How can I write a test to verify that my application is binding to a particular UDP port via dgram? Below is a snippet of the code I am wanting to test:
var dgram = require('dgram');
var socket_json = dgram.createSocket('udp4');
var socket_syslog = dgram.createSocket('udp4');
socket_json.bind(6371);
socket_syslog.bind(6370);
I am attempting to use Mocha and Chai for my tests:
var expect = require("chai").expect;
var sawyer = require("../server.js");
describe("Sawyer", function() {
it("should bind to UDP port 6370", function() {
// some kind of expect statement here
});
it("should bind to UDP port 6371", function() {
// some kind of expect statement here
});
});
Any help is greatly appreciated!
According to the documentation, an error event will be emitted on socket or an error could be thrown if the socket.bind() fails.
So you could watch for those two things and also add a callback argument to socket.bind() (or add a listening event handler on socket, which is what socket.bind() does for you), which is called once the binding is complete.
Example:
socket_json.on('error', function(err) {
console.log('Socket error: ' + err.message);
}).on('listening', function() {
console.log('Successfully bound JSON socket!');
});
try {
socket_json.bind(6371);
} catch (ex) {
console.log('Failed to bind JSON socket: ' + ex.message);
}
Related
I'm trying to read data from Arduino server with Node.js "net" module. Actually, all goes great, except error handling.
The problem is in "error" event. It's not fired at all. I just switched off the server and "data" event stopped, but "error" event was not fired.
Here is the simplest example.
var net = require('net');
var socket = new net.Socket();
var config = {
port: 5003,
host: '192.168.1.66'
};
function connect() {
socket.connect(config, function () {
console.log('Connected to: ' + socket.remoteAddress + ':' + socket.remotePort);
});
}
// This event is working.
socket.on('data', function () {
console.log('Data...');
});
// This is never fired.
socket.on('error', function () {
console.log('Error...');
});
connect();
Any ideas where is the problem?
The Arduino server probably closes the connection properly (without an error) when it is shut down. Listen to the 'close' event:
socket.on('close', function (had_error) {
console.log('Connection closed with' + (had_error ? '' : 'out') + ' error.');
});
If that doesn't work try the 'timeout' event.
I have a very simple configuration in a node server with socket.io installed (a little bit more complex but essentially like this one):
var main = require('express')();
server = require('http').createServer(main);
io = require('socket.io')(server);
io.use(function(socket, next) {
console.log("middleware!");
next();
});
io.on('connection', function (socket) {
console.log('connected...');
socket.on('pong', function (data) {
console.log(data.message);
});
setTimeout(function() {
console.log("Saying hello");
socket.emit('ping', { message: 'Hello from server ' + Date.now() });
}, 1000);
});
server.listen(2080, function onCreateServerMain() {
console.log('Server main is listening on port 2080';
console.log('************************************************************');
});
In the client:
var socketIoScript,
loadSocketTimeout,
trialsToLoadSocketIo = 0,
APP_CFG = {baseUrl : "http://192.168.1.13:2080"};
function loadSocketIo(socketIoIp) {
socketIoScript = document.createElement('script');
socketIoScript.setAttribute('src', socketIoIp);
socketIoScript.setAttribute('onload', 'onSocketLoaded();');
document.head.appendChild(socketIoScript);
}
window.onSocketLoaded = function onSocketLoaded() {
if (typeof(io.connect) === 'function') {
var mSocket,
mIoSocket;
$timeout.cancel(loadSocketTimeout);
mIoSocket = new io.Manager(APP_CFG.baseUrl);
mIoSocket.connect(function(socket) {
console.log('Connected!!');
});
mIoSocket.on('error', function onSocketError(e) {
console.log('WebSocket Error ' + error);
});
mIoSocket.on('ping', function onPingReceived(e) {
console.log('Server emitted ping: ' + e.data);
mSocket.emit('pong', 'hi server!');
});
}
}
~(function onLoadSocketTimeout() {
var nextTimeout;
if (trialsToLoadSocketIo < 10) {
nextTimeout = 5000;
} else if (trialsToLoadSocketIo > 60) {
nextTimeout = 60000;
} else {
nextTimeout = 1000 * trialsToLoadSocketIo;
}
if (socketIoScript) {
document.head.removeChild(socketIoScript);
}
loadSocketIo(APP_CFG.baseUrl + '/socket.io/socket.io.js#' + trialsToLoadSocketIo);
loadSocketTimeout = $timeout(onLoadSocketTimeout, nextTimeout);
trialsToLoadSocketIo += 1;
})();
(I'm doing like this because it's mobile app so it may have not connection). I'm testing it with Brackets and Chrome. Server and client are in the same machine. In the app the script is loaded fine and it connects to the server as I can it see in node log (edit: and this is all what I get in the node console):
Server main is listening on port 2080
************************************************************
middleware!
connected...
Saying hello
Edit: in Chrome console I don't get any message, and any breakpoint stops at on listeners. If I stop node, the console for the Chrome immediately starts logging that it has been disconnected:
GET http://192.168.1.13:2080/socket.io/?EIO=3&transport=polling&t=1413066902601-6 net::ERR_CONNECTION_REFUSED
GET http://192.168.1.13:2080/socket.io/?EIO=3&transport=polling&t=1413066906606-7 net::ERR_CONNECTION_REFUSED
But I can't see any incoming message. In the app I don't receive any incoming message. Is there any reason why I could not communicate in this environment even if socket is successfully connected?
EDIT
No app is receiving events sent from the other side. Logs from node show this, logs from Chrome are empty.
EDIT
In Chrome app I don't receive console.log("Connected!");. But neither I receive ERR_CONNECTION_REFUSED errors: I don't receive anything.
EDIT
I managed to get console.log("Connected!"); in the app by changing Manager options:
mIoSocket = new io.Manager(APP_CFG.baseUrl, { autoConnect: false });
As it was auto connecting and the events were attached after connection was made, "Connected" was never reached. But I'm still not receiving any event in any app.
I had a similar issue were event callbacks on the server were not firing when emitting. My event names were ping and pong. As soon as I renamed these events everything worked.
I suspect the event names ping and pong are reserved by socket.io and so cannot be used.
Ok, so a few things :
First, var mSocket doesn't seem to be initialized, so it may be difficult for it to emit() anything (am I missing something?)
Second, when you do :
socket.on('pong', function (data) {
console.log(data.message);
});
the server expects to receive an object containing a message property, eg : data = {message:'hi server'} In your case, you send a string, so data is 'Hi server !' and your log will say 'undefined'. You should change this bit to :
socket.on('pong', function (data) {
console.log(data);
});
and you have a similar problem the other way around, you send an object : { message: 'Hello from server ' + Date.now() }, and are trying to log a data property which does not exist. Change this bit to :
console.log('Server emitted ping: ' + e.message);
And third , you have to listen for events on the socket, not the 'manager'
Client :
mIoSocket.connect(function(socket) {
console.log('Connected!!');
socket.emit('pong');
socket.on('error', function onSocketError(e) {
console.log('WebSocket Error ' + error);
});
socket.on('ping', function onPingReceived(e) {
console.log('Server emitted ping: ' + e.data);
socket.emit('pong', 'hi server!');
});
});
Server :
io.on('connection', function (socket) {
console.log('connected...');
socket.on('pong', function (data) {
console.log(data);
});
setTimeout(function() {
console.log("Saying hello");
socket.emit('ping', { message: 'Hello from server ' + Date.now() });
}, 1000);
});
I'm attempting to write a small relay script in node.js that listens for incoming TCP connections on a local socket, and when it gets one, forwards the traffic to a 3rd party. It must also take any returned data from that 3rd party and send it back to the original local socket. I've tried code like http://delog.wordpress.com/2011/07/19/a-tcp-relay-mechanism-with-node-js/ and it does work, but it requires the sender be a server that is listening on a socket itself, and my utility is intended to work with any program that tries to create an outbound TCP connection. Unfortunately, the problem I'm running into is that everything works great the first time with the client sending the data to the "router" program, and the router forwarding it to another server, and then returning the data from the client. However, when the client program ends or is terminated and attempts to reconnect, I get this:
events.js:72
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
^
Error: This socket has been ended by the other party
at Socket.writeAfterFIN [as write] (net.js:275:12)
at Socket.<anonymous> (/root/tcp_loop.js:37:17)
at Socket.emit (events.js:117:20)
at Socket.<anonymous> (_stream_readable.js:748:14)
at Socket.emit (events.js:92:17)
at emitReadable_ (_stream_readable.js:410:10)
at emitReadable (_stream_readable.js:406:5)
at readableAddChunk (_stream_readable.js:168:9)
at Socket.Readable.push (_stream_readable.js:130:10)
at TCP.onread (net.js:528:21)
I ripped out all of the logic and distilled the test case into a small bit of code: one server that acts as both the router (listening on port 8124) as well as the "remote" server (on port 9999), though my testing indicates it makes no difference weather the remote server is on the same machine, on the Internet, etc. Here is the server code:
var net = require('net'),
util = require('util')
;
// The loop_server simulates a remote service.
// The error occurs whether using it here, or actually forwarding
// the data to a remote host.
var loop_server = net.createServer(function(loop) {
console.log("Loop server connected");
loop.on("end", function() {
console.log("Loop server disconnected");
});
loop.on("data", function(data) {
console.log("Loop got data: " + data);
loop.write(data);
});
}).listen(9999, function() {
console.log("Loop server bound");
});
var remote_socket = net.connect(9999, function() {
console.log("Remote connected");
var local_server = net.createServer(function(local_socket) { //'connection' listener
console.log('Local server connected');
local_socket.on('end', function() {
console.log('Local server disconnected');
// local_socket.destroy();
});
local_socket.on('data', function(ldata) {
console.log("Local socket got data: " + ldata);
remote_socket.write(ldata);
});
remote_socket.on('data', function(rdata) {
console.log("Remote socket got data: " + rdata);
local_socket.write(rdata);
});
local_socket.write('hello\r\n');
}).listen(8124, function() { //'listening' listener
console.log('Local server bound');
});
}); // remote_socket
The thing that's failing is the local_socket.write(rdata); in the remote_socket.on('data', ... handler. It works the first time the router is started and the client connects, but never again.
For reference, here is the code for the little client app that I've been using. I get the same result with a perl script, telnet, etc.:
var net = require('net');
var client = new net.Socket();
client.connect(8124, function() {
console.log('CONNECTED TO: localhost:8124');
client.write('Single text message from the client app');
});
client.on('data', function(data) {
console.log('DATA: ' + data);
});
client.on('close', function() {
sconsole.log('Connection closed');
});
Any insight would be greatly appreciated. I feel like I must be missing something extremely simple here...
Update:
Nitzin's solution below is a better way to do this, but in my particular example below, the solution is to remove old remote_socket.on('data') listeners before creating new ones, e.g.:
var remote_socket = net.connect(9999, function() {
console.log("Remote connected");
var local_server = net.createServer(function(local_socket) { //'connection' listener
console.log('Local server connected');
remote_socket.removeAllListeners('data');
...
remote_socket.on('data', function(rdata) {
console.log("Remote socket got data: " + rdata);
local_socket.write(rdata);
});
You should not destroy the socket. It closes both ends of the socket. You should only .end() it, which closes your writing end.
EDIT
Destroying the socket is bad, as I originally wrote, but your real problem is something completely different: you got your proxy (what you call "local") and echo (what you call "remote") servers backwards: the proxy server should make a new connection to the echo server for each new connection the proxy server gets, not the other way around as you have it now.
The only end() needed is in the client, to let the server know you're done writing.
Here is client.js:
var net = require('net');
var client = new net.Socket();
client.connect(8124, function() {
console.log('CLIENT: CONNECTED: localhost:8124');
client.write('single text message from the client app');
client.end();
});
client.on('data', function(data) {
console.log('CLIENT: GOT DATA: ' + data);
});
client.on('close', function() {
console.log('CLIENT: CONNECTION CLOSED');
});
And here is servers.js:
var net = require('net'),
util = require('util');
net.createServer(function(conn) {
console.log('ECHO_SERVER: CONN: new connection');
conn.on('end', function() {
console.log('ECHO_SERVER: CONN: disconnected');
});
conn.on('data', function(data) {
console.log('ECHO_SERVER: CONN: GOT DATA: ' + data);
conn.write(data);
});
}).listen(9999, function() {
console.log('ECHO_SERVER STARTED');
});
net.createServer(function(conn) {
console.log('PROXY_SERVER: CONN: new connection');
var remote = net.connect(9999, function() {
console.log('PROXY_SERVER: CONNECTED TO ECHO_SERVER');
conn.on('end', function() {
console.log('PROXY_SERVER: CONN: disconnected');
remote.end();
});
conn.on('data', function(data) {
console.log('PROXY_SERVER: CONN: GOT DATA FOR ECHO_SERVER: ' + data);
remote.write(data);
});
remote.on('data', function(data) {
console.log('PROXY_SERVER: CONN: GOT DATA FROM ECHO_SERVER: ' + data);
conn.write(data);
});
});
}).listen(8124, function() {
console.log('PROXY_SERVER STARTED');
});
As you can see, for each conn to the proxy server, there is a new remote going to the echo server.
I've got a litte problem with my code snipet. I wrote a example to learn the TCP Socket Communication for a project. For the moment i can send a TCP Socket and read the answer, but i want to use the answer in other software parts. For that i tried to use the variable socketmessage but this doesn't work. Does anyone have the answer for my problem? Thanks a lot
var net = require('net');
var client = new net.Socket();
var HOST='127.0.0.1';
var PORT='20000';
var MSG="{\"REQUEST\":\"STATUS\"}";
var socketmessage;
socketmessage=getSocketMessage(MSG);
console.log ("Socket Message: " + socketmessage);
function getSocketMessage(tcpmsg){
var outData;
client.connect(PORT, HOST, function() {
console.log("Client: " + tcpmsg);
client.write(tcpmsg);
});
client.setTimeout(5000, function() { client.destroy(); });
client.on('data', function(data) {
console.log('Server: ' + data);
outData = data.toString('utf8');
console.log ("Socketmessage: " + outData);
client.destroy();
});
//Add a 'close' event handler for the client socket
client.on('close', function() {
console.log('Connection closed');
});
// Add a 'error' event handler for the client socket
client.on('error', function(error) {
console.log('Error Connection: ' + error);
});
return outData;
}
Terminal:
Socket Message: undefined
Client: {"REQUEST":"STATUS"}
Server: {"STATUS":0.000000}
This is because function getSocketMessage is asynchronous. You are trying to return the received message. The function returns immediately, outData being undefined then. Its value is
set when data arrives from server. The network I/O is evented, the event you use is data
client.on('data', function(data) {
The received message can only be handled properly inside the event-handler for data. You would have to call your other part from here itself.
You can create a read stream and once the stream ends you may process the data.
var readStream = fs.createReadStream(path of the file, 'utf8'); //you can use path.join(loc, filename)
var data = '';
readStream.on('data', function(chunk:any) {
data += chunk;
}).on('end', function() {
let gotContent = data.toString(); //
doWhatEver(gotContent) //the method is async or promose
then(function(result){
console.log(result); //desired output
})
});
I built a simple TCP server and a simple TCP client in Node.js
Now, when the client sends "exit" to the server, the connection is successfully closed. The server deletes the socket from its sockets list and sends "Bye bye!" to the client.
The connection on the client is closed as well but the app is still waiting for other inputs, so it doesn't die and I'm forced to type CTRL+C.
I tried adding process.exit() after connection closes but it doesn't work:
CLIENT CODE:
var net = require('net'),
config = require(__dirname + '/config.json'),
connection = net.createConnection(config.port, config.host);
connection.setEncoding('utf8');
connection.on('connect', function () {
console.log('Connected');
});
connection.on('error', function (err) {
console.error(err);
});
connection.on('data', function (data) {
console.log('ยป ' + data);
});
connection.on('close', function() {
console.log('Connection closed');
});
process.stdin.on('data', function (data) {
if ((new String(data)).toLowerCase() === 'exit') {
connection.end();
process.exit();
}
else {
connection.write(data);
}
});
process.stdin.resume();
SERVER CODE:
var server = require('net').createServer(),
config = require(__dirname + '/config.json'),
sockets = [];
server.on('connection', function (socket) {
socket.setEncoding('UTF-8');
socket.on('data', function (data) {
console.log('Received data: ' + data);
if (data.trim().toLowerCase() === 'exit') {
socket.write("Bye bye!\n");
socket.end();
}
else {
sockets.forEach(function (client) {
if (client && client != socket) {
client.write(data);
}
});
}
});
socket.on('close', function () {
console.log('Connection closed');
sockets.splice(sockets.indexOf(socket), 1);
console.info('Sockets connected: ' + sockets.length);
});
sockets.push(socket);
});
server.on('listening', function () {
console.log('Server listening');
});
server.on('close', function () {
console.log('Server is now closed');
});
server.on('error', function (err) {
console.log('error:', err);
});
server.listen(config.port);
EDIT:
I added a client connection "on close" event handler. So, the string "Connection closed" is now printed by the server and by the client too.
I think you're looking for this: socket.unref().
From Node.js documentation (https://nodejs.org/api/net.html#net_socket_unref):
socket.unref()#
Calling unref on a socket will allow the program to exit if this is the only active socket in the event system. If the socket is already unrefd calling unref again will have no effect.
Some time ago when improving the tests suite for node-cubrid module, I had encountered the same problem. After all tests have passed, nodeunit process didn't quit because node-cubrid was using connection.end() to close the client socket when timeout occurs, just like you did.
Then I replaced connection.end() with connection.destroy(), a cleaner way to ensure the socket is really closed without actually terminating the running process, which, I think, is a better solution than the above suggested process.exit(). So, in your client code context, I would do:
process.stdin.on('data', function (data) {
if ((new String(data)).toLowerCase() === 'exit') {
connection.destroy();
}
else {
connection.write(data);
}
});
According to Node.js documentation:
socket.destroy()
Ensures that no more I/O activity happens on this socket. Only necessary in case of errors (parse error or so).
I doubt that if ((new String(data)).toLowerCase() === 'exit') is succeeding because data most likely has a trailing newline (in your server, you trim() before doing the comparison, but not in the client).
If that's fixed, you've got a logic problem: when getting "exit" you close the connection without sending "exit" to the server, so the server code that looks for "exit" will never execute.
You have to put the process.exit() instruction only on the last event handler. So, in this case you have to put it inside the client connection "on close" event handler:
CLIENT:
connection.on('close', function() {
console.log('Connection closed');
process.exit();
});
Try with Event: 'close' in the server:
http://nodejs.org/api/net.html#net_event_close