go/src/pkg/rpc/server.go

531 lines
16 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

// Copyright 2009 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.
/*
The rpc package provides access to the exported methods of an object across a
network or other I/O connection. A server registers an object, making it visible
as a service with the name of the type of the object. After registration, exported
methods of the object will be accessible remotely. A server may register multiple
objects (services) of different types but it is an error to register multiple
objects of the same type.
Only methods that satisfy these criteria will be made available for remote access;
other methods will be ignored:
- the method receiver and name are exported, that is, begin with an upper case letter.
- the method has two arguments, both pointers to exported types.
- the method has return type os.Error.
The method's first argument represents the arguments provided by the caller; the
second argument represents the result parameters to be returned to the caller.
The method's return value, if non-nil, is passed back as a string that the client
sees as an os.ErrorString.
The server may handle requests on a single connection by calling ServeConn. More
typically it will create a network listener and call Accept or, for an HTTP
listener, HandleHTTP and http.Serve.
A client wishing to use the service establishes a connection and then invokes
NewClient on the connection. The convenience function Dial (DialHTTP) performs
both steps for a raw network connection (an HTTP connection). The resulting
Client object has two methods, Call and Go, that specify the service and method to
call, a pointer containing the arguments, and a pointer to receive the result
parameters.
Call waits for the remote call to complete; Go launches the call asynchronously
and returns a channel that will signal completion.
Package "gob" is used to transport the data.
Here is a simple example. A server wishes to export an object of type Arith:
package server
type Args struct {
A, B int
}
type Quotient struct {
Quo, Rem int
}
type Arith int
func (t *Arith) Multiply(args *Args, reply *int) os.Error {
*reply = args.A * args.B
return nil
}
func (t *Arith) Divide(args *Args, quo *Quotient) os.Error {
if args.B == 0 {
return os.ErrorString("divide by zero")
}
quo.Quo = args.A / args.B
quo.Rem = args.A % args.B
return nil
}
The server calls (for HTTP service):
arith := new(Arith)
rpc.Register(arith)
rpc.HandleHTTP()
l, e := net.Listen("tcp", ":1234")
if e != nil {
log.Fatal("listen error:", e)
}
go http.Serve(l, nil)
At this point, clients can see a service "Arith" with methods "Arith.Multiply" and
"Arith.Divide". To invoke one, a client first dials the server:
client, err := rpc.DialHTTP("tcp", serverAddress + ":1234")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal("dialing:", err)
}
Then it can make a remote call:
// Synchronous call
args := &server.Args{7,8}
var reply int
err = client.Call("Arith.Multiply", args, &reply)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal("arith error:", err)
}
fmt.Printf("Arith: %d*%d=%d", args.A, args.B, *reply)
or
// Asynchronous call
quotient := new(Quotient)
divCall := client.Go("Arith.Divide", args, &quotient, nil)
replyCall := <-divCall.Done // will be equal to divCall
// check errors, print, etc.
A server implementation will often provide a simple, type-safe wrapper for the
client.
*/
package rpc
import (
"gob"
"http"
"log"
"io"
"net"
"os"
"reflect"
"strings"
"sync"
"unicode"
"utf8"
)
const (
// Defaults used by HandleHTTP
DefaultRPCPath = "/_goRPC_"
DefaultDebugPath = "/debug/rpc"
)
// Precompute the reflect type for os.Error. Can't use os.Error directly
// because Typeof takes an empty interface value. This is annoying.
var unusedError *os.Error
var typeOfOsError = reflect.Typeof(unusedError).(*reflect.PtrType).Elem()
type methodType struct {
sync.Mutex // protects counters
method reflect.Method
ArgType *reflect.PtrType
ReplyType *reflect.PtrType
numCalls uint
}
type service struct {
name string // name of service
rcvr reflect.Value // receiver of methods for the service
typ reflect.Type // type of the receiver
method map[string]*methodType // registered methods
}
// Request is a header written before every RPC call. It is used internally
// but documented here as an aid to debugging, such as when analyzing
// network traffic.
type Request struct {
ServiceMethod string // format: "Service.Method"
Seq uint64 // sequence number chosen by client
}
// Response is a header written before every RPC return. It is used internally
// but documented here as an aid to debugging, such as when analyzing
// network traffic.
type Response struct {
ServiceMethod string // echoes that of the Request
Seq uint64 // echoes that of the request
Error string // error, if any.
}
// ClientInfo records information about an RPC client connection.
type ClientInfo struct {
LocalAddr string
RemoteAddr string
}
// Server represents an RPC Server.
type Server struct {
sync.Mutex // protects the serviceMap
serviceMap map[string]*service
}
// NewServer returns a new Server.
func NewServer() *Server {
return &Server{serviceMap: make(map[string]*service)}
}
// DefaultServer is the default instance of *Server.
var DefaultServer = NewServer()
// Is this an exported - upper case - name?
func isExported(name string) bool {
rune, _ := utf8.DecodeRuneInString(name)
return unicode.IsUpper(rune)
}
// Register publishes in the server the set of methods of the
// receiver value that satisfy the following conditions:
// - exported method
// - two arguments, both pointers to exported structs
// - one return value, of type os.Error
// It returns an error if the receiver is not an exported type or has no
// suitable methods.
// The client accesses each method using a string of the form "Type.Method",
// where Type is the receiver's concrete type.
func (server *Server) Register(rcvr interface{}) os.Error {
return server.register(rcvr, "", false)
}
// RegisterName is like Register but uses the provided name for the type
// instead of the receiver's concrete type.
func (server *Server) RegisterName(name string, rcvr interface{}) os.Error {
return server.register(rcvr, name, true)
}
func (server *Server) register(rcvr interface{}, name string, useName bool) os.Error {
server.Lock()
defer server.Unlock()
if server.serviceMap == nil {
server.serviceMap = make(map[string]*service)
}
s := new(service)
s.typ = reflect.Typeof(rcvr)
s.rcvr = reflect.NewValue(rcvr)
sname := reflect.Indirect(s.rcvr).Type().Name()
if useName {
sname = name
}
if sname == "" {
log.Fatal("rpc: no service name for type", s.typ.String())
}
if s.typ.PkgPath() != "" && !isExported(sname) && !useName {
s := "rpc Register: type " + sname + " is not exported"
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Print(s)
return os.ErrorString(s)
}
if _, present := server.serviceMap[sname]; present {
return os.ErrorString("rpc: service already defined: " + sname)
}
s.name = sname
s.method = make(map[string]*methodType)
// Install the methods
for m := 0; m < s.typ.NumMethod(); m++ {
method := s.typ.Method(m)
mtype := method.Type
mname := method.Name
if mtype.PkgPath() != "" || !isExported(mname) {
continue
}
// Method needs three ins: receiver, *args, *reply.
if mtype.NumIn() != 3 {
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Println("method", mname, "has wrong number of ins:", mtype.NumIn())
continue
}
argType, ok := mtype.In(1).(*reflect.PtrType)
if !ok {
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Println(mname, "arg type not a pointer:", mtype.In(1))
continue
}
replyType, ok := mtype.In(2).(*reflect.PtrType)
if !ok {
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Println(mname, "reply type not a pointer:", mtype.In(2))
continue
}
if argType.Elem().PkgPath() != "" && !isExported(argType.Elem().Name()) {
log.Println(mname, "argument type not exported:", argType)
continue
}
if replyType.Elem().PkgPath() != "" && !isExported(replyType.Elem().Name()) {
log.Println(mname, "reply type not exported:", replyType)
continue
}
if mtype.NumIn() == 4 {
t := mtype.In(3)
if t != reflect.Typeof((*ClientInfo)(nil)) {
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Println(mname, "last argument not *ClientInfo")
continue
}
}
// Method needs one out: os.Error.
if mtype.NumOut() != 1 {
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Println("method", mname, "has wrong number of outs:", mtype.NumOut())
continue
}
if returnType := mtype.Out(0); returnType != typeOfOsError {
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Println("method", mname, "returns", returnType.String(), "not os.Error")
continue
}
s.method[mname] = &methodType{method: method, ArgType: argType, ReplyType: replyType}
}
if len(s.method) == 0 {
s := "rpc Register: type " + sname + " has no exported methods of suitable type"
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Print(s)
return os.ErrorString(s)
}
server.serviceMap[s.name] = s
return nil
}
// A value sent as a placeholder for the response when the server receives an invalid request.
type InvalidRequest struct {
marker int
}
var invalidRequest = InvalidRequest{1}
func _new(t *reflect.PtrType) *reflect.PtrValue {
v := reflect.MakeZero(t).(*reflect.PtrValue)
v.PointTo(reflect.MakeZero(t.Elem()))
return v
}
func sendResponse(sending *sync.Mutex, req *Request, reply interface{}, codec ServerCodec, errmsg string) {
resp := new(Response)
// Encode the response header
resp.ServiceMethod = req.ServiceMethod
if errmsg != "" {
resp.Error = errmsg
}
resp.Seq = req.Seq
sending.Lock()
err := codec.WriteResponse(resp, reply)
if err != nil {
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Println("rpc: writing response:", err)
}
sending.Unlock()
}
func (m *methodType) NumCalls() (n uint) {
m.Lock()
n = m.numCalls
m.Unlock()
return n
}
func (s *service) call(sending *sync.Mutex, mtype *methodType, req *Request, argv, replyv reflect.Value, codec ServerCodec) {
mtype.Lock()
mtype.numCalls++
mtype.Unlock()
function := mtype.method.Func
// Invoke the method, providing a new value for the reply.
returnValues := function.Call([]reflect.Value{s.rcvr, argv, replyv})
// The return value for the method is an os.Error.
errInter := returnValues[0].Interface()
errmsg := ""
if errInter != nil {
errmsg = errInter.(os.Error).String()
}
sendResponse(sending, req, replyv.Interface(), codec, errmsg)
}
type gobServerCodec struct {
rwc io.ReadWriteCloser
dec *gob.Decoder
enc *gob.Encoder
}
func (c *gobServerCodec) ReadRequestHeader(r *Request) os.Error {
return c.dec.Decode(r)
}
func (c *gobServerCodec) ReadRequestBody(body interface{}) os.Error {
return c.dec.Decode(body)
}
func (c *gobServerCodec) WriteResponse(r *Response, body interface{}) os.Error {
if err := c.enc.Encode(r); err != nil {
return err
}
return c.enc.Encode(body)
}
func (c *gobServerCodec) Close() os.Error {
return c.rwc.Close()
}
// ServeConn runs the server on a single connection.
// ServeConn blocks, serving the connection until the client hangs up.
// The caller typically invokes ServeConn in a go statement.
// ServeConn uses the gob wire format (see package gob) on the
// connection. To use an alternate codec, use ServeCodec.
func (server *Server) ServeConn(conn io.ReadWriteCloser) {
server.ServeCodec(&gobServerCodec{conn, gob.NewDecoder(conn), gob.NewEncoder(conn)})
}
// ServeCodec is like ServeConn but uses the specified codec to
// decode requests and encode responses.
func (server *Server) ServeCodec(codec ServerCodec) {
sending := new(sync.Mutex)
for {
// Grab the request header.
req := new(Request)
err := codec.ReadRequestHeader(req)
if err != nil {
if err == os.EOF || err == io.ErrUnexpectedEOF {
if err == io.ErrUnexpectedEOF {
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Println("rpc:", err)
}
break
}
s := "rpc: server cannot decode request: " + err.String()
sendResponse(sending, req, invalidRequest, codec, s)
break
}
serviceMethod := strings.Split(req.ServiceMethod, ".", -1)
if len(serviceMethod) != 2 {
s := "rpc: service/method request ill-formed: " + req.ServiceMethod
sendResponse(sending, req, invalidRequest, codec, s)
continue
}
// Look up the request.
server.Lock()
service, ok := server.serviceMap[serviceMethod[0]]
server.Unlock()
if !ok {
s := "rpc: can't find service " + req.ServiceMethod
sendResponse(sending, req, invalidRequest, codec, s)
continue
}
mtype, ok := service.method[serviceMethod[1]]
if !ok {
s := "rpc: can't find method " + req.ServiceMethod
sendResponse(sending, req, invalidRequest, codec, s)
continue
}
// Decode the argument value.
argv := _new(mtype.ArgType)
replyv := _new(mtype.ReplyType)
err = codec.ReadRequestBody(argv.Interface())
if err != nil {
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Println("rpc: tearing down", serviceMethod[0], "connection:", err)
sendResponse(sending, req, replyv.Interface(), codec, err.String())
break
}
go service.call(sending, mtype, req, argv, replyv, codec)
}
codec.Close()
}
// Accept accepts connections on the listener and serves requests
// for each incoming connection. Accept blocks; the caller typically
// invokes it in a go statement.
func (server *Server) Accept(lis net.Listener) {
for {
conn, err := lis.Accept()
if err != nil {
log.Fatal("rpc.Serve: accept:", err.String()) // TODO(r): exit?
}
go server.ServeConn(conn)
}
}
// Register publishes the receiver's methods in the DefaultServer.
func Register(rcvr interface{}) os.Error { return DefaultServer.Register(rcvr) }
// RegisterName is like Register but uses the provided name for the type
// instead of the receiver's concrete type.
func RegisterName(name string, rcvr interface{}) os.Error {
return DefaultServer.RegisterName(name, rcvr)
}
// A ServerCodec implements reading of RPC requests and writing of
// RPC responses for the server side of an RPC session.
// The server calls ReadRequestHeader and ReadRequestBody in pairs
// to read requests from the connection, and it calls WriteResponse to
// write a response back. The server calls Close when finished with the
// connection.
type ServerCodec interface {
ReadRequestHeader(*Request) os.Error
ReadRequestBody(interface{}) os.Error
WriteResponse(*Response, interface{}) os.Error
Close() os.Error
}
// ServeConn runs the DefaultServer on a single connection.
// ServeConn blocks, serving the connection until the client hangs up.
// The caller typically invokes ServeConn in a go statement.
// ServeConn uses the gob wire format (see package gob) on the
// connection. To use an alternate codec, use ServeCodec.
func ServeConn(conn io.ReadWriteCloser) {
DefaultServer.ServeConn(conn)
}
// ServeCodec is like ServeConn but uses the specified codec to
// decode requests and encode responses.
func ServeCodec(codec ServerCodec) {
DefaultServer.ServeCodec(codec)
}
// Accept accepts connections on the listener and serves requests
// to DefaultServer for each incoming connection.
// Accept blocks; the caller typically invokes it in a go statement.
func Accept(lis net.Listener) { DefaultServer.Accept(lis) }
// Can connect to RPC service using HTTP CONNECT to rpcPath.
var connected = "200 Connected to Go RPC"
// ServeHTTP implements an http.Handler that answers RPC requests.
func (server *Server) ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
if req.Method != "CONNECT" {
w.SetHeader("Content-Type", "text/plain; charset=utf-8")
w.WriteHeader(http.StatusMethodNotAllowed)
io.WriteString(w, "405 must CONNECT\n")
return
}
conn, _, err := w.Hijack()
if err != nil {
log: new interface New logging interface simplifies and generalizes. 1) Loggers now have only one output. 2) log.Stdout, Stderr, Crash and friends are gone. Logging is now always to standard error by default. 3) log.Panic* replaces log.Crash*. 4) Exiting and panicking are not part of the logger's state; instead the functions Exit* and Panic* simply call Exit or panic after printing. 5) There is now one 'standard logger'. Instead of calling Stderr, use Print etc. There are now triples, by analogy with fmt: Print, Println, Printf What was log.Stderr is now best represented by log.Println, since there are now separate Print and Println functions (and methods). 6) New functions SetOutput, SetFlags, and SetPrefix allow global editing of the standard logger's properties. This is new functionality. For instance, one can call log.SetFlags(log.Lshortfile|log.Ltime|log.Lmicroseconds) to get all logging output to show file name, line number, and time stamp. In short, for most purposes log.Stderr -> log.Println or log.Print log.Stderrf -> log.Printf log.Crash -> log.Panicln or log.Panic log.Crashf -> log.Panicf log.Exit -> log.Exitln or log.Exit log.Exitf -> log.Exitf (no change) This has a slight breakage: since loggers now write only to one output, existing calls to log.New() need to delete the second argument. Also, custom loggers with exit or panic properties will need to be reworked. All package code updated to new interface. The test has been reworked somewhat. The old interface will be removed after the new release. For now, its elements are marked 'deprecated' in their comments. Fixes #1184. R=rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/2419042
2010-10-12 12:59:18 -07:00
log.Print("rpc hijacking ", w.RemoteAddr(), ": ", err.String())
return
}
io.WriteString(conn, "HTTP/1.0 "+connected+"\n\n")
server.ServeConn(conn)
}
// HandleHTTP registers an HTTP handler for RPC messages on rpcPath,
// and a debugging handler on debugPath.
// It is still necessary to invoke http.Serve(), typically in a go statement.
func (server *Server) HandleHTTP(rpcPath, debugPath string) {
http.Handle(rpcPath, server)
http.Handle(debugPath, debugHTTP{server})
}
// HandleHTTP registers an HTTP handler for RPC messages to DefaultServer
// on DefaultRPCPath and a debugging handler on DefaultDebugPath.
// It is still necessary to invoke http.Serve(), typically in a go statement.
func HandleHTTP() {
DefaultServer.HandleHTTP(DefaultRPCPath, DefaultDebugPath)
}