github.com/ader1990/go@v0.0.0-20140630135419-8c24447fa791/src/pkg/net/tcpsock_posix.go (about)

     1  // Copyright 2009 The Go Authors.  All rights reserved.
     2  // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
     3  // license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
     4  
     5  // +build darwin dragonfly freebsd linux nacl netbsd openbsd solaris windows
     6  
     7  package net
     8  
     9  import (
    10  	"io"
    11  	"os"
    12  	"syscall"
    13  	"time"
    14  )
    15  
    16  // BUG(rsc): On OpenBSD, listening on the "tcp" network does not listen for
    17  // both IPv4 and IPv6 connections. This is due to the fact that IPv4 traffic
    18  // will not be routed to an IPv6 socket - two separate sockets are required
    19  // if both AFs are to be supported. See inet6(4) on OpenBSD for details.
    20  
    21  func sockaddrToTCP(sa syscall.Sockaddr) Addr {
    22  	switch sa := sa.(type) {
    23  	case *syscall.SockaddrInet4:
    24  		return &TCPAddr{IP: sa.Addr[0:], Port: sa.Port}
    25  	case *syscall.SockaddrInet6:
    26  		return &TCPAddr{IP: sa.Addr[0:], Port: sa.Port, Zone: zoneToString(int(sa.ZoneId))}
    27  	}
    28  	return nil
    29  }
    30  
    31  func (a *TCPAddr) family() int {
    32  	if a == nil || len(a.IP) <= IPv4len {
    33  		return syscall.AF_INET
    34  	}
    35  	if a.IP.To4() != nil {
    36  		return syscall.AF_INET
    37  	}
    38  	return syscall.AF_INET6
    39  }
    40  
    41  func (a *TCPAddr) isWildcard() bool {
    42  	if a == nil || a.IP == nil {
    43  		return true
    44  	}
    45  	return a.IP.IsUnspecified()
    46  }
    47  
    48  func (a *TCPAddr) sockaddr(family int) (syscall.Sockaddr, error) {
    49  	if a == nil {
    50  		return nil, nil
    51  	}
    52  	return ipToSockaddr(family, a.IP, a.Port, a.Zone)
    53  }
    54  
    55  // TCPConn is an implementation of the Conn interface for TCP network
    56  // connections.
    57  type TCPConn struct {
    58  	conn
    59  }
    60  
    61  func newTCPConn(fd *netFD) *TCPConn {
    62  	c := &TCPConn{conn{fd}}
    63  	c.SetNoDelay(true)
    64  	return c
    65  }
    66  
    67  // ReadFrom implements the io.ReaderFrom ReadFrom method.
    68  func (c *TCPConn) ReadFrom(r io.Reader) (int64, error) {
    69  	if n, err, handled := sendFile(c.fd, r); handled {
    70  		return n, err
    71  	}
    72  	return genericReadFrom(c, r)
    73  }
    74  
    75  // CloseRead shuts down the reading side of the TCP connection.
    76  // Most callers should just use Close.
    77  func (c *TCPConn) CloseRead() error {
    78  	if !c.ok() {
    79  		return syscall.EINVAL
    80  	}
    81  	return c.fd.closeRead()
    82  }
    83  
    84  // CloseWrite shuts down the writing side of the TCP connection.
    85  // Most callers should just use Close.
    86  func (c *TCPConn) CloseWrite() error {
    87  	if !c.ok() {
    88  		return syscall.EINVAL
    89  	}
    90  	return c.fd.closeWrite()
    91  }
    92  
    93  // SetLinger sets the behavior of Close on a connection which still
    94  // has data waiting to be sent or to be acknowledged.
    95  //
    96  // If sec < 0 (the default), the operating system finishes sending the
    97  // data in the background.
    98  //
    99  // If sec == 0, the operating system discards any unsent or
   100  // unacknowledged data.
   101  //
   102  // If sec > 0, the data is sent in the background as with sec < 0. On
   103  // some operating systems after sec seconds have elapsed any remaining
   104  // unsent data may be discarded.
   105  func (c *TCPConn) SetLinger(sec int) error {
   106  	if !c.ok() {
   107  		return syscall.EINVAL
   108  	}
   109  	return setLinger(c.fd, sec)
   110  }
   111  
   112  // SetKeepAlive sets whether the operating system should send
   113  // keepalive messages on the connection.
   114  func (c *TCPConn) SetKeepAlive(keepalive bool) error {
   115  	if !c.ok() {
   116  		return syscall.EINVAL
   117  	}
   118  	return setKeepAlive(c.fd, keepalive)
   119  }
   120  
   121  // SetKeepAlivePeriod sets period between keep alives.
   122  func (c *TCPConn) SetKeepAlivePeriod(d time.Duration) error {
   123  	if !c.ok() {
   124  		return syscall.EINVAL
   125  	}
   126  	return setKeepAlivePeriod(c.fd, d)
   127  }
   128  
   129  // SetNoDelay controls whether the operating system should delay
   130  // packet transmission in hopes of sending fewer packets (Nagle's
   131  // algorithm).  The default is true (no delay), meaning that data is
   132  // sent as soon as possible after a Write.
   133  func (c *TCPConn) SetNoDelay(noDelay bool) error {
   134  	if !c.ok() {
   135  		return syscall.EINVAL
   136  	}
   137  	return setNoDelay(c.fd, noDelay)
   138  }
   139  
   140  // DialTCP connects to the remote address raddr on the network net,
   141  // which must be "tcp", "tcp4", or "tcp6".  If laddr is not nil, it is
   142  // used as the local address for the connection.
   143  func DialTCP(net string, laddr, raddr *TCPAddr) (*TCPConn, error) {
   144  	switch net {
   145  	case "tcp", "tcp4", "tcp6":
   146  	default:
   147  		return nil, &OpError{Op: "dial", Net: net, Addr: raddr, Err: UnknownNetworkError(net)}
   148  	}
   149  	if raddr == nil {
   150  		return nil, &OpError{Op: "dial", Net: net, Addr: nil, Err: errMissingAddress}
   151  	}
   152  	return dialTCP(net, laddr, raddr, noDeadline)
   153  }
   154  
   155  func dialTCP(net string, laddr, raddr *TCPAddr, deadline time.Time) (*TCPConn, error) {
   156  	fd, err := internetSocket(net, laddr, raddr, deadline, syscall.SOCK_STREAM, 0, "dial", sockaddrToTCP)
   157  
   158  	// TCP has a rarely used mechanism called a 'simultaneous connection' in
   159  	// which Dial("tcp", addr1, addr2) run on the machine at addr1 can
   160  	// connect to a simultaneous Dial("tcp", addr2, addr1) run on the machine
   161  	// at addr2, without either machine executing Listen.  If laddr == nil,
   162  	// it means we want the kernel to pick an appropriate originating local
   163  	// address.  Some Linux kernels cycle blindly through a fixed range of
   164  	// local ports, regardless of destination port.  If a kernel happens to
   165  	// pick local port 50001 as the source for a Dial("tcp", "", "localhost:50001"),
   166  	// then the Dial will succeed, having simultaneously connected to itself.
   167  	// This can only happen when we are letting the kernel pick a port (laddr == nil)
   168  	// and when there is no listener for the destination address.
   169  	// It's hard to argue this is anything other than a kernel bug.  If we
   170  	// see this happen, rather than expose the buggy effect to users, we
   171  	// close the fd and try again.  If it happens twice more, we relent and
   172  	// use the result.  See also:
   173  	//	http://golang.org/issue/2690
   174  	//	http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4949858/
   175  	//
   176  	// The opposite can also happen: if we ask the kernel to pick an appropriate
   177  	// originating local address, sometimes it picks one that is already in use.
   178  	// So if the error is EADDRNOTAVAIL, we have to try again too, just for
   179  	// a different reason.
   180  	//
   181  	// The kernel socket code is no doubt enjoying watching us squirm.
   182  	for i := 0; i < 2 && (laddr == nil || laddr.Port == 0) && (selfConnect(fd, err) || spuriousENOTAVAIL(err)); i++ {
   183  		if err == nil {
   184  			fd.Close()
   185  		}
   186  		fd, err = internetSocket(net, laddr, raddr, deadline, syscall.SOCK_STREAM, 0, "dial", sockaddrToTCP)
   187  	}
   188  
   189  	if err != nil {
   190  		return nil, &OpError{Op: "dial", Net: net, Addr: raddr, Err: err}
   191  	}
   192  	return newTCPConn(fd), nil
   193  }
   194  
   195  func selfConnect(fd *netFD, err error) bool {
   196  	// If the connect failed, we clearly didn't connect to ourselves.
   197  	if err != nil {
   198  		return false
   199  	}
   200  
   201  	// The socket constructor can return an fd with raddr nil under certain
   202  	// unknown conditions. The errors in the calls there to Getpeername
   203  	// are discarded, but we can't catch the problem there because those
   204  	// calls are sometimes legally erroneous with a "socket not connected".
   205  	// Since this code (selfConnect) is already trying to work around
   206  	// a problem, we make sure if this happens we recognize trouble and
   207  	// ask the DialTCP routine to try again.
   208  	// TODO: try to understand what's really going on.
   209  	if fd.laddr == nil || fd.raddr == nil {
   210  		return true
   211  	}
   212  	l := fd.laddr.(*TCPAddr)
   213  	r := fd.raddr.(*TCPAddr)
   214  	return l.Port == r.Port && l.IP.Equal(r.IP)
   215  }
   216  
   217  func spuriousENOTAVAIL(err error) bool {
   218  	e, ok := err.(*OpError)
   219  	return ok && e.Err == syscall.EADDRNOTAVAIL
   220  }
   221  
   222  // TCPListener is a TCP network listener.  Clients should typically
   223  // use variables of type Listener instead of assuming TCP.
   224  type TCPListener struct {
   225  	fd *netFD
   226  }
   227  
   228  // AcceptTCP accepts the next incoming call and returns the new
   229  // connection.
   230  func (l *TCPListener) AcceptTCP() (*TCPConn, error) {
   231  	if l == nil || l.fd == nil {
   232  		return nil, syscall.EINVAL
   233  	}
   234  	fd, err := l.fd.accept(sockaddrToTCP)
   235  	if err != nil {
   236  		return nil, err
   237  	}
   238  	return newTCPConn(fd), nil
   239  }
   240  
   241  // Accept implements the Accept method in the Listener interface; it
   242  // waits for the next call and returns a generic Conn.
   243  func (l *TCPListener) Accept() (Conn, error) {
   244  	c, err := l.AcceptTCP()
   245  	if err != nil {
   246  		return nil, err
   247  	}
   248  	return c, nil
   249  }
   250  
   251  // Close stops listening on the TCP address.
   252  // Already Accepted connections are not closed.
   253  func (l *TCPListener) Close() error {
   254  	if l == nil || l.fd == nil {
   255  		return syscall.EINVAL
   256  	}
   257  	return l.fd.Close()
   258  }
   259  
   260  // Addr returns the listener's network address, a *TCPAddr.
   261  func (l *TCPListener) Addr() Addr { return l.fd.laddr }
   262  
   263  // SetDeadline sets the deadline associated with the listener.
   264  // A zero time value disables the deadline.
   265  func (l *TCPListener) SetDeadline(t time.Time) error {
   266  	if l == nil || l.fd == nil {
   267  		return syscall.EINVAL
   268  	}
   269  	return l.fd.setDeadline(t)
   270  }
   271  
   272  // File returns a copy of the underlying os.File, set to blocking
   273  // mode.  It is the caller's responsibility to close f when finished.
   274  // Closing l does not affect f, and closing f does not affect l.
   275  //
   276  // The returned os.File's file descriptor is different from the
   277  // connection's.  Attempting to change properties of the original
   278  // using this duplicate may or may not have the desired effect.
   279  func (l *TCPListener) File() (f *os.File, err error) { return l.fd.dup() }
   280  
   281  // ListenTCP announces on the TCP address laddr and returns a TCP
   282  // listener.  Net must be "tcp", "tcp4", or "tcp6".  If laddr has a
   283  // port of 0, ListenTCP will choose an available port.  The caller can
   284  // use the Addr method of TCPListener to retrieve the chosen address.
   285  func ListenTCP(net string, laddr *TCPAddr) (*TCPListener, error) {
   286  	switch net {
   287  	case "tcp", "tcp4", "tcp6":
   288  	default:
   289  		return nil, &OpError{Op: "listen", Net: net, Addr: laddr, Err: UnknownNetworkError(net)}
   290  	}
   291  	if laddr == nil {
   292  		laddr = &TCPAddr{}
   293  	}
   294  	fd, err := internetSocket(net, laddr, nil, noDeadline, syscall.SOCK_STREAM, 0, "listen", sockaddrToTCP)
   295  	if err != nil {
   296  		return nil, &OpError{Op: "listen", Net: net, Addr: laddr, Err: err}
   297  	}
   298  	return &TCPListener{fd}, nil
   299  }