view conf/koi-win @ 9270:3d455e37abf8

Core: PID file writing synchronization. Now, ngx_daemon() does not call exit() in the parent process immediately, but instead waits for the child process to signal it actually started (and wrote the PID file if configured to). This ensures that the PID file already exists when the parent process exits. To make sure that signal handlers won't cause unexpected logging in the parent process if the child process dies (for example, due to errors when writing the PID file), ngx_init_signals() is moved to the child process. This resolves "PID file ... not readable (yet?) after start" and "Failed to parse PID from file..." errors as observed with systemd. Note that the errors observed are considered to be a bug in systemd, which isn't able to work properly with traditional Unix daemons. Still, the workaround is implemented to make sure there will be no OS vendor patches trying to address this.
author Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru>
date Mon, 13 May 2024 06:13:22 +0300
parents 400711951595
children
line wrap: on
line source


charset_map  koi8-r  windows-1251 {

    80  88 ; # euro

    95  95 ; # bullet

    9A  A0 ; # &nbsp;

    9E  B7 ; # &middot;

    A3  B8 ; # small yo
    A4  BA ; # small Ukrainian ye

    A6  B3 ; # small Ukrainian i
    A7  BF ; # small Ukrainian yi

    AD  B4 ; # small Ukrainian soft g
    AE  A2 ; # small Byelorussian short u

    B0  B0 ; # &deg;

    B3  A8 ; # capital YO
    B4  AA ; # capital Ukrainian YE

    B6  B2 ; # capital Ukrainian I
    B7  AF ; # capital Ukrainian YI

    B9  B9 ; # numero sign

    BD  A5 ; # capital Ukrainian soft G
    BE  A1 ; # capital Byelorussian short U

    BF  A9 ; # (C)

    C0  FE ; # small yu
    C1  E0 ; # small a
    C2  E1 ; # small b
    C3  F6 ; # small ts
    C4  E4 ; # small d
    C5  E5 ; # small ye
    C6  F4 ; # small f
    C7  E3 ; # small g
    C8  F5 ; # small kh
    C9  E8 ; # small i
    CA  E9 ; # small j
    CB  EA ; # small k
    CC  EB ; # small l
    CD  EC ; # small m
    CE  ED ; # small n
    CF  EE ; # small o

    D0  EF ; # small p
    D1  FF ; # small ya
    D2  F0 ; # small r
    D3  F1 ; # small s
    D4  F2 ; # small t
    D5  F3 ; # small u
    D6  E6 ; # small zh
    D7  E2 ; # small v
    D8  FC ; # small soft sign
    D9  FB ; # small y
    DA  E7 ; # small z
    DB  F8 ; # small sh
    DC  FD ; # small e
    DD  F9 ; # small shch
    DE  F7 ; # small ch
    DF  FA ; # small hard sign

    E0  DE ; # capital YU
    E1  C0 ; # capital A
    E2  C1 ; # capital B
    E3  D6 ; # capital TS
    E4  C4 ; # capital D
    E5  C5 ; # capital YE
    E6  D4 ; # capital F
    E7  C3 ; # capital G
    E8  D5 ; # capital KH
    E9  C8 ; # capital I
    EA  C9 ; # capital J
    EB  CA ; # capital K
    EC  CB ; # capital L
    ED  CC ; # capital M
    EE  CD ; # capital N
    EF  CE ; # capital O

    F0  CF ; # capital P
    F1  DF ; # capital YA
    F2  D0 ; # capital R
    F3  D1 ; # capital S
    F4  D2 ; # capital T
    F5  D3 ; # capital U
    F6  C6 ; # capital ZH
    F7  C2 ; # capital V
    F8  DC ; # capital soft sign
    F9  DB ; # capital Y
    FA  C7 ; # capital Z
    FB  D8 ; # capital SH
    FC  DD ; # capital E
    FD  D9 ; # capital SHCH
    FE  D7 ; # capital CH
    FF  DA ; # capital hard sign
}