Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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All is done in the Makefile, like with Cowboy.
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There is no need to contact the server and track requests unless being
asked to do so by the user. It's going to be faster and more efficient
to not track anything when being told tracking doesn't matter.
Whenever the max connections is set to infinity, the connections
counting key is not created, or is deleted if it existed already.
When using a numeric value, the connection count is created or
maintained if it existed already.
Moreover, trying to reduce a listener's counter while the max connection
number is set to `infinity` will return 0 and avoid all counting
operations as they are meaningless.
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This patch lets the user set and use raw socket options as described in
inet:setopts/2 documentation.
The raw options can be useful to use TCP features that are platform-
specific and not supported in inet in general, such as TCP_DEFER_ACCEPT
or TCP_LINGER2 in linux stacks, for example.
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It is non_neg_integer() | infinity. Introduce the type
`ranch:max_conns/0` for easier manipulation.
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Concerning supervisor tests subtle issue. Before we just presumed that last
port in the global list of ports is the listening socket. From now we trace
the return value of the `ranch_tcp:listen` call.
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Tests were constantly failing without this patch. It seems ct
starts erlang code server in interactive mode, so application
module loading is defered.
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Two general issues were addressed. The first one is the issue with
statically defined pids passed into childspecs. This issue prevents
regular supervisor' children restarts in the case of someone's
failure.
The second one is the not quite appropriate restart strategy.
Changed to rest_for_one which in pair with previous fixes assures
that live connections will not die in the case of partial failure.
Among possible failures are listening socket shutdown or frequent
accept errors.
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Making people happy one IRC channel at a time.
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Uses file:sendfile/2 for TCP, a fallback function for SSL.
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Enabled by default.
A comprehensive explanation about TCP_NODELAY and the Nagle algorithm
can be found at http://www.stuartcheshire.org/papers/NagleDelayedAck/
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At the same time we make the 'port' option optional, defaulting to 0.
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Should prove itself more robust when things go wrong.
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Distinguish the errors from transport_accept and ssl_accept
in ranch_ssl. {error, closed} for the first one means the listening
socket got closed; for the second one it means the connection
socket was.
Ignore all errors except when the listening socket got closed,
where we want to crash to allow opening the socket again.
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Ranch now accepts connection asynchronously through a separate
process. The accept process is linked to the acceptor, calls
accept and does nothing else but send the socket back to the
acceptor. This allows us to receive messages in the acceptor
to handle upgrades instead of polling. This will also allow us
later to make acceptors system processes.
Remove support for connection pools in favor of a simpler
max_connections setting. Connections can be removed from the
count, allowing us to have as many long-lived connections as
we want while still limiting the number of short-lived ones.
Add max_connections, max_connections with long-lived connections,
and upgrade tests.
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This way, if a crash happens in one of them after a protocol options
upgrade has occured, the restarted acceptor will get the upgraded
options as expected, and not the initial ones.
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