Use vj_uncompress_err() instead of duplicating the same code.
Signed-off-by: Axel Lin <axel.lin@ingics.com>
Signed-off-by: Sylvain Rochet <gradator@gradator.net>
Current code does not correctly update ifoutoctets counter because nb->tot_len
is always 0. Fix it by setting nb->tot_len to actual payload length so we can
update ifoutoctets correctly.
Signed-off-by: Axel Lin <axel.lin@ingics.com>
Signed-off-by: Sylvain Rochet <gradator@gradator.net>
This changes tcpflags_t to be a u16_t for all cases. The TCP Appropriate
Byte Count support added a new flag that used a bit past 8 and since this
flag is now required, tcpflags_t can no longer be a u8_t
This does not increase the size of struct tcp_pcb due to padding that
already existed (see bug #51326 for details)
Signed-off-by: goldsimon <goldsimon@gmx.de>
The function previously returned after posting a message, which is a short operation. Now it actually waits until the operation has completed - which may take a long time. This may break user programs. So all that remains is the cleanup separation in tcpip_callback() and tcpip_try_callback() :-(
Created two new functions for API cleanup:
tcpip_callback() that blocks until message is posted, cannot be called from IRQs.
tcpip_try_callback() that does not block and just tries to post a message. Can be called from IRQs.
Add compatibility #define tcpip_callback_with_block() that maps to these two functions according to "block" parameter.
This switches netconn_gethostbyname to use tcpip_send_msg_wait_sem to
take advantage of core locking support when enabled.
tcpip_send_msg_wait_sem handles blocking for the non-core locking case,
so we can remove the manual blocking in netconn_gethostbyname. For the
core locking case, we need to block if waiting on DNS callback. To
achieve this, we unlock the core and wait in lwip_netconn_do_gethostbyname.
This is the similar approach that netconn_write takes when it needs to
block to continue the write (see lwip_netconn_do_write)
This improves performance in the core locking case and is no change
for the non-core locking case
TCP timestamps were only sent if the remote side
requested it first. This enables the use of timestamps
for outgoing connections as well.
Signed-off-by: goldsimon <goldsimon@gmx.de>