zeroconf: fix setsockopt() call on Solaris to send payload of correct length
The zeroconf extension has been broken on Solaris since the beginning, but
no one noticed until the testsuite started poking it after changeset
72f2a19c5f88, when it started running "hg paths" with the extension
enabled.
Solaris requires that, for IP_MULTICAST_{TTL,LOOP}, the argument passed in
be of length 1. With the original code here, it gets passed in as an int
-- length 4 -- and so the system call fails with EINVAL. Thankfully,
Python's socket.setsockopt() allows you to pass in a string instead of an
integer, and it passes that string to libc's setsockopt() with the correct
value and length.
# strutil.py - string utilities for Mercurial
#
# Copyright 2006 Vadim Gelfer <vadim.gelfer@gmail.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import
def findall(haystack, needle, start=0, end=None):
if end is None:
end = len(haystack)
if end < 0:
end += len(haystack)
if start < 0:
start += len(haystack)
while start < end:
c = haystack.find(needle, start, end)
if c == -1:
break
yield c
start = c + 1
def rfindall(haystack, needle, start=0, end=None):
if end is None:
end = len(haystack)
if end < 0:
end += len(haystack)
if start < 0:
start += len(haystack)
while end >= 0:
c = haystack.rfind(needle, start, end)
if c == -1:
break
yield c
end = c - 1