// Copyright 2020 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 jsonrpc2 import ( "context" "errors" "fmt" "io" "net" "os" "time" "golang.org/x/tools/internal/event" ) // NOTE: This file provides an experimental API for serving multiple remote // jsonrpc2 clients over the network. For now, it is intentionally similar to // net/http, but that may change in the future as we figure out the correct // semantics. // A StreamServer is used to serve incoming jsonrpc2 clients communicating over // a newly created connection. type StreamServer interface { ServeStream(context.Context, Conn) error } // The ServerFunc type is an adapter that implements the StreamServer interface // using an ordinary function. type ServerFunc func(context.Context, Conn) error // ServeStream calls f(ctx, s). func (f ServerFunc) ServeStream(ctx context.Context, c Conn) error { return f(ctx, c) } // HandlerServer returns a StreamServer that handles incoming streams using the // provided handler. func HandlerServer(h Handler) StreamServer { return ServerFunc(func(ctx context.Context, conn Conn) error { conn.Go(ctx, h) <-conn.Done() return conn.Err() }) } // ListenAndServe starts an jsonrpc2 server on the given address. If // idleTimeout is non-zero, ListenAndServe exits after there are no clients for // this duration, otherwise it exits only on error. func ListenAndServe(ctx context.Context, network, addr string, server StreamServer, idleTimeout time.Duration) error { ln, err := net.Listen(network, addr) if err != nil { return err } defer ln.Close() if network == "unix" { defer os.Remove(addr) } return Serve(ctx, ln, server, idleTimeout) } // Serve accepts incoming connections from the network, and handles them using // the provided server. If idleTimeout is non-zero, ListenAndServe exits after // there are no clients for this duration, otherwise it exits only on error. func Serve(ctx context.Context, ln net.Listener, server StreamServer, idleTimeout time.Duration) error { ctx, cancel := context.WithCancel(ctx) defer cancel() // Max duration: ~290 years; surely that's long enough. const forever = 1<<63 - 1 if idleTimeout <= 0 { idleTimeout = forever } connTimer := time.NewTimer(idleTimeout) newConns := make(chan net.Conn) doneListening := make(chan error) closedConns := make(chan error) go func() { for { nc, err := ln.Accept() if err != nil { select { case doneListening <- fmt.Errorf("Accept(): %w", err): case <-ctx.Done(): } return } newConns <- nc } }() activeConns := 0 for { select { case netConn := <-newConns: activeConns++ connTimer.Stop() stream := NewHeaderStream(netConn) go func() { conn := NewConn(stream) closedConns <- server.ServeStream(ctx, conn) stream.Close() }() case err := <-doneListening: return err case err := <-closedConns: if !isClosingError(err) { event.Error(ctx, "closed a connection", err) } activeConns-- if activeConns == 0 { connTimer.Reset(idleTimeout) } case <-connTimer.C: return ErrIdleTimeout case <-ctx.Done(): return ctx.Err() } } } // isClosingError reports if the error occurs normally during the process of // closing a network connection. It uses imperfect heuristics that err on the // side of false negatives, and should not be used for anything critical. func isClosingError(err error) bool { if errors.Is(err, io.EOF) { return true } // Per https://github.com/golang/go/issues/4373, this error string should not // change. This is not ideal, but since the worst that could happen here is // some superfluous logging, it is acceptable. if err.Error() == "use of closed network connection" { return true } return false }