stream: fix end-of-stream for HTTP/2#24926
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HTTP/2 streams call `.end()` on themselves from their `.destroy()` method, which might be queued (e.g. due to network congestion) and not processed before the stream itself is destroyed. In that case, the `_writableState.ended` property could be set before the stream emits its `'close'` event, and never actually emits the `'finished'` event, confusing the end-of-stream implementation so that it wouldn’t call its callback. This can be fixed by watching for the end events themselves using the existing `'finish'` and `'end'` listeners rather than relying on the `.ended` properties of the `_...State` objects. These properties still need to be checked to know whether stream closure was premature – My understanding is that ideally, streams should not emit `'close'` before `'end'` and/or `'finished'`, so this might be another bug, but changing this would require modifying tests and almost certainly be a breaking change. Fixes: nodejs#24456
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Fixes the |
Trott
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Dec 9, 2018
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CI: https://ci.nodejs.org/job/node-test-pull-request/19361/ /cc @nodejs/streams |
lpinca
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Dec 9, 2018
mcollina
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Good work! Can you add a test just using streams?
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@mcollina … I did? https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/24926/files#diff-c5ecccd43a23798a93a3ab920bebee64 should be what you want, right? |
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(my bad) |
fhinkel
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Dec 10, 2018
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Resume Build CI: https://ci.nodejs.org/job/node-test-pull-request/19366/ ✔️ |
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Landed in 83ec33b |
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HTTP/2 streams call `.end()` on themselves from their `.destroy()` method, which might be queued (e.g. due to network congestion) and not processed before the stream itself is destroyed. In that case, the `_writableState.ended` property could be set before the stream emits its `'close'` event, and never actually emits the `'finished'` event, confusing the end-of-stream implementation so that it wouldn’t call its callback. This can be fixed by watching for the end events themselves using the existing `'finish'` and `'end'` listeners rather than relying on the `.ended` properties of the `_...State` objects. These properties still need to be checked to know whether stream closure was premature – My understanding is that ideally, streams should not emit `'close'` before `'end'` and/or `'finished'`, so this might be another bug, but changing this would require modifying tests and almost certainly be a breaking change. Fixes: nodejs#24456 PR-URL: nodejs#24926 Reviewed-By: Rich Trott <rtrott@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <luigipinca@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <matteo.collina@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <franziska.hinkelmann@gmail.com>
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BethGriggs
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Dec 17, 2018
HTTP/2 streams call `.end()` on themselves from their `.destroy()` method, which might be queued (e.g. due to network congestion) and not processed before the stream itself is destroyed. In that case, the `_writableState.ended` property could be set before the stream emits its `'close'` event, and never actually emits the `'finished'` event, confusing the end-of-stream implementation so that it wouldn’t call its callback. This can be fixed by watching for the end events themselves using the existing `'finish'` and `'end'` listeners rather than relying on the `.ended` properties of the `_...State` objects. These properties still need to be checked to know whether stream closure was premature – My understanding is that ideally, streams should not emit `'close'` before `'end'` and/or `'finished'`, so this might be another bug, but changing this would require modifying tests and almost certainly be a breaking change. Fixes: #24456 PR-URL: #24926 Reviewed-By: Rich Trott <rtrott@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <luigipinca@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <matteo.collina@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <franziska.hinkelmann@gmail.com>
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refack
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HTTP/2 streams call `.end()` on themselves from their `.destroy()` method, which might be queued (e.g. due to network congestion) and not processed before the stream itself is destroyed. In that case, the `_writableState.ended` property could be set before the stream emits its `'close'` event, and never actually emits the `'finished'` event, confusing the end-of-stream implementation so that it wouldn’t call its callback. This can be fixed by watching for the end events themselves using the existing `'finish'` and `'end'` listeners rather than relying on the `.ended` properties of the `_...State` objects. These properties still need to be checked to know whether stream closure was premature – My understanding is that ideally, streams should not emit `'close'` before `'end'` and/or `'finished'`, so this might be another bug, but changing this would require modifying tests and almost certainly be a breaking change. Fixes: nodejs#24456 PR-URL: nodejs#24926 Reviewed-By: Rich Trott <rtrott@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <luigipinca@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <matteo.collina@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <franziska.hinkelmann@gmail.com>
BethGriggs
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Feb 12, 2019
HTTP/2 streams call `.end()` on themselves from their `.destroy()` method, which might be queued (e.g. due to network congestion) and not processed before the stream itself is destroyed. In that case, the `_writableState.ended` property could be set before the stream emits its `'close'` event, and never actually emits the `'finished'` event, confusing the end-of-stream implementation so that it wouldn’t call its callback. This can be fixed by watching for the end events themselves using the existing `'finish'` and `'end'` listeners rather than relying on the `.ended` properties of the `_...State` objects. These properties still need to be checked to know whether stream closure was premature – My understanding is that ideally, streams should not emit `'close'` before `'end'` and/or `'finished'`, so this might be another bug, but changing this would require modifying tests and almost certainly be a breaking change. Fixes: #24456 PR-URL: #24926 Reviewed-By: Rich Trott <rtrott@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <luigipinca@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <matteo.collina@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <franziska.hinkelmann@gmail.com>
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BethGriggs
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Feb 20, 2019
HTTP/2 streams call `.end()` on themselves from their `.destroy()` method, which might be queued (e.g. due to network congestion) and not processed before the stream itself is destroyed. In that case, the `_writableState.ended` property could be set before the stream emits its `'close'` event, and never actually emits the `'finished'` event, confusing the end-of-stream implementation so that it wouldn’t call its callback. This can be fixed by watching for the end events themselves using the existing `'finish'` and `'end'` listeners rather than relying on the `.ended` properties of the `_...State` objects. These properties still need to be checked to know whether stream closure was premature – My understanding is that ideally, streams should not emit `'close'` before `'end'` and/or `'finished'`, so this might be another bug, but changing this would require modifying tests and almost certainly be a breaking change. Fixes: #24456 PR-URL: #24926 Reviewed-By: Rich Trott <rtrott@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <luigipinca@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <matteo.collina@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <franziska.hinkelmann@gmail.com>
rvagg
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Feb 28, 2019
HTTP/2 streams call `.end()` on themselves from their `.destroy()` method, which might be queued (e.g. due to network congestion) and not processed before the stream itself is destroyed. In that case, the `_writableState.ended` property could be set before the stream emits its `'close'` event, and never actually emits the `'finished'` event, confusing the end-of-stream implementation so that it wouldn’t call its callback. This can be fixed by watching for the end events themselves using the existing `'finish'` and `'end'` listeners rather than relying on the `.ended` properties of the `_...State` objects. These properties still need to be checked to know whether stream closure was premature – My understanding is that ideally, streams should not emit `'close'` before `'end'` and/or `'finished'`, so this might be another bug, but changing this would require modifying tests and almost certainly be a breaking change. Fixes: #24456 PR-URL: #24926 Reviewed-By: Rich Trott <rtrott@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <luigipinca@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <matteo.collina@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <franziska.hinkelmann@gmail.com>
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@mcollina Do we have any placeholder issue for known cases of "incorrect" event ordering, in particular in relation to |
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@ronag we don't. Open a new one for HTTP/2. |
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HTTP/2 streams call
.end()on themselves from their.destroy()method, which might be queued (e.g. due to networkcongestion) and not processed before the stream itself is destroyed.
In that case, the
_writableState.endedproperty could be set beforethe stream emits its
'close'event, and never actually emits the'finished'event, confusing the end-of-stream implementation sothat it wouldn’t call its callback.
This can be fixed by watching for the end events themselves using the
existing
'finish'and'end'listeners rather than relying on the.endedproperties of the_...Stateobjects.These properties still need to be checked to know whether stream
closure was premature – My understanding is that ideally, streams
should not emit
'close'before'end'and/or'finished', so thismight be another bug, but changing this would require modifying tests
and almost certainly be a breaking change.
Fixes: #24456
macOS stress test: https://ci.nodejs.org/job/node-stress-single-test/2124/nodes=osx1011/console
Checklist
make -j4 test(UNIX), orvcbuild test(Windows) passes