On Linux, socket functions are unblocked by shutdown(), but on Windows
they are unblocked by closesocket().
Expose net_interrupt() and net_close() to abstract these differences:
- net_interrupt() calls shutdown() on Linux and closesocket() on
Windows (if not already called);
- net_close() calls close() on Linux and closesocket() on Windows (if
not already called).
This simplifies the server code, and prevents a data race on close
(reported by TSAN) on Linux (but does not fix it on Windows):
WARNING: ThreadSanitizer: data race (pid=836124)
Write of size 8 at 0x7ba0000000d0 by main thread:
#0 close ../../../../src/libsanitizer/tsan/tsan_interceptors_posix.cpp:1690 (libtsan.so.0+0x359d8)
#1 net_close ../app/src/util/net.c:211 (scrcpy+0x1c76b)
#2 close_socket ../app/src/server.c:330 (scrcpy+0x19442)
#3 server_stop ../app/src/server.c:522 (scrcpy+0x19e33)
#4 scrcpy ../app/src/scrcpy.c:532 (scrcpy+0x156fc)
#5 main ../app/src/main.c:92 (scrcpy+0x622a)
Previous read of size 8 at 0x7ba0000000d0 by thread T6:
#0 recv ../../../../src/libsanitizer/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_common_interceptors.inc:6603 (libtsan.so.0+0x4f4a6)
#1 net_recv ../app/src/util/net.c:167 (scrcpy+0x1c5a7)
#2 run_receiver ../app/src/receiver.c:76 (scrcpy+0x12819)
#3 <null> <null> (libSDL2-2.0.so.0+0x84f40)
The platform-specific code for net.c was implemented in sys/*/net.c.
But the differences are quite limited, so use ifdef-blocks in the single
net.c instead.