The function pointer casting used when creating drivers made changing interfaces difficult and led to slightly divergent driver implementations. Unit testing caught production-level errors but there were a lot of small issues and the process was harder than it should have been.
Use void pointers instead so that no casts are required. Introduce the THIS_VOID and THIS() macros to make dealing with void pointers a little safer.
Since we don't want to expose void pointers in header files, driver functions have been removed from the headers and the various driver objects return their interface type. This cuts down on accessor methods and the vast majority of those functions were not being used. Move functions that are still required to .intern.h.
Remove the special "C" crypto functions that were used in libc and instead use the standard interface.
Add bufDup() and bufNewUsedC().
Arrange bufNewC() params to match bufNewUsedC() since they have always seemed backward.
Fix bufHex() to only render the used portion of the buffer and fix some places where used was not being set correctly.
Use a union to make macro assignments for all legal values without casting. This is much more likely to catch bad assignments.
There is only one instance in the core code where this helps. It is mostly helpful in the tests.
There is an argument to be made that only THROW_SYS_ERROR*() variants should be used in the core code to improve test coverage. If so, that will be the subject of a future commit.
Some functions (e.g. getpwnam()/getgrnam()) will return an error but not set errno. In this case there's no use in appending strerror(), which will be "Success". This is confusing since an error has just been reported.
At least in the examples above, an error with no errno set just means "missing" and our current error message already conveys that.
The remote list was at most 9 (based on pg[1-8]-* max index) so anything over 8 wrote into unallocated memory.
The remote for the main process is (currently) stored in position zero so do the same for remotes started from locals, since there should only be one. The main process will need to start more remotes in the future which is why there is extra space.
Reported by Jens Wilke.
Use autoconf to provide a basic configure script. WITH_BACKTRACE is yet to be migrated to configure and the unit tests still use a custom Makefile.
Each C file must include "build.auto.conf" before all other includes and defines. This is enforced by test.pl for includes, but it won't detect incorrect define ordering.
Update packages to call configure and use standard flags to pass options.
Update RHEL repos that have changed upstream. Remove PostgreSQL 9.3 since the RHEL6/7 packages have disappeared.
Remove PostgreSQL versions from U12 that are still getting minor updates so the container does not need to be rebuilt.
LZ4 is included for future development, but this seems like a good time to add it to the containers.
The function provides all the file/path/link information required to build a backup manifest.
Also update storageInfo() to provide the same information for a single file.
At the same time change the way that load constructors work (and are named) so that Ini objects do not persist after the constructors complete.
infoArchiveSave() is excluded from this commit since it is just a trivial call to infoPgSave() and won't be required soon.
In most cases the JSON type is known so this is more efficient than converting to Variant first, both in terms of memory and time.
Also rename some of the existing functions for consistency.
Variants were being used to expose String and StringList types but this can be done more simply with an additional method.
Using only strings also allows for a more efficient implementation down the road.
This greatly reduces calls to filter processing, which is a performance benefit, but also makes the trace logs smaller and easier to read.
However, this means that ioWriteFlush() will no longer work with filters since a full flush of IoFilterGroup would require an expensive reset. Currently ioWriteFlush() is not used in this scenario so for now just add an assert to ensure it stays that way.
These are more efficient than creating buffers in place when needed.
After replacement discovered that bufNewStr() and BufNewZ() were not being used in the core code so removed them. This required using the macros in tests which is not the usual pattern.
Since the introduction of blocking read drivers (e.g. IoHandleRead, TlsClient) the non-blocking drivers have used the same rules for determining maximum buffer size, i.e. read only as much as requested. This is necessary so the blocking drivers don't get stuck waiting for data that might not be coming.
Instead mark blocking drivers so IoRead knows how much buffer to allow for the read. The non-blocking drivers can now request the maximum number of bytes allowed by buffer-size.
Bug Fixes:
* Fix zero-length reads causing problems for IO filters that did not expect them. (Reported by brunre01, jwpit, Tomasz Kontusz, guruguruguru.)
* Fix reliability of error reporting from local/remote processes.
* Fix Posix/CIFS error messages reporting the wrong filename on write/sync/close.
Add production checks to ensure no filter gets a zero-size input buffer.
Also, optimize the case where a filter returns no output. There's no sense in running downstream filters if they have no new input.
The IoRead object was passing zero-length buffers into the filter processing code but not all the filters were happy about getting them.
In particular, the gzip compression filter failed if it was given no input directly after it had flushed all of its buffers. This made the problem rather intermittent even though a zero-length buffer was being passed to the filter at the end of every file. It also explains why tweaking compress-level or buffer-size allowed the file to go through.
Since this error was happening after all processing had completed, there does not appear to be any risk that successfully processed files were corrupted.
Reported by brunre01, jwpit, Tomasz Kontusz, guruguruguru.
Releasing the lock too early was allowing other async processes to sneak in and start running before the current process was completely shut down.
The only symptom seems to have been mixed up log messages so not a very serious issue.
Asserts were only only reported on stderr rather than being returned through the protocol layer. This did not appear to be very reliable.
Instead, report the assert through the protocol layer like any other error. Add a stack trace if an assert error or debug logging is enabled.
These work almost exactly like the String constant macros. However, a struct per variant type was required which meant custom constructors and destructors for each type.
Propagate the variant constants out into the codebase wherever they are useful.
The STRING_CONST() macro worked fine for constants but was not able to constify strings created at runtime.
Add the STR() macro to do this by using strlen() to get the size.
Also rename STRING_CONST() to STRDEF() for brevity and to match the other macro name.
Removed the "anchor" parameter because it was never used in any calls in the Perl code so it was just a dead parameter that always defaulted to true.
Contributed by Cynthia Shang.