bsc/common/mclock/alarm_test.go
Felix Lange 9e6a1c3834
common/mclock: add Alarm (#26333)
Alarm is a timer utility that simplifies code where a timer needs to be rescheduled over
and over. Doing this can be tricky with time.Timer or time.AfterFunc because the channel
requires draining in some cases.

Alarm is optimized for use cases where items are tracked in a heap according to their expiry
time, and a goroutine with a for/select loop wants to be woken up whenever the next item expires.
In this application, the timer needs to be rescheduled when an item is added or removed
from the heap. Using a timer naively, these updates will always require synchronization
with the global runtime timer datastructure to update the timer using Reset. Alarm avoids
this by tracking the next expiry time and only modifies the timer if it would need to fire earlier
than already scheduled.

As an example use, I have converted p2p.dialScheduler to use Alarm instead of AfterFunc.
2023-01-03 12:10:48 +01:00

117 lines
2.8 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2022 The go-ethereum Authors
// This file is part of the go-ethereum library.
//
// The go-ethereum library is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
// it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
// the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
// (at your option) any later version.
//
// The go-ethereum library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
// GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
//
// You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
// along with the go-ethereum library. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
package mclock
import "testing"
// This test checks basic functionality of Alarm.
func TestAlarm(t *testing.T) {
clk := new(Simulated)
clk.Run(20)
a := NewAlarm(clk)
a.Schedule(clk.Now() + 10)
if recv(a.C()) {
t.Fatal("Alarm fired before scheduled deadline")
}
if ntimers := clk.ActiveTimers(); ntimers != 1 {
t.Fatal("clock has", ntimers, "active timers, want", 1)
}
clk.Run(5)
if recv(a.C()) {
t.Fatal("Alarm fired too early")
}
clk.Run(5)
if !recv(a.C()) {
t.Fatal("Alarm did not fire")
}
if recv(a.C()) {
t.Fatal("Alarm fired twice")
}
if ntimers := clk.ActiveTimers(); ntimers != 0 {
t.Fatal("clock has", ntimers, "active timers, want", 0)
}
a.Schedule(clk.Now() + 5)
if recv(a.C()) {
t.Fatal("Alarm fired before scheduled deadline when scheduling the second event")
}
clk.Run(5)
if !recv(a.C()) {
t.Fatal("Alarm did not fire when scheduling the second event")
}
if recv(a.C()) {
t.Fatal("Alarm fired twice when scheduling the second event")
}
}
// This test checks that scheduling an Alarm to an earlier time than the
// one already scheduled works properly.
func TestAlarmScheduleEarlier(t *testing.T) {
clk := new(Simulated)
clk.Run(20)
a := NewAlarm(clk)
a.Schedule(clk.Now() + 50)
clk.Run(5)
a.Schedule(clk.Now() + 1)
clk.Run(3)
if !recv(a.C()) {
t.Fatal("Alarm did not fire")
}
}
// This test checks that scheduling an Alarm to a later time than the
// one already scheduled works properly.
func TestAlarmScheduleLater(t *testing.T) {
clk := new(Simulated)
clk.Run(20)
a := NewAlarm(clk)
a.Schedule(clk.Now() + 50)
clk.Run(5)
a.Schedule(clk.Now() + 100)
clk.Run(50)
if !recv(a.C()) {
t.Fatal("Alarm did not fire")
}
}
// This test checks that scheduling an Alarm in the past makes it fire immediately.
func TestAlarmNegative(t *testing.T) {
clk := new(Simulated)
clk.Run(50)
a := NewAlarm(clk)
a.Schedule(-1)
clk.Run(1) // needed to process timers
if !recv(a.C()) {
t.Fatal("Alarm did not fire for negative time")
}
}
func recv(ch <-chan struct{}) bool {
select {
case <-ch:
return true
default:
return false
}
}