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esp
mongoose
Commits
04de3bb2
Commit
04de3bb2
authored
Jan 07, 2014
by
Sergey Lyubka
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docs/API.md
View file @
04de3bb2
...
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@@ -51,8 +51,8 @@ is serving, in between `mg_poll_server()` calls.
void mg_poll_server(struct mg_server *server, int milliseconds);
This function performs one iteration of IO loop by iterating over all
active connections, performing
`select()`
syscall on all sockets
, and sleeping
for
`milliseconds`
number of milliseconds. When
`select()`
returns, Mongoose
active connections, performing
`select()`
syscall on all sockets
with a timeout
of
`milliseconds`
number of milliseconds. When
`select()`
returns, Mongoose
does an IO for each socket that has data to be sent or received. Application
code must call
`mg_poll_server()`
in a loop. It is an error to have more then
one thread calling
`mg_poll_server()`
,
`mg_set_option()`
or any other function
...
...
docs/Internals.md
View file @
04de3bb2
# Mongoose Internals
Mongoose has single-threaded, event-driven, asynchronous, non-blocking core.
When mongoose server instance is created, it contains an information about
the configuration and the state of each connection:
`mg_create_server()`
creates a web server instance. An instance is a container
for the config options and list of active connections. To do the actual
serving, user must call
`mg_poll_server()`
, which iterates over all
active connections, performing
`select()`
syscall on all sockets with a
timeout of specified number of milliseconds. When
`select()`
returns, Mongoose
does an IO for each socket that has data to be sent or received. Application
code must call
`mg_poll_server()`
in a loop.
struct mg_server {
sock_t listening_sock; // Listening socket
union socket_address lsa; // Listening socket address
struct linked_list_link active_connections;
struct linked_list_link uri_handlers;
char *config_options[NUM_OPTIONS];
...
};
Mongoose server instance is designed to be used by a single thread.
It is an error to have more then
one thread calling
`mg_poll_server()`
,
`mg_set_option()`
or any other function
that take
`struct mg_server *`
parameter. Mongoose does not
mutex-protect
`struct mg_server *`
, therefore the best practice is
to call server management functions from the same thread (an IO thread).
A server instance is capable on listening on only one port. After creation,
a server instance has a list
of active connections, initially empty. It has a list of URI handlers,
initially empty, and configuration parameters. Configuration can be
altered by
`mg_set_option()`
, and new URI handlers could be added by
`mg_add_uri_handler()`
.
It is an error to pass and store
`struct mg_connection *`
pointers for
later use to send data. The reason is that they can be invalidated by the
next
`mg_poll_server()`
call. For such a task,
there is
`mg_iterate_over_connections()`
API
exists, which sends a callback function to the IO thread, then IO thread
calls specified function for all active connection.
When mongoose buffers in HTTP request and successfully parses it, it calls
appropriate URI handler immediately for GET requests. For POST requests,
Mongoose delays the call until the whole POST request is buffered in memory.
POST data is available to the callback as
`struct mg_connection::content`
,
and POST data length is in
`struct mg_connection::content_len`
.
Note that websocket connections are treated the same way. Mongoose buffers
websocket frame in memory, and calls URI handler when frame is fully
buffered. Frame data is available
`struct mg_connection::content`
, and
data length is in
`struct mg_connection::content_len`
, i.e. very similar to
the POST request.
`struct mg_connection::is_websocket`
flag indicates
whether the request is websocket or not. Also, for websocket requests,
there is
`struct mg_connection::wsbits`
field which contains first byte
of the websocket frame which URI handler can examine. Note that to
reply to the websocket client,
`mg_websocket_write()`
should be used.
To reply to the plain HTTP client,
`mg_write()`
should be used.
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