Move more logic into the reader. Avoid copying partial messages in
cases where we know that the buffer is large enough.
This is mostly groundwork for trying to add support for continuation
frames.
Adding HTTP & websocket awareness to the TCP server.
HTTP server handles `GET /json/version` and websocket upgrade requests.
Conceptually, websocket handling is the same code as before, but receiving
data will parse the websocket frames and writing data will wrap it in
a websocket frame.
The previous `Ctx` was split into a `Server` and a `Client`. This was
largely done to make it easy to write unit tests, since the `Client` is
a generic, all its dependencies (i.e. the server) can be mocked out. This
also makes it a bit nicer to know if there is or isn't a client (via the
server's client optional).
Added a MemoryPool for the Send object (I thought that was a nice touch!)
Removed MacOS hack on accept/conn completion usage.
Known issues:
- When framing an outgoing message, the entire message has to be duped. This
is no worse than how it was before, but it should be possible to eliminate
this in the future. Probably not part of this PR.
- Websocket parsing will reject continuation frames. I don't know of a single
client that will send a fragmented message (websocket has its own
message fragmentation), but we should probably still support this just in
case.
- I don't think the receive, timeout and close completions can safely be
re-used like we're doing. I believe they need to be associated with a specific
client socket.
- A new connection creates a new browser session. I think this is right (??),
but for the very first, we're throwing out a perfectly usable session. I'm
thinking this might be a change to how Browser/Sessions work.
- zig build test won't compile. This branch reproduces the issue with none
of these changes:
https://github.com/karlseguin/browser/tree/broken_test_build
(or, as a diff to main):
https://github.com/lightpanda-io/browser/compare/main...karlseguin:broken_test_build
1 - Use getOrPut to avoid making 2 map lookups where possible.
2 - Use an arena allocator for Values, which makes memory management simpler.
3 - Because of #2, we no longer need to allocate key or values which don't need
to be unescaped. The downside is that the input string has to outlive the
query.Values (but I think this is currently always the case)
4 - Optimize unescape logic & allocations
5 - Improve test coverage