Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joris Vink fcc044af87 change all domain directives to * in examples. 2017-09-19 15:16:02 +02:00
Joris Vink 175b2e2c9b kore flavor -> kodev flavor 2017-03-06 23:18:16 +01:00
Joris Vink f1d33ab91b kore -> kodev where appropriate 2017-03-06 11:00:53 +01:00
Joris Vink 3e84502235 Adjust examples after recent changes.
- New kodev tool generates config with server.pem/key.pem.
- Use proper formats for kore_log().
- Update to new websocket api.
2017-02-25 17:02:39 -08:00
Joris Vink c5ce707a91 Introduce build flavors.
Kore applications now get a build.conf which may contain different
build flavors. Each flavor can get its own cflags or ldflags.

This was in parts inspired by #106.

A new cli command has been added:
kore flavor

This command allows you to see all flavors and switch between them.
The kore build command now also takes a -v argument which if given
dumps the used CFLAGS and LDFLAGS out to stdout.

For existing applications the build.conf is automatically generated
next time you run kore build or kore run.

Also fixed a bug in the json_yajl example, sneaky change here.
2016-01-27 21:29:59 +01:00
Joris Vink 961a2e3685 Allow apps to override connection handling.
Setting the handle callback allows your application
to take care of network events for the connection.

Look at the connection state and flags to determine
if read/write is possible and go from there.

See kore_connection_handle() for more details.
2015-12-01 20:55:00 +01:00
Joris Vink 428802afc8 More cleanup after introducing NOHTTP=1.
* The cli tools must know when building as KORE_NO_HTTP.
* Reshuffle some structs around to avoid forward declarations.
* Move wscbs under !KORE_NO_HTTP as its for websockets.
* Remove unused members from struct connection.

Applications that use the connect callbacks for new connections
must now set the connection state themselves, see nohttp example.
2015-11-30 16:23:34 +01:00
Joris Vink 769c78a6e8 Introduce NOHTTP=1 build option.
This basically turns off the HTTP layer for Kore. It does not
compile in anything for HTTP.

This allows Kore to be used as a network application platform as well.
Added an example for this called nohttp.

Other changes that sneaked in while hacking on this:
* Use calloc(), kill pendantic malloc option.
* Killed off SPDY/3.1 support completely, will be superseded by http2

Note that comes with massive changes to a lot of the core API
functions provided by Kore, these might break your application.
2015-11-27 16:22:50 +01:00