This fixes the following compiler warning when building for Windows:
In file included from top.c:24:0:
/usr/local/mingw/ncurses/include/curses.h:1478:0: error: "KEY_EVENT" redefined [-Werror]
#define KEY_EVENT 0633 /* We were interrupted by an event */
^
In file included from /usr/share/mingw-w64/include/windows.h:74:0,
from /usr/share/mingw-w64/include/winsock2.h:23,
from have.h:46,
from system.h:26,
from top.c:20:
/usr/share/mingw-w64/include/wincon.h:101:0: note: this is the location of the previous definition
#define KEY_EVENT 0x1
^
- Try to prevent SIGPIPE from being sent for errors sending to the control
socket. We don't outright block the SIGPIPE signal because we still want the
tinc CLI to exit when its output is actually sent to a real (broken) pipe.
- Don't call exit() from top(), and properly detect when the control socket is
closed by the tincd.
There are several reasons for this:
- MacOS/X doesn't support polling the tap device using kqueue, requiring a
workaround to fall back to select().
- On Windows only sockets are properly handled, therefore tinc uses a second
thread that does a blocking ReadFile() on the TAP-Win32/64 device. However,
this does not mix well with libevent.
- Libevent, event just the core, is quite large, and although it is easy to get
and install on many platforms, it can be a burden.
- Libev is more lightweight and seems technically superior, but it doesn't
abstract away all the platform differences (for example, async events are not
supported on Windows).
Although we use qsort(), which is not guaranteed to be stable, resorting the
previously sorted array is more stable than recreating and resorting the array
each time.