The wallclock() API uses gettimeofday which can be affected by the the
systems clock being changed etc. The curl fetcher usage of this API is
to generate a timing delta and does not cope with the gettimeofday
issues.
This changes the fetcher to use the nsutils library monotonic time
function which does not suffer from the issues with gettimeofday.
The config header was causing many source files to unecessarily
include the dirent headers causing extra dependancies. This has been
fixed by providing a utility dirent header that provides a common API
across all platforms while removing the unecessary dirent header usage.
The utility configuration header dragged in a number of bsd sockets
and related API as a side effect of setting up the configuration. By
splitting the header and API setup into a separate header only the
small number of places that need the functionality explitly include
it.
The update to remove curl usage from urldb must pull in the utility
config header instead to get inet_aton and such or compoles on some
platforms fail.
currently NetSurf uses curl_getdate to convert textural date and time
strings into seconds since epoch. It is betetr to move this
functionality to a utility function so curl_getdate can easily be
replaced if required.
When the operations tables were created the browser table was renamed
to miscellaneous except the actual rename patch was never applied,
this fixes that situation.
The printf formatting for size_t is set in c99 as %zu but in windows
it is %Iu this is solved by adding and inttypes style PRI macro for size_t
This also uses this macro everywhere size_t is formatted.
If a fetcher returns with no data (no content or http error code 204)
the hlcache state machine was trying to mimesniff using non existent
header data and reporting the resulting NSERROR_NOT_FOUND as a
"BadType" message.
This changes the behaviour to be similar to that in the headers
received case where NSERROR_NOT_FOUND from the mimesniffing is not an
error.
This is an attempt to amelioriate the situation found in #2384 where
we see the cURL connect() failing to complete. Based on the pcap
from the bug log, we believe that RISC OS is likely failing to signal
the completion of the connection to cURL. As such, cURL times out.
This change permits retries of timed out connections in the hope that
a fresh socket FD might subsequently function correctly. The defaults
chosen mean that the previous behaviour of 30 seconds before timeout
is reported will remain the same, but in that time we will make 3 separate
attempts to connect the socket.
Any fetch start error was being reported as "out of memory" which was
clearly insufficient. Foe example bad urls (reported was file:// with
a missing /) were causing a warn_user with out of memory. This change
now at least causes a "bad url" message.
This changes the LOG macro to be varadic removing the need for all
callsites to have double bracketing and allows for future improvement
on how we use the logging macros.
The callsites were changed with coccinelle and the changes checked by
hand. Compile tested for several frontends but not all.
A formatting annotation has also been added which allows the compiler
to check the parameters and types passed to the logging.
On some OS the ftruncate operation can take some time so move it to
occour in the background maintinance operations instead of when data
blocks are initialy opened. This should improve browsing responsiveness.
It seems many filesystems are greatly more efficient if the block file
is allocated its entire extent once rather than trying to
continuously grown the file later.
The size of the block files is known at their creation time so this
change ensures they are grown to the full possible extent hence removing
future inefficient writes.
Add a new interface to the content to allow automaticaly scaled
content redraws. This is intended to replace the thumbnail_redraw
interface with something more generic.
The generic bitmap handlers provided by each frontend are called back
from the core and therefore should be in an operation table. This was
one of the very few remaining interfaces stopping the core code from
being split into a library.