We can remove those when we have a working implementation, for now it's too
painful to debug when an exchange doesn't work for some reason.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Makes it easier to distinguish between ei and eis when everything in the tests
is just printed to stderr anyway.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
SOCK_DGRAM gives us free message framing but the sockets we'll likely deal
with (or at least *have* to handle) are stream. This was a leftover anyway
from some debug testing.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This is a more explicit API that makes it more obvious where the ref/unref
calls need to go. The sink now has two refs to the sources as well (epoll data
pointer and the list) which means a caller cannot just source_unref() anymore
without removing a source. Since this is how we've been using it anyway - meh.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
We don't want valgrind to complain about leaks when we only handle a portion
of the events on the socket.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
That's what copy/pasting does... this argument is the user_data pointer which
we don't care about here.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Similar in style to Rust where the unit tests are in the same file. Let's see
how far we can get with that in C. Auto-discovery of tests by forcing the
respective suites into a special test section so we can collect it later from
our unit runner.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>