consul/lib/freeport/freeport.go
Alex Dadgar 17dcbb1912 Make freeport testing friendly
This PR allows the caller to decide if they would like to have the
calling test fail, have the caller panic on error, or handle the errors
themselves.
2017-10-23 16:28:02 -07:00

132 lines
3.3 KiB
Go

// Package freeport provides a helper for allocating free ports across multiple
// processes on the same machine.
package freeport
import (
"fmt"
"math/rand"
"net"
"sync"
"time"
"github.com/mitchellh/go-testing-interface"
)
const (
// blockSize is the size of the allocated port block. ports are given out
// consecutively from that block with roll-over for the lifetime of the
// application/test run.
blockSize = 500
// maxBlocks is the number of available port blocks.
// lowPort + maxBlocks * blockSize must be less than 65535.
maxBlocks = 30
// lowPort is the lowest port number that should be used.
lowPort = 10000
// attempts is how often we try to allocate a port block
// before giving up.
attempts = 10
)
var (
// firstPort is the first port of the allocated block.
firstPort int
// lockLn is the system-wide mutex for the port block.
lockLn net.Listener
// mu guards nextPort
mu sync.Mutex
// port is the last allocated port.
port int
)
func init() {
if lowPort+maxBlocks*blockSize > 65535 {
panic("freeport: block size too big or too many blocks requested")
}
rand.Seed(time.Now().UnixNano())
firstPort, lockLn = alloc()
}
// alloc reserves a port block for exclusive use for the lifetime of the
// application. lockLn serves as a system-wide mutex for the port block and is
// implemented as a TCP listener which is bound to the firstPort and which will
// be automatically released when the application terminates.
func alloc() (int, net.Listener) {
for i := 0; i < attempts; i++ {
block := int(rand.Int31n(int32(maxBlocks)))
firstPort := lowPort + block*blockSize
ln, err := net.ListenTCP("tcp", tcpAddr("127.0.0.1", firstPort))
if err != nil {
continue
}
// log.Printf("[DEBUG] freeport: allocated port block %d (%d-%d)", block, firstPort, firstPort+blockSize-1)
return firstPort, ln
}
panic("freeport: cannot allocate port block")
}
func tcpAddr(ip string, port int) *net.TCPAddr {
return &net.TCPAddr{IP: net.ParseIP(ip), Port: port}
}
// Get wraps the Free function and panics on any failure retrieving ports.
func Get(n int) (ports []int) {
ports, err := Free(n)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return ports
}
// GetT is suitable for use when retrieving unused ports in tests. If there is
// an error retrieving free ports, the test will be failed.
func GetT(t testing.T, n int) (ports []int) {
ports, err := Free(n)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("Failed retrieving free port: %v", err)
}
return ports
}
// Free returns a list of free ports from the allocated port block. It is safe
// to call this method concurrently. Ports have been tested to be available on
// 127.0.0.1 TCP but there is no guarantee that they will remain free in the
// future.
func Free(n int) (ports []int, err error) {
mu.Lock()
defer mu.Unlock()
if n > blockSize-1 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("freeport: block size too small")
}
for len(ports) < n {
port++
// roll-over the port
if port < firstPort+1 || port >= firstPort+blockSize {
port = firstPort + 1
}
// if the port is in use then skip it
ln, err := net.ListenTCP("tcp", tcpAddr("127.0.0.1", port))
if err != nil {
// log.Println("[DEBUG] freeport: port already in use: ", port)
continue
}
ln.Close()
ports = append(ports, port)
}
// log.Println("[DEBUG] freeport: free ports:", ports)
return ports, nil
}