We were mistakenly not making a rejoin attempt on freezing connections
due to all closest connections going down. This fixes that, and tweaks
the test. I've still only done tens rather than hundreds of tests, but
I'm fairly confident that the conference test now consistently passes.
* add freezing and unfreezing of peers
* add rejoin packet
* revise handling of temporary invited connections
* rename "peer kill" packet to "peer leave" packet
* test rejoining in conference test
* use custom clock in conference test
This forces all the loop bodies to be executed at least once, which is
harmless since it just means one more tox event loop iteration. This
reduces the jitter we see in coverage measurements, which is partially
caused by loops sometimes being entered and sometimes not (because their
condition happens to randomly already be true).
* specify correct source files
* add save_compatibility_test (commented out for now)
* reformat TESTS to one line per test, and set check_PROGRAMS := TESTS
* add run_auto_test.h to EXTRA_DIST
* Fix `AUTO_TEST_CFLAGS` -> `AUTOTEST_CFLAGS`.
Reduced by, e.g.:
* `file_transfer_test`: 33% of the `clock_gettime` calls.
* `tox_many_test`: 53% of the `clock_gettime` calls.
Other tests will see similar improvements. Real world applications will
be closer to 40-50% improvement, since tox_many_test has 100 nodes, while
file_transfer_test has 2 nodes.
* test names in conference_test
* raise error on attempt to invite friend to group before we are connected
* revise handling of temporary invited connections
We are now careful not to prematurely delete a connection to a peer
established during the invitation process; namely, before we have sufficient
other connections and have confirmed that we have an alternative route to the
peer.
* process out-of-order messages from a peer
* don't reset names when handling a Peer Response
Renamed a poorly named test, fixed up a few printf statements,
substituted some unsigned integers with fixed size counterparts,
and implemmented the auto_run_test.h fixture for the lossy and
lossless packet tests.
The file_saving_test.c was not included in the cmake list
and thus was ignored by travis and "make check". I found this
out while introducing ck_assert_msg into the integration test.
Furthermore, removed some variable width integers from encryptsave_test.c,
and the SRunner utilization. Implemmented ck_assert_msg, reorganized some
loops, and removed some longs in file_transfer_test.c.
Did my best to surmise the size requirements of
these integers, will do the rest of the tests soon. Also added a todo
and made an obsessive change to a for loop.
* Moved PAIR to toxav, where it's used (but really this should die).
* Replace most MIN calls with typed `min_*` calls. Didn't replace the
ones where the desired semantics are unclear. Moved the MIN macro to
the one place where it's still used.
* Avoid assignments in `while` loops. Instead, factored out the loop body
into a separate `bool`-returning function.
* Use named types for callbacks (`_cb` types).
* Avoid assignments in `if` conditions.
* Removed `MAKE_REALLOC` and expanded its two calls. We can't have
templates in C, and this fake templating is ugly and hard to analyse
and debug (it expands on a single line).
* Moved epoll system include to the .c file, out of the .h file.
* Avoid assignments in expressions (`a = b = c;`).
* Avoid multiple declarators per struct member declaration.
* Fix naming inconsistencies.
* Replace `net_to_host` macro with function.
* Removed `ARRAY_SIZE` and use NULL markers for end of array, instead.
The alternative is + size, but for these arrays, NULL markers made
sense, since they are arrays of non-null pointers.
* Made `INDEX_OF_PK` a self-contained macro, not dependent upon the
naming inside its call site. This is a minor change but makes the code
more local and reviews easier.
* No nested structs.
* Use only named function types ending in `_cb` for callbacks.
* Replaced two macros with functions.
* `++i` instead of `i++`.
* struct member names start with lowercase letters.
* It takes a bit of work to support `/**/` comments in preprocessor
macros, so I've decided not to support these. If a macro is complex
enough to need comments inside it, it's too complex. `//` comments are
allowed at the end of macro definitions.
* Callback typedefs must name their parameters.
It turns out, `unix_time` is also monotonic, and is used as such, so I've
renamed the new functions to `mono_time_*`.
2018-07-08:
```
00:01 <@irungentoo> the idea used to be that the unix_time() function
could go backward in time but I think I might have started using it like
if it could not after I changed it so that it would never go back in time
```