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769 lines
33 KiB
769 lines
33 KiB
What's new in Libevent 2.1
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Nick Mathewson
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0. Before we start
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0.1. About this document
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This document describes the key differences between Libevent 2.0 and
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Libevent 2.1, from a user's point of view. It's a work in progress.
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For better documentation about libevent, see the links at
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http://libevent.org/
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Libevent 2.1 would not be possible without the generous help of
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numerous volunteers. For a list of who did what in Libevent 2.1,
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please see the ChangeLog!
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NOTE: I am very sure that I missed some thing on this list. Caveat
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haxxor.
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0.2. Where to get help
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Try looking at the other documentation too. All of the header files
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have documentation in the doxygen format; this gets turned into nice
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HTML and linked to from the libevent.org website.
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There is a work-in-progress book with reference manual at
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http://www.wangafu.net/~nickm/libevent-book/ .
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You can ask questions on the #libevent IRC channel at irc.oftc.net or
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on the mailing list at libevent-users@freehaven.net. The mailing list
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is subscribers-only, so you will need to subscribe before you post.
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0.3. Compatibility
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Our source-compatibility policy is that correct code (that is to say,
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code that uses public interfaces of Libevent and relies only on their
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documented behavior) should have forward source compatibility: any
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such code that worked with a previous version of Libevent should work
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with this version too.
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We don't try to do binary compatibility except within stable release
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series, so binaries linked against any version of Libevent 2.0 will
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probably need to be recompiled against Libevent 2.1.4-alpha if you
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want to use it. It is probable that we'll break binary compatibility
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again before Libevent 2.1 is stable.
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1. New APIs and features
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1.1. New ways to build libevent
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We now provide an --enable-gcc-hardening configure option to turn on
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GCC features designed for increased code security.
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There is also an --enable-silent-rules configure option to make
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compilation run more quietly with automake 1.11 or later.
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You no longer need to use the --enable-gcc-warnings option to turn on
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all of the GCC warnings that Libevent uses. The only change from
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using that option now is to turn warnings into errors.
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For IDE users, files that are not supposed to be built are now
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surrounded with appropriate #ifdef lines to keep your IDE from getting
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upset.
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There is now an alternative cmake-based build process; cmake users
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should see the relevant sections in the README.
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1.2. New functions for events and the event loop
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If you're running Libevent with multiple event priorities, you might
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want to make sure that Libevent checks for new events frequently, so
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that time-consuming or numerous low-priority events don't keep it from
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checking for new high-priority events. You can now use the
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event_config_set_max_dispatch_interval() interface to ensure that the
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loop checks for new events either every N microseconds, every M
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callbacks, or both.
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When configuring an event base, you can now choose whether you want
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timers to be more efficient, or more precise. (This only has effect
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on Linux for now.) Timers are efficient by default: to select more
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precise timers, use the EVENT_BASE_FLAG_PRECISE_TIMER flag when
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constructing the event_config, or set the EVENT_PRECISE_TIMER
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environment variable to a non-empty string.
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There is an EVLOOP_NO_EXIT_ON_EMPTY flag that tells event_base_loop()
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to keep looping even when there are no pending events. (Ordinarily,
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event_base_loop() will exit as soon as no events are pending.)
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Past versions of Libevent have been annoying to use with some
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memory-leak-checking tools, because Libevent allocated some global
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singletons but provided no means to free them. There is now a
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function, libevent_global_shutdown(), that you can use to free all
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globally held resources before exiting, so that your leak-check tools
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don't complain. (Note: this function doesn't free non-global things
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like events, bufferevents, and so on; and it doesn't free anything
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that wouldn't otherwise get cleaned up by the operating system when
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your process exit()s. If you aren't using a leak-checking tool, there
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is not much reason to call libevent_global_shutdown().)
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There is a new event_base_get_npriorities() function to return the
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number of priorities set in the event base.
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Libevent 2.0 added an event_new() function to construct a new struct
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event on the heap. Unfortunately, with event_new(), there was no
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equivalent for:
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struct event ev;
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event_assign(&ev, base, fd, EV_READ, callback, &ev);
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In other words, there was no easy way for event_new() to set up an
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event so that the event itself would be its callback argument.
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Libevent 2.1 lets you do this by passing "event_self_cbarg()" as the
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callback argument:
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struct event *evp;
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evp = event_new(base, fd, EV_READ, callback,
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event_self_cbarg());
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There's also a new event_base_get_running_event() function you can
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call from within a Libevent callback to get a pointer to the current
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event. This should never be strictly necessary, but it's sometimes
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convenient.
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The event_base_once() function used to leak some memory if the event
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that it added was never actually triggered. Now, its memory is
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tracked in the event_base and freed when the event_base is freed.
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Note however that Libevent doesn't know how to free any information
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passed as the callback argument to event_base_once is still something
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you'll might need a way to de-allocate yourself.
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There is an event_get_priority() function to return an event's
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priority.
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By analogy to event_base_loopbreak(), there is now an
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event_base_loopcontinue() that tells Libevent to stop processing
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active event callbacks, and re-scan for new events right away.
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There's a function, event_base_foreach_event(), that can iterate over
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every event currently pending or active on an event base, and invoke a
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user-supplied callback on each. The callback must not alter the events
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or add or remove anything to the event base.
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We now have an event_remove_timer() function to remove the timeout on
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an event while leaving its socket and/or signal triggers unchanged.
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(If we were designing the API from scratch, this would be the behavior
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of "event_add(ev, NULL)" on an already-added event with a timeout. But
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that's a no-op in past versions of Libevent, and we don't want to
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break compatibility.)
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You can use the new event_base_get_num_events() function to find the
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number of events active or pending on an event_base. To find the
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largest number of events that there have been since the last call, use
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event_base_get_max_events().
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You can now activate all the events waiting for a given fd or signal
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using the event_base_active_by_fd() and event_base_active_by_signal()
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APIs.
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On backends that support it (currently epoll), there is now an
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EV_CLOSED flag that programs can use to detect when a socket has
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closed without having to read all the bytes until receiving an EOF.
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1.3. Event finalization
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1.3.1. Why event finalization?
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Libevent 2.1 now supports an API for safely "finalizing" events that
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might be running in multiple threads, and provides a way to slightly
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change the semantics of event_del() to prevent deadlocks in
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multithreaded programs.
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To motivate this feature, consider the following code, in the context
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of a mulithreaded Libevent application:
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struct connection *conn = event_get_callback_arg(ev);
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event_del(ev);
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connection_free(conn);
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Suppose that the event's callback might be running in another thread,
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and using the value of "conn" concurrently. We wouldn't want to
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execute the connection_free() call until "conn" is no longer in use.
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How can we make this code safe?
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Libevent 2.0 answered that question by saying that the event_del()
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call should block if the event's callback is running in another
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thread. That way, we can be sure that event_del() has canceled the
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callback (if the callback hadn't started running yet), or has waited
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for the callback to finish.
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But now suppose that the data structure is protected by a lock, and we
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have the following code:
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void check_disable(struct connection *connection) {
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lock(connection);
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if (should_stop_reading(connection))
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event_del(connection->read_event);
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unlock(connection);
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}
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What happens when we call check_disable() from a callback and from
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another thread? Let's say that the other thread gets the lock
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first. If it decides to call event_del(), it will wait for the
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callback to finish. But meanwhile, the callback will be waiting for
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the lock on the connection. Since each threads is waiting for the
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other one to release a resource, the program will deadlock.
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This bug showed up in multithreaded bufferevent programs in 2.1,
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particularly when freeing bufferevents. (For more information, see
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the "Deadlock when calling bufferevent_free from an other thread"
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thread on libevent-users starting on 6 August 2012 and running through
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February of 2013. You might also like to read my earlier writeup at
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http://archives.seul.org/libevent/users/Feb-2012/msg00053.html and
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the ensuing discussion.)
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1.3.2. The EV_FINALIZE flag and avoiding deadlock
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To prevent the deadlock condition described above, Libevent
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2.1.3-alpha adds a new flag, "EV_FINALIZE". You can pass it to
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event_new() and event_assign() along with EV_READ, EV_WRITE, and the
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other event flags.
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When an event is constructed with the EV_FINALIZE flag, event_del()
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will not block on that event, even when the event's callback is
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running in another thread. By using EV_FINALIZE, you are therefore
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promising not to use the "event_del(ev); free(event_get_callback_arg(ev));"
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pattern, but rather to use one of the finalization functions below to
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clean up the event.
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EV_FINALIZE has no effect on a single-threaded program, or on a
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program where events are only used from one thread.
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There are also two new variants of event_del() that you can use for
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more fine-grained control:
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event_del_noblock(ev)
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event_del_block(ev)
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The event_del_noblock() function will never block, even if the event
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callback is running in another thread and doesn't have the EV_FINALIZE
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flag. The event_del_block() function will _always_ block if the event
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callback is running in another thread, even if the event _does_ have
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the EV_FINALIZE flag.
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[A future version of Libevent may have a way to make the EV_FINALIZE
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flag the default.]
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1.3.3. Safely finalizing events
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To safely tear down an event that may be running, Libevent 2.1.3-alpha
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introduces event_finalize() and event_free_finalize(). You call them
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on an event, and provide a finalizer callback to be run on the event
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and its callback argument once the event is definitely no longer
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running.
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With event_free_finalize(), the event is also freed once the finalizer
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callback has been invoked.
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A finalized event cannot be re-added or activated. The finalizer
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callback must not add events, activate events, or attempt to
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"resucitate" the event being finalized in any way.
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If any finalizer callbacks are pending as the event_base is being
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freed, they will be invoked. You can override this behavior with the
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new function event_base_free_nofinalize().
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1.4. New debugging features
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You can now turn on debug logs at runtime using a new function,
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event_enable_debug_logging().
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The event_enable_lock_debugging() function is now spelled correctly.
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You can still use the old "event_enable_lock_debuging" name, though,
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so your old programs shouldnt' break.
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There's also been some work done to try to make the debugging logs
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more generally useful.
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1.5. New evbuffer functions
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In Libevent 2.0, we introduced evbuffer_add_file() to add an entire
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file's contents to an evbuffer, and then send them using sendfile() or
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mmap() as appropriate. This API had some drawbacks, however.
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Notably, it created one mapping or fd for every instance of the same
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file added to any evbuffer. Also, adding a file to an evbuffer could
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make that buffer unusable with SSL bufferevents, filtering
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bufferevents, and any code that tried to read the contents of the
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evbuffer.
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Libevent 2.1 adds a new evbuffer_file_segment API to solve these
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problems. Now, you can use evbuffer_file_segment_new() to construct a
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file-segment object, and evbuffer_add_file_segment() to insert it (or
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part of it) into an evbuffer. These segments avoid creating redundant
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maps or fds. Better still, the code is smart enough (when the OS
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supports sendfile) to map the file when that's necessary, and use
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sendfile() otherwise.
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File segments can receive callback functions that are invoked when the
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file segments are freed.
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The evbuffer_ptr interface has been extended so that an evbuffer_ptr
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can now yield a point just after the end of the buffer. This makes
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many algorithms simpler to implement.
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There's a new evbuffer_add_buffer() interface that you can use to add
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one buffer to another nondestructively. When you say
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evbuffer_add_buffer_reference(outbuf, inbuf), outbuf now contains a
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reference to the contents of inbuf.
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To aid in adding data in bulk while minimizing evbuffer calls, there
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is an evbuffer_add_iovec() function.
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There's a new evbuffer_copyout_from() variant function to enable
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copying data nondestructively from the middle of a buffer.
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evbuffer_readln() now supports an EVBUFFER_EOL_NUL argument to fetch
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NUL-terminated strings from buffers.
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There's a new evbuffer_set_flags()/evbuffer_clear_flags() that you can use to
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set EVBUFFER_FLAG_DRAINS_TO_FD.
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1.6. New functions and features: bufferevents
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You can now use the bufferevent_getcb() function to find out a
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bufferevent's callbacks. Previously, there was no supported way to do
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that.
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The largest chunk readable or writeable in a single bufferevent
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callback is no longer hardcoded; it's now configurable with
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the new functions bufferevent_set_max_single_read() and
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bufferevent_set_max_single_write().
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For consistency, OpenSSL bufferevents now make sure to always set one
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of BEV_EVENT_READING or BEV_EVENT_WRITING when invoking an event
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callback.
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Calling bufferevent_set_timeouts(bev, NULL, NULL) now removes the
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timeouts from socket and ssl bufferevents correctly.
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You can find the priority at which a bufferevent runs with
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bufferevent_get_priority().
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The function bufferevent_get_token_bucket_cfg() can retrieve the
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rate-limit settings for a bufferevent; bufferevent_getwatermark() can
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return a bufferevent's current watermark settings.
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You can manually trigger a bufferevent's callbacks via
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bufferevent_trigger() and bufferevent_trigger_event().
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Also you can manually increment/decrement reference for bufferevent with
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bufferevent_incref()/bufferevent_decref(), it is useful in situations where a
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user may reference the bufferevent somewhere else.
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Now bufferevent_openssl supports "dirty" shutdown (when the peer closes the
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TCP connection before closing the SSL channel), see
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bufferevent_openssl_get_allow_dirty_shutdown() and
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bufferevent_openssl_set_allow_dirty_shutdown().
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And also libevent supports openssl 1.1.
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1.7. New functions and features: evdns
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The previous evdns interface used an "open a test UDP socket" trick in
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order to detect IPv6 support. This was a hack, since it would
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sometimes badly confuse people's firewall software, even though no
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packets were sent. The current evdns interface-detection code uses
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the appropriate OS functions to see which interfaces are configured.
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The evdns_base_new() function now has multiple possible values for its
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second (flags) argument. Using 1 and 0 have their old meanings, though the
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1 flag now has a symbolic name of EVDNS_BASE_INITIALIZE_NAMESERVERS.
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A second flag is now supported too: the EVDNS_BASE_DISABLE_WHEN_INACTIVE
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flag, which tells the evdns_base that it should not prevent Libevent from
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exiting while it has no DNS requests in progress.
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There is a new evdns_base_clear_host_addresses() function to remove
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all the /etc/hosts addresses registered with an evdns instance.
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Also there is evdns_base_get_nameserver_addr() for retrieve the address of
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the 'idx'th configured nameserver.
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1.8. New functions and features: evconnlistener
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Libevent 2.1 adds the following evconnlistener flags:
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LEV_OPT_DEFERRED_ACCEPT -- Tells the OS that it doesn't need to
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report sockets as having arrived until the initiator has sent some
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data too. This can greatly improve performance with protocols like
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HTTP where the client always speaks first. On operating systems
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that don't support this functionality, this option has no effect.
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LEV_OPT_REUSEABLE_PORT -- Indicates that we ask to allow multiple servers
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to bind to the same port if they each set the option Ionly on Linux and
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>=3.9)
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LEV_OPT_DISABLED -- Creates an evconnlistener in the disabled (not
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listening) state.
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Libevent 2.1 changes the behavior of the LEV_OPT_CLOSE_ON_EXEC
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flag. Previously, it would apply to the listener sockets, but not to
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the accepted sockets themselves. That's almost never what you want.
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Now, it applies both to the listener and the accepted sockets.
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1.9. New functions and features: evhttp
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**********************************************************************
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NOTE: The evhttp module will eventually be deprecated in favor of Mark
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Ellzey's libevhtp library. Don't worry -- this won't happen until
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libevhtp provides every feature that evhttp does, and provides a
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compatible interface that applications can use to migrate.
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**********************************************************************
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Previously, you could only set evhttp timeouts in increments of one
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second. Now, you can use evhttp_set_timeout_tv() and
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evhttp_connection_set_timeout_tv() to configure
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microsecond-granularity timeouts.
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Also there is evhttp_connection_set_initial_retry_tv() to change initial
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retry timeout.
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There are a new pair of functions: evhttp_set_bevcb() and
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evhttp_connection_base_bufferevent_new(), that you can use to
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configure which bufferevents will be used for incoming and outgoing
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http connections respectively. These functions, combined with SSL
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bufferevents, should enable HTTPS support.
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There's a new evhttp_foreach_bound_socket() function to iterate over
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every listener on an evhttp object.
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Whitespace between lines in headers is now folded into a single space;
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whitespace at the end of a header is now removed.
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The socket errno value is now preserved when invoking an http error
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callback.
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There's a new kind of request callback for errors; you can set it with
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evhttp_request_set_error_cb(). It gets called when there's a request error,
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and actually reports the error code and lets you figure out which request
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failed.
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You can navigate from an evhttp_connection back to its evhttp with the
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new evhttp_connection_get_server() function.
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You can override the default HTTP Content-Type with the new
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evhttp_set_default_content_type() function
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There's a new evhttp_connection_get_addr() API to return the peer
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address of an evhttp_connection.
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The new evhttp_send_reply_chunk_with_cb() is a variant of
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evhttp_send_reply_chunk() with a callback to be invoked when the
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chunk is sent.
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The evhttp_request_set_header_cb() facility adds a callback to be
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invoked while parsing headers.
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The evhttp_request_set_on_complete_cb() facility adds a callback to be
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invoked on request completion.
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You can add linger-close for http server by passing
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EVHTTP_SERVER_LINGERING_CLOSE to evhttp_set_flags(), with this flag server
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read all the clients body, and only after this respond with an error if the
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clients body exceed max_body_size (since some clients cannot read response
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otherwise).
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The evhttp_connection_set_family() can bypass family hint to evdns.
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|
|
|
There are some flags available for connections, which can be installed with
|
|
evhttp_connection_set_flags():
|
|
- EVHTTP_CON_REUSE_CONNECTED_ADDR -- reuse connection address on retry (avoid
|
|
extra DNS request).
|
|
- EVHTTP_CON_READ_ON_WRITE_ERROR - try read error, since server may already
|
|
close the connection.
|
|
|
|
The evhttp_connection_free_on_completion() can be used to tell libevent to
|
|
free the connection object after the last request has completed or failed.
|
|
|
|
There is evhttp_request_get_response_code_line() if
|
|
evhttp_request_get_response_code() is not enough for you.
|
|
|
|
There are *evhttp_uri_parse_with_flags() that accepts
|
|
EVHTTP_URI_NONCONFORMANT to tolerate URIs that do not conform to RFC3986.
|
|
The evhttp_uri_set_flags() can changes the flags on URI.
|
|
|
|
1.10. New functions and features: evutil
|
|
|
|
There's a function "evutil_secure_rng_set_urandom_device_file()" that
|
|
you can use to override the default file that Libevent uses to seed
|
|
its (sort-of) secure RNG.
|
|
|
|
The evutil_date_rfc1123() returns date in RFC1123
|
|
|
|
There are new API to work with monotonic timer -- monotonic time is
|
|
guaranteed never to run in reverse, but is not necessarily epoch-based. Use
|
|
it to make reliable measurements of elapsed time between events even when the
|
|
system time may be changed:
|
|
- evutil_monotonic_timer_new()/evutil_monotonic_timer_free()
|
|
- evutil_configure_monotonic_time()
|
|
- evutil_gettime_monotonic()
|
|
|
|
Use evutil_make_listen_socket_reuseable_port() to set SO_REUSEPORT (linux >=
|
|
3.9)
|
|
|
|
The evutil_make_tcp_listen_socket_deferred() can make a tcp listener socket
|
|
defer accept()s until there is data to read (TCP_DEFER_ACCEPT).
|
|
|
|
2. Cross-platform performance improvements
|
|
|
|
2.1. Better data structures
|
|
|
|
We replaced several users of the sys/queue.h "TAILQ" data structure
|
|
with the "LIST" data structure. Because this data type doesn't
|
|
require FIFO access, it requires fewer pointer checks and
|
|
manipulations to keep it in line.
|
|
|
|
All previous versions of Libevent have kept every pending (added)
|
|
event in an "eventqueue" data structure. Starting in Libevent 2.0,
|
|
however, this structure became redundant: every pending timeout event
|
|
is stored in the timeout heap or in one of the common_timeout queues,
|
|
and every pending fd or signal event is stored in an evmap. Libevent
|
|
2.1 removes this data structure, and thereby saves all of the code
|
|
that we'd been using to keep it updated.
|
|
|
|
2.2. Faster activations and timeouts
|
|
|
|
It's a common pattern in older code to use event_base_once() with a
|
|
0-second timeout to ensure that a callback will get run 'as soon as
|
|
possible' in the current iteration of the Libevent loop. We optimize
|
|
this case by calling event_active() directly, and bypassing the
|
|
timeout pool. (People who are using this pattern should also consider
|
|
using event_active() themselves.)
|
|
|
|
Libevent 2.0 would wake up a polling event loop whenever the first
|
|
timeout in the event loop was adjusted--whether it had become earlier
|
|
or later. We now only notify the event loop when a change causes the
|
|
expiration time to become _sooner_ than it would have been otherwise.
|
|
|
|
The timeout heap code is now optimized to perform fewer comparisons
|
|
and shifts when changing or removing a timeout.
|
|
|
|
Instead of checking for a wall-clock time jump every time we call
|
|
clock_gettime(), we now check only every 5 seconds. This should save
|
|
a huge number of gettimeofday() calls.
|
|
|
|
2.3. Microoptimizations
|
|
|
|
Internal event list maintainance no longer use the antipattern where
|
|
we have one function with multiple totally independent behaviors
|
|
depending on an argument:
|
|
#define OP1 1
|
|
#define OP2 2
|
|
#define OP3 3
|
|
void func(int operation, struct event *ev) {
|
|
switch (op) {
|
|
...
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
Instead, these functions are now split into separate functions for
|
|
each operation:
|
|
void func_op1(struct event *ev) { ... }
|
|
void func_op2(struct event *ev) { ... }
|
|
void func_op3(struct event *ev) { ... }
|
|
|
|
This produces better code generation and inlining decisions on some
|
|
compilers, and makes the code easier to read and check.
|
|
|
|
2.4. Evbuffer performance improvements
|
|
|
|
The EVBUFFER_EOL_CRLF line-ending type is now much faster, thanks to
|
|
smart optimizations.
|
|
|
|
2.5. HTTP performance improvements
|
|
|
|
o Performance tweak to evhttp_parse_request_line. (aee1a97 Mark Ellzey)
|
|
o Add missing break to evhttp_parse_request_line (0fcc536)
|
|
|
|
2.6. Coarse timers by default on Linux
|
|
|
|
Due to limitations of the epoll interface, Libevent programs using epoll
|
|
have not previously been able to wait for timeouts with accuracy smaller
|
|
than 1 millisecond. But Libevent had been using CLOCK_MONOTONIC for
|
|
timekeeping on Linux, which is needlessly expensive: CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE
|
|
has approximately the resolution corresponding to epoll, and is much faster
|
|
to invoke than CLOCK_MONOTONIC.
|
|
|
|
To disable coarse timers, and get a more plausible precision, use the
|
|
new EVENT_BASE_FLAG_PRECISE_TIMER flag when setting up your event base.
|
|
|
|
3. Backend/OS-specific improvements
|
|
|
|
3.1. Linux-specific improvements
|
|
|
|
The logic for deciding which arguements to use with epoll_ctl() is now
|
|
a table-driven lookup, rather than the previous pile of cascading
|
|
branches. This should minimize epoll_ctl() calls and make the epoll
|
|
code run a little faster on change-heavy loads.
|
|
|
|
Libevent now takes advantage of Linux's support for enhanced APIs
|
|
(e.g., SOCK_CLOEXEC, SOCK_NONBLOCK, accept4, pipe2) that allow us to
|
|
simultaneously create a socket, make it nonblocking, and make it
|
|
close-on-exec. This should save syscalls throughout our codebase, and
|
|
avoid race-conditions if an exec() occurs after a socket is socket is
|
|
created but before we can make it close-on-execute on it.
|
|
|
|
3.2. Windows-specific improvements
|
|
|
|
We now use GetSystemTimeAsFileTime to implement gettimeofday. It's
|
|
significantly faster and more accurate than our old ftime()-based approach.
|
|
|
|
3.3. Improvements in the solaris evport backend.
|
|
|
|
The evport backend has been updated to use many of the infrastructure
|
|
improvements from Libevent 2.0. Notably, it keeps track of per-fd
|
|
information using the evmap infrastructure, and removes a number of
|
|
linear scans over recently-added events. This last change makes it
|
|
efficient to receive many more events per evport_getn() call, thereby
|
|
reducing evport overhead in general.
|
|
|
|
3.4. OSX backend improvements
|
|
|
|
The OSX select backend doesn't like to have more than a certain number
|
|
of fds set unless an "unlimited select" option has been set.
|
|
Therefore, we now set it.
|
|
|
|
3.5. Monotonic clocks on even more platforms
|
|
|
|
Libevent previously used a monotonic clock for its internal timekeeping
|
|
only on platforms supporting the POSIX clock_gettime() interface. Now,
|
|
Libevent has support for monotonic clocks on OSX and Windows too, and a
|
|
fallback implementation for systems without monotonic clocks that will at
|
|
least keep time running forwards.
|
|
|
|
Using monotonic timers makes Libevent more resilient to changes in the
|
|
system time, as can happen in small amounts due to clock adjustments from
|
|
NTP, or in large amounts due to users who move their system clocks all over
|
|
the timeline in order to keep nagware from nagging them.
|
|
|
|
3.6. Faster cross-thread notification on kqueue
|
|
|
|
When a thread other than the one in which the main event loop is
|
|
running needs to wake the thread running the main event loop, Libevent
|
|
usually writes to a socketpair in order to force the main event loop
|
|
to wake up. On Linux, we've been able to use eventfd() instead. Now
|
|
on BSD and OSX systems (any anywhere else that has kqueue with the
|
|
EVFILT_USER extension), we can use EVFILT_USER to wake up the main
|
|
thread from kqueue. This should be a tiny bit faster than the
|
|
previous approach.
|
|
|
|
4. Infrastructure improvements
|
|
|
|
4.1. Faster tests
|
|
|
|
I've spent some time to try to make the unit tests run faster in
|
|
Libevent 2.1. Nearly all of this was a matter of searching slow tests
|
|
for unreasonably long timeouts, and cutting them down to reasonably
|
|
long delays, though on one or two cases I actually had to parallelize
|
|
an operation or improve an algorithm.
|
|
|
|
On my desktop, a full "make verify" run of Libevent 2.0.18-stable
|
|
requires about 218 seconds. Libevent 2.1.1-alpha cuts this down to
|
|
about 78 seconds.
|
|
|
|
Faster unit tests are great, since they let programmers test their
|
|
changes without losing their train of thought.
|
|
|
|
4.2. Finicky tests are now off-by-default
|
|
|
|
The Tinytest unit testing framework now supports optional tests, and
|
|
Libevent uses them. By default, Libevent's unit testing framework
|
|
does not run tests that require a working network, and does not run
|
|
tests that tend to fail on heavily loaded systems because of timing
|
|
issues. To re-enable all tests, run ./test/regress using the "@all"
|
|
alias.
|
|
|
|
4.3. Modernized use of autotools
|
|
|
|
Our autotools-based build system has been updated to build without
|
|
warnings on recent autoconf/automake versions.
|
|
|
|
Libevent's autotools makefiles are no longer recursive. This allows
|
|
make to use the maximum possible parallelism to do the minimally
|
|
necessary amount of work. See Peter Miller's "Recursive Make
|
|
Considered Harmful" at http://miller.emu.id.au/pmiller/books/rmch/ for
|
|
more information here.
|
|
|
|
We now use the "quiet build" option to suppress distracting messages
|
|
about which commandlines are running. You can get them back with
|
|
"make V=1".
|
|
|
|
4.4. Portability
|
|
|
|
Libevent now uses large-file support internally on platforms where it
|
|
matters. You shouldn't need to set _LARGEFILE or OFFSET_BITS or
|
|
anything magic before including the Libevent headers, either, since
|
|
Libevent now sets the size of ev_off_t to the size of off_t that it
|
|
received at compile time, not to some (possibly different) size based
|
|
on current macro definitions when your program is building.
|
|
|
|
We now also use the Autoconf AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS mechanism to
|
|
enable per-system macros needed to enable not-on-by-default features.
|
|
Unlike the rest of the autoconf macros, we output these to an
|
|
internal-use-only evconfig-private.h header, since their names need to
|
|
survive unmangled. This lets us build correctly on more platforms,
|
|
and avoid inconsistencies when some files define _GNU_SOURCE and
|
|
others don't.
|
|
|
|
Libevent now tries to detect OpenSSL via pkg-config.
|
|
|
|
4.5. Standards conformance
|
|
|
|
Previous Libevent versions had no consistent convention for internal
|
|
vs external identifiers, and used identifiers starting with the "_"
|
|
character throughout the codebase. That's no good, since the C
|
|
standard says that identifiers beginning with _ are reserved. I'm not
|
|
aware of having any collisions with system identifiers, but it's best
|
|
to fix these things before they cause trouble.
|
|
|
|
We now avoid all use of the _identifiers in the Libevent source code.
|
|
These changes were made *mainly* through the use of automated scripts,
|
|
so there shouldn't be any mistakes, but you never know.
|
|
|
|
As an exception, the names _EVENT_LOG_DEBUG, _EVENT_LOG_MSG_,
|
|
_EVENT_LOG_WARN, and _EVENT_LOG_ERR are still exposed in event.h: they
|
|
are now deprecated, but to support older code, they will need to stay
|
|
around for a while. New code should use EVENT_LOG_DEBUG,
|
|
EVENT_LOG_MSG, EVENT_LOG_WARN, and EVENT_LOG_ERR instead.
|
|
|
|
4.6. Event and callback refactoring
|
|
|
|
As a simplification and optimization to Libevent's "deferred callback"
|
|
logic (introduced in 2.0 to avoid callback recursion), Libevent now
|
|
treats all of its deferrable callback types using the same logic it
|
|
uses for active events. Now deferred events no longer cause priority
|
|
inversion, no longer require special code to cancel them, and so on.
|
|
|
|
Regular events and deferred callbacks now both descend from an
|
|
internal light-weight event_callback supertype, and both support
|
|
priorities and take part in the other anti-priority-inversion
|
|
mechanisms in Libevent.
|
|
|
|
To avoid starvation from callback recursion (which was the reason we
|
|
introduced "deferred callbacks" in the first place) the implementation
|
|
now allows an event callback to be scheduled as "active later":
|
|
instead of running in the current iteration of the event loop, it runs
|
|
in the next one.
|
|
|
|
5. Testing
|
|
|
|
Libevent's test coverage level is more or less unchanged since before:
|
|
we still have over 80% line coverage in our tests on Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD,
|
|
Windows, OSX.
|
|
There are some under-tested modules, though: we need to fix those.
|
|
|
|
And now we have CI:
|
|
- https://travis-ci.org/libevent/libevent
|
|
- https://ci.appveyor.com/project/nmathewson/libevent
|
|
|
|
And code coverage:
|
|
- https://coveralls.io/github/libevent/libevent
|
|
|
|
Plus there is vagrant boxes if you what to test it on more OS'es then
|
|
travis-ci allows, and there is a wrapper (in python) that will parse logs and
|
|
provide report:
|
|
- https://github.com/libevent/libevent-extras/blob/master/tools/vagrant-tests.py
|
|
|
|
6. Contributing
|
|
|
|
From now we have contributing guide and checkpatch.sh.
|