agree with strlen in array declaration, test_socks now at least compiles on windows
* windows: libsodium build fails, missing include dirs set by env var
* ws transport test only works when GnuTLS is found
* Fixed condition to use NSS / built in SHA1, so that test_ws_transport should now pass, also when GnuTLS is not found
Solution: Modify the build scripts so the user can specify the platform
for which to build, e.g. `./build.sh arm`. This approach originally
significantly reduces the parameters which have to be set before running
the script.
Further the build process is documented in a README now.
Solution: use libbsd by default when available, and the internal implementation
only as a fallback, to take advantage of Linux distros maintenance of the
string libraries.