This module doesn't actually need to mock the libevent mainloop at
all: it can just use the regular mainloop that the test environment
sets up.
Part of ticket 23750.
The current code flow makes it that we can release a channel in a PENDING
state but not in the pending list. This happens while the channel is being
processed in the scheduler loop.
Fixes#25125
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This tests many cases of the KIST scheduler with the pending list state by
calling entry point in the scheduler while channels are scheduled or not.
Also, it adds a test for the bug #24700.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In 0.3.2.1-alpha, we've added notify_networkstatus_changed() in order to have
a way to notify other subsystems that the consensus just changed. The old and
new consensus are passed to it.
Before this patch, this was done _before_ the new consensus was set globally
(thus NOT accessible by getting the latest consensus). The scheduler
notification was assuming that it was set and select_scheduler() is looking at
the latest consensus to get the parameters it might needs. This was very wrong
because at that point it is still the old consensus set globally.
This commit changes the notify_networkstatus_changed() to be the "before"
function and adds an "after" notification from which the scheduler subsystem
is notified.
Fixes#24975
This makes sure that a non opened channel is never put back in the channel
pending list and that its state is consistent with what we expect that is
IDLE.
Test the fixes in #24502.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
For the rationale, see ticket #23709.
This is a pretty massive commit. Those queues were everywhere in channel.c and
it turns out that it was used by lots of dead code.
The channel subsystem *never* handles variable size cell (var_cell_t) or
unpacked cells (cell_t). The variable ones are only handled in channeltls and
outbound cells are always packed from the circuit queue so this commit removes
code related to variable and unpacked cells.
However, inbound cells are unpacked (cell_t), that is untouched and is handled
via channel_process_cell() function.
In order to make the commit compile, test have been modified but not passing
at this commit. Also, many tests have been removed but better improved ones
get added in future commits.
This commit also adds a XXX: which indicates that the handling process of
outbound cells isn't fully working. This as well is fixed in a future commit.
Finally, at this commit, more dead code remains, it will be cleanup in future
commits.
Fixes#23709
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Each type of scheduler implements its own static scheduler_t object and
returns a reference to it.
This commit also makes it a const pointer that is it can only change inside
the scheduler type subsystem but not outside for extra protection.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This option is a list of possible scheduler type tor can use ordered by
priority. Its default value is "KIST,KISTLite,Vanilla" which means that KIST
will be used first and if unavailable will fallback to KISTLite and so on.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This patch fixes the operator usage in src/test/*.c to use the symbolic
operators instead of the normal C comparison operators.
This patch was generated using:
./scripts/coccinelle/test-operator-cleanup src/test/*.[ch]
Only some very ancient distributions don't ship with Libevent 2 anymore,
even the oldest supported Ubuntu LTS version has it. This allows us to
get rid of a lot of compat code.
This is a big-ish patch, but it's very straightforward. Under this
clang warning, we're not actually allowed to have a global variable
without a previous extern declaration for it. The cases where we
violated this rule fall into three roughly equal groups:
* Stuff that should have been static.
* Stuff that was global but where the extern was local to some
other C file.
* Stuff that was only global when built for the unit tests, that
needed a conditional extern in the headers.
The first two were IMO genuine problems; the last is a wart of how
we build tests.