view src/core/ngx_syslog.h @ 6536:f7849bfb6d21

Improved EPOLLRDHUP handling. When it's known that the kernel supports EPOLLRDHUP, there is no need in additional recv() call to get EOF or error when the flag is absent in the event generated by the kernel. A special runtime test is done at startup to detect if EPOLLRDHUP is actually supported by the kernel because epoll_ctl() silently ignores unknown flags. With this knowledge it's now possible to drop the "ready" flag for partial read. Previously, the "ready" flag was kept until the recv() returned EOF or error. In particular, this change allows the lingering close heuristics (which relies on the "ready" flag state) to actually work on Linux, and not wait for more data in most cases. The "available" flag is now used in the read event with the semantics similar to the corresponding counter in kqueue.
author Valentin Bartenev <vbart@nginx.com>
date Fri, 13 May 2016 17:19:23 +0300
parents a6a2016b8e31
children 7f9935f07fe9
line wrap: on
line source


/*
 * Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc.
 */


#ifndef _NGX_SYSLOG_H_INCLUDED_
#define _NGX_SYSLOG_H_INCLUDED_


typedef struct {
    ngx_pool_t       *pool;
    ngx_uint_t        facility;
    ngx_uint_t        severity;
    ngx_str_t         tag;

    ngx_addr_t        server;
    ngx_connection_t  conn;
    unsigned          busy:1;
    unsigned          nohostname:1;
} ngx_syslog_peer_t;


char *ngx_syslog_process_conf(ngx_conf_t *cf, ngx_syslog_peer_t *peer);
u_char *ngx_syslog_add_header(ngx_syslog_peer_t *peer, u_char *buf);
void ngx_syslog_writer(ngx_log_t *log, ngx_uint_t level, u_char *buf,
    size_t len);
ssize_t ngx_syslog_send(ngx_syslog_peer_t *peer, u_char *buf, size_t len);


#endif /* _NGX_SYSLOG_H_INCLUDED_ */