Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | |
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2015-03-11 | bus-proxy: complain only once about queue overflows | David Herrmann | |
If the local peer does not dispatch its incoming queue, the bus-proxy will slowly fill its outgoing queue. Once its full, it will continously complain that it cannot forward its messages. As it turns out, pulseaudio does have an idle background dbus connection that is not integrated into any mainloop (and given that gdbus and libdbus1 both support background shared connections, PA is probably not the only example), therefore, the bus-proxy will loudly complain if it cannot forward NameOwnerChanged events once the queue is full. This commit makes the proxy track queue-state and complain only once the queue runs full, not if it is already full. A PA bug-report (and patch) has been filed, and other applications should be fixed similarly. Hence, lets keep the error message, instead of dropping it. It's unused resources we really want to get rid of, so silencing the message does not really help (which is actually what dbus-daemon does). | |||
2015-02-23 | remove unused includes | Thomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen | |
This patch removes includes that are not used. The removals were found with include-what-you-use which checks if any of the symbols from a header is in use. | |||
2015-02-13 | bus-proxy: we don't pointlessly abbreviate function names | Lennart Poettering | |
It's fine to abbreviate local variables, but it's not OK to abbreviate function names needlessly. This is not an excercise in writing unreadable code. | |||
2015-01-17 | bus-proxy: share policy between threads | David Herrmann | |
This implements a shared policy cache with read-write locks. We no longer parse the XML policy in each thread. This will allow us to easily implement ReloadConfig(). | |||
2015-01-17 | bus-proxy: extract proxy into Proxy object | David Herrmann | |
Move all the proxy code into a "struct Proxy" object that can be used from multiple binaries. We now dropped SMACK as we have to refactor it to work properly. We can introduce it later on. |