Instead of returning 0 or -1, return true on success and false on
failure. This seems more natural, and when the C library was
designed, there was no "bool" data type.
Provide separate constructors for creating a remote song, a local
song, and one for loading data from a song file. This way, we can add
more assertions.
This makes the update code thread-safe and doesn't penalize
the playlist code by complicating it with complicated and
error-prone locks (and the associated overhead, not everybody
has a thread-implementation as good as NPTL).
The update task blocks during the delete; but the update task is
a slow task anyways so we can block w/o people caring too much.
This was also our only freeSong call site, so remove that
function.
Note that deleting entire directories is not fully thread-safe,
yet; as their traversals are not yet locked.
We already know if a song is a URL or not based on whether it
has parentDir defined or not. Hopefully one day in the future
we can drop HTTP support from MPD entirely when an HTTP
filesystem comes along and we can access streams via open(2).
The "packed" attribute may have negative side effects on performance.
Remove the "packed" attribute, and increase the size of "song.url" to
a multiple of the machine word size.
Having an enum type is much nicer than an anonymous integer plus CPP
macros. Note that the old code didn't save any space by declaring the
variable 8 bit, due to padding.
Our linked-list implementation is wasteful and the
SongList isn't modified enough to benefit from being a linked
list. So use a more compact array of song pointers which
saves ~200K on a library with ~9K songs (on x86-32).
Move everything which dumps song information (via tag_print.c) to a
separate source file. song_print.c gets code which writes song data
to the client; song_save.c is responsible for serializing songs from
the tag cache.
clearMpdTag could be called on a tag that was still in a
tag_begin_add transaction before tag_end_add is called. This
was causing free() to attempt to operate on bulk.items; which is
un-free()-able. Now instead we unmark the bulk.busy to avoid
committing the tags to the heap only to be immediately freed.
Additionally, we need to remember to call tag_end_add() when
a song is updated before we NULL song->tag to avoid tripping
an assertion the next time tag_begin_add() is called.
If many tag_items are added at once while the tag cache is being
loaded, manage these items in a static fixed list, instead of
reallocating the list with every newly created item. This reduces
heap fragmentation.
Massif results again:
mk before: total 12,837,632; useful 10,626,383; extra 2,211,249
mk now: total 12,736,720; useful 10,626,383; extra 2,110,337
The "useful" value is the same since this patch only changes the way
we allocate the same amount of memory, but heap fragmentation was
reduced by 5%.
"decoder plugin" is a better name than "input plugin", since the
plugin does not actually do the input - InputStream does. Also don't
use typedef, so we can forward-declare it if required.
The database parser does not check whether the song object has been
initialized yet, which may lead to a NULL pointer dereference. Add
this check.
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7201 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
Local variables which are never read before the first assignment don't
need initialization. Saves a few bytes of text. Also don't reset
variables which are never read until function return.
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7199 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
[ew: cleaned up the dirty union hack a bit]
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7180 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
This will make refactoring features easier, especially now that
pthreads support and larger refactorings are on the horizon.
Hopefully, this will make porting to other platforms (even
non-UNIX-like ones for masochists) easier, too.
os_compat.h will house all the #includes for system headers
considered to be the "core" of MPD. Headers for optional
features will be left to individual source files.
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7130 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
thread-safety work in preparation for rewrite to use pthreads
Expect no regressions against trunk (r7078), possibly minor
performance improvements in update (due to fewer heap
allocations), but increased stack usage.
Applied the following patches:
* maxpath_str for reentrancy (temporary fix, reverted)
* path: start working on thread-safe variants of these methods
* Re-entrancy work on path/character-set conversions
* directory.c: exploreDirectory() use reentrant functions here
* directory/update: more use of reentrant functions + cleanups
* string_toupper: a strdup-less version of strDupToUpper
* get_song_url: a static-variable-free version of getSongUrl()
* Use reentrant/thread-safe get_song_url everywhere
* replace rmp2amp with the reentrant version, rmp2amp_r
* Get rid of the non-reentrant/non-thread-safe rpp2app, too.
* buffer2array: assert strdup() returns a usable value in unit tests
* replace utf8ToFsCharset and fsCharsetToUtf8 with thread-safe variants
* fix storing playlists w/o absolute paths
* parent_path(), a reentrant version of parentPath()
* parentPath => parent_path for reentrancy and thread-safety
* allow "make test" to automatically run embedded unit tests
* remove convStrDup() and maxpath_str()
* use MPD_PATH_MAX everywhere instead of MAXPATHLEN
* path: get rid of appendSlash, pfx_path and just use pfx_dir
* get_song_url: fix the ability to play songs in the top-level music_directory
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7106 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
Some compilers and linkers aren't smart enough to optimize this,
as global variables are implictly initialized to zero. As a
result, binaries are a bit smaller as more goes in the .bss and
less in the text section.
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@5254 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
I'm checking for zero-size allocations and assert()-ing them,
so we can more easily get backtraces and debug problems, but we'll
also allow -DNDEBUG people to live on the edge if they wish.
We do not rely on errno when checking for OOM errors because
some implementations of malloc do not set it, and malloc
is commonly overridden by userspace wrappers.
I've spent some time looking through the source and didn't find any
obvious places where we would explicitly allocate 0 bytes, so we
shouldn't trip any of those assertions.
We also avoid allocating zero bytes because C libraries don't
handle this consistently (some return NULL, some not); and it's
dangerous either way.
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@4690 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
This shaves another 5-6k because we've removed the paranoid
fflush() calls after every fprintf. Now we only fflush()
when we need to
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@4493 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
This patch massively reduces the amount of heap allocations at
the interface/command layer. Most commands with minimal output
should not allocate memory from the heap at all. Things like
repeatedly polling status, currentsong, and volume changes
should be faster as a result, and more importantly, not a source
of memory fragmentation.
These changes should be safe in that there's no way for a
remote-client to corrupt memory or otherwise do bad stuff to
MPD, but an extra set of eyes to review would be good. Of
course there's never any warranty :)
No longer do we use FILE * structures in the interface, which means
we don't have to allocate any new memory for most connections.
Now, before you go on about losing the buffering that FILE *
+implies+, remember that myfprintf() never took advantage of
any of the stdio buffering features.
To reduce the diff and make bugs easier to spot in the diff,
I've kept myfprintf in places where we write to files (and not
network interfaces). Expect myfprintf to go away entirely soon
(we'll use fprintf for writing regular files).
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@4483 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
These are just warnings from sparse, but it makes the output
easier to read. I ran this through a quick perl script, but
of course verified the output by looking at the diff and making
sure the thing still compiles.
here's the quick perl script I wrote to generate this patch:
----------- 8< -----------
use Tie::File;
defined(my $pid = open my $fh, '-|') or die $!;
if (!$pid) {
open STDERR, '>&STDOUT' or die $!;
exec 'sparse', @ARGV or die $!;
}
my $na = 'warning: non-ANSI function declaration of function';
while (<$fh>) {
print STDERR $_;
if (/^(.+?\.[ch]):(\d+):(\d+): $na '(\w+)'/o) {
my ($f, $l, $pos, $func) = ($1, $2, $3, $4);
$l--;
tie my @x, 'Tie::File', $f or die "$!: $f";
print '-', $x[$l], "\n";
$x[$l] =~ s/\b($func\s*)\(\s*\)/$1(void)/;
print '+', $x[$l], "\n";
untie @x;
}
}
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@4378 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f