- make closures know where they should be executed (eg, on a workqueue,
or a combiner, or on an exec_ctx)
- this allows removal of a large number of trampoline functions that
were appearing whenever we used combiners, and should allow for a much
easier interface to combiner locks
This extends the existing http parser to support requests as well as responses.
httpcli continues to exist and work as it has previously, though in the new
directory src/core/http (to reflect the fact the directory now contains code
relevant to parsing requests, which httpcli would not generally involve itself
in).
Starting to allow for >1 implementation of pollset within a binary.
Do so without requiring an extra allocation for completion queues (which
we could not tolerate).
- cleanup: change grpc_iomgr_cb_func to take a bool instead of int
success
- cleanup: follow through with iomgr callback scheduling functions
- prepare: add a workqueue to offload to to grpc_exec_ctx_enqueue*
functions
run_tests.py will start a server (if it's not running, or if the running
port server mismatches the 'current' one) that serves ports to use for
tests. The server is left running after run_tests.py finishes, so that
in environments such as Mac and Windows where tests run unshielded from
each other, we don't start jumping on already used ports.
Currently, if two threads call grpc_completion_queue_pluck on the same
completion queue for different tags, there is a 50% chance that we
deliver the completion wakeup to the wrong poller - forcing the correct
poller to wait until its polling times out before it can return an event
up to the application.
This change tweaks our polling interfaces so that we can indeed wake a
specific poller.
Nothing has been performance tuned yet. It's definitely sub-optimal in a
number of places. Wakeup file-descriptors should be recycled. We should
have a path that avoids calling poll() followed by epoll(). We can
probably live without it right at the second though.
This code will fail on Windows at least (I'll do that port when I'm in the office and have a Windows
machine).