Now ClearSocketList() may only be called from PrepareSockets().
Calling it before destroying the object doesn't work properly, because
it doesn't unregister the TimeoutMonitor and the IdleMonitor. Some of
its callers need to be fixed.
Change EventLoop::IsInside() call to EventLoop::IsInsideOrNull().
This means that BlockingCall() may be used during shutdown, after the
main EventLoop::Run() has finished. This is important because mixers
are currently registered in the main EventLoop.
Fixes race condition when epoll_ctl() gets called after the socket has
been closed, which may affect a different socket created by another
thread meanwhile.
When rpc_reconnect_requeue() gets called from inside nfs_service(),
the NfsInputStream can stall completely because the old socket has
been unregistered from epoll automatically, but the new one has never
been registered. Therefore, nfs_service() will never be called again.
This kludge attempts to detect this condition by checking
nfs_which_events()==POLLOUT.
https://bugs.musicpd.org/view.php?id=4081
If the base class is not accessible, the "catching" the base class
won't work. This caused the fatal error:
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'LibmpdclientError'
Each close/open cycle resets the Filter's state, because a new Filter
instance is being created. That results in the serials
(replay_gain_serial and other_replay_gain_serial) being out of sync
with the internal ReplayGainFilter state.
So instead of initializing those serials once, we need to initialize
them each time we create new ReplayGainFilter instances, i.e. in
OpenFilter().
https://bugs.musicpd.org/view.php?id=4632
Previously, there was no special code to convert stereo to
multi-channel. The generic solution for this was to convert to mono,
and then copy the result to all channels. That's a pretty bad
solution, but at least something which always renders audio. MPD does
something, instead of failing.
Now that MPD has proper support for multi-channel (by defining the
channel order), we can do better than that. It is a (somewhat) common
case to play back stereo music on a DAC which can only do
multi-channel. The best approach here is to copy the stereo channels
to front-left and front-right, and apply the "silence" pattern to all
other channels.