Mercurial > hg > nginx-tests
view proxy_noclose.t @ 1982:fb25cbe9d4ec
Tests: explicit Valgrind support.
Valgrind logging is done to a separate file, as it is not able to
follow stderr redirection within nginx or append to a file without
corrupting it. Further, Valgrind logging seems to interfere with
error suppression in tests, and catches various startup errors and
warnings, so the log is additionally filtered.
Since startup under Valgrind can be really slow, timeout in waitforfile()
was changed to 10 seconds.
Prodded by Robert Mueller.
author | Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 31 May 2024 06:23:00 +0300 |
parents | 882267679006 |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
#!/usr/bin/perl # (C) Maxim Dounin # Test for http backend not closing connection properly after sending full # reply. This is in fact backend bug, but it seems common, and anyway # correct handling is required to support persistent connections. # There are actually 2 nginx problems here: # # 1. It doesn't send reply in-time even if got Content-Length and all the data. # # 2. If upstream times out some data may be left in input buffer and won't be # sent to downstream. ############################################################################### use warnings; use strict; use Test::More; use IO::Select; 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/)->plan(4); $t->write_file_expand('nginx.conf', <<'EOF'); %%TEST_GLOBALS%% daemon off; events { } http { %%TEST_GLOBALS_HTTP%% server { listen 127.0.0.1:8080; server_name localhost; location / { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8081; proxy_read_timeout 2s; } location /uselen { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8081; # test will wait only 2s for reply, we it will fail if # Content-Length not used as a hint proxy_read_timeout 10s; } } } EOF $t->run_daemon(\&http_noclose_daemon); $t->run()->waitforsocket('127.0.0.1:' . port(8081)); ############################################################################### like(http_get('/'), qr/SEE-THIS/, 'request to bad backend'); like(http_get('/multi'), qr/AND-THIS/, 'bad backend - multiple packets'); like(http_get('/uselen'), qr/SEE-THIS/, 'content-length actually used'); TODO: { local $TODO = 'not yet'; local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub {}; like(http_get('/nolen'), qr/SEE-THIS/, 'bad backend - no content length'); } ############################################################################### sub http_noclose_daemon { my $server = IO::Socket::INET->new( Proto => 'tcp', LocalAddr => '127.0.0.1:' . port(8081), Listen => 5, Reuse => 1 ) or die "Can't create listening socket: $!\n"; local $SIG{PIPE} = 'IGNORE'; while (my $client = $server->accept()) { $client->autoflush(1); my $multi = 0; my $nolen = 0; while (<$client>) { $multi = 1 if /multi/; $nolen = 1 if /nolen/; last if (/^\x0d?\x0a?$/); } if ($nolen) { print $client <<'EOF'; HTTP/1.1 200 OK Connection: close TEST-OK-IF-YOU-SEE-THIS EOF } elsif ($multi) { print $client <<"EOF"; HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Length: 32 Connection: close TEST-OK-IF-YOU-SEE-THIS EOF select undef, undef, undef, 0.1; print $client 'AND-THIS'; } else { print $client <<"EOF"; HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Length: 24 Connection: close TEST-OK-IF-YOU-SEE-THIS EOF } my $select = IO::Select->new($client); $select->can_read(10); close $client; } } ###############################################################################