Start with |start %desk %app-name
Everywhere in the kernel that we deal with marks, we infer the app it's
connected to and use the marks from that desk.
Also some light renaming in gall, especially path->wire and
current-agent->yoke.
Subsequent tasks:
- Dojo needs a syntax to run generators and threads from other desks
- The home desk should be split into at least a minimal base desk and
big "userspace" desk. Dill's initialization logic should be updated
to handle
- |show-package, |install, and |uninstall should to be written
- Clay should have smarter handling of system versions instead of just
ignoring what's on each desk. It's not clear that this will work
correctly when sys updates right now.
Avoid allocating hundreds of thousands of cells when giving large
requests. This took the footprint of this function on initial landscape
load from 1 second to 100 ms.
* jb/motion:
pill: solid
zuse: remove %crud from vane-task
arvo: full vane names in $sign
aqua: build again (still broken)
arvo: reform of the scry reform
Eyre's clog logic was a tad inconsistent about "only facts" vs "not poke-acks".
This makes it consistently say "only facts" when it comes to clog-related logic.
Yes, in theory this means %watch-acks and %kicks can build up endlessly, but
those should take up negligible space compared to %facts.
Should fix any oddball cases of crashes here that #3835 didn't already catch.
Pretty-printing is expensive, yet we do it whenever we construct the cookie
string, at least once (but usually twice) per authenticated request.
Here we call out the the specific to-tape functions we need, instead of relying
on the pretty-printer for converting... tapes to tapes, among other things.
The primary gains come from the cookie-related instances, we update the others
mostly for good style.
For the "receive request and immediately send response" case, that is processed
synchronously within eyre (ie, client sends channel ack), speeds thing up by
roughly 55%.
If the Forwarded header specifies the original connection is secure,
update the flag to reflect that, regardless of whether the connection
directly to the urbit was made securely.
When an application would send multiple facts during a single event, it
was possible for the first fact to trigger a clog, removing the
subscription and sending a quit, but then the second fact still getting
sent out at normal.
Here, we drop any facts for subscriptions we don't have registered in
state, which should only happen in the described case.
Because storing in reverse order means producing in reverse reverse
order.
The tests didn't catch this because they, too, were infected with the
"reverse moves" meme.
In order to curb event queue growth when a client for whatever reason
isn't acking the events we send out, we implement a mechanism for
detecting such "clogging", and proactively kick subscriptions which are
adding too many events to the queue.
If the client hasn't sent an ack for ~s30, any subscription that accrues
more than 50 unacked %facts gets closed to prevent further buildup.
Upon reconnecting, the client will see %kick for the relevant
subscriptions and can open a new subscription as appropriate.
Includes a simple test for this behavior, and updates /app/dbug to be
able to display the newly tracked statistics.