caddy/listeners.go
Matt Holt 0c8ad52be1
Experimental IETF-standard HTTP/3 support (known issue exists) (#2727)
* Begin WIP integration of HTTP/3 support

* http3: Set actual Handler, make fakeClosePacketConn type for UDP sockets

Also use latest quic-go for ALPN fix

* Manually keep track of and close HTTP/3 listeners

* Update quic-go after working through some http3 bugs

* Fix go mod

* Make http3 optional for now
2019-09-10 08:03:37 -06:00

295 lines
8.6 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2015 Matthew Holt and The Caddy Authors
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package caddy
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"net"
"strconv"
"strings"
"sync"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
)
// TODO: Can we use the new UsagePool type?
// Listen returns a listener suitable for use in a Caddy module.
// Always be sure to close listeners when you are done with them.
func Listen(network, addr string) (net.Listener, error) {
lnKey := network + "/" + addr
listenersMu.Lock()
defer listenersMu.Unlock()
// if listener already exists, increment usage counter, then return listener
if lnUsage, ok := listeners[lnKey]; ok {
atomic.AddInt32(&lnUsage.usage, 1)
return &fakeCloseListener{usage: &lnUsage.usage, key: lnKey, Listener: lnUsage.ln}, nil
}
// or, create new one and save it
ln, err := net.Listen(network, addr)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
// make sure to start its usage counter at 1
lnUsage := &listenerUsage{usage: 1, ln: ln}
listeners[lnKey] = lnUsage
return &fakeCloseListener{usage: &lnUsage.usage, key: lnKey, Listener: ln}, nil
}
// ListenPacket returns a net.PacketConn suitable for use in a Caddy module.
// Always be sure to close the PacketConn when you are done.
func ListenPacket(network, addr string) (net.PacketConn, error) {
lnKey := network + "/" + addr
listenersMu.Lock()
defer listenersMu.Unlock()
// if listener already exists, increment usage counter, then return listener
if lnUsage, ok := listeners[lnKey]; ok {
atomic.AddInt32(&lnUsage.usage, 1)
log.Printf("[DEBUG] %s: Usage counter should not go above 2 or maybe 3, is now: %d", lnKey, atomic.LoadInt32(&lnUsage.usage)) // TODO: remove
return &fakeClosePacketConn{usage: &lnUsage.usage, key: lnKey, PacketConn: lnUsage.pc}, nil
}
// or, create new one and save it
pc, err := net.ListenPacket(network, addr)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
// make sure to start its usage counter at 1
lnUsage := &listenerUsage{usage: 1, pc: pc}
listeners[lnKey] = lnUsage
return &fakeClosePacketConn{usage: &lnUsage.usage, key: lnKey, PacketConn: pc}, nil
}
// fakeCloseListener's Close() method is a no-op. This allows
// stopping servers that are using the listener without giving
// up the socket; thus, servers become hot-swappable while the
// listener remains running. Listeners should be re-wrapped in
// a new fakeCloseListener each time the listener is reused.
type fakeCloseListener struct {
closed int32 // accessed atomically - TODO: this needs to be shared across the whole app instance, not to cross instance boundaries... hmmm... see #2658 (still relevant?)
usage *int32 // accessed atomically
key string
net.Listener
}
// Accept accepts connections until Close() is called.
func (fcl *fakeCloseListener) Accept() (net.Conn, error) {
// if the listener is already "closed", return error
if atomic.LoadInt32(&fcl.closed) == 1 {
return nil, fcl.fakeClosedErr()
}
// wrap underlying accept
conn, err := fcl.Listener.Accept()
if err == nil {
return conn, nil
}
if atomic.LoadInt32(&fcl.closed) == 1 {
// clear the deadline
switch ln := fcl.Listener.(type) {
case *net.TCPListener:
ln.SetDeadline(time.Time{})
case *net.UnixListener:
ln.SetDeadline(time.Time{})
}
// if we cancelled the Accept() by setting a deadline
// on the listener, we need to make sure any callers of
// Accept() think the listener was actually closed;
// if we return the timeout error instead, callers might
// simply retry, leaking goroutines for longer
if netErr, ok := err.(net.Error); ok && netErr.Timeout() {
return nil, fcl.fakeClosedErr()
}
}
return nil, err
}
// Close stops accepting new connections without
// closing the underlying listener, unless no one
// else is using it.
func (fcl *fakeCloseListener) Close() error {
if atomic.CompareAndSwapInt32(&fcl.closed, 0, 1) {
// unfortunately, there is no way to cancel any
// currently-blocking calls to Accept() that are
// awaiting connections since we're not actually
// closing the listener; so we cheat by setting
// a deadline in the past, which forces it to
// time out; note that this only works for
// certain types of listeners...
switch ln := fcl.Listener.(type) {
case *net.TCPListener:
ln.SetDeadline(time.Now().Add(-1 * time.Minute))
case *net.UnixListener:
ln.SetDeadline(time.Now().Add(-1 * time.Minute))
}
// since we're no longer using this listener,
// decrement the usage counter and, if no one
// else is using it, close underlying listener
if atomic.AddInt32(fcl.usage, -1) == 0 {
listenersMu.Lock()
delete(listeners, fcl.key)
listenersMu.Unlock()
err := fcl.Listener.Close()
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
}
return nil
}
func (fcl *fakeCloseListener) fakeClosedErr() error {
return &net.OpError{
Op: "accept",
Net: fcl.Listener.Addr().Network(),
Addr: fcl.Listener.Addr(),
Err: errFakeClosed,
}
}
type fakeClosePacketConn struct {
closed int32 // accessed atomically - TODO: this needs to be shared across the whole app instance, not to cross instance boundaries... hmmm... see #2658 (still relevant?)
usage *int32 // accessed atomically
key string
net.PacketConn
}
func (fcpc *fakeClosePacketConn) Close() error {
log.Println("[DEBUG] Fake-closing underlying packet conn") // TODO: remove this
if atomic.CompareAndSwapInt32(&fcpc.closed, 0, 1) {
// since we're no longer using this listener,
// decrement the usage counter and, if no one
// else is using it, close underlying listener
if atomic.AddInt32(fcpc.usage, -1) == 0 {
listenersMu.Lock()
delete(listeners, fcpc.key)
listenersMu.Unlock()
err := fcpc.PacketConn.Close()
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
}
return nil
}
// ErrFakeClosed is the underlying error value returned by
// fakeCloseListener.Accept() after Close() has been called,
// indicating that it is pretending to be closed so that the
// server using it can terminate, while the underlying
// socket is actually left open.
var errFakeClosed = fmt.Errorf("listener 'closed' 😉")
// listenerUsage pairs a net.Listener with a
// count of how many servers are using it.
type listenerUsage struct {
usage int32 // accessed atomically
ln net.Listener
pc net.PacketConn
}
var (
listeners = make(map[string]*listenerUsage)
listenersMu sync.Mutex
)
// ParseNetworkAddress parses addr, a string of the form "network/host:port"
// (with any part optional) into its component parts. Because a port can
// also be a port range, there may be multiple addresses returned.
func ParseNetworkAddress(addr string) (network string, addrs []string, err error) {
var host, port string
network, host, port, err = SplitNetworkAddress(addr)
if network == "" {
network = "tcp"
}
if err != nil {
return
}
if network == "unix" || network == "unixgram" || network == "unixpacket" {
addrs = []string{host}
return
}
ports := strings.SplitN(port, "-", 2)
if len(ports) == 1 {
ports = append(ports, ports[0])
}
var start, end int
start, err = strconv.Atoi(ports[0])
if err != nil {
return
}
end, err = strconv.Atoi(ports[1])
if err != nil {
return
}
if end < start {
err = fmt.Errorf("end port must be greater than start port")
return
}
for p := start; p <= end; p++ {
addrs = append(addrs, net.JoinHostPort(host, fmt.Sprintf("%d", p)))
}
return
}
// SplitNetworkAddress splits a into its network, host, and port components.
// Note that port may be a port range, or omitted for unix sockets.
func SplitNetworkAddress(a string) (network, host, port string, err error) {
if idx := strings.Index(a, "/"); idx >= 0 {
network = strings.ToLower(strings.TrimSpace(a[:idx]))
a = a[idx+1:]
}
if network == "unix" || network == "unixgram" || network == "unixpacket" {
host = a
return
}
host, port, err = net.SplitHostPort(a)
return
}
// JoinNetworkAddress combines network, host, and port into a single
// address string of the form "network/host:port". Port may be a
// port range. For unix sockets, the network should be "unix" and
// the path to the socket should be given in the host argument.
func JoinNetworkAddress(network, host, port string) string {
var a string
if network != "" {
a = network + "/"
}
a += host
if port != "" {
a += ":" + port
}
return a
}