Commit graph

2 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Yogthos
db9bed226f Remove the built-in jolt.sqlite / jdbc.core (libraries own native code)
The sqlite/jdbc functionality moves out of the host into the jolt-lang/db
library, which binds libsqlite3 (and libpq) itself via jolt.ffi. A baked
built-in jdbc.core would shadow the library's, so it's removed here. ring-app
gets jdbc.core from the db git dep instead.
2026-06-22 11:23:45 -04:00
Yogthos
6f433a1b3c Make blocking socket FFI collect-safe; fix http-client temp-file race
Two thread-safety bugs in the native FFI layer.

The HTTP server's accept/recv/send were plain foreign-procedures. A thread
inside a foreign call stays active for the stop-the-world collector, so the
accept loop sitting idle in accept() froze GC for the whole process whenever
another thread (a future, an async block) allocated. Mark the three blocking
calls __collect_safe so the thread deactivates for the call's duration —
collection proceeds while the accept thread waits. The args are an fd and
foreign-alloc'd buffers (outside the Scheme heap), so a collection mid-call has
nothing to move.

jolt.http-client built its -D header-file path from an unguarded (set! counter
(+ counter 1)) and counter mod 90000, with no per-process component. Concurrent
requests could compute the same path and clobber each other's headers. Use a
mutex-guarded monotonic counter plus the pid.

test/chez/ffi-server-test.ss exercises both (a (collect) while the server is
idle in accept(), temp-path uniqueness across threads, and a live request) and
is wired into the gate as `make ffi`.
2026-06-22 08:12:53 -04:00