Reputation: 5730
I'm converting an application from using Juce asynchronous i/o to asio. The first part is to rewrite the code that receives traffic from another application on the same machine (it's a Lightroom Lua plugin that sends \n
delimited messages on port 58764). Whenever I successfully connect to that port with my C++ program, I get a series of error codes, all the same:
An operation on a socket could not be performed because the system lacked sufficient buffer space or because a queue was full.
Can someone point out my error? I can see that the socket is successfully opened. I've reduced this from my full program to a minimal example. I also tried it with connect
instead of async_connect
and had the same problem.
#include <iostream>
#include "asio.hpp"
asio::io_context io_context_;
asio::ip::tcp::socket socket_{io_context_};
void loop_me()
{
asio::streambuf streambuf{};
while (true) {
if (!socket_.is_open()) {
return;
}
else {
asio::async_read_until(socket_, streambuf, '\n',
[&streambuf](const asio::error_code& error_code, std::size_t bytes_transferred) {
if (error_code) {
std::cerr << "Socket error " << error_code.message() << std::endl;
return;
}
// Extract up to the first delimiter.
std::string command{buffers_begin(streambuf.data()),
buffers_begin(streambuf.data()) + bytes_transferred};
std::cout << command << std::endl;
streambuf.consume(bytes_transferred);
});
}
}
}
int main()
{
auto work_{asio::make_work_guard(io_context_)};
std::thread io_thread_;
std::thread run_thread_;
io_thread_ = std::thread([] { io_context_.run(); });
socket_.async_connect(asio::ip::tcp::endpoint(asio::ip::address_v4::loopback(), 58764),
[&run_thread_](const asio::error_code& error) {
if (!error) {
std::cout << "Socket connected in LR_IPC_In\n";
run_thread_ = std::thread(loop_me);
}
else {
std::cerr << "LR_IPC_In socket connect failed " << error.message() << std::endl;
}
});
std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::seconds(1));
socket_.close();
io_context_.stop();
if (io_thread_.joinable())
io_thread_.join();
if (run_thread_.joinable())
run_thread_.join();
}
Upvotes: 0
Views: 359
Reputation: 58929
You are trying to start an infinite number of asynchronous read operations at the same time. You shouldn't start a new asynchronous read until the previous one finished.
async_read_until
returns immediately, even though the data hasn't been received yet. That's the point of "async".
Upvotes: 1