Since file descriptors are now identified using their validation counter, it is a valid operation to invalidate a slot that is still referenced.
This fixes a related test failure in vibe-core.
isDir can be a huge performance issue when watching a network based directory and can effectively block the thread almost completely in case of frequent file changes. This does mean than high-level code now needs to perform the check manually, if required, and the free information provided by inotify goes unused.
Introduces a "validationCounter" field for all handle types that gets incremented (at least) whenever an OS file descriptor/handle gets invalidated or re-allocated. This way, an old eventcore handle to a reused OS handle can always be distinguished from the current one to avoid interference.
Ensure that only the connect or the connection error callback is ever triggered.
merged-on-behalf-of: Leonid Kramer <l-kramer@users.noreply.github.com>
On macOS it could happen that both, onConnect and onConnectError, were triggered, resulting in seemingly overlapping connection attempts when they really were sequential. This in turn triggered a connection error leak test in vibe-core.
Now using only the write-ready flag plus the reported socket error status to determine failed connections, guaranteeing a single call back.
Malloc should not force '@safe' or '@nogc' on constructors which are not.
For example, TaskPool's ctor is not '@nogc' but was assumed as such
thanks to the delegate cast happening in malloc.
Likewise, the ctor or the arguments might not be '@safe',
or any other attributes, but they were be mistakenly marked as such.
Depending on the timing of starting and finishing DNS queries, `Thread.join` could be called on an instance that had already been `destroy`ed. To avoid this, the thread instance is now explicitly set to null, as well as resetting the "done" field to avoid redundant work for unused slots.
See vibe-d/vibe.d#2378.
std.parallelism.Task.executeInNewThread leaks the thread's resources instead of reusing it in later calls. As a workaround, this commit starts a new thread for every lookup and properly tears it down afterwards. At a later point, this code should be changed to reuse the thread(s), if possible, to avoid the startup overhead.