The type isn't exported by OTP so we don't win much.
Also, inet.erl and file.erl define posix() différently,
so OTP needs to stop being so confuse in the first place
before we can attempt to use it properly.
Now the server defines default headers that can be overwritten by the
handler simply by passing them to the reply/4 function. Default headers
include, for now, Connection and Content-Length headers. Note that it isn't
enough to change the Connection header to close a keep-alive connection
server-side.
The server shouldn't crash the request process when we have an error
while receiving headers. A case where this could happen is if the header
line is too long.
See also bfrog's report on ticket #3 on github.
Moved the Transport:listen call to cowboy_acceptors_sup. This make it
depend on a child of cowboy_listener_sup instead of cowboy_sup, which
isn't getting shut down when calling cowboy:stop_listener/1 and thus
didn't close the listening socket.
As requested by many people on IRC Cowboy is now a proper OTP application
to support soft code upgrades. It should also be easier to start and stop
listeners now using cowboy:start_listener/6 and cowboy:stop_listener/1.
* Cowboy isn't an OTP application anymore; just a supervisor.
* All processes started by Cowboy are now anonymous.
* All processes related to a listener are now part of its supervision tree.
After much testing and experimentation of all kinds I find lists to be both
faster and using less memory than binaries for request-line and headers
handling. This is more than likely due to the fact that headers are very
short and thus do not benefit from the advantages of refc binaries, meaning
they're copied, just like lists. The memory usage discrepancy is still a
mystery for the most part, although the hoops needed to perform operations
on the binaries are probably responsible for the extra memory use.
I'm thus giving up on trying to use binaries for request-line and headers.
Instead, this commit improves performances even more to the lists code,
making lists 5% faster than binaries. Lists are easier to work with too,
so I guess it's all a big win for everyone.
Of course the request body is still read as a binary, we're using the
binary type where it performs best.