Software /
code /
prosody
File
net/cqueues.lua @ 12696:27a72982e331
util.jwt: Add support/tests for ES256 via improved API and using util.crypto
In many cases code will be either signing or verifying. With asymmetric
algorithms it's clearer and more efficient to just state that once, instead of
passing keys (and possibly other parameters) with every sign/verify call.
This also allows earlier validation of the key used.
The previous (HS256-only) sign/verify methods continue to be exposed for
backwards-compatibility.
author | Matthew Wild <mwild1@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 01 Jul 2022 18:51:15 +0100 |
parent | 10999:37b884d675f7 |
child | 12974:ba409c67353b |
line wrap: on
line source
-- Prosody IM -- Copyright (C) 2014 Daurnimator -- -- This project is MIT/X11 licensed. Please see the -- COPYING file in the source package for more information. -- -- This module allows you to use cqueues with a net.server mainloop -- local server = require "net.server"; local cqueues = require "cqueues"; local timer = require "util.timer"; assert(cqueues.VERSION >= 20150113, "cqueues newer than 20150113 required") -- Create a single top level cqueue local cq; if server.cq then -- server provides cqueues object cq = server.cq; elseif server.watchfd then cq = cqueues.new(); local timeout = timer.add_task(cq:timeout() or 0, function () -- FIXME It should be enough to reschedule this timeout instead of replacing it, but this does not work. See https://issues.prosody.im/1572 assert(cq:loop(0)); return cq:timeout(); end); server.watchfd(cq:pollfd(), function () assert(cq:loop(0)); local t = cq:timeout(); if t then timer.stop(timeout); timeout = timer.add_task(cq:timeout(), function () assert(cq:loop(0)); return cq:timeout(); end); end end); else error "NYI" end return { cq = cq; }