Mercurial > pidgin
view src/protocols/zephyr/ZInit.c @ 8230:4e354776ae2a
[gaim-migrate @ 8953]
"Well sf seems to be in read only mode.
This patch makes the progress bar in the room list dialog pulse slower.
Previously it pulsed every time a new room was received, and had a pulse
step of 10 until 100 rooms were downloaded, and then switched to a pulse
step of 100.
Now it pulses every time a room is received but no more than once every
100ms. And the pulse step stays constant at 10. This should fix the "my
connection is so far the progress bar is sucking up all my cpu" problem
some lucky individuals have had. Since my connection isn't that fast,
I'm not completely sure how well it works, but it seems good to me.
Simguy tells me it's better.
If you want to test you'll need to download the list on undernet on irc,
or something like that. Other protocols tend to download it too fast to
really see the progress bar.
--Tim Ringenbach"
committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
| author | Luke Schierer <lschiere@pidgin.im> |
|---|---|
| date | Wed, 11 Feb 2004 22:34:55 +0000 |
| parents | 7ba69b8e0de5 |
| children | 43d6c08d7e96 |
line wrap: on
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/* This file is part of the Project Athena Zephyr Notification System. * It contains source for the ZInitialize function. * * Created by: Robert French * * $Source$ * $Author: warmenhoven $ * * Copyright (c) 1987, 1991 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. * For copying and distribution information, see the file * "mit-copyright.h". */ /* $Header$ */ #ifndef lint static char rcsid_ZInitialize_c[] = "$Zephyr: /afs/athena.mit.edu/astaff/project/zephyr/src/lib/RCS/ZInitialize.c,v 1.17 89/05/30 18:11:25 jtkohl Exp $"; #endif #include <internal.h> #include <sys/socket.h> #ifdef ZEPHYR_USES_KERBEROS #include <krb_err.h> #endif #ifndef INADDR_NONE #define INADDR_NONE 0xffffffff #endif Code_t ZInitialize() { struct servent *hmserv; struct hostent *hostent; char addr[4], hostname[MAXHOSTNAMELEN]; struct in_addr servaddr; struct sockaddr_in sin; int s, sinsize = sizeof(sin); Code_t code; ZNotice_t notice; #ifdef ZEPHYR_USES_KERBEROS char *krealm = NULL; int krbval; char d1[ANAME_SZ], d2[INST_SZ]; initialize_krb_error_table(); #endif initialize_zeph_error_table(); (void) memset((char *)&__HM_addr, 0, sizeof(__HM_addr)); __HM_addr.sin_family = AF_INET; /* Set up local loopback address for HostManager */ addr[0] = 127; addr[1] = 0; addr[2] = 0; addr[3] = 1; hmserv = (struct servent *)getservbyname(HM_SVCNAME, "udp"); __HM_addr.sin_port = (hmserv) ? hmserv->s_port : HM_SVC_FALLBACK; (void) memcpy((char *)&__HM_addr.sin_addr, addr, 4); __HM_set = 0; /* Initialize the input queue */ __Q_Tail = NULL; __Q_Head = NULL; /* if the application is a server, there might not be a zhm. The code will fall back to something which might not be "right", but this is is ok, since none of the servers call krb_rd_req. */ servaddr.s_addr = INADDR_NONE; if (! __Zephyr_server) { if ((code = ZOpenPort(NULL)) != ZERR_NONE) return(code); if ((code = ZhmStat(NULL, ¬ice)) != ZERR_NONE) return(code); ZClosePort(); /* the first field, which is NUL-terminated, is the server name. If this code ever support a multiplexing zhm, this will have to be made smarter, and probably per-message */ #ifdef ZEPHYR_USES_KERBEROS krealm = krb_realmofhost(notice.z_message); #endif hostent = gethostbyname(notice.z_message); if (hostent && hostent->h_addrtype == AF_INET) memcpy(&servaddr, hostent->h_addr, sizeof(servaddr)); ZFreeNotice(¬ice); } #ifdef ZEPHYR_USES_KERBEROS if (krealm) { strcpy(__Zephyr_realm, krealm); } else if ((krb_get_tf_fullname(TKT_FILE, d1, d2, __Zephyr_realm) != KSUCCESS) && ((krbval = krb_get_lrealm(__Zephyr_realm, 1)) != KSUCCESS)) { return (krbval); } #else strcpy(__Zephyr_realm, "local-realm"); #endif __My_addr.s_addr = INADDR_NONE; if (servaddr.s_addr != INADDR_NONE) { /* Try to get the local interface address by connecting a UDP * socket to the server address and getting the local address. * Some broken operating systems (e.g. Solaris 2.0-2.5) yield * INADDR_ANY (zero), so we have to check for that. */ s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0); if (s != -1) { memset(&sin, 0, sizeof(sin)); sin.sin_family = AF_INET; memcpy(&sin.sin_addr, &servaddr, sizeof(servaddr)); sin.sin_port = HM_SRV_SVC_FALLBACK; if (connect(s, (struct sockaddr *) &sin, sizeof(sin)) == 0 && getsockname(s, (struct sockaddr *) &sin, &sinsize) == 0 && sin.sin_addr.s_addr != 0) memcpy(&__My_addr, &sin.sin_addr, sizeof(__My_addr)); close(s); } } if (__My_addr.s_addr == INADDR_NONE) { /* We couldn't figure out the local interface address by the * above method. Try by resolving the local hostname. (This * is a pretty broken thing to do, and unfortunately what we * always do on server machines.) */ if (gethostname(hostname, sizeof(hostname)) == 0) { hostent = gethostbyname(hostname); if (hostent && hostent->h_addrtype == AF_INET) memcpy(&__My_addr, hostent->h_addr, sizeof(__My_addr)); } } /* If the above methods failed, zero out __My_addr so things will * sort of kind of work. */ if (__My_addr.s_addr == INADDR_NONE) __My_addr.s_addr = 0; /* Get the sender so we can cache it */ (void) ZGetSender(); return (ZERR_NONE); }
