We need to identify ourselves as HTTP/1.1 so Range: works;
and so the server can return HTTP/1.1 instead of HTTP/1.0.
Tested against lighttpd 1.4.13
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@5394 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
strncpy isn't really safe because it doesn't guarantee null termination,
and we have had to work around it in several places.
strlcpy (from OpenBSD) isn't great, either because it often leaves
errors going unchecked (by truncating strings).
So we'll add the pathcpy_trunc() function with is basically strlcpy
with a hardcoded MAXPATHLEN as the limit, and we'll acknowledge
truncation since we only work on paths and MAXPATHLEN should be
set correctly by the system headers[1].
file-specific notes:
inputStream_http:
eyeballing the changes here, it seems to look alright but I
haven't actually tested it myself.
ls:
don't even bother printing a file if the filename is too long
(and when is it ever?) since we won't be able to read it anyways.
metadataChunk:
it's only metadata, and it's only for showin the user, so truncating
it here souldn't be a big issue.
memset to zero in init is unecessary, so lets not waste cycles
[1] - If the system headers are screwed up, then we're majorly
screwed regardless of what we do :x
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@4491 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
Add a few new options for indent to try to make
things a bit cleaner
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@4411 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
still lots some debug code with print out's, so don't bitch about it!
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@1364 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f