go-ethereum/p2p/peer.go
Felix Lange 1440f9a37a p2p: new dialer, peer management without locks
The most visible change is event-based dialing, which should be an
improvement over the timer-based system that we have at the moment.
The dialer gets a chance to compute new tasks whenever peers change or
dials complete. This is better than checking peers on a timer because
dials happen faster. The dialer can now make more precise decisions
about whom to dial based on the peer set and we can test those
decisions without actually opening any sockets.

Peer management is easier to test because the tests can inject
connections at checkpoints (after enc handshake, after protocol
handshake).

Most of the handshake stuff is now part of the RLPx code. It could be
exported or move to its own package because it is no longer entangled
with Server logic.
2015-05-25 01:17:14 +02:00

306 lines
6.8 KiB
Go

package p2p
import (
"errors"
"fmt"
"io"
"net"
"sort"
"sync"
"time"
"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/logger"
"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/logger/glog"
"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/p2p/discover"
"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/rlp"
)
const (
baseProtocolVersion = 4
baseProtocolLength = uint64(16)
baseProtocolMaxMsgSize = 2 * 1024
pingInterval = 15 * time.Second
)
const (
// devp2p message codes
handshakeMsg = 0x00
discMsg = 0x01
pingMsg = 0x02
pongMsg = 0x03
getPeersMsg = 0x04
peersMsg = 0x05
)
// protoHandshake is the RLP structure of the protocol handshake.
type protoHandshake struct {
Version uint64
Name string
Caps []Cap
ListenPort uint64
ID discover.NodeID
}
// Peer represents a connected remote node.
type Peer struct {
rw *conn
running map[string]*protoRW
wg sync.WaitGroup
protoErr chan error
closed chan struct{}
disc chan DiscReason
}
// NewPeer returns a peer for testing purposes.
func NewPeer(id discover.NodeID, name string, caps []Cap) *Peer {
pipe, _ := net.Pipe()
conn := &conn{fd: pipe, transport: nil, id: id, caps: caps, name: name}
peer := newPeer(conn, nil)
close(peer.closed) // ensures Disconnect doesn't block
return peer
}
// ID returns the node's public key.
func (p *Peer) ID() discover.NodeID {
return p.rw.id
}
// Name returns the node name that the remote node advertised.
func (p *Peer) Name() string {
return p.rw.name
}
// Caps returns the capabilities (supported subprotocols) of the remote peer.
func (p *Peer) Caps() []Cap {
// TODO: maybe return copy
return p.rw.caps
}
// RemoteAddr returns the remote address of the network connection.
func (p *Peer) RemoteAddr() net.Addr {
return p.rw.fd.RemoteAddr()
}
// LocalAddr returns the local address of the network connection.
func (p *Peer) LocalAddr() net.Addr {
return p.rw.fd.LocalAddr()
}
// Disconnect terminates the peer connection with the given reason.
// It returns immediately and does not wait until the connection is closed.
func (p *Peer) Disconnect(reason DiscReason) {
select {
case p.disc <- reason:
case <-p.closed:
}
}
// String implements fmt.Stringer.
func (p *Peer) String() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("Peer %x %v", p.rw.id[:8], p.RemoteAddr())
}
func newPeer(conn *conn, protocols []Protocol) *Peer {
protomap := matchProtocols(protocols, conn.caps, conn)
p := &Peer{
rw: conn,
running: protomap,
disc: make(chan DiscReason),
protoErr: make(chan error, len(protomap)+1), // protocols + pingLoop
closed: make(chan struct{}),
}
return p
}
func (p *Peer) run() DiscReason {
readErr := make(chan error, 1)
p.wg.Add(2)
go p.readLoop(readErr)
go p.pingLoop()
p.startProtocols()
// Wait for an error or disconnect.
var (
reason DiscReason
requested bool
)
select {
case err := <-readErr:
if r, ok := err.(DiscReason); ok {
reason = r
} else {
// Note: We rely on protocols to abort if there is a write
// error. It might be more robust to handle them here as well.
glog.V(logger.Detail).Infof("%v: Read error: %v\n", p, err)
reason = DiscNetworkError
}
case err := <-p.protoErr:
reason = discReasonForError(err)
case reason = <-p.disc:
requested = true
}
close(p.closed)
p.rw.close(reason)
p.wg.Wait()
if requested {
reason = DiscRequested
}
glog.V(logger.Debug).Infof("%v: Disconnected: %v\n", p, reason)
return reason
}
func (p *Peer) pingLoop() {
ping := time.NewTicker(pingInterval)
defer p.wg.Done()
defer ping.Stop()
for {
select {
case <-ping.C:
if err := SendItems(p.rw, pingMsg); err != nil {
p.protoErr <- err
return
}
case <-p.closed:
return
}
}
}
func (p *Peer) readLoop(errc chan<- error) {
defer p.wg.Done()
for {
msg, err := p.rw.ReadMsg()
if err != nil {
errc <- err
return
}
msg.ReceivedAt = time.Now()
if err = p.handle(msg); err != nil {
errc <- err
return
}
}
}
func (p *Peer) handle(msg Msg) error {
switch {
case msg.Code == pingMsg:
msg.Discard()
go SendItems(p.rw, pongMsg)
case msg.Code == discMsg:
var reason [1]DiscReason
// This is the last message. We don't need to discard or
// check errors because, the connection will be closed after it.
rlp.Decode(msg.Payload, &reason)
glog.V(logger.Debug).Infof("%v: Disconnect Requested: %v\n", p, reason[0])
return reason[0]
case msg.Code < baseProtocolLength:
// ignore other base protocol messages
return msg.Discard()
default:
// it's a subprotocol message
proto, err := p.getProto(msg.Code)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("msg code out of range: %v", msg.Code)
}
select {
case proto.in <- msg:
return nil
case <-p.closed:
return io.EOF
}
}
return nil
}
func countMatchingProtocols(protocols []Protocol, caps []Cap) int {
n := 0
for _, cap := range caps {
for _, proto := range protocols {
if proto.Name == cap.Name && proto.Version == cap.Version {
n++
}
}
}
return n
}
// matchProtocols creates structures for matching named subprotocols.
func matchProtocols(protocols []Protocol, caps []Cap, rw MsgReadWriter) map[string]*protoRW {
sort.Sort(capsByName(caps))
offset := baseProtocolLength
result := make(map[string]*protoRW)
outer:
for _, cap := range caps {
for _, proto := range protocols {
if proto.Name == cap.Name && proto.Version == cap.Version && result[cap.Name] == nil {
result[cap.Name] = &protoRW{Protocol: proto, offset: offset, in: make(chan Msg), w: rw}
offset += proto.Length
continue outer
}
}
}
return result
}
func (p *Peer) startProtocols() {
p.wg.Add(len(p.running))
for _, proto := range p.running {
proto := proto
proto.closed = p.closed
glog.V(logger.Detail).Infof("%v: Starting protocol %s/%d\n", p, proto.Name, proto.Version)
go func() {
err := proto.Run(p, proto)
if err == nil {
glog.V(logger.Detail).Infof("%v: Protocol %s/%d returned\n", p, proto.Name, proto.Version)
err = errors.New("protocol returned")
} else if err != io.EOF {
glog.V(logger.Detail).Infof("%v: Protocol %s/%d error: %v\n", p, proto.Name, proto.Version, err)
}
p.protoErr <- err
p.wg.Done()
}()
}
}
// getProto finds the protocol responsible for handling
// the given message code.
func (p *Peer) getProto(code uint64) (*protoRW, error) {
for _, proto := range p.running {
if code >= proto.offset && code < proto.offset+proto.Length {
return proto, nil
}
}
return nil, newPeerError(errInvalidMsgCode, "%d", code)
}
type protoRW struct {
Protocol
in chan Msg
closed <-chan struct{}
offset uint64
w MsgWriter
}
func (rw *protoRW) WriteMsg(msg Msg) error {
if msg.Code >= rw.Length {
return newPeerError(errInvalidMsgCode, "not handled")
}
msg.Code += rw.offset
return rw.w.WriteMsg(msg)
}
func (rw *protoRW) ReadMsg() (Msg, error) {
select {
case msg := <-rw.in:
msg.Code -= rw.offset
return msg, nil
case <-rw.closed:
return Msg{}, io.EOF
}
}