nodejs/test/parallel/test-http2-session-timeout.js

63 lines
1.7 KiB
JavaScript

'use strict';
const common = require('../common');
if (!common.hasCrypto)
common.skip('missing crypto');
const assert = require('assert');
const http2 = require('http2');
let requests = 0;
const mustNotCall = () => {
assert.fail(`Timeout after ${requests} request(s)`);
};
const server = http2.createServer();
// Disable server timeout until first request. We will set the timeout based on
// how long the first request takes.
server.timeout = 0;
server.on('request', (req, res) => res.end());
server.on('timeout', mustNotCall);
server.listen(0, common.mustCall(() => {
const port = server.address().port;
const url = `http://localhost:${port}`;
const client = http2.connect(url);
let startTime = process.hrtime();
makeReq();
function makeReq() {
const request = client.request({
':path': '/foobar',
':method': 'GET',
':scheme': 'http',
':authority': `localhost:${port}`,
});
request.resume();
request.end();
requests += 1;
request.on('end', () => {
const diff = process.hrtime(startTime);
const milliseconds = (diff[0] * 1e3 + diff[1] / 1e6);
if (server.timeout === 0) {
// Set the timeout now. First connection will take significantly longer
// than subsequent connections, so using the duration of the first
// connection as the timeout should be robust. Double it anyway for good
// measure.
server.timeout = milliseconds * 2;
startTime = process.hrtime();
makeReq();
} else if (milliseconds < server.timeout * 2) {
makeReq();
} else {
server.removeListener('timeout', mustNotCall);
server.close();
client.close();
}
});
}
}));