This patch contains:
* checks for malloc return value + treat callers;
* modified malloc() + ZeroMemory() to calloc();
* misc fixes of micro errors seen during the code audit:
** some invalid checks in gcc.c, also there were some possible
integer overflow. This is interesting because at the end the data are parsed
and freed directly, so it's a vulnerability in some kind of dead code (at least
useless);
** fixed usage of GetComputerNameExA with just one call, when 2 were used
in misc places. According to MSDN GetComputerNameA() is supposed to return
an error when called with NULL;
** there were a bug in the command line parsing of shadow;
** in freerdp_dynamic_channel_collection_add() the size of array was multiplied
by 4 instead of 2 on resize
Add option WITH_DEBUG_RINGBUFFER to enable/disable ringbuffer debugging
at compile time.
Even if it is possible to filter specific wlog tags it's not yet
possible to exclude one or more and ringbuffer adds massive debugging
output if enabled and WLOG_LEVEL is set to DEBUG.
"libfreerdp" consisted of multiple (small) single libraries. If the cmake
option MONOLITHIC was used only one library was build combining all of
the libfreerdp-* libraries.
The only exceptions to this are libfreerdp-server and libfreerdp-client these
are build as separate libraries.
This commit obsoltes non-monolithic builds and makes monolithic builds
the default. The cmake option MONOLITHIC is also removed.
Conflicts:
channels/drdynvc/client/dvcman.c
include/freerdp/codec/h264.h
libfreerdp/codec/h264.c after this merge h264 doesn't work anymore!!
libfreerdp/utils/svc_plugin.c
winpr is now always build as single library.
The build option MONOLITHIC_BUILD doesn't influence this behavior anymore.
The only exception is winpr-makecert-tool which is still build as extra
library.
This obsoletes complex_libraries for winpr.
select() has the major drawback that it cannot handle file descriptor
that are bigger than 1024. This patch makes use of poll() instead of
select() when poll() support is available.
This adds a ringbuffer implementation that targets bytes sending.
The ringbuffer can grow when there's not enough room, that's why it's
not thread-safe (locking must be done externally). It will be shrinked
to its initial size as soon as the used bytes are the half of the
initial size.