and while there replace SAFE_SETENV with an inline function. LOG is
more difficult to transform into an inline function, given the string
concatenations it does. The other LOG* and FATAL macros are fine as
they already are.
SIGHUP is sent when the tty is detached and by default kills the
process. When we run in the background we don't care anymore about
the tty, so it should be safe for us to ignore SIGHUP. (frankly,
I expected daemon(3) to do stuff like this for us).
Up until now I used a "poor man" approach: the uri parser is barely a
parser, it tries to extract the path from the request, with some minor
checking, and that's all. This obviously is not RFC3986-compliant.
The new RFC3986 (URI) parser should be fully compliant. It may accept
some invalid URI, but shouldn't reject or mis-parse valid URI. (in
particular, the rule for the path is way more relaxed in this parser
than it is in the RFC text).
A difference with RFC3986 is that we don't even try to parse the
(optional) userinfo part of a URI: following the Gemini spec we treat
it as an error.
A further caveats is that %2F in the path part of the URI is
indistinguishable from a literal '/': this is NOT conforming, but due
to the scope and use of gmid, I don't see how treat a %2F sequence in
the path (reject the URI?).