// Copyright (c) 2020 Tailscale Inc & 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 safesocket import ( "context" "fmt" "net" "syscall" ) func path(vendor, name string, port uint16) string { return fmt.Sprintf("127.0.0.1:%v", port) } func connect(path string, port uint16) (net.Conn, error) { pipe, err := net.Dial("tcp", fmt.Sprintf("127.0.0.1:%d", port)) if err != nil { return nil, err } return pipe, err } func setFlags(network, address string, c syscall.RawConn) error { return c.Control(func(fd uintptr) { syscall.SetsockoptInt(syscall.Handle(fd), syscall.SOL_SOCKET, syscall.SO_REUSEADDR, 1) }) } // TODO(apenwarr): use named pipes instead of sockets? // I tried to use winio.ListenPipe() here, but that code is a disaster, // built on top of an API that's a disaster. So for now we'll hack it by // just always using a TCP session on a fixed port on localhost. As a // result, on Windows we ignore the vendor and name strings. // NOTE(bradfitz): Jason did a new pipe package: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/sys/+/299009 func listen(path string, port uint16) (_ net.Listener, gotPort uint16, _ error) { lc := net.ListenConfig{ Control: setFlags, } pipe, err := lc.Listen(context.Background(), "tcp", fmt.Sprintf("127.0.0.1:%d", port)) if err != nil { return nil, 0, err } return pipe, uint16(pipe.Addr().(*net.TCPAddr).Port), err }