This is the final piece of the series to establish io_uring support on
Linux.
MPD doesn't need io_uring for its efficient bulk I/O support, but to
allow file I/O to be cancelled. This is a big problem on CIFS/NFS
mounts where processes sleep uninterruptable if the file server
disappears, deadlocking MPD.
With io_uring, a flaky NFS connection allows MPD to continue to work
(even though there are still deadlocks inside MPD which need to be
addressed).
This plugin does not yet use cancellable `open()` using
`IORING_OP_OPENAT`. This will be implemented later.
Lots of other optimization opportunities for io_uring are still
missing as well - for example the database update could benefit a lot,
but unfortunately, io_uring doesn't have `readdir()` support just yet.
The former was deprecated with C++14.
According to the C++11 and C++17 standards, both files are identical.
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
Since we switched from autotools to Meson in commit
94592c1406, we don't need to include
`config.h` early to properly enable large file support. Meson passes
the required macros on the compiler command line instead of defining
them in `config.h`.
This means we can include `config.h` at any time, whenever we want to
check its macros, and there are no ordering constraints.
This adds a bit of overhead, but also adds flexibility to the API,
because arbitrary triggers may be invoked from that virtual method
implementation, not just Cond::signal().
The motivation for this is to make the handlers more dynamic, for the
upcoming buffering class utilizing ProxyInputStream.
Make the "open" method of plugins "file" and "archive" dummy methods
that always fail. Instead, let InputStream::Open() hard-code access
to these two plugins by using OpenLocalInputStream(). This allows
simplifyin the algorithm for falling back to probing archive plugins.