tox_unpack is for unpacking Tox types, and bin_unpack is for
unpacking ints and binary data. This prevents us from creating
dependency cycles due to tox_unpack depending on tox.h
This commit adds functionality for clients to interact with
the DHT, sending getnodes requests to their peers and receiving
nodes in getnodes responses.
These help static analysis and ubsan. We should eventually have all
functions annotated like this with a cimple check to make sure every
pointer has an explicit nullability annotation. The `nullable`
annotation does nothing in GCC, but will be used by cimple to validate
that every parameter has defined nullability.
It was kind of thread-safe, maybe, but there was a data race that makes
tsan unhappy. We now do interface detection once per Tox instance
instead of once per process.
Instead of synchronously handling events as they happen in
`tox_iterate`, this first collects all events in a structure and then
lets the client process them. This allows clients to process events in
parallel, since the data structure returned is mostly immutable.
This also makes toxcore compatible with languages that don't (easily)
support callbacks from C into the non-C language.
If we remove the callbacks, this allows us to add fields to the events
without breaking the API.
* Function arguments must use `foo_cb *p` and can't just use `foo_cb p`
* You can no longer cast function pointers (if it's incompatible, you
must wrap the callback). I'm avoiding this with tokstyle exclusions.
* Drop the Travis build status.
* Drop the link to projects since we're not using that GitHub feature
anymore.
* Update the Binaries/Downloads link to point to tox.chat/downloads. The
previous link just lead to a page telling the user to go to
tox.chat/downloads.
* Update the code coverage badge to point to codecov.
Most system headers contain functions (e.g. `memcpy` in `string.h`)
which aren't needed in our own header files. For the most part, our own
headers should only include types needed to declare our own types and
functions. We now enforce this so we think twice about which headers we
really need in the .h files.
strerror_r() has two versions: GNU-specific and XSI-compliant. The XSI
version always stores the string in the provided buffer, but the GNU
version might store it in the provided buffer or it might use some
immutable static buffer instead. Since we always free the error string,
we might end up freeing the immutable static buffer.
Also added a whole bunch of logging that I needed while debugging the
issue. The solution in the end is that bootstrap needs to resolve IPs,
and getaddrinfo fails in the browser. Most of the time we bootstrap
against IPs anyway, so trying to parse as IP address first will shortcut
that.