Node Request Library Error: getaddrinfo ENOTFOUND dns.js 26 - node.js

I am scraping a website in a continuous manner (once a day multiple requests) and using the async and request node modules to do so every time. I run the function getPage in parallel using the async eachLimit (not shown in code here). However once in a few thousands queries I get the following error:
Error: getaddrinfo ENOTFOUND 247sports.com 247sports.com:80
at errnoException (dns.js:26:10)
at GetAddrInfoReqWrap.onlookup [as oncomplete] (dns.js:77:26)
Even though I know the url I passed it was valid. I found there were solutions for people using the http module and getting the same error but no one seems to be getting this using the request module.
I know my ip was not blocked as I was able to access the site right after the error. I also know my user-agent is not the problem, as I rotate through a list of user agents, all of which are valid.
My guess is that the problem lies where the request library interacts with the node http module. Unfortunately I have not been able to reproduce the problem accurately as it seems to just get triggered when I push a lot of requests at the same time or in a row.
The function code below is what my function looks like:
function getPage(){
var options = {
url: "http://stackoverflow.com/",
headers: { 'User-agent': 'Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:2.0.1) Gecko/20110506 Firefox/4.0.1'
};
request(options, function(err, resp, body) {
if (err){
throw err;
return;
}
PagesScraped++;
console.log(PagesScraped);
return;
});
};
for (var i = 0; i < 600; i++){
getPage();
};
Note: I realize this code gets the same page 600 times asynchronously, but the error is still present if ran enough times... My local code visits multiple thousands of pages on the same website.

Related

GET request using node/request throwing unexpected "read ECONNRESET"

I am getting strange behavior using the request library in node when hitting certain sites.
for a quick context (that has nothing to do with the technical issue): my goal on this project was to read the NASDAQ dividend history for a number of stocks. The histories can be quite long and I'm certainly not going to sit here and read 100 of them manually. An example of one of these pages: https://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/msft/dividend-history
On to the technical troubles... I am using node v11.10.0 with the request module to call the page - the simplest possible thing. I have used this library to do other similar tasks and have never had an issue. Here was my very simple script:
var request = require("request");
var options = { method: 'GET',
url: 'https://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/msft/dividend-history',
headers:
{ 'Postman-Token': 'e4e9749e-d73e-44b9-994f-9d0522654fb0',
'cache-control': 'no-cache' } };
request(options, function (error, response, body) {
if (error) throw new Error(error);
console.log(body);
});
Save file as index.js, and run
node index.js
and that should get the page... except I'm getting an error. The error is:
Error: Error: read ECONNRESET
at Request._callback (<localpath>\index.js:8:24)
at self.callback (<localpath>\node_modules\request\request.js:185:22)
at Request.emit (events.js:197:13)
at Request.onRequestError (<localpath>\node_modules\request\request.js:881:8)
at ClientRequest.emit (events.js:197:13)
at TLSSocket.socketErrorListener (_http_client.js:397:9)
at TLSSocket.emit (events.js:197:13)
at emitErrorNT (internal/streams/destroy.js:82:8)
at emitErrorAndCloseNT (internal/streams/destroy.js:50:3)
at processTicksAndRejections (internal/process/next_tick.js:76:17)
So, thinking that I maybe had something wrong, I tried the same request in postman to validate. But Postman had no trouble doing a get request against the same URL above. I thought perhaps there was a certificate issue with the https stuff, but I toggled certificate validation on and off in postman, and it worked regardless of the setting.
Additional note here - my "very simple script" is actually what I pulled from the Postman "code" tab for a Node/Request code block, so I am really baffled that Postman works but Postman's own node codeblock does not.
At this point I don't even care about what I was trying to do originally... I'm just trying to figure out why I am getting different behavior on two seemingly equivalent ways to make a GET request.
Does anyone have insight on what postman has that node is missing in this case?

catching exceptions in node.js express proxy application

I have some proxy code like this below. Problem is that whenever the target server is down, this code fails to capture the error, resulting in the entire application crashing with Error: connect ECONNREFUSED.
For a proxy server, this is terrible, it needs to just return an error to the caller, not crash altogether upon the first time that the target server is unreachable.
What is the right way around it these days?
Node version 6.
let targetUrl = "http://foo.com/bar"
app.options('/cors-proxy/bar', cors())
app.post('/cors-proxy/bar', function(req, res) {
console.log(`received message with method ${req.method} and some body ${req.body}`)
console.log(`relaying message to ${targetUrl}`)
try {
req.pipe(
request({
url: targetUrl,
method: req.method,
json: req.body
})
).pipe(res);
} catch (err) {
res.status(502)
res.render('error', {
message: err.message,
error: err
});
}
});
Thanks!
In general, you can't use try/catch to catch exceptions that may occur in asynchronous callbacks or asynchronous operations. That will only catch synchronous errors.
Instead, you have to read how each particular asynchronous operation reports errors and make sure you are plugged into that particular mechanism.
For example, streams report errors with a message to the stream that you intercept with stream.on('error', ...). For example, a request() can report errors several different ways depending upon which request() library you are actually using and how you are using it.
Some references:
Error handling with node.js streams
Stream Readable Error
How Error Events Affect Piped Streams in Node.js

aws ec2 getaddrinfo ENOTFOUND error code

My aim is to get the instanceId when my script is started. (Cause I want to connect my webserver as backend with the aws elb. This even works when I hardcode the id) So now I try to code a function wich gives me the id.
So what I know is that I need the AWS.metadataService but I don't know how to use it. I found this documentation (metaDataService) an command-line tool. I guess I need to combine it like this:
var meta = new AWS.MetadataService();
meta.request("http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/", function(err, data){
if(err){
console.log(err);
}
console.log(data);
});
But it produces this error:
{ [Error: getaddrinfo ENOTFOUND 169.254.169.254http 169.254.169.254http:80]
code: 'ENOTFOUND',
errno: 'ENOTFOUND',
syscall: 'getaddrinfo',
hostname: '169.254.169.254http',
host: '169.254.169.254http',
port: 80 }
Any ideas what could fix this? Or at least what causes this error.
Hope it helps.
var meta = new AWS.MetadataService({
host: '169.254.169.254'
});
meta.request('/latest/meta-data/', function(err, data){
if(err){
console.log(err);
}
console.log(data);
});
As the error message rather clearly tells you, you somehow ended up passing in 169.254.169.254http as the host name, and 169.254.169.254http:80 as the host. Just to spell this out completely, you probably wanted the host to be 169.254.169.254. You need to figure out why your request was botched like this, and correct the code or your configuration files so you send what you wanted to send.
ENOTFOUND in response to getaddrinfo simply means that you wanted to obtain the address of something which doesn't exist or is unknown. Very often this means that you have a typo, or that the information you used to configure your service is obsolete or otherwise out of whack (attempting to reach a private corporate server when you are outside the corporate firewall, for example).

nodejs - upload using fs.createReadStream, requestjs, streaming and AWS S3 presigned url throws error

My Environment: Windows 8.1, NodeJS 0.10.0 request 2.30.0
This is what I tried based on samples from Amazon SDK and documentation for requestjs
var params = {Bucket:'myprivateuniquebucket'
,Key:'mykey'
,Expires: 60};
var url = s3.getSignedUrl('putObject', params);
fs.createReadStream('pic.png').pipe(request.put(url));
and this is the error I got
events.js:72
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
^
Error: read ECONNRESET
at errnoException (net.js:863:11)
at TCP.onread (net.js:524:19)
However instead of using fs.createReadStream when I used fs.readFile like below everything worked just fine
fs.readFile('pic.png', function (err, data) {
request(
{ method: 'PUT'
, uri: url
, body: data
}
, function (error, response, body) {
}
);
});
Note I followed the streaming example here https://github.com/mikeal/request almost verbatim.
I'd appreciate pointers on what was incorrect since I'd like to use streaming in multiple places.
This is mostly an issue with Amazon's API rather than your code. Uploading a file to Amazon requires the Content-Length header to be set. In your stream example, the length is unknown so Amazon is just dropping the connection. In your second example, request knows the length of the buffer and sets the Content-Length for you.
If you are streaming because the file is huge and loading it all into RAM is hard, then you will need to use Amazon's multi-part uploading APIs. If you are streaming but the file is small, then I'd probably stick with the readFile method.

NodeJS - What does "socket hang up" actually mean?

I'm building a web scraper with Node and Cheerio, and for a certain website I'm getting the following error (it only happens on this one website, no others that I try to scrape.
It happens at a different location every time, so sometimes it's url x that throws the error, other times url x is fine and it's a different url entirely:
Error!: Error: socket hang up using [insert random URL, it's different every time]
Error: socket hang up
at createHangUpError (http.js:1445:15)
at Socket.socketOnEnd [as onend] (http.js:1541:23)
at Socket.g (events.js:175:14)
at Socket.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:117:20)
at _stream_readable.js:910:16
at process._tickCallback (node.js:415:13)
This is very tricky to debug, I don't really know where to start. To begin, what IS a socket hang up error? Is it a 404 error or similar? Or does it just mean that the server refused a connection?
I can't find an explanation of this anywhere!
EDIT: Here's a sample of code that is (sometimes) returning errors:
function scrapeNexts(url, oncomplete) {
request(url, function(err, resp, body) {
if (err) {
console.log("Uh-oh, ScrapeNexts Error!: " + err + " using " + url);
errors.nexts.push(url);
}
$ = cheerio.load(body);
// do stuff with the '$' cheerio content here
});
}
There is no direct call to close the connection, but I'm using Node Request which (as far as I can tell) uses http.get so this is not required, correct me if I'm wrong!
EDIT 2: Here's an actual, in-use bit of code that is causing errors. prodURL and other variables are mostly jquery selectors that are defined earlier. This uses the async library for Node.
function scrapeNexts(url, oncomplete) {
request(url, function (err, resp, body) {
if (err) {
console.log("Uh-oh, ScrapeNexts Error!: " + err + " using " + url);
errors.nexts.push(url);
}
async.series([
function (callback) {
$ = cheerio.load(body);
callback();
},
function (callback) {
$(prodURL).each(function () {
var theHref = $(this).attr('href');
urls.push(baseURL + theHref);
});
var next = $(next_select).first().attr('href');
oncomplete(next);
}
]);
});
}
There are two cases when socket hang up gets thrown:
When you are a client
When you, as a client, send a request to a remote server, and receive no timely response. Your socket is ended which throws this error. You should catch this error and decide how to handle it: whether retry the request, queue it for later, etc.
When you are a server/proxy
When you, as a server, perhaps a proxy server, receive a request from a client, then start acting upon it (or relay the request to the upstream server), and before you have prepared the response, the client decides to cancel/abort the request.
This stack trace shows what happens when a client cancels the request.
Trace: { [Error: socket hang up] code: 'ECONNRESET' }
at ClientRequest.proxyError (your_server_code_error_handler.js:137:15)
at ClientRequest.emit (events.js:117:20)
at Socket.socketCloseListener (http.js:1526:9)
at Socket.emit (events.js:95:17)
at TCP.close (net.js:465:12)
Line http.js:1526:9points to the same socketCloseListener mentioned by #Blender, particularly:
// This socket error fired before we started to
// receive a response. The error needs to
// fire on the request.
req.emit('error', createHangUpError());
...
function createHangUpError() {
var error = new Error('socket hang up');
error.code = 'ECONNRESET';
return error;
}
This is a typical case if the client is a user in the browser. The request to load some resource/page takes long, and users simply refresh the page. Such action causes the previous request to get aborted which on your server side throws this error.
Since this error is caused by the wish of a client, they don't expect to receive any error message. So, no need to consider this error as critical. Just ignore it. This is encouraged by the fact that on such error the res socket that your client listened to is, though still writable, destroyed.
console.log(res.socket.destroyed); //true
So, no point to send anything, except explicitly closing the response object:
res.end();
However, what you should do for sure if you are a proxy server which has already relayed the request to the upstream, is to abort your internal request to the upstream, indicating your lack of interest in the response, which in turn will tell the upstream server to, perhaps, stop an expensive operation.
Take a look at the source:
function socketCloseListener() {
var socket = this;
var parser = socket.parser;
var req = socket._httpMessage;
debug('HTTP socket close');
req.emit('close');
if (req.res && req.res.readable) {
// Socket closed before we emitted 'end' below.
req.res.emit('aborted');
var res = req.res;
res.on('end', function() {
res.emit('close');
});
res.push(null);
} else if (!req.res && !req._hadError) {
// This socket error fired before we started to
// receive a response. The error needs to
// fire on the request.
req.emit('error', createHangUpError());
req._hadError = true;
}
}
The message is emitted when the server never sends a response.
One case worth mentioning: when connecting from Node.js to Node.js using Express, I get "socket hang up" if I don't prefix the requested URL path with "/".
below is a simple example where I got the same error when I missed to add the commented code in below example. Uncommenting the code req.end() will resolve this issue.
var fs = require("fs");
var https = require("https");
var options = {
host: "en.wikipedia.org",
path: "/wiki/George_Washington",
port: 443,
method: "GET"
};
var req = https.request(options, function (res) {
console.log(res.statusCode);
});
// req.end();
I used require('http') to consume https service and it showed "socket hang up".
Then I changed require('http') to require('https') instead, and it is working.
Expanding on Blender's answer, this happens in a number of situations. The most common ones I run into are:
The server crashed.
The server refused your connection, most likely blocked by User-Agent.
socketCloseListener, as outlined in Blender's answer, is not the only place that hangup errors are created.
For example, found here:
function socketOnEnd() {
var socket = this;
var req = this._httpMessage;
var parser = this.parser;
if (!req.res) {
// If we don't have a response then we know that the socket
// ended prematurely and we need to emit an error on the request.
req.emit('error', createHangUpError());
req._hadError = true;
}
if (parser) {
parser.finish();
freeParser(parser, req);
}
socket.destroy();
}
You could try curl with the headers and such that are being sent out from Node and see if you get a response there. If you don't get a response with curl, but you do get a response in your browser, then your User-Agent header is most likely being blocked.
Another case worth mentioning (for Linux and OS X) is that if you use a library like https for performing the requests, or if you pass https://... as a URL of the locally served instance, you will be using port 443 which is a reserved private port and you might be ending up in Socket hang up or ECONNREFUSED errors.
Instead, use port 3000, f.e., and do an http request.
For request module users
Timeouts
There are two main types of timeouts: connection timeouts and read timeouts. A connect timeout occurs if the timeout is hit while your client is attempting to establish a connection to a remote machine (corresponding to the connect() call on the socket). A read timeout occurs any time the server is too slow to send back a part of the response.
Note that connection timeouts emit an ETIMEDOUT error, and read timeouts emit an ECONNRESET error.
This caused me issues, as I was doing everything listed here, but was still getting errors thrown. It turns out that calling req.abort() actually throws an error, with a code of ECONNRESET, so you actually have to catch that in your error handler.
req.on('error', function(err) {
if (err.code === "ECONNRESET") {
console.log("Timeout occurs");
return;
}
//handle normal errors
});
I had the same problem while using Nano library to connect to Couch DB. I tried to fine tune connection pooling with use of keepaliveagent library and it kept failing with socket hang up message.
var KeepAliveAgent = require('agentkeepalive');
var myagent = new KeepAliveAgent({
maxSockets: 10,
maxKeepAliveRequests: 0,
maxKeepAliveTime: 240000
});
nano = new Nano({
url : uri,
requestDefaults : {
agent : myagent
}
});
After some struggling I was able to nail the problem - as it came out it was very, very simple mistake. I was connecting to the database via HTTPS protocol, but I kept passing to my nano object a keepalive agent created as the examples for use of this library show (they rely on some defaults that use http).
One simple change to use HttpsAgent did the trick:
var KeepAliveAgent = require('agentkeepalive').HttpsAgent;
I think "socket hang up" is a fairly general error indicating that the connection has been terminated from the server end. In other words, the sockets being used to maintain the connection between the client and the server have been disconnected. (While I'm sure many of the points mentioned above are helpful to various people, I think this is the more general answer.)
In my case, I was sending a request with a payload in excess of 20K. This was rejected by the server. I verified this by removing text and retrying until the request succeeded. After determining the maximum acceptable length, I verified that adding a single character caused the error to manifest. I also confirmed that the client wasn't the issue by sending the same request from a Python app and from Postman. So anyway, I'm confident that, in my case, the length of the payload was my specific problem.
Once again, the source of the problem is anecdotal. The general problem is "Server Says No".
I had the same problem during request to some server. In my case, setting any value to User-Agent in headers in request options helped me.
const httpRequestOptions = {
hostname: 'site.address.com',
headers: {
'User-Agent': 'Chrome/59.0.3071.115'
}
};
It's not a general case and depends on server settings.
This error also can happen when working with http.request, probably your request is not finished yet.
Example:
const req = https.request(options, res => {})
And you always need to add this line: req.end()
With this function we will order to finish sending request.
As in documentation is said:
With http.request() one must always call req.end() to signify the end of the request - even if there is no data being written to the request body.
Also reason can be because of using app instance of express instead of server from const server = http.createServer(app) while creating server socket .
Wrong
const express = require('express');
const http = require('http');
const WebSocket = require('ws');
const app = express();
app.use(function (req, res) {
res.send({ msg: "hello" });
});
const wss = new WebSocket.Server({ server: app }); // will throw error while connecting from client socket
app.listen(8080, function listening() {
console.log('Listening on %d', server.address().port);
});
Correct
const express = require('express');
const http = require('http');
const WebSocket = require('ws');
const app = express();
app.use(function (req, res) {
res.send({ msg: "hello" });
});
const server = http.createServer(app);
const wss = new WebSocket.Server({ server });
server.listen(8080, function listening() {
console.log('Listening on %d', server.address().port);
});
it's been a long time but another case is when performing requests which takes a long time on the server side (more then 2 minutes which is the default for express) and the timeout parameter was not configured in the server side. In my case I was doing client->server->server request (Node.js express) and I should set the timeout parameter on each request router on the server and on the client.
So in both servers I needed to set the request timeout by using
req.setTimeout([your needed timeout])
on the router.
I do both web (node) and Android development, and open Android Studio device simulator and docker together, both of them use port 8601, it complained socket hang up error, after close Android Studio device simulator and it works well in node side. Don’t use Android Studio device simulator and docker together.
There seems to be one additional case here, which is Electron not being a fan of the "localhost" domain name. In my case I needed to change this:
const backendApiHostUrl = "http://localhost:3000";
to this:
const backendApiHostUrl = "http://127.0.0.1:3000";
After that the problem just went away.
This means that DNS resolution (local or remote) might be causing some problems too.
I got a similar error when using CouchDB on OCP cluster.
const cloudantSessionStore = sessionStore.createSessionStore(
{
type: 'couchdb',
host: 'https://' + credentials['host'],
port: credentials['port'],
dbName: 'sessions',
options: {
auth: {
username: credentials['username'],
password: credentials['password']
},
cache: false
}
}
Which should be "http", not "https", to connect with my CouchDB instance. Hope it could be helpful for anyone who is faced with similar issue.
In my case, it was because a application/json response was badly formatted (contains a stack trace). The response was never send to the server.
That was very tricky to debug because, there were no log. This thread helps me a lot to understand what happens.
In case you're using node-http-proxy, please be aware to this issue, which will result a socket hang-up error : https://github.com/nodejitsu/node-http-proxy/issues/180.
For resolution, also in this link, simply move declaring the API route (for proxying) within express routes before express.bodyParser().
Ran into this issue yesterday running my web application and node.js server through IntelliJ IDEA 2016.3.6. All I had to do was clear my cookies and cache in my Chrome browser.
If you are experiencing this error over a https connection and it's happening instantly it could be a problem setting up the SSL connection.
For me it was this issue https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/9845 but for you it could be something else. If it is a problem with the ssl then you should be able to reproduce it with the nodejs tls/ssl package just trying to connect to the domain
I think worth noting...
I was creating tests for Google APIs. I was intercepting the request with a makeshift server, then forwarding those to the real api. I was attempting to just pass along the headers in the request, but a few headers were causing a problem with express on the other end.
Namely, I had to delete connection, accept, and content-length headers before using the request module to forward along.
let headers = Object.assign({}, req.headers);
delete headers['connection']
delete headers['accept']
delete headers['content-length']
res.end() // We don't need the incoming connection anymore
request({
method: 'post',
body: req.body,
headers: headers,
json: true,
url: `http://myapi/${req.url}`
}, (err, _res, body)=>{
if(err) return done(err);
// Test my api response here as if Google sent it.
})
I my case it's was not an error, but expected behavior for chrome browser. Chrome keeps tls connection alive (for speed i think), but node.js server stop it after 2 min and you get an error.
If you try GET request using edge browser, there will be no error at all.
If you will close chrome window - you will get error right away.
So what to do?
1)You can filter this errors, because they are not really errors.
2)Maybe there is a better solution :)
After a long debug into node js code, mongodb connection string, checking CORS etc, For me just switching to a different port number server.listen(port); made it work, into postman, try that too. No changes to proxy settings just the defaults.
I was using nano, and it took me a long time to figure out this error. My problem was I was using the wrong port. I had port 5948 instead of 5984.
var nano = require('nano')('http://localhost:5984');
var db = nano.use('address');
var app = express();
Might be your server or Socket connection crashes unexpectedly.
I had this error when running two applications on the same port by mistake.
I had a next.js app and another one in nest.js, running both on port 8080, when I looked at the .env files I realized that they had the same port, so I changed the one from nest.js to 3000 and everything worked.
I'm not saying that this is the reason for the error but it's a possibility.
Your problem might also come from an attempt to connect to an HTTP URL while your service is only published on HTTPS...
Definitely a time-consuming mistake!
Got "[GET] localhost:4200, Socket hang up" during Azure Static Web App (SWA) Emulator for Angular app.
Solution is to remove this from angular.json:
"headers": {"cross-origin-opener-policy": "same-origin-allow-popups"}

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