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* make mimalloc default again
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Adds a **transparent TCP proxy mode** to zenserver (activated via `zenserver proxy`), allowing it to sit between clients and upstream Zen servers to inspect and monitor HTTP/1.x traffic in real time. Primarily useful during development, to be able to observe multi-server/client interactions in one place.
- **Dedicated proxy port** -- Proxy mode defaults to port 8118 with its own data directory to avoid collisions with a normal zenserver instance.
- **TCP proxy core** (`src/zenserver/proxy/`) -- A new transparent TCP proxy that forwards connections to upstream targets, with support for both TCP/IP and Unix socket listeners. Multi-threaded I/O for connection handling. Supports Unix domain sockets for both upstream/downstream.
- **HTTP traffic inspection** -- Parses HTTP/1.x request/response streams inline to extract method, path, status, content length, and WebSocket upgrades without breaking the proxied data.
- **Proxy dashboard** -- A web UI showing live connection stats, per-target request counts, active connections, bytes transferred, and client IP/session ID rollups.
- **Server mode display** -- Dashboard banner now shows the running server mode (Zen Proxy, Zen Compute, etc.).
Supporting changes included in this branch:
- **Wildcard log level matching** -- Log levels can now be set per-category using wildcard patterns (e.g. `proxy.*=debug`).
- **`zen down --all`** -- New flag to shut down all running zenserver instances; also used by the new `xmake kill` task.
- Minor test stability fixes (flaky hash collisions, per-thread RNG seeds).
- Support ZEN_MALLOC environment variable for default allocator selection and switch default to rpmalloc
- Fixed sentry-native build to allow LTO on Windows
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This change removes our dependency on vcpkg for package management, in favour of bringing some code in-tree in the `thirdparty` folder as well as using the xmake build-in package management feature. For the latter, all the package definitions are maintained in the zen repo itself, in the `repo` folder.
It should now also be easier to build the project as it will no longer depend on having the right version of vcpkg installed, which has been a common problem for new people coming in to the codebase. Now you should only need xmake to build.
* Bumps xmake requirement on github runners to 2.9.9 to resolve an issue where xmake on Windows invokes cmake with `v144` toolchain which does not exist
* BLAKE3 is now in-tree at `thirdparty/blake3`
* cpr is now in-tree at `thirdparty/cpr`
* cxxopts is now in-tree at `thirdparty/cxxopts`
* fmt is now in-tree at `thirdparty/fmt`
* robin-map is now in-tree at `thirdparty/robin-map`
* ryml is now in-tree at `thirdparty/ryml`
* sol2 is now in-tree at `thirdparty/sol2`
* spdlog is now in-tree at `thirdparty/spdlog`
* utfcpp is now in-tree at `thirdparty/utfcpp`
* xmake package repo definitions is in `repo`
* implemented support for sanitizers. ASAN is supported on windows, TSAN, UBSAN, MSAN etc are supported on Linux/MacOS though I have not yet tested it extensively on MacOS
* the zencore encryption implementation also now supports using mbedTLS which is used on MacOS, though for now we still use openssl on Linux
* crashpad
* bumps libcurl to 8.11.0 (from 8.8.0) which should address a rare build upload bug
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* clean up trace command line options
explicitly shut down worker pools
* some additional startup trace scopes
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This change introduces support for tracing of memory allocation activity. The code is ported from UE5, and Unreal Insights can be used to analyze the output. This is currently only fully supported on Windows, but will be extended to Mac/Linux in the near future.
To activate full memory tracking, pass `--trace=memory` on the commandline alongside `--tracehost=<ip>` or `-tracefile=<path>`. For more control over how much detail is traced you can instead pass some combination of `callstack`, `memtag`, `memalloc` instead. In practice, `--trace=memory` is an alias for `--trace=callstack,memtag,memalloc`). For convenience we also support `--trace=memory_light` which omits call stacks.
This change also introduces multiple memory allocators, which may be selected via command-line option `--malloc=<allocator>`:
* `mimalloc` - mimalloc (default, same as before)
* `rpmalloc` - rpmalloc is another high performance allocator for multithreaded applications which may be a better option than mimalloc (to be evaluated). Due to toolchain limitations this is currently only supported on Windows.
* `stomp` - an allocator intended to be used during development/debugging to help track down memory issues such as use-after-free or out-of-bounds access. Currently only supported on Windows.
* `ansi` - fallback to default system allocator
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