// Copyright 2011 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 ( "runtime" "testing" "time" ) func newLocalListener(t *testing.T) Listener { ln, err := Listen("tcp", "127.0.0.1:0") if err != nil { ln, err = Listen("tcp6", "[::1]:0") } if err != nil { t.Fatal(err) } return ln } func TestDialTimeout(t *testing.T) { ln := newLocalListener(t) defer ln.Close() errc := make(chan error) numConns := listenerBacklog + 10 // TODO(bradfitz): It's hard to test this in a portable // way. This is unforunate, but works for now. switch runtime.GOOS { case "linux": // The kernel will start accepting TCP connections before userspace // gets a chance to not accept them, so fire off a bunch to fill up // the kernel's backlog. Then we test we get a failure after that. for i := 0; i < numConns; i++ { go func() { _, err := DialTimeout("tcp", ln.Addr().String(), 200*time.Millisecond) errc <- err }() } case "darwin": // At least OS X 10.7 seems to accept any number of // connections, ignoring listen's backlog, so resort // to connecting to a hopefully-dead 127/8 address. // Same for windows. go func() { _, err := DialTimeout("tcp", "127.0.71.111:80", 200*time.Millisecond) errc <- err }() default: // TODO(bradfitz): // OpenBSD may have a reject route to 127/8 except 127.0.0.1/32 // by default. FreeBSD likely works, but is untested. // TODO(rsc): // The timeout never happens on Windows. Why? Issue 3016. t.Logf("skipping test on %q; untested.", runtime.GOOS) return } connected := 0 for { select { case <-time.After(15 * time.Second): t.Fatal("too slow") case err := <-errc: if err == nil { connected++ if connected == numConns { t.Fatal("all connections connected; expected some to time out") } } else { terr, ok := err.(timeout) if !ok { t.Fatalf("got error %q; want error with timeout interface", err) } if !terr.Timeout() { t.Fatalf("got error %q; not a timeout", err) } // Pass. We saw a timeout error. return } } } } func TestSelfConnect(t *testing.T) { if runtime.GOOS == "windows" { // TODO(brainman): do not know why it hangs. t.Logf("skipping known-broken test on windows") return } // Test that Dial does not honor self-connects. // See the comment in DialTCP. // Find a port that would be used as a local address. l, err := Listen("tcp", "127.0.0.1:0") if err != nil { t.Fatal(err) } c, err := Dial("tcp", l.Addr().String()) if err != nil { t.Fatal(err) } addr := c.LocalAddr().String() c.Close() l.Close() // Try to connect to that address repeatedly. n := 100000 if testing.Short() { n = 1000 } switch runtime.GOOS { case "darwin", "freebsd", "openbsd", "windows": // Non-Linux systems take a long time to figure // out that there is nothing listening on localhost. n = 100 } for i := 0; i < n; i++ { c, err := Dial("tcp", addr) if err == nil { c.Close() t.Errorf("#%d: Dial %q succeeded", i, addr) } } }