* New src/ripple/crypto and src/ripple/protocol directories
* Merged src/ripple/common into src/ripple/basics
* Move resource/api files up a level
* Add headers for "include what you use"
* Normalized include guards
* Renamed to JsonFields.h
* Remove obsolete files
* Remove net.h unity header
* Remove resource.h unity header
* Removed some deprecated unity includes
The Stoppable interface aids in the enforcement of invariants needed to
successful start and stop a multi-threaded application composed of classes
that depend on each other in complex ways.
* Test written to confirm the current behavior.
* Comments updated to reflect the current behavior.
* Public API reduced to what is currently in use.
* Protected data members made private.
* volatile bool members changed to std::atomic<bool>.
* std::atomic<int> members changed to std::atomic<bool>.
* Name storage uses std::string
This gives the ssl_bundle shared ownership of the underlying ssl context
so that ownership of the bundle may be transferred to other classes without
introduce lifetime issues.
This changes the http::message object to no longer contain a body. It modifies
the parser to store the body in a separate object, or to pass the body data
to a functor. This allows the body to be stored in more flexible ways. For
example, in HTTP responses the body can be generated procedurally instead
of being required to exist entirely in memory at once.
This is class whose interface is identical to the boost::asio::basic_streambuf,
and uses an implementation that stores the data in multiple discontiguous
linear buffers, expanding and shrinking as needed.
* Some runner member functions are now thread-safe.
* De-inline and tidy up declarations and definitions.
* arg() interface allows command lines to be passed to suites.
Beast includes a lot of code for encapsulating cross-platform differences
which are not used or needed by rippled. Additionally, a lot of that code
implements functionality that is available from the standard library.
This moves away from custom implementations of features that the standard
library provides and reduces the number of platform-specific interfaces
andfeatures that Beast makes available.
Highlights include:
* Use std:: instead of beast implementations when possible
* Reduce the use of beast::String in public interfaces
* Remove Windows-specific COM and Registry code
* Reduce the public interface of beast::File
* Reduce the public interface of beast::SystemStats
* Remove unused sysctl/getsysinfo functions
* Remove beast::Logger
Many classes required to support type-erasure of handlers and boost::asio
types are now obsolete, so these classes and files are removed:
HTTPClientType, FixedInputBuffer, PeerRole, socket_wrapper,
client_session, basic_url, abstract_socket, buffer_sequence, memory_buffer,
enable_wait_for_async, shared_handler, wrap_handler, streambuf,
ContentBodyBuffer, SSLContext, completion-handler based handshake detectors.
These structural changes are made:
* Some missing includes added to headers
* asio module directory flattened
This changes the HTTP parser interface to return an error_code instead
of a bool. This eliminates the need for the error() member function and
simplifies calling code.
This works around the limitation that 1.56 boost::asio::ssl::stream objects
do not support r-value move or construction. It is required when the stream
does not own the socket.
* Remove all calls to setlocale to ensure that the global
locale is always C.
* Also replace beast::SystemStats::getNumCpus() with
std:🧵:hardware_concurrency()