- 20 Apr, 2021 1 commit
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Cory Schwartz authored
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- 19 Apr, 2021 1 commit
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Steven Allen authored
fix go vet
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- 15 Apr, 2021 3 commits
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Cory Schwartz authored
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Cory Schwartz authored
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Cory Schwartz authored
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- 01 Apr, 2021 10 commits
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vyzo authored
New Dialer
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vyzo authored
Fix simultaneous dials
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
they work with private data types, so there is no point in having them public
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vyzo authored
so that we exercise the dialWorker dial to self error path
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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- 31 Mar, 2021 16 commits
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
we might get more connections because simultaneous dials can succeed and we have both TCP and QUIC addrs by default
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vyzo authored
for consistency with the old dialer behaviour.
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
i want to use binary literals; technically only requires 1.13, but let's not be ancient
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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vyzo authored
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- 30 Mar, 2021 5 commits
- 29 Mar, 2021 4 commits
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Steven Allen authored
fix: use 64bit stream/conn IDs
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Steven Allen authored
feat: close transports that implement io.Closer
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Steven Allen authored
Given 1k requests per second (assuming one stream per request), we can easily loop around the stream ID after less than 2 months. 32bits is plenty (usually) for connection-scoped stream IDs because individual connections don't usually last that long, but isn't enough for a _global_ stream ID. Given that there's no reason for these to be 32bit IDs, let's just make them 64bits.
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Steven Allen authored
This way, transports with shared resources (e.g., reused sockets) can clean them up. fixes https://github.com/libp2p/go-libp2p/issues/999
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