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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
Fixes the |
CI: https://ci.nodejs.org/job/node-test-pull-request/19361/ /cc @nodejs/streams |
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Good work! Can you add a test just using streams?
@mcollina … I did? https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/24926/files#diff-c5ecccd43a23798a93a3ab920bebee64 should be what you want, right? |
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LGTM
(my bad) |
Resume Build CI: https://ci.nodejs.org/job/node-test-pull-request/19366/ ✔️ |
Landed in 83ec33b |
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 <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <[email protected]>
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 <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <[email protected]>
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 <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <[email protected]>
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 <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <[email protected]>
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 <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <[email protected]>
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 <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Franziska Hinkelmann <[email protected]>
@mcollina Do we have any placeholder issue for known cases of "incorrect" event ordering, in particular in relation to |
@ronag we don't. Open a new one for HTTP/2. |
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.ended
property 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.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 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