diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'src/core/iomgr/tcp_server_windows.c')
-rw-r--r-- | src/core/iomgr/tcp_server_windows.c | 80 |
1 files changed, 35 insertions, 45 deletions
diff --git a/src/core/iomgr/tcp_server_windows.c b/src/core/iomgr/tcp_server_windows.c index d70968de88..e6e1d1499e 100644 --- a/src/core/iomgr/tcp_server_windows.c +++ b/src/core/iomgr/tcp_server_windows.c @@ -108,9 +108,10 @@ void grpc_tcp_server_destroy(grpc_tcp_server *s, size_t i; gpr_mu_lock(&s->mu); /* First, shutdown all fd's. This will queue abortion calls for all - of the pending accepts. */ + of the pending accepts due to the normal operation mechanism. */ for (i = 0; i < s->nports; i++) { server_port *sp = &s->ports[i]; + sp->shutting_down = 1; grpc_winsocket_shutdown(sp->socket); } /* This happens asynchronously. Wait while that happens. */ @@ -242,63 +243,52 @@ static void on_accept(void *arg, int from_iocp) { SOCKET sock = sp->new_socket; grpc_winsocket_callback_info *info = &sp->socket->read_info; grpc_endpoint *ep = NULL; - - /* The shutdown sequence is done in two parts. This is the second - part here, acknowledging the IOCP notification, and doing nothing - else, especially not queuing a new accept. */ - if (sp->shutting_down) { - GPR_ASSERT(from_iocp); - sp->shutting_down = 0; - sp->socket->read_info.outstanding = 0; - gpr_mu_lock(&sp->server->mu); - if (0 == --sp->server->active_ports) { - gpr_cv_broadcast(&sp->server->cv); - } - gpr_mu_unlock(&sp->server->mu); - return; - } - - if (from_iocp) { - /* The IOCP notified us of a completed operation. Let's grab the results, - and act accordingly. */ - DWORD transfered_bytes = 0; - DWORD flags; - BOOL wsa_success = WSAGetOverlappedResult(sock, &info->overlapped, - &transfered_bytes, FALSE, &flags); - if (!wsa_success) { + DWORD transfered_bytes; + DWORD flags; + BOOL wsa_success; + + /* The general mechanism for shutting down is to queue abortion calls. While + this is necessary in the read/write case, it's useless for the accept + case. Let's do nothing. */ + if (!from_iocp) return; + + /* The IOCP notified us of a completed operation. Let's grab the results, + and act accordingly. */ + transfered_bytes = 0; + wsa_success = WSAGetOverlappedResult(sock, &info->overlapped, + &transfered_bytes, FALSE, &flags); + if (!wsa_success) { + if (sp->shutting_down) { + /* During the shutdown case, we ARE expecting an error. So that's swell, + and we can wake up the shutdown thread. */ + sp->shutting_down = 0; + sp->socket->read_info.outstanding = 0; + gpr_mu_lock(&sp->server->mu); + if (0 == --sp->server->active_ports) { + gpr_cv_broadcast(&sp->server->cv); + } + gpr_mu_unlock(&sp->server->mu); + return; + } else { char *utf8_message = gpr_format_message(WSAGetLastError()); gpr_log(GPR_ERROR, "on_accept error: %s", utf8_message); gpr_free(utf8_message); closesocket(sock); - } else { - /* TODO(ctiller): add sockaddr address to label */ - ep = grpc_tcp_create(grpc_winsocket_create(sock, "server")); } } else { - /* If we're not notified from the IOCP, it means we are asked to shutdown. - This will initiate that shutdown. Calling closesocket will trigger an - IOCP notification, that will call this function a second time, from - the IOCP thread. Of course, this only works if the socket was, in fact, - listening. If that's not the case, we'd wait indefinitely. That's a bit - of a degenerate case, but it can happen if you create a server, but - don't start it. So let's support that by recursing once. */ - sp->shutting_down = 1; - sp->new_socket = INVALID_SOCKET; - if (sock != INVALID_SOCKET) { - closesocket(sock); - } else { - on_accept(sp, 1); + if (!sp->shutting_down) { + /* TODO(ctiller): add sockaddr address to label */ + ep = grpc_tcp_create(grpc_winsocket_create(sock, "server")); } - return; } /* The only time we should call our callback, is where we successfully managed to accept a connection, and created an endpoint. */ if (ep) sp->server->cb(sp->server->cb_arg, ep); /* As we were notified from the IOCP of one and exactly one accept, - the former socked we created has now either been destroy or assigned - to the new connection. We need to create a new one for the next - connection. */ + the former socked we created has now either been destroy or assigned + to the new connection. We need to create a new one for the next + connection. */ start_accept(sp); } |