'use strict'; const assert = require('assert'); const util = require('util'); const { Socket } = require('net'); const { JSStream } = internalBinding('js_stream'); const uv = internalBinding('uv'); const debug = util.debuglog('stream_socket'); const { owner_symbol } = require('internal/async_hooks').symbols; const { ERR_STREAM_WRAP } = require('internal/errors').codes; const kCurrentWriteRequest = Symbol('kCurrentWriteRequest'); const kCurrentShutdownRequest = Symbol('kCurrentShutdownRequest'); const kPendingShutdownRequest = Symbol('kPendingShutdownRequest'); function isClosing() { return this[owner_symbol].isClosing(); } function onreadstart() { return this[owner_symbol].readStart(); } function onreadstop() { return this[owner_symbol].readStop(); } function onshutdown(req) { return this[owner_symbol].doShutdown(req); } function onwrite(req, bufs) { return this[owner_symbol].doWrite(req, bufs); } /* This class serves as a wrapper for when the C++ side of Node wants access * to a standard JS stream. For example, TLS or HTTP do not operate on network * resources conceptually, although that is the common case and what we are * optimizing for; in theory, they are completely composable and can work with * any stream resource they see. * * For the common case, i.e. a TLS socket wrapping around a net.Socket, we * can skip going through the JS layer and let TLS access the raw C++ handle * of a net.Socket. The flipside of this is that, to maintain composability, * we need a way to create "fake" net.Socket instances that call back into a * "real" JavaScript stream. JSStreamSocket is exactly this. */ class JSStreamSocket extends Socket { constructor(stream) { const handle = new JSStream(); handle.close = (cb) => { debug('close'); this.doClose(cb); }; // Inside of the following functions, `this` refers to the handle // and `this[owner_symbol]` refers to this JSStreamSocket instance. handle.isClosing = isClosing; handle.onreadstart = onreadstart; handle.onreadstop = onreadstop; handle.onshutdown = onshutdown; handle.onwrite = onwrite; stream.pause(); stream.on('error', (err) => this.emit('error', err)); const ondata = (chunk) => { if (typeof chunk === 'string' || stream._readableState.objectMode === true) { // Make sure that no further `data` events will happen. stream.pause(); stream.removeListener('data', ondata); this.emit('error', new ERR_STREAM_WRAP()); return; } debug('data', chunk.length); if (this._handle) this._handle.readBuffer(chunk); }; stream.on('data', ondata); stream.once('end', () => { debug('end'); if (this._handle) this._handle.emitEOF(); }); // Some `Stream` don't pass `hasError` parameters when closed. stream.once('close', () => { // Errors emitted from `stream` have also been emitted to this instance // so that we don't pass errors to `destroy()` again. this.destroy(); }); super({ handle, manualStart: true }); this.stream = stream; this[kCurrentWriteRequest] = null; this[kCurrentShutdownRequest] = null; this[kPendingShutdownRequest] = null; this.readable = stream.readable; this.writable = stream.writable; // Start reading. this.read(0); } // Allow legacy requires in the test suite to keep working: // const { StreamWrap } = require('internal/js_stream_socket') static get StreamWrap() { return JSStreamSocket; } isClosing() { return !this.readable || !this.writable; } readStart() { this.stream.resume(); return 0; } readStop() { this.stream.pause(); return 0; } doShutdown(req) { // TODO(addaleax): It might be nice if we could get into a state where // DoShutdown() is not called on streams while a write is still pending. // // Currently, the only part of the code base where that happens is the // TLS implementation, which calls both DoWrite() and DoShutdown() on the // underlying network stream inside of its own DoShutdown() method. // Working around that on the native side is not quite trivial (yet?), // so for now that is supported here. if (this[kCurrentWriteRequest] !== null) { this[kPendingShutdownRequest] = req; return 0; } assert.strictEqual(this[kCurrentWriteRequest], null); assert.strictEqual(this[kCurrentShutdownRequest], null); this[kCurrentShutdownRequest] = req; const handle = this._handle; setImmediate(() => { // Ensure that write is dispatched asynchronously. this.stream.end(() => { this.finishShutdown(handle, 0); }); }); return 0; } // handle === this._handle except when called from doClose(). finishShutdown(handle, errCode) { // The shutdown request might already have been cancelled. if (this[kCurrentShutdownRequest] === null) return; const req = this[kCurrentShutdownRequest]; this[kCurrentShutdownRequest] = null; handle.finishShutdown(req, errCode); } doWrite(req, bufs) { assert.strictEqual(this[kCurrentWriteRequest], null); assert.strictEqual(this[kCurrentShutdownRequest], null); const handle = this._handle; const self = this; let pending = bufs.length; this.stream.cork(); for (var i = 0; i < bufs.length; ++i) this.stream.write(bufs[i], done); this.stream.uncork(); // Only set the request here, because the `write()` calls could throw. this[kCurrentWriteRequest] = req; function done(err) { if (!err && --pending !== 0) return; // Ensure that this is called once in case of error pending = 0; let errCode = 0; if (err) { errCode = uv[`UV_${err.code}`] || uv.UV_EPIPE; } // Ensure that write was dispatched setImmediate(() => { self.finishWrite(handle, errCode); }); } return 0; } // handle === this._handle except when called from doClose(). finishWrite(handle, errCode) { // The write request might already have been cancelled. if (this[kCurrentWriteRequest] === null) return; const req = this[kCurrentWriteRequest]; this[kCurrentWriteRequest] = null; handle.finishWrite(req, errCode); if (this[kPendingShutdownRequest]) { const req = this[kPendingShutdownRequest]; this[kPendingShutdownRequest] = null; this.doShutdown(req); } } doClose(cb) { const handle = this._handle; // When sockets of the "net" module destroyed, they will call // `this._handle.close()` which will also emit EOF if not emitted before. // This feature makes sockets on the other side emit "end" and "close" // even though we haven't called `end()`. As `stream` are likely to be // instances of `net.Socket`, calling `stream.destroy()` manually will // avoid issues that don't properly close wrapped connections. this.stream.destroy(); setImmediate(() => { // Should be already set by net.js assert.strictEqual(this._handle, null); this.finishWrite(handle, uv.UV_ECANCELED); this.finishShutdown(handle, uv.UV_ECANCELED); cb(); }); } } module.exports = JSStreamSocket;