view stream_limit_rate.t @ 1606:e4e0695552ed

Tests: fixed stream_proxy_ssl_conf_command.t. The stream_proxy_ssl_conf_command.t test used stream return module to return the response. Since this ignores actual request, but the perl test code used http_get(). This might result in the request being sent after the response is returned and the connection closed by the server, resulting in RST being generated and no response seen by the client at all. Fix is to use "stream(...)->read()" instead of http_get(), so no request is sent at all, eliminating possibility of RST being generated.
author Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru>
date Tue, 10 Nov 2020 05:03:29 +0300
parents 7ae2747ee593
children f3ba4c74de31
line wrap: on
line source

#!/usr/bin/perl

# (C) Andrey Zelenkov
# (C) Nginx, Inc.

# Tests for stream proxy module, limit rate directives.

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

use warnings;
use strict;

use Test::More;

use IO::Select;

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

use lib 'lib';
use Test::Nginx;
use Test::Nginx::Stream qw/ stream /;

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

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

my $t = Test::Nginx->new()->has(qw/stream/)->plan(9)
	->write_file_expand('nginx.conf', <<'EOF');

%%TEST_GLOBALS%%

daemon off;

events {
}

stream {
    # download and upload rates are set equal to the maximum
    # number of bytes transmitted

    # proxy_download_rate value comes from following calculations:
    # test string length (1000) + whitespace (1) + time string length (10)

    proxy_download_rate      1011;
    proxy_upload_rate        1000;

    server {
        listen               127.0.0.1:8081;
        proxy_pass           127.0.0.1:8080;
    }

    server {
        listen               127.0.0.1:8082;
        proxy_pass           127.0.0.1:8080;
        proxy_download_rate  0;
        proxy_upload_rate    0;
    }

    server {
        listen               127.0.0.1:8083;
        proxy_pass           127.0.0.1:8080;
        proxy_download_rate  1;
    }

    server {
        listen               127.0.0.1:8084;
        proxy_pass           127.0.0.1:8080;
        proxy_upload_rate    1;
    }

    server {
        listen               127.0.0.1:8085;
        proxy_pass           127.0.0.1:8080;
        proxy_download_rate  250;
    }

    server {
        listen               127.0.0.1:8086;
        proxy_pass           127.0.0.1:8087;
        proxy_upload_rate    250;
    }
}

EOF

$t->run_daemon(\&stream_daemon, port(8080));
$t->run_daemon(\&stream_daemon, port(8087));
$t->run();

$t->waitforsocket('127.0.0.1:' . port(8080));
$t->waitforsocket('127.0.0.1:' . port(8087));

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

my $str = '1234567890' x 100;

my %r = response($str, peer => '127.0.0.1:' . port(8081));
is($r{'data'}, $str, 'exact limit');

%r = response($str . 'extra', peer => '127.0.0.1:' . port(8082));
is($r{'data'}, $str . 'extra', 'unlimited');

SKIP: {
skip 'unsafe on VM', 3 unless $ENV{TEST_NGINX_UNSAFE};

# if interaction between backend and client is slow then proxy can add extra
# bytes to upload/download data

%r = response($str . 'extra', peer => '127.0.0.1:' . port(8081));
is($r{'data'}, $str, 'limited');

%r = response($str, peer => '127.0.0.1:' . port(8083), readonce => 1);
is($r{'data'}, '1', 'download - one byte');

%r = response($str, peer =>  '127.0.0.1:' . port(8084));
is($r{'data'}, '1', 'upload - one byte');

}

# Five chunks are split with four 1s delays:
# the first four chunks are quarters of test string
# and the fifth one is some extra data from backend.

%r = response($str, peer =>  '127.0.0.1:' . port(8085));
my $diff = time() - $r{'time'};
cmp_ok($diff, '>=', 4, 'download - time');
is($r{'data'}, $str, 'download - data');

my $time = time();
%r = response($str . 'close', peer => '127.0.0.1:' . port(8086));
$diff = time() - $time;
cmp_ok($diff, '>=', 4, 'upload - time');
is($r{'data'}, $str . 'close', 'upload - data');

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

sub response {
	my ($data, %extra) = @_;

	my $s = stream($extra{peer});
	$s->write($data);

	$data = '';
	while (1) {
		my $buf = $s->read();
		last unless length($buf);

		$data .= $buf;

		last if $extra{'readonce'};
	}
	$data =~ /([\S]*)\s?(\d+)?/;

	return ('data' => $1, 'time' => $2)
}

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

sub stream_daemon {
	my $port = shift;

	my $server = IO::Socket::INET->new(
		Proto => 'tcp',
		LocalAddr => '127.0.0.1',
		LocalPort => $port,
		Listen => 5,
		Reuse => 1
	)
		or die "Can't create listening socket: $!\n";

	my $sel = IO::Select->new($server);

	local $SIG{PIPE} = 'IGNORE';

	while (my @ready = $sel->can_read) {
		foreach my $fh (@ready) {
			if ($server == $fh) {
				my $new = $fh->accept;
				$new->autoflush(1);
				$sel->add($new);

			} elsif (stream_handle_client($fh)) {
				$sel->remove($fh);
				$fh->close;
			}
		}
	}
}

sub stream_handle_client {
	my ($client) = @_;

	log2c("(new connection $client)");

	$client->sysread(my $buffer, 65536) or return 1;

	log2i("$client $buffer");

	$buffer .= " " . time() if $client->sockport() eq port(8080);

	log2o("$client $buffer");

	$client->syswrite($buffer);

	return $client->sockport() eq port(8080) ? 1 : $buffer =~ /close/;
}

sub log2i { Test::Nginx::log_core('|| <<', @_); }
sub log2o { Test::Nginx::log_core('|| >>', @_); }
sub log2c { Test::Nginx::log_core('||', @_); }

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