| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The stanza API does not accept number values and threw an error due to
the height and width attributes of the media element (XEP-0221).
This part had no test coverage previously, explaining why it was not
discovered until now.
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objects
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Otherwise it would use the configured buffer size, or previously '*a'.
Using the read size set by the listener seems more sensible.
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Otherwise the '*a' read mode applies, which under certain circumstances
can read infinite amounts of data into memory.
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Fixes #726
API:
module:provides("http", {
streaming_uploads = true;
route = {
PUT = function (event)
event.request.body_sink = io.tmpfile();
return true;
end
}
})
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This enables uses such as saving uploaded files directly to a file on
disk or streaming parsing of payloads.
See #726
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This is primarily a step towards saving uploads directly to files, tho
this should hopefully be more efficient than collapsing the entire
buffer to a single string every now and then.
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It's confusingly quiet otherwise, even with maximum verboseness.
Thanks perflyst
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Spammers are a big hassle, hopefully this will make admins aware of them sooner
than when they?ve already spammed a bunch.
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Makes it easier to see human-readable parts and thus identifying the
garbage. Also consistent with mod_c2s and others.
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XEP-0157 version 1.1.0
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Passing it in CFLAGS applied to all modules, which was not needed.
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luaunbound, lunbound, lua-unbound ... "k?rt barn har m?nga namn"
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Some modules have _VERSION = "LuaModule x.y.z", so it is a bit weird
to show the name twice.
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E.g. 'lxp' isn't that easy to guess that it's LuaExpat
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Currently libevent and libunbound would show up under Lua modules but
they are not, so a separate section seems more appropriate.
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Code reuse and one less module to import is nice.
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We use Mercurial, not git!
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net.cqueues previously relied on timers instead of fd events sometimes.
Under net.server_select, it would have called cq:loop() on every
iteration of the main loop, which was probably not optimal.
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This approximates what happens if you add a timer far in the future,
then reschedule it to right now.
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Why? Just look at all that code deleted!
watchfd is the prefered way to poll things that expose FDs for this
purpose, altho it was added after net.cqueues.
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A cache miss can be expensive so having numbers on how often this occurs
may be valuable.
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Might improve (CPU) performance at the risk of triggering top level
errors.
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This lets plugins handle errors in some custom way, should they wish to.
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Unused since the move to util.indexedbheap in c8c3f2eba898
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Reduces the overhead of having both util.timer and the timer handling
here, since they are very similar and now API-compatible.
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E.g. net.server_epoll is very close and could easily be adapted to
support this.
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frontmost chunk
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calls)
This fixes 'prosodyctl check dns' being slow.
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At least until packages are available
Wording from MattJ
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Similar to util.ringbuffer (and shares almost identical API). Differences:
- size limit is optional and dynamic
- does not allocate a fixed buffer of max_size bytes
- focus on simply storing references to existing string objects where possible,
avoiding unnecessary allocations
- references are still stored in a ring buffer to enable use as a fast FIFO
Optional second parameter to new() provides the number of ring buffer segments. On
Lua 5.2 on my laptop, a segment is ~19 bytes. If the ring buffer fills up, the next
write will compact all strings into a single item.
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