281b304edb
This change moves our e2e tests into a separate package to make room for proper unit and integration tests. This is Phase 1 described in #371. Changes: Makefile has separate directives to run unit/integration tests and e2e tests, CI runs unit/integration tests first and then e2e tests, E2e tests are in reliability order, i.e. the least reliable tests are run in the end to be sure that nothing else is broken, Some tests are fixed or quarantined. |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
console | ||
internal | ||
README.md | ||
cell.go | ||
cell_test.go | ||
doc.go | ||
handlers.go | ||
jail.go |
README.md
jail
jail - jailed enviroment for executing JS code.
Download:
go get github.com/status-im/status-go/geth/jail
jail - jailed enviroment for executing JS code.
Package jail implements "jailed" enviroment for executing arbitrary JavaScript code using Otto JS interpreter (https://github.com/robertkrimen/otto).
Jail create multiple Cells, one cell per status client chat. Each cell runs own Otto virtual machine and lives forever, but that may change in the future.
+----------------------------------------------+
| Jail |
+----------------------------------------------+
+---------+ +---------+ +---------+ +---------+
| Cell | | Cell | | Cell | | Cell |
|ChatID 1 | |ChatID 2 | |ChatID 3 | |ChatID N |
|+-------+| |+-------+| |+-------+| |+-------+|
||Otto VM|| ||Otto VM|| ||Otto VM|| ||Otto VM||
|+-------+| |+-------+| |+-------+| |+-------+|
|| Loop || || Loop || || Loop || || Loop ||
++-------++ ++-------++ ++-------++ ++-------++
##Cells Each Cell object embeds *VM from 'jail/vm' for concurrency safe wrapper around *otto.VM functions. This is important when dealing with setTimeout and Fetch API functions (see below).
##Get and Set (*VM).Get/Set functions provide transparent and concurrently safe wrappers for Otto VM Get and Set functions respectively. See Otto documentation for usage examples: https://godoc.org/github.com/robertkrimen/otto
##Call and Run (*VM).Call/Run functions allows executing arbitrary JS in the cell. They're also wrappers arount Otto VM functions of the same name. Run accepts raw JS strings for execution, Call takes a JS function name (defined in VM) and parameters.
##Timeouts and intervals support
Default Otto VM interpreter doesn't support setTimeout()/setInterval() JS functions,
because they're not part of ECMA-262 spec, but properties of the window object in browser.
We add support for them using own implementation of Event Loop, heavily based on http://github.com/status-im/ottoext package. See loop/fetch/promise packages under jail/internal/
.
Each cell starts a new loop in a separate goroutine, registers functions for setTimeout/setInterval calls and associate them with this loop. All JS code executed as callback to setTimeout/setInterval will be handled by this loop.
For example, following code:
cell.Run(`setTimeout(function(){ value = "42" }, 2000);`)
will execute setTimeout and return immidiately, but callback function will be executed after 2 seconds in the loop that was started upon current cell.
In order to capture response one may use following approach:
err = cell.Set("__captureResponse", func(val string) otto.Value {
fmt.Println("Captured response from callback:", val)
return otto.UndefinedValue()
})
cell.Run(`setTimeout(function(){ __captureResponse("OK") }, 2000);`)
##Fetch support Fetch API is implemented in a similar way using the same loop. When Cell is created, corresponding handlers are registered within VM and associated event loop.
Due to asynchronous nature of Fetch API, the following code will return immediately:
cell.Run(`fetch('http://example.com/').then(function(data) { ... })`)
and callback function in a promise will be executed in a event loop in the background. Thus, it's user responsibility to register a corresponding callback function before:
cell.Set("__captureSuccess", func(res otto.Value) { ... })
cell.Run(`fetch('http://example.com').then(function(r) {
return r.text()
}).then(function(data) {
// user code
__captureSuccess(data)
}))
Automatically generated by autoreadme on 2017.09.15