view auto/endianness @ 5643:436f3605195a

SPDY: consistently handle control frames with unknown type. The SPDY draft 2 specification requires that if an endpoint receives a control frame for a type it does not recognize, it must ignore the frame. But the 3 and 3.1 drafts don't seem to declare any behavior for such case. Then sticking with the previous draft in this matter looks to be right. But previously, only 8 least significant bits of the type field were parsed while the rest of 16 bits of the field were checked against zero. Though there are no known frame types bigger than 255, this resulted in inconsistency in handling of such frames: they were not recognized as valid frames at all, and the connection was closed.
author Valentin Bartenev <vbart@nginx.com>
date Mon, 07 Apr 2014 19:27:56 +0400
parents 434548349838
children 7ec809b579d7
line wrap: on
line source


# Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev
# Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc.


echo $ngx_n "checking for system byte ordering ...$ngx_c"
echo >> $NGX_ERR
echo "checking for system byte ordering" >> $NGX_ERR


cat << END > $NGX_AUTOTEST.c

int main() {
    int i = 0x11223344;
    char *p;

    p = (char *) &i;
    if (*p == 0x44) return 0;
    return 1;
}

END

ngx_test="$CC $CC_TEST_FLAGS $CC_AUX_FLAGS \
          -o $NGX_AUTOTEST $NGX_AUTOTEST.c $NGX_LD_OPT $ngx_feature_libs"

eval "$ngx_test >> $NGX_AUTOCONF_ERR 2>&1"

if [ -x $NGX_AUTOTEST ]; then
    if $NGX_AUTOTEST >/dev/null 2>&1; then
        echo " little endian"
        have=NGX_HAVE_LITTLE_ENDIAN . auto/have
    else
        echo " big endian"
    fi

    rm -rf $NGX_AUTOTEST*

else
    rm -rf $NGX_AUTOTEST*

    echo
    echo "$0: error: cannot detect system byte ordering"
    exit 1
fi