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import logging
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import subprocess
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import time
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import zlib
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import unittest2
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import testlib
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import mitogen.master
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import mitogen.parent
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import mitogen.utils
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try:
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import Queue
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except ImportError:
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import queue as Queue
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def ping():
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return True
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@mitogen.core.takes_router
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def ping_context(other, router):
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other = mitogen.parent.Context(router, other.context_id)
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other.call(ping)
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@mitogen.core.takes_router
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def return_router_max_message_size(router):
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return router.max_message_size
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def send_n_sized_reply(sender, n):
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sender.send(' ' * n)
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return 123
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class SourceVerifyTest(testlib.RouterMixin, unittest2.TestCase):
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def setUp(self):
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super(SourceVerifyTest, self).setUp()
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# Create some children, ping them, and store what their messages look
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# like so we can mess with them later.
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self.child1 = self.router.fork()
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self.child1_msg = self.child1.call_async(ping).get()
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self.child1_stream = self.router._stream_by_id[self.child1.context_id]
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self.child2 = self.router.fork()
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self.child2_msg = self.child2.call_async(ping).get()
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self.child2_stream = self.router._stream_by_id[self.child2.context_id]
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def test_bad_auth_id(self):
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# Deliver a message locally from child2, but using child1's stream.
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log = testlib.LogCapturer()
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log.start()
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# Used to ensure the message was dropped rather than routed after the
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# error is logged.
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recv = mitogen.core.Receiver(self.router)
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self.child2_msg.handle = recv.handle
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self.broker.defer(self.router._async_route,
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self.child2_msg,
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in_stream=self.child1_stream)
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# Wait for IO loop to finish everything above.
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self.sync_with_broker()
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# Ensure message wasn't forwarded.
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self.assertTrue(recv.empty())
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# Ensure error was logged.
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expect = 'bad auth_id: got %d via' % (self.child2_msg.auth_id,)
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self.assertTrue(expect in log.stop())
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def test_bad_src_id(self):
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# Deliver a message locally from child2 with the correct auth_id, but
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# the wrong src_id.
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log = testlib.LogCapturer()
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log.start()
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# Used to ensure the message was dropped rather than routed after the
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# error is logged.
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recv = mitogen.core.Receiver(self.router)
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self.child2_msg.handle = recv.handle
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self.child2_msg.src_id = self.child1.context_id
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self.broker.defer(self.router._async_route,
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self.child2_msg,
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self.child2_stream)
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# Wait for IO loop to finish everything above.
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self.sync_with_broker()
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# Ensure message wasn't forwarded.
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self.assertTrue(recv.empty())
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# Ensure error was lgoged.
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expect = 'bad src_id: got %d via' % (self.child1_msg.src_id,)
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self.assertTrue(expect in log.stop())
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class PolicyTest(testlib.RouterMixin, testlib.TestCase):
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def test_allow_any(self):
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# This guy gets everything.
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recv = mitogen.core.Receiver(self.router)
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recv.to_sender().send(123)
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self.sync_with_broker()
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self.assertFalse(recv.empty())
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self.assertEquals(123, recv.get().unpickle())
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def test_refuse_all(self):
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# Deliver a message locally from child2 with the correct auth_id, but
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# the wrong src_id.
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log = testlib.LogCapturer()
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log.start()
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# This guy never gets anything.
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recv = mitogen.core.Receiver(
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router=self.router,
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policy=(lambda msg, stream: False),
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)
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# This guy becomes the reply_to of our refused message.
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reply_target = mitogen.core.Receiver(self.router)
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# Send the message.
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self.router.route(
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mitogen.core.Message(
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dst_id=mitogen.context_id,
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handle=recv.handle,
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reply_to=reply_target.handle,
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)
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)
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# Wait for IO loop.
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self.sync_with_broker()
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# Verify log.
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expect = '%r: policy refused message: ' % (self.router,)
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self.assertTrue(expect in log.stop())
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# Verify message was not delivered.
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self.assertTrue(recv.empty())
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# Verify CallError received by reply_to target.
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e = self.assertRaises(mitogen.core.CallError,
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lambda: reply_target.get().unpickle())
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self.assertEquals(e.args[0], self.router.refused_msg)
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class CrashTest(testlib.BrokerMixin, unittest2.TestCase):
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# This is testing both Broker's ability to crash nicely, and Router's
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# ability to respond to the crash event.
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klass = mitogen.master.Router
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def _naughty(self):
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raise ValueError('eek')
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def test_shutdown(self):
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router = self.klass(self.broker)
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sem = mitogen.core.Latch()
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router.add_handler(sem.put)
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log = testlib.LogCapturer('mitogen')
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log.start()
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# Force a crash and ensure it wakes up.
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self.broker._loop_once = self._naughty
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self.broker.defer(lambda: None)
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Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
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# sem should have received dead message.
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self.assertTrue(sem.get().is_dead)
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# Ensure it was logged.
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expect = '_broker_main() crashed'
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self.assertTrue(expect in log.stop())
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class AddHandlerTest(unittest2.TestCase):
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klass = mitogen.master.Router
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def test_invoked_at_shutdown(self):
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router = self.klass()
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queue = Queue.Queue()
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handle = router.add_handler(queue.put)
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router.broker.shutdown()
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Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
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self.assertTrue(queue.get(timeout=5).is_dead)
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class MessageSizeTest(testlib.BrokerMixin, testlib.TestCase):
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klass = mitogen.master.Router
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def test_local_exceeded(self):
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router = self.klass(broker=self.broker, max_message_size=4096)
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logs = testlib.LogCapturer()
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logs.start()
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# Send message and block for one IO loop, so _async_route can run.
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router.route(mitogen.core.Message.pickled(' '*8192))
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router.broker.defer_sync(lambda: None)
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expect = 'message too large (max 4096 bytes)'
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self.assertTrue(expect in logs.stop())
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def test_local_dead_message(self):
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# Local router should generate dead message when reply_to is set.
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router = self.klass(broker=self.broker, max_message_size=4096)
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logs = testlib.LogCapturer()
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logs.start()
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# Try function call. Receiver should be woken by a dead message sent by
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# router due to message size exceeded.
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child = router.fork()
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e = self.assertRaises(mitogen.core.ChannelError,
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lambda: child.call(zlib.crc32, ' '*8192))
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self.assertEquals(e.args[0], mitogen.core.ChannelError.local_msg)
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expect = 'message too large (max 4096 bytes)'
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self.assertTrue(expect in logs.stop())
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def test_remote_configured(self):
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router = self.klass(broker=self.broker, max_message_size=4096)
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remote = router.fork()
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size = remote.call(return_router_max_message_size)
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self.assertEquals(size, 4096)
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def test_remote_exceeded(self):
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# Ensure new contexts receive a router with the same value.
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router = self.klass(broker=self.broker, max_message_size=4096)
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recv = mitogen.core.Receiver(router)
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logs = testlib.LogCapturer()
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logs.start()
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remote = router.fork()
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remote.call(send_n_sized_reply, recv.to_sender(), 8192)
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expect = 'message too large (max 4096 bytes)'
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self.assertTrue(expect in logs.stop())
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Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
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class NoRouteTest(testlib.RouterMixin, testlib.TestCase):
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def test_invalid_handle_returns_dead(self):
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# Verify sending a message to an invalid handle yields a dead message
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# from the target context.
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l1 = self.router.fork()
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recv = l1.send_async(mitogen.core.Message(handle=999))
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msg = recv.get(throw_dead=False)
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self.assertEquals(msg.is_dead, True)
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self.assertEquals(msg.src_id, l1.context_id)
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Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
|
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recv = l1.send_async(mitogen.core.Message(handle=999))
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e = self.assertRaises(mitogen.core.ChannelError,
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lambda: recv.get())
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Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
|
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self.assertEquals(e.args[0], mitogen.core.ChannelError.remote_msg)
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def test_totally_invalid_context_returns_dead(self):
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recv = mitogen.core.Receiver(self.router)
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msg = mitogen.core.Message(
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dst_id=1234,
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handle=1234,
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reply_to=recv.handle,
|
Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
|
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)
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self.router.route(msg)
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rmsg = recv.get(throw_dead=False)
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self.assertEquals(rmsg.is_dead, True)
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self.assertEquals(rmsg.src_id, mitogen.context_id)
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self.router.route(msg)
|
Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
|
|
|
e = self.assertRaises(mitogen.core.ChannelError,
|
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|
|
lambda: recv.get())
|
Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
|
|
|
self.assertEquals(e.args[0], mitogen.core.ChannelError.local_msg)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
def test_previously_alive_context_returns_dead(self):
|
|
|
|
l1 = self.router.fork()
|
|
|
|
l1.shutdown(wait=True)
|
|
|
|
recv = mitogen.core.Receiver(self.router)
|
|
|
|
msg = mitogen.core.Message(
|
|
|
|
dst_id=l1.context_id,
|
|
|
|
handle=mitogen.core.CALL_FUNCTION,
|
|
|
|
reply_to=recv.handle,
|
Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
|
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
self.router.route(msg)
|
|
|
|
rmsg = recv.get(throw_dead=False)
|
|
|
|
self.assertEquals(rmsg.is_dead, True)
|
|
|
|
self.assertEquals(rmsg.src_id, mitogen.context_id)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
self.router.route(msg)
|
Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
|
|
|
e = self.assertRaises(mitogen.core.ChannelError,
|
|
|
|
lambda: recv.get())
|
Move _DEAD into header, autogenerate dead messages
This change blocks off 2 common scenarios where a race condition is
upgraded to a hang, when the library could internally do better.
* Since we don't know whether the receiver of a `reply_to` is expecting
a raw or pickled message, and since in the case of a raw reply, there
is no way to signal "dead" to the receiver, override the reply_to
field to explicitly mark a message as dead using a special handle.
This replaces the serialized _DEAD sentinel value with a slightly
neater interface, in the form of the reserved IS_DEAD handle, and
enables an important subsequent change: when a context cannot route a
message, it can send a generic 'dead' reply back towards the message
source, ensuring any sleeping thread is woken with ChannelError.
The use of this field could potentially be extended later on if
additional flags are needed, but for now this seems to suffice.
* Teach Router._invoke() to reply with a dead message when it receives a
message for an invalid local handle.
* Teach Router._async_route() to reply with a dead message when it
receives an unroutable message.
7 years ago
|
|
|
self.assertEquals(e.args[0], mitogen.core.ChannelError.local_msg)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
class UnidirectionalTest(testlib.RouterMixin, testlib.TestCase):
|
|
|
|
def test_siblings_cant_talk(self):
|
|
|
|
self.router.unidirectional = True
|
|
|
|
l1 = self.router.fork()
|
|
|
|
l2 = self.router.fork()
|
|
|
|
logs = testlib.LogCapturer()
|
|
|
|
logs.start()
|
|
|
|
e = self.assertRaises(mitogen.core.CallError,
|
|
|
|
lambda: l2.call(ping_context, l1))
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
msg = 'mitogen.core.ChannelError: Channel closed by remote end.'
|
|
|
|
self.assertTrue(msg in str(e))
|
|
|
|
self.assertTrue('routing mode prevents forward of ' in logs.stop())
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
def test_auth_id_can_talk(self):
|
|
|
|
self.router.unidirectional = True
|
|
|
|
# One stream has auth_id stamped to that of the master, so it should be
|
|
|
|
# treated like a parent.
|
|
|
|
l1 = self.router.fork()
|
|
|
|
l1s = self.router.stream_by_id(l1.context_id)
|
|
|
|
l1s.auth_id = mitogen.context_id
|
|
|
|
l1s.is_privileged = True
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
l2 = self.router.fork()
|
|
|
|
logs = testlib.LogCapturer()
|
|
|
|
logs.start()
|
|
|
|
e = self.assertRaises(mitogen.core.CallError,
|
|
|
|
lambda: l2.call(ping_context, l1))
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
msg = 'mitogen.core.CallError: Refused by policy.'
|
|
|
|
self.assertTrue(msg in str(e))
|
|
|
|
self.assertTrue('policy refused message: ' in logs.stop())
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
class EgressIdsTest(testlib.RouterMixin, testlib.TestCase):
|
|
|
|
def test_egress_ids_populated(self):
|
|
|
|
# Ensure Stream.egress_ids is populated on message reception.
|
|
|
|
c1 = self.router.fork()
|
|
|
|
stream = self.router.stream_by_id(c1.context_id)
|
|
|
|
self.assertEquals(set(), stream.egress_ids)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c1.call(time.sleep, 0)
|
|
|
|
self.assertEquals(set([mitogen.context_id]), stream.egress_ids)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if __name__ == '__main__':
|
|
|
|
unittest2.main()
|