osmo_sock_init2 abstract two calls of getaddrinfo into one.
While there aren't problems with AF_INET or AF_INET6. When using
AF_UNSPEC there are corner cases when this fails. E.g. calling
local_host with "" and remote_host with an IPv6 only address results in
setting up a local socket with AF_INET while trying to connect from there towards
AF_INET6 will most likely fail.
To prevent such cases with AF_UNSPEC, search prio calling any syscalls if local and remote site
supports AF_INET or AF_INET6. In case both supported, prefer AF_INET6
Change-Id: I397c633931fd00d4f083955a3c49a40fb002d766
Ironically, when deprecating osmo_init_logging() in
I216837780e9405fdaec8059c63d10699c695b360, I forgot to change the callers
within libosmocore itself, i.e. in the various regression tests.
Change-Id: Ia36c248f99353d5baaa2533f46a2f60a8579bdf8
In a string like
127.0.0.1:2905<->127.0.0.1:60661
it is hard to tell which is the local part. I'd have expected it on the left,
but it is actually on the right.
To avoid doubt and bypass bikesheds on which side should be what, clearly mark
the two sides as remote and local.
(r=127.0.0.1:2905<->l=127.0.0.1:60661)
Change-Id: I43dcc6a1906429bd0955fd7fe2eb5b8495b592d8
The old osmo_sock_init() function allows only either a bind (for a
server socket), or a connect (for a client socket), but not both
together. So there's no way to have a client socket that is bound to a
specific local IP and/or port, which is needed for some use cases.
Change-Id: Idab124bcca47872f55311a82d6818aed590965e6
socket.c still uses fprintf to output error messages. This commit
replaces the fprintf with proper LOGP messages.
Change-Id: Ia2993415d5f5c33ccd719af239ff59252d11b764