lwip_itoa would output the number 0 as \0. This fixes the issue by
adding a special check before the normal conversion loop
This was found via shell cmd idxtoname and win32 port. "lo0" should
be returned for index 1
These are now defined to return != SYS_ARCH_TIMEOUT on success rather than the time
waiting. The returned times were unused by lwip and this simplifies at
least some implementations.
Signed-off-by: goldsimon <goldsimon@gmx.de>
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
This commit adds a timeout to the zero-window probing (persist timer)
mechanism. LwIP has not historically had a timeout for the persist
timer, leading to unbounded blocking if connection drops during the
zero-window condition
This commit also adds two units test, one to check the RTO timeout
and a second to check the zero-window probe timeout
While TCP_OVERSIZE works only when tcp_write() is used with
TCP_WRITE_FLAG_COPY, this new code achieves
similar benefits for the use case that the caller manages their own
send buffers and passes successive chunks of those to tcp_write()
without TCP_WRITE_FLAG_COPY.
In particular, if a buffer is passed to
tcp_write() that is adjacent in memory to the previously passed
buffer, it will be combined into the previous ROM pbuf reference
whenever possible, thus extending that ROM pbuf rather than allocating
a new ROM pbuf.
For the aforementioned use case, the advantages of this code are
twofold:
1) fewer ROM pbufs need to be allocated to send the same data, and,
2) the MAC layer gets outgoing TCP packets with shorter pbuf chains.
Original patch by Ambroz Bizjak <ambrop7@gmail.com>
Edited by David van Moolenbroek <david@minix3.org>
Signed-off-by: goldsimon <goldsimon@gmx.de>