view proxy_request_buffering_keepalive.t @ 1236:93f749c1d5c5

Tests: fixed parallel tests execution with UDP. Previously, when checking ports availability, a UDP socket was always created first, then a TCP socket was created. On success, one of UDP and TCP sockets was closed (depending on the "udp" option) and the second one was used to busy this port in other scripts. This lead to the following problem: in an attempt to reopen a UDP socket used in a given testing script it could be stolen by another script as part of checking ports availability. To solve this problem, UDP and TCP ports were split into two non-overlapping ranges: TCP ports are only used in the range 8000-8499, and UDP ports - in the range 8500-8999. In addition, the order of creating sockets in UDP tests has been reversed: now a TCP socket used as a lock precedes a UDP socket.
author Andrey Zelenkov <zelenkov@nginx.com>
date Thu, 26 Oct 2017 18:00:21 +0300
parents 196d33c2bb45
children
line wrap: on
line source

#!/usr/bin/perl

# (C) Sergey Kandaurov
# (C) Nginx, Inc.

# Tests for unbuffered request body and proxy with keepalive.

###############################################################################

use warnings;
use strict;

use Test::More;

BEGIN { use FindBin; chdir($FindBin::Bin); }

use lib 'lib';
use Test::Nginx;

###############################################################################

select STDERR; $| = 1;
select STDOUT; $| = 1;

my $t = Test::Nginx->new()->has(qw/http proxy upstream_keepalive/)->plan(1);

$t->write_file_expand('nginx.conf', <<'EOF');

%%TEST_GLOBALS%%

daemon off;

events {
}

http {
    %%TEST_GLOBALS_HTTP%%

    upstream backend {
        server 127.0.0.1:8081;
        keepalive 1;
    }

    server {
        listen       127.0.0.1:8080;
        server_name  localhost;

        proxy_http_version 1.1;
        proxy_set_header Connection "";

        location / {
            proxy_pass http://backend;
            add_header X-Body $request_body;
            proxy_request_buffering off;
        }
    }

    server {
        listen       127.0.0.1:8081;
        server_name  localhost;

        location / { }
    }
}

EOF

$t->write_file('t1', 'SEE-THIS');
$t->run();

###############################################################################

# We emulate an early upstream server response while proxy is still
# transmitting the request body.  In this case, the request body is
# discarded by proxy, and 2nd request will be processed by upstream
# as remain request body.

http(<<EOF);
GET /t1 HTTP/1.0
Host: localhost
Content-Length: 10

EOF

like(http_get('/t1'), qr/200 OK.*SEE/ms, 'keepalive after discarded');

###############################################################################