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go/src/net/udpsock.go

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// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package net
import (
"context"
"internal/itoa"
"net/netip"
"syscall"
)
// BUG(mikio): On Plan 9, the ReadMsgUDP and
// WriteMsgUDP methods of UDPConn are not implemented.
// BUG(mikio): On Windows, the File method of UDPConn is not
// implemented.
// BUG(mikio): On JS, methods and functions related to UDPConn are not
// implemented.
// UDPAddr represents the address of a UDP end point.
type UDPAddr struct {
IP IP
Port int
Zone string // IPv6 scoped addressing zone
}
// AddrPort returns the UDPAddr a as a netip.AddrPort.
//
// If a.Port does not fit in a uint16, it's silently truncated.
//
// If a is nil, a zero value is returned.
func (a *UDPAddr) AddrPort() netip.AddrPort {
if a == nil {
return netip.AddrPort{}
}
na, _ := netip.AddrFromSlice(a.IP)
na = na.WithZone(a.Zone)
return netip.AddrPortFrom(na, uint16(a.Port))
}
// Network returns the address's network name, "udp".
func (a *UDPAddr) Network() string { return "udp" }
func (a *UDPAddr) String() string {
if a == nil {
return "<nil>"
}
ip := ipEmptyString(a.IP)
if a.Zone != "" {
return JoinHostPort(ip+"%"+a.Zone, itoa.Itoa(a.Port))
}
return JoinHostPort(ip, itoa.Itoa(a.Port))
}
func (a *UDPAddr) isWildcard() bool {
if a == nil || a.IP == nil {
return true
}
return a.IP.IsUnspecified()
}
func (a *UDPAddr) opAddr() Addr {
if a == nil {
return nil
}
return a
}
// ResolveUDPAddr returns an address of UDP end point.
//
// The network must be a UDP network name.
//
// If the host in the address parameter is not a literal IP address or
// the port is not a literal port number, ResolveUDPAddr resolves the
// address to an address of UDP end point.
// Otherwise, it parses the address as a pair of literal IP address
// and port number.
// The address parameter can use a host name, but this is not
// recommended, because it will return at most one of the host name's
// IP addresses.
//
// See func Dial for a description of the network and address
// parameters.
func ResolveUDPAddr(network, address string) (*UDPAddr, error) {
switch network {
case "udp", "udp4", "udp6":
case "": // a hint wildcard for Go 1.0 undocumented behavior
network = "udp"
default:
return nil, UnknownNetworkError(network)
}
addrs, err := DefaultResolver.internetAddrList(context.Background(), network, address)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return addrs.forResolve(network, address).(*UDPAddr), nil
}
// UDPAddrFromAddrPort returns addr as a UDPAddr. If addr.IsValid() is false,
// then the returned UDPAddr will contain a nil IP field, indicating an
// address family-agnostic unspecified address.
func UDPAddrFromAddrPort(addr netip.AddrPort) *UDPAddr {
return &UDPAddr{
IP: addr.Addr().AsSlice(),
Zone: addr.Addr().Zone(),
Port: int(addr.Port()),
}
}
net: optimize WriteMsgUDPAddrPort This is one step towards optimizing WriteMsgUDPAddrPort. Further steps remain, namely to avoid the syscall.Sockaddr interface, as we do for UDPConn.WriteToUDP and UDPConn.ReadFromUDP. A previous change optimized ReadMsgUDPAddrPort by having ReadMsgUDP call ReadMsgUDPAddrPort rather than the other way around. This change does not implement WriteMsgUDP in terms of WriteMsgUDPAddrPort, because a few layers deep, on posix platforms only (in ipToSockaddrInet4 and ipToSockaddrInet6), is special handling of zero-length IP addresses and IPv4zero. It treats IP(nil) as equivalent to 0.0.0.0 or ::, and 0.0.0.0 as equivalent to :: in an IPv6 context. Based on the comments, I suspect that this treatment was intended for the Listen* API, not the Write* API, but it affects both, and I am nervous about changing the behavior for Write*. The netip package doesn't have a way to represent a "zero-length IP address" as distinct from an invalid IP address (which is a good thing), so to implement WriteMsgUDP using WriteMsgUDPAddrPort, we would have to duplicate this special handling at the start of WriteMsgUDP. But this handling depends on whether the UDPConn is an IPv4 or an IPv6 conn, which is also platform-specific information. As a result, every attempt I made to implement WriteMsgUDP using WriteMsgUDPAddrPort while preserving behavior ended up being considerably worse than copy/paste/modify. This does mean that WriteMsgUDP and WriteMsgUDPAddrPort will have different behavior in these cases. name old time/op new time/op delta ReadWriteMsgUDPAddrPort-8 5.29µs ± 6% 5.02µs ± 7% -5.14% (p=0.000 n=13+15) name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta ReadWriteMsgUDPAddrPort-8 128B ± 0% 64B ± 0% -50.00% (p=0.000 n=15+15) name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta ReadWriteMsgUDPAddrPort-8 4.00 ± 0% 2.00 ± 0% -50.00% (p=0.000 n=15+15) Change-Id: Ia78eb49734f4301d7772dfdbb5a87e4d303a9f7a Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/360597 Trust: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josharian@gmail.com> Run-TryBot: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josharian@gmail.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2021-11-01 14:34:08 -06:00
// An addrPortUDPAddr is a netip.AddrPort-based UDP address that satisfies the Addr interface.
type addrPortUDPAddr struct {
netip.AddrPort
}
func (addrPortUDPAddr) Network() string { return "udp" }
// UDPConn is the implementation of the Conn and PacketConn interfaces
// for UDP network connections.
type UDPConn struct {
conn
}
// SyscallConn returns a raw network connection.
// This implements the syscall.Conn interface.
func (c *UDPConn) SyscallConn() (syscall.RawConn, error) {
if !c.ok() {
return nil, syscall.EINVAL
}
return newRawConn(c.fd)
}
// ReadFromUDP acts like ReadFrom but returns a UDPAddr.
func (c *UDPConn) ReadFromUDP(b []byte) (n int, addr *UDPAddr, err error) {
// This function is designed to allow the caller to control the lifetime
// of the returned *UDPAddr and thereby prevent an allocation.
// See https://blog.filippo.io/efficient-go-apis-with-the-inliner/.
// The real work is done by readFromUDP, below.
return c.readFromUDP(b, &UDPAddr{})
}
// readFromUDP implements ReadFromUDP.
func (c *UDPConn) readFromUDP(b []byte, addr *UDPAddr) (int, *UDPAddr, error) {
if !c.ok() {
return 0, nil, syscall.EINVAL
}
n, addr, err := c.readFrom(b, addr)
if err != nil {
err = &OpError{Op: "read", Net: c.fd.net, Source: c.fd.laddr, Addr: c.fd.raddr, Err: err}
}
return n, addr, err
}
// ReadFrom implements the PacketConn ReadFrom method.
func (c *UDPConn) ReadFrom(b []byte) (int, Addr, error) {
n, addr, err := c.readFromUDP(b, &UDPAddr{})
if addr == nil {
// Return Addr(nil), not Addr(*UDPConn(nil)).
return n, nil, err
}
return n, addr, err
}
// ReadFromUDPAddrPort acts like ReadFrom but returns a netip.AddrPort.
//
// If c is bound to an unspecified address, the returned
// netip.AddrPort's address might be an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address.
// Use netip.Addr.Unmap to get the address without the IPv6 prefix.
func (c *UDPConn) ReadFromUDPAddrPort(b []byte) (n int, addr netip.AddrPort, err error) {
if !c.ok() {
return 0, netip.AddrPort{}, syscall.EINVAL
}
n, addr, err = c.readFromAddrPort(b)
if err != nil {
err = &OpError{Op: "read", Net: c.fd.net, Source: c.fd.laddr, Addr: c.fd.raddr, Err: err}
}
return n, addr, err
}
// ReadMsgUDP reads a message from c, copying the payload into b and
// the associated out-of-band data into oob. It returns the number of
// bytes copied into b, the number of bytes copied into oob, the flags
// that were set on the message and the source address of the message.
//
// The packages golang.org/x/net/ipv4 and golang.org/x/net/ipv6 can be
// used to manipulate IP-level socket options in oob.
func (c *UDPConn) ReadMsgUDP(b, oob []byte) (n, oobn, flags int, addr *UDPAddr, err error) {
var ap netip.AddrPort
n, oobn, flags, ap, err = c.ReadMsgUDPAddrPort(b, oob)
if ap.IsValid() {
addr = UDPAddrFromAddrPort(ap)
}
return
}
// ReadMsgUDPAddrPort is like ReadMsgUDP but returns an netip.AddrPort instead of a UDPAddr.
func (c *UDPConn) ReadMsgUDPAddrPort(b, oob []byte) (n, oobn, flags int, addr netip.AddrPort, err error) {
if !c.ok() {
return 0, 0, 0, netip.AddrPort{}, syscall.EINVAL
}
n, oobn, flags, addr, err = c.readMsg(b, oob)
if err != nil {
err = &OpError{Op: "read", Net: c.fd.net, Source: c.fd.laddr, Addr: c.fd.raddr, Err: err}
}
return
}
// WriteToUDP acts like WriteTo but takes a UDPAddr.
func (c *UDPConn) WriteToUDP(b []byte, addr *UDPAddr) (int, error) {
if !c.ok() {
return 0, syscall.EINVAL
}
n, err := c.writeTo(b, addr)
if err != nil {
err = &OpError{Op: "write", Net: c.fd.net, Source: c.fd.laddr, Addr: addr.opAddr(), Err: err}
}
return n, err
}
// WriteToUDPAddrPort acts like WriteTo but takes a netip.AddrPort.
func (c *UDPConn) WriteToUDPAddrPort(b []byte, addr netip.AddrPort) (int, error) {
if !c.ok() {
return 0, syscall.EINVAL
}
n, err := c.writeToAddrPort(b, addr)
if err != nil {
err = &OpError{Op: "write", Net: c.fd.net, Source: c.fd.laddr, Addr: addrPortUDPAddr{addr}, Err: err}
}
return n, err
}
// WriteTo implements the PacketConn WriteTo method.
func (c *UDPConn) WriteTo(b []byte, addr Addr) (int, error) {
if !c.ok() {
return 0, syscall.EINVAL
}
a, ok := addr.(*UDPAddr)
if !ok {
return 0, &OpError{Op: "write", Net: c.fd.net, Source: c.fd.laddr, Addr: addr, Err: syscall.EINVAL}
}
n, err := c.writeTo(b, a)
if err != nil {
err = &OpError{Op: "write", Net: c.fd.net, Source: c.fd.laddr, Addr: a.opAddr(), Err: err}
}
return n, err
}
// WriteMsgUDP writes a message to addr via c if c isn't connected, or
// to c's remote address if c is connected (in which case addr must be
// nil). The payload is copied from b and the associated out-of-band
// data is copied from oob. It returns the number of payload and
// out-of-band bytes written.
//
// The packages golang.org/x/net/ipv4 and golang.org/x/net/ipv6 can be
// used to manipulate IP-level socket options in oob.
func (c *UDPConn) WriteMsgUDP(b, oob []byte, addr *UDPAddr) (n, oobn int, err error) {
if !c.ok() {
return 0, 0, syscall.EINVAL
}
n, oobn, err = c.writeMsg(b, oob, addr)
if err != nil {
err = &OpError{Op: "write", Net: c.fd.net, Source: c.fd.laddr, Addr: addr.opAddr(), Err: err}
}
return
}
// WriteMsgUDPAddrPort is like WriteMsgUDP but takes a netip.AddrPort instead of a UDPAddr.
func (c *UDPConn) WriteMsgUDPAddrPort(b, oob []byte, addr netip.AddrPort) (n, oobn int, err error) {
net: optimize WriteMsgUDPAddrPort This is one step towards optimizing WriteMsgUDPAddrPort. Further steps remain, namely to avoid the syscall.Sockaddr interface, as we do for UDPConn.WriteToUDP and UDPConn.ReadFromUDP. A previous change optimized ReadMsgUDPAddrPort by having ReadMsgUDP call ReadMsgUDPAddrPort rather than the other way around. This change does not implement WriteMsgUDP in terms of WriteMsgUDPAddrPort, because a few layers deep, on posix platforms only (in ipToSockaddrInet4 and ipToSockaddrInet6), is special handling of zero-length IP addresses and IPv4zero. It treats IP(nil) as equivalent to 0.0.0.0 or ::, and 0.0.0.0 as equivalent to :: in an IPv6 context. Based on the comments, I suspect that this treatment was intended for the Listen* API, not the Write* API, but it affects both, and I am nervous about changing the behavior for Write*. The netip package doesn't have a way to represent a "zero-length IP address" as distinct from an invalid IP address (which is a good thing), so to implement WriteMsgUDP using WriteMsgUDPAddrPort, we would have to duplicate this special handling at the start of WriteMsgUDP. But this handling depends on whether the UDPConn is an IPv4 or an IPv6 conn, which is also platform-specific information. As a result, every attempt I made to implement WriteMsgUDP using WriteMsgUDPAddrPort while preserving behavior ended up being considerably worse than copy/paste/modify. This does mean that WriteMsgUDP and WriteMsgUDPAddrPort will have different behavior in these cases. name old time/op new time/op delta ReadWriteMsgUDPAddrPort-8 5.29µs ± 6% 5.02µs ± 7% -5.14% (p=0.000 n=13+15) name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta ReadWriteMsgUDPAddrPort-8 128B ± 0% 64B ± 0% -50.00% (p=0.000 n=15+15) name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta ReadWriteMsgUDPAddrPort-8 4.00 ± 0% 2.00 ± 0% -50.00% (p=0.000 n=15+15) Change-Id: Ia78eb49734f4301d7772dfdbb5a87e4d303a9f7a Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/360597 Trust: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josharian@gmail.com> Run-TryBot: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josharian@gmail.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2021-11-01 14:34:08 -06:00
if !c.ok() {
return 0, 0, syscall.EINVAL
}
n, oobn, err = c.writeMsgAddrPort(b, oob, addr)
if err != nil {
err = &OpError{Op: "write", Net: c.fd.net, Source: c.fd.laddr, Addr: addrPortUDPAddr{addr}, Err: err}
}
return
}
func newUDPConn(fd *netFD) *UDPConn { return &UDPConn{conn{fd}} }
// DialUDP acts like Dial for UDP networks.
//
// The network must be a UDP network name; see func Dial for details.
//
// If laddr is nil, a local address is automatically chosen.
// If the IP field of raddr is nil or an unspecified IP address, the
// local system is assumed.
func DialUDP(network string, laddr, raddr *UDPAddr) (*UDPConn, error) {
switch network {
case "udp", "udp4", "udp6":
default:
return nil, &OpError{Op: "dial", Net: network, Source: laddr.opAddr(), Addr: raddr.opAddr(), Err: UnknownNetworkError(network)}
}
if raddr == nil {
return nil, &OpError{Op: "dial", Net: network, Source: laddr.opAddr(), Addr: nil, Err: errMissingAddress}
}
sd := &sysDialer{network: network, address: raddr.String()}
c, err := sd.dialUDP(context.Background(), laddr, raddr)
if err != nil {
return nil, &OpError{Op: "dial", Net: network, Source: laddr.opAddr(), Addr: raddr.opAddr(), Err: err}
}
return c, nil
}
// ListenUDP acts like ListenPacket for UDP networks.
//
// The network must be a UDP network name; see func Dial for details.
//
// If the IP field of laddr is nil or an unspecified IP address,
// ListenUDP listens on all available IP addresses of the local system
// except multicast IP addresses.
// If the Port field of laddr is 0, a port number is automatically
// chosen.
func ListenUDP(network string, laddr *UDPAddr) (*UDPConn, error) {
switch network {
case "udp", "udp4", "udp6":
default:
return nil, &OpError{Op: "listen", Net: network, Source: nil, Addr: laddr.opAddr(), Err: UnknownNetworkError(network)}
}
if laddr == nil {
laddr = &UDPAddr{}
}
sl := &sysListener{network: network, address: laddr.String()}
c, err := sl.listenUDP(context.Background(), laddr)
if err != nil {
return nil, &OpError{Op: "listen", Net: network, Source: nil, Addr: laddr.opAddr(), Err: err}
}
return c, nil
}
// ListenMulticastUDP acts like ListenPacket for UDP networks but
// takes a group address on a specific network interface.
//
// The network must be a UDP network name; see func Dial for details.
//
// ListenMulticastUDP listens on all available IP addresses of the
// local system including the group, multicast IP address.
// If ifi is nil, ListenMulticastUDP uses the system-assigned
// multicast interface, although this is not recommended because the
// assignment depends on platforms and sometimes it might require
// routing configuration.
// If the Port field of gaddr is 0, a port number is automatically
// chosen.
//
// ListenMulticastUDP is just for convenience of simple, small
// applications. There are golang.org/x/net/ipv4 and
// golang.org/x/net/ipv6 packages for general purpose uses.
//
// Note that ListenMulticastUDP will set the IP_MULTICAST_LOOP socket option
// to 0 under IPPROTO_IP, to disable loopback of multicast packets.
func ListenMulticastUDP(network string, ifi *Interface, gaddr *UDPAddr) (*UDPConn, error) {
switch network {
case "udp", "udp4", "udp6":
default:
return nil, &OpError{Op: "listen", Net: network, Source: nil, Addr: gaddr.opAddr(), Err: UnknownNetworkError(network)}
}
if gaddr == nil || gaddr.IP == nil {
return nil, &OpError{Op: "listen", Net: network, Source: nil, Addr: gaddr.opAddr(), Err: errMissingAddress}
}
sl := &sysListener{network: network, address: gaddr.String()}
c, err := sl.listenMulticastUDP(context.Background(), ifi, gaddr)
if err != nil {
return nil, &OpError{Op: "listen", Net: network, Source: nil, Addr: gaddr.opAddr(), Err: err}
}
return c, nil
}