reuse. They have their reasons I guess. Thus, we will free
the old transport buffer if user passes the message in; at least
our mbuf will be reused.
+
+ When msg->state is not ok, this function must set tp_state in the message as some API
+ fucntions return the message directly and do not propigate errno into the message.
*/
static rmr_mbuf_t* rcv_msg( uta_ctx_t* ctx, rmr_mbuf_t* old_msg ) {
int state;
msg->state = nng_recvmsg( ctx->nn_sock, (nng_msg **) &msg->tp_buf, NO_FLAGS ); // blocks hard until received
if( (msg->state = xlate_nng_state( msg->state, RMR_ERR_RCVFAILED )) != RMR_OK ) {
+ msg->tp_state = errno;
return msg;
}
+ msg->tp_state = 0;
if( msg->tp_buf == NULL ) { // if state is good this _should_ not be nil, but parninoia says check anyway
msg->state = RMR_ERR_EMPTY;
+ msg->tp_state = 0;
return msg;
}
msg->mtype, msg->state, msg->len, msg->payload - (unsigned char *) msg->header );
} else {
msg->state = RMR_ERR_EMPTY;
+ msg->tp_state = 0;
msg->len = 0;
msg->alloc_len = rsize;
msg->payload = NULL;
Called by rmr_send_msg() and rmr_rts_msg(), etc. and thus we assume that all pointer
validation has been done prior.
+
+ When msg->state is not ok, this function must set tp_state in the message as some API
+ fucntions return the message directly and do not propigate errno into the message.
*/
static rmr_mbuf_t* send_msg( uta_ctx_t* ctx, rmr_mbuf_t* msg, nng_socket nn_sock, int retries ) {
int state;
// future: this should not happen as all buffers we deal with are zc buffers; might make sense to remove the test and else
msg->state = RMR_ERR_SENDFAILED;
errno = ENOTSUP;
+ msg->tp_state = errno;
return msg;
/*
NOT SUPPORTED
message type is used. If the initial lookup, with a subid, fails, then a
second lookup using just the mtype is tried.
+ When msg->state is not OK, this function must set tp_state in the message as
+ some API fucntions return the message directly and do not propigate errno into
+ the message.
+
CAUTION: this is a non-blocking send. If the message cannot be sent, then
it will return with an error and errno set to eagain. If the send is
a limited fanout, then the returned status is the status of the last
if( msg != NULL ) {
msg->state = RMR_ERR_BADARG;
errno = EINVAL; // must ensure it's not eagain
+ msg->tp_state = errno;
}
return msg;
}
fprintf( stderr, "rmr_send_msg: ERROR: message had no header\n" );
msg->state = RMR_ERR_NOHDR;
errno = EBADMSG; // must ensure it's not eagain
+ msg->tp_state = errno;
return msg;
}
msg->state = RMR_ERR_NOENDPT;
errno = ENXIO; // must ensure it's not eagain
+ msg->tp_state = errno;
return msg; // caller can resend (maybe) or free
}