server/rpc_codec: if c.codec.Write fails, reset write buffer and encode an error message about the encoding failure
When developing go-micro services, it is frequently possible to set invalid results in the response pointer. When this happens (as I and @trushton personally experienced), `sendResponse()` returns an error correctly explaining what happened (e.g. protobuf refused to encode a bad struct) but the `call()` function one above it in the stack ignores the returned error object.
Thus, invalid structs go un-encoded and the _client side times out_. @trushton and I first caught this in our CI builds when we left a protobuf.Empty field uninitialized (nil) instead of setting it to `&ptypes.Empty{}`. This resulted in an `proto: oneof field has nil value` error, but it was dropped and became a terribly confusing client timeout instead.
This patch is two independent changes:
* In rpc_codec, when a serialization failure occurs serialize an error message, which will correctly become a 500 for HTTP services, about the encoding failure. This means rpc_codec only returns an `error` when a socket failure occurs, which I believe is the behavior that rpc_service is expecting anyway.
* In rpc_service, log any errors returned by sendResponse instead of dropping the error object. This will make debugging client timeouts less of a hassle.
2017-07-11 23:51:36 +02:00
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package server
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import (
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"bytes"
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"errors"
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"testing"
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"github.com/micro/go-micro/codec"
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"github.com/micro/go-micro/transport"
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)
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// testCodec is a dummy codec that only knows how to encode nil bodies
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type testCodec struct {
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buf *bytes.Buffer
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}
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type testSocket struct {
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2018-11-14 21:45:46 +02:00
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local string
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remote string
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server/rpc_codec: if c.codec.Write fails, reset write buffer and encode an error message about the encoding failure
When developing go-micro services, it is frequently possible to set invalid results in the response pointer. When this happens (as I and @trushton personally experienced), `sendResponse()` returns an error correctly explaining what happened (e.g. protobuf refused to encode a bad struct) but the `call()` function one above it in the stack ignores the returned error object.
Thus, invalid structs go un-encoded and the _client side times out_. @trushton and I first caught this in our CI builds when we left a protobuf.Empty field uninitialized (nil) instead of setting it to `&ptypes.Empty{}`. This resulted in an `proto: oneof field has nil value` error, but it was dropped and became a terribly confusing client timeout instead.
This patch is two independent changes:
* In rpc_codec, when a serialization failure occurs serialize an error message, which will correctly become a 500 for HTTP services, about the encoding failure. This means rpc_codec only returns an `error` when a socket failure occurs, which I believe is the behavior that rpc_service is expecting anyway.
* In rpc_service, log any errors returned by sendResponse instead of dropping the error object. This will make debugging client timeouts less of a hassle.
2017-07-11 23:51:36 +02:00
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}
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// TestCodecWriteError simulates what happens when a codec is unable
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// to encode a message (e.g. a missing branch of an "oneof" message in
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// protobufs)
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//
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// We expect an error to be sent to the socket. Previously the socket
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// would remain open with no bytes sent, leading to client-side
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// timeouts.
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func TestCodecWriteError(t *testing.T) {
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socket := testSocket{}
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message := transport.Message{
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Header: map[string]string{},
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Body: []byte{},
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}
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rwc := readWriteCloser{
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rbuf: new(bytes.Buffer),
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wbuf: new(bytes.Buffer),
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}
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2018-11-23 22:05:31 +02:00
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c := rpcCodec{
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server/rpc_codec: if c.codec.Write fails, reset write buffer and encode an error message about the encoding failure
When developing go-micro services, it is frequently possible to set invalid results in the response pointer. When this happens (as I and @trushton personally experienced), `sendResponse()` returns an error correctly explaining what happened (e.g. protobuf refused to encode a bad struct) but the `call()` function one above it in the stack ignores the returned error object.
Thus, invalid structs go un-encoded and the _client side times out_. @trushton and I first caught this in our CI builds when we left a protobuf.Empty field uninitialized (nil) instead of setting it to `&ptypes.Empty{}`. This resulted in an `proto: oneof field has nil value` error, but it was dropped and became a terribly confusing client timeout instead.
This patch is two independent changes:
* In rpc_codec, when a serialization failure occurs serialize an error message, which will correctly become a 500 for HTTP services, about the encoding failure. This means rpc_codec only returns an `error` when a socket failure occurs, which I believe is the behavior that rpc_service is expecting anyway.
* In rpc_service, log any errors returned by sendResponse instead of dropping the error object. This will make debugging client timeouts less of a hassle.
2017-07-11 23:51:36 +02:00
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buf: &rwc,
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codec: &testCodec{
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buf: rwc.wbuf,
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},
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req: &message,
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socket: socket,
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}
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2019-01-08 17:38:25 +02:00
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err := c.Write(&codec.Message{
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2019-01-10 23:25:31 +02:00
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Endpoint: "Service.Endpoint",
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Id: "0",
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Error: "",
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2019-01-08 17:38:25 +02:00
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}, "body")
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server/rpc_codec: if c.codec.Write fails, reset write buffer and encode an error message about the encoding failure
When developing go-micro services, it is frequently possible to set invalid results in the response pointer. When this happens (as I and @trushton personally experienced), `sendResponse()` returns an error correctly explaining what happened (e.g. protobuf refused to encode a bad struct) but the `call()` function one above it in the stack ignores the returned error object.
Thus, invalid structs go un-encoded and the _client side times out_. @trushton and I first caught this in our CI builds when we left a protobuf.Empty field uninitialized (nil) instead of setting it to `&ptypes.Empty{}`. This resulted in an `proto: oneof field has nil value` error, but it was dropped and became a terribly confusing client timeout instead.
This patch is two independent changes:
* In rpc_codec, when a serialization failure occurs serialize an error message, which will correctly become a 500 for HTTP services, about the encoding failure. This means rpc_codec only returns an `error` when a socket failure occurs, which I believe is the behavior that rpc_service is expecting anyway.
* In rpc_service, log any errors returned by sendResponse instead of dropping the error object. This will make debugging client timeouts less of a hassle.
2017-07-11 23:51:36 +02:00
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if err != nil {
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2019-01-07 20:20:47 +02:00
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t.Fatalf(`Expected Write to fail; got "%+v" instead`, err)
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server/rpc_codec: if c.codec.Write fails, reset write buffer and encode an error message about the encoding failure
When developing go-micro services, it is frequently possible to set invalid results in the response pointer. When this happens (as I and @trushton personally experienced), `sendResponse()` returns an error correctly explaining what happened (e.g. protobuf refused to encode a bad struct) but the `call()` function one above it in the stack ignores the returned error object.
Thus, invalid structs go un-encoded and the _client side times out_. @trushton and I first caught this in our CI builds when we left a protobuf.Empty field uninitialized (nil) instead of setting it to `&ptypes.Empty{}`. This resulted in an `proto: oneof field has nil value` error, but it was dropped and became a terribly confusing client timeout instead.
This patch is two independent changes:
* In rpc_codec, when a serialization failure occurs serialize an error message, which will correctly become a 500 for HTTP services, about the encoding failure. This means rpc_codec only returns an `error` when a socket failure occurs, which I believe is the behavior that rpc_service is expecting anyway.
* In rpc_service, log any errors returned by sendResponse instead of dropping the error object. This will make debugging client timeouts less of a hassle.
2017-07-11 23:51:36 +02:00
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}
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const expectedError = "Unable to encode body: simulating a codec write failure"
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actualError := rwc.wbuf.String()
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if actualError != expectedError {
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t.Fatalf(`Expected error "%+v" in the write buffer, got "%+v" instead`, expectedError, actualError)
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}
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}
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func (c *testCodec) ReadHeader(message *codec.Message, typ codec.MessageType) error {
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return nil
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}
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func (c *testCodec) ReadBody(dest interface{}) error {
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return nil
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}
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func (c *testCodec) Write(message *codec.Message, dest interface{}) error {
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if dest != nil {
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return errors.New("simulating a codec write failure")
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}
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c.buf.Write([]byte(message.Error))
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return nil
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}
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func (c *testCodec) Close() error {
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return nil
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}
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func (c *testCodec) String() string {
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return "string"
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}
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2018-11-14 21:45:46 +02:00
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func (s testSocket) Local() string {
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return s.local
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}
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func (s testSocket) Remote() string {
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return s.remote
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}
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server/rpc_codec: if c.codec.Write fails, reset write buffer and encode an error message about the encoding failure
When developing go-micro services, it is frequently possible to set invalid results in the response pointer. When this happens (as I and @trushton personally experienced), `sendResponse()` returns an error correctly explaining what happened (e.g. protobuf refused to encode a bad struct) but the `call()` function one above it in the stack ignores the returned error object.
Thus, invalid structs go un-encoded and the _client side times out_. @trushton and I first caught this in our CI builds when we left a protobuf.Empty field uninitialized (nil) instead of setting it to `&ptypes.Empty{}`. This resulted in an `proto: oneof field has nil value` error, but it was dropped and became a terribly confusing client timeout instead.
This patch is two independent changes:
* In rpc_codec, when a serialization failure occurs serialize an error message, which will correctly become a 500 for HTTP services, about the encoding failure. This means rpc_codec only returns an `error` when a socket failure occurs, which I believe is the behavior that rpc_service is expecting anyway.
* In rpc_service, log any errors returned by sendResponse instead of dropping the error object. This will make debugging client timeouts less of a hassle.
2017-07-11 23:51:36 +02:00
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func (s testSocket) Recv(message *transport.Message) error {
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return nil
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}
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func (s testSocket) Send(message *transport.Message) error {
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return nil
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}
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func (s testSocket) Close() error {
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return nil
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}
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