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spec/util_debug_spec.lua @ 11516:83822be7704d
util.xmppstream: Send <?xml?> declaration in same call as stream open
If network_settings.opportunistic_writes is enabled then this would
previously have resulted in two socket writes, and possibly two packets
being sent. This caused some issues in older versions of Gajim, which
apparently expected the stream opening in the first packet, and thus it
could not connect.
With this change and opportunistic_writes enabled, the first packet
should contain both the xml declaration and the stream open tag.
Without opportunistic_writes, there should be no observable change.
Tested with Gajim 1.1.2 (on same machine). Unsure if loopback behaves
differently than the network here.
author | Kim Alvefur <zash@zash.se> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 14 Apr 2021 15:21:13 +0200 |
parent | 11177:37dc2a6144d1 |
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local dbg = require "util.debug"; describe("util.debug", function () describe("traceback()", function () it("works", function () local tb = dbg.traceback(); assert.is_string(tb); end); end); describe("get_traceback_table()", function () it("works", function () local count = 0; -- MUST stay in sync with the line numbers of these functions: local f1_defined, f3_defined = 43, 15; local function f3(f3_param) --luacheck: ignore 212/f3_param count = count + 1; for i = 1, 2 do local tb = dbg.get_traceback_table(i == 1 and coroutine.running() or nil, 0); assert.is_table(tb); --print(dbg.traceback(), "\n\n\n", require "util.serialization".serialize(tb, { fatal = false, unquoted = true})); local found_f1, found_f3; for _, frame in ipairs(tb) do if frame.info.linedefined == f1_defined then assert.equal(0, #frame.locals); assert.equal("f2", frame.upvalues[1].name); assert.equal("f1_upvalue", frame.upvalues[2].name); found_f1 = true; elseif frame.info.linedefined == f3_defined then assert.equal("f3_param", frame.locals[1].name); found_f3 = true; end end assert.is_true(found_f1); assert.is_true(found_f3); end end local function f2() local f2_local = "hello"; return f3(f2_local); end local f1_upvalue = "upvalue1"; local function f1() f2(f1_upvalue); end -- ok/err are caught and re-thrown so that -- busted gets to handle them in its own way local ok, err; local function hook() debug.sethook(); ok, err = pcall(f1); end -- Test the traceback is correct in various -- types of caller environments -- From a Lua hook debug.sethook(hook, "crl", 1); local a = string.sub("abcdef", 3, 4); assert.equal("cd", a); debug.sethook(); assert.equal(1, count); if not ok then error(err); end ok, err = nil, nil; -- From a signal handler (C hook) require "util.signal".signal("SIGUSR1", hook); require "util.signal".raise("SIGUSR1"); assert.equal(2, count); if not ok then error(err); end ok, err = nil, nil; -- Inside a coroutine local co = coroutine.create(function () hook(); end); coroutine.resume(co); if not ok then error(err); end assert.equal(3, count); end); end); end);