Debugging stray uncaught exceptions (ECONNRESET) in a node cluster - node.js

In my node.js app which uses the cluster module, I'm intermittently seeing errors like this:
events.js:71
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
^
Error: read ECONNRESET
at errnoException (net.js:863:11)
at TCP.onread (net.js:524:19)
This brings down my whole app, and so far the only way I've been able to deal with these is by binding a process.on('uncaughtException'). I'd like to figure out the underlying cause, but the above stack trace is pretty useless.
Is there some way to figure out what's causing these exceptions?
I should note that I'm seeing these only in the cluster master, not the workers, which leads me to suspect that they have something to do with the way the cluster modules does its magic in distributing connections to workers.

This answer was helpful: https://stackoverflow.com/a/11542134/233370
Basically, I installed longjohn and was then able to get the full async stack trace to figure out the underlying cause (rabbit.js in my case).

It seems that express enabled keep-alive by default.
In order to close connection after response you can add
res.set("Connection", "close");
Alternatively you can add a middleware in your app to close connection after each response:
app.use(function(req, res, next) {
res.set("Connection", "close");
next();
});

Related

Node.js error: ECONNRESET at TCP.onStreamRead [duplicate]

I'm running an Express.js application using Socket.io for a chat webapp
and I get the following error randomly around 5 times during 24h.
The node process is wrapped in forever and it restarts itself immediately.
The problem is that restarting Express kicks my users out of their rooms
and nobody wants that.
The web server is proxied by HAProxy. There are no socket stability issues,
just using websockets and flashsockets transports.
I cannot reproduce this on purpose.
This is the error with Node v0.10.11:
events.js:72
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
^
Error: read ECONNRESET //alternatively it s a 'write'
at errnoException (net.js:900:11)
at TCP.onread (net.js:555:19)
error: Forever detected script exited with code: 8
error: Forever restarting script for 2 time
EDIT (2013-07-22)
Added both socket.io client error handler and the uncaught exception handler.
Seems that this one catches the error:
process.on('uncaughtException', function (err) {
console.error(err.stack);
console.log("Node NOT Exiting...");
});
So I suspect it's not a Socket.io issue but an HTTP request to another server
that I do or a MySQL/Redis connection. The problem is that the error stack
doesn't help me identify my code issue. Here is the log output:
Error: read ECONNRESET
at errnoException (net.js:900:11)
at TCP.onread (net.js:555:19)
How do I know what causes this? How do I get more out of the error?
Ok, not very verbose but here's the stacktrace with Longjohn:
Exception caught: Error ECONNRESET
{ [Error: read ECONNRESET]
code: 'ECONNRESET',
errno: 'ECONNRESET',
syscall: 'read',
__cached_trace__:
[ { receiver: [Object],
fun: [Function: errnoException],
pos: 22930 },
{ receiver: [Object], fun: [Function: onread], pos: 14545 },
{},
{ receiver: [Object],
fun: [Function: fireErrorCallbacks],
pos: 11672 },
{ receiver: [Object], fun: [Function], pos: 12329 },
{ receiver: [Object], fun: [Function: onread], pos: 14536 } ],
__previous__:
{ [Error]
id: 1061835,
location: 'fireErrorCallbacks (net.js:439)',
__location__: 'process.nextTick',
__previous__: null,
__trace_count__: 1,
__cached_trace__: [ [Object], [Object], [Object] ] } }
Here I serve the flash socket policy file:
net = require("net")
net.createServer( (socket) =>
socket.write("<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\n")
socket.write("<!DOCTYPE cross-domain-policy SYSTEM \"http://www.macromedia.com/xml/dtds/cross-domain-policy.dtd\">\n")
socket.write("<cross-domain-policy>\n")
socket.write("<allow-access-from domain=\"*\" to-ports=\"*\"/>\n")
socket.write("</cross-domain-policy>\n")
socket.end()
).listen(843)
Can this be the cause?
You might have guessed it already: it's a connection error.
"ECONNRESET" means the other side of the TCP conversation abruptly closed its end of the connection. This is most probably due to one or more application protocol errors. You could look at the API server logs to see if it complains about something.
But since you are also looking for a way to check the error and potentially debug the problem, you should take a look at "How to debug a socket hang up error in NodeJS?" which was posted at stackoverflow in relation to an alike question.
Quick and dirty solution for development:
Use longjohn, you get long stack traces that will contain the async operations.
Clean and correct solution:
Technically, in node, whenever you emit an 'error' event and no one listens to it, it will throw. To make it not throw, put a listener on it and handle it yourself. That way you can log the error with more information.
To have one listener for a group of calls you can use domains and also catch other errors on runtime. Make sure each async operation related to http(Server/Client) is in different domain context comparing to the other parts of the code, the domain will automatically listen to the error events and will propagate it to its own handler. So you only listen to that handler and get the error data. You also get more information for free.
EDIT (2013-07-22)
As I wrote above:
"ECONNRESET" means the other side of the TCP conversation abruptly closed its end of the connection. This is most probably due to one or more application protocol errors. You could look at the API server logs to see if it complains about something.
What could also be the case: at random times, the other side is overloaded and simply kills the connection as a result. If that's the case, depends on what you're connecting to exactly…
But one thing's for sure: you indeed have a read error on your TCP connection which causes the exception. You can see that by looking at the error code you posted in your edit, which confirms it.
A simple tcp server I had for serving the flash policy file was causing this. I can now catch the error using a handler:
# serving the flash policy file
net = require("net")
net.createServer((socket) =>
//just added
socket.on("error", (err) =>
console.log("Caught flash policy server socket error: ")
console.log(err.stack)
)
socket.write("<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\n")
socket.write("<!DOCTYPE cross-domain-policy SYSTEM \"http://www.macromedia.com/xml/dtds/cross-domain-policy.dtd\">\n")
socket.write("<cross-domain-policy>\n")
socket.write("<allow-access-from domain=\"*\" to-ports=\"*\"/>\n")
socket.write("</cross-domain-policy>\n")
socket.end()
).listen(843)
I had a similar problem where apps started erroring out after an upgrade of Node. I believe this can be traced back to Node release v0.9.10 this item:
net: don't suppress ECONNRESET (Ben Noordhuis)
Previous versions wouldn't error out on interruptions from the client. A break in the connection from the client throws the error ECONNRESET in Node. I believe this is intended functionality for Node, so the fix (at least for me) was to handle the error, which I believe you did in unCaught exceptions. Although I handle it in the net.socket handler.
You can demonstrate this:
Make a simple socket server and get Node v0.9.9 and v0.9.10.
require('net')
.createServer( function(socket)
{
// no nothing
})
.listen(21, function()
{
console.log('Socket ON')
})
Start it up using v0.9.9 and then attempt to FTP to this server. I'm using FTP and port 21 only because I'm on Windows and have an FTP client, but no telnet client handy.
Then from the client side, just break the connection. (I'm just doing Ctrl-C)
You should see NO ERROR when using Node v0.9.9, and ERROR when using Node v.0.9.10 and up.
In production, I use v.0.10. something and it still gives the error. Again, I think this is intended and the solution is to handle the error in your code.
Had the same problem today.
After some research i found a very useful --abort-on-uncaught-exception node.js option. Not only it provides much more verbose and useful error stack trace, but also saves core file on application crash allowing further debug.
I also get ECONNRESET error during my development, the way I solve it is by not using nodemon to start my server, just use "node server.js" to start my server fixed my problem.
It's weird, but it worked for me, now I never see the ECONNRESET error again.
I was facing the same issue but I mitigated it by placing:
server.timeout = 0;
before server.listen. server is an HTTP server here. The default timeout is 2 minutes as per the API documentation.
Yes, your serving of the policy file can definitely cause the crash.
To repeat, just add a delay to your code:
net.createServer( function(socket)
{
for (i=0; i<1000000000; i++) ;
socket.write("<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\n");
…
… and use telnet to connect to the port. If you disconnect telnet before the delay has expired, you'll get a crash (uncaught exception) when socket.write throws an error.
To avoid the crash here, just add an error handler before reading/writing the socket:
net.createServer(function(socket)
{
for(i=0; i<1000000000; i++);
socket.on('error', function(error) { console.error("error", error); });
socket.write("<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\n");
}
When you try the above disconnect, you'll just get a log message instead of a crash.
And when you're done, remember to remove the delay.
Another possible case (but rare) could be if you have server to server communications and have set server.maxConnections to a very low value.
In node's core lib net.js it will call clientHandle.close() which will also cause error ECONNRESET:
if (self.maxConnections && self._connections >= self.maxConnections) {
clientHandle.close(); // causes ECONNRESET on the other end
return;
}
ECONNRESET occurs when the server side closes the TCP connection and your request to the server is not fulfilled. The server responds with the message that the connection, you are referring to a invalid connection.
Why the server sends a request with invalid connection?
Suppose you have enabled a keep-alive connection between client and server. The keep-alive timeout is configured to 15 seconds. This means that if keep-alive is idle for 15 seconds, it will send connection close request. So after 15 seconds, server tells the client to close the connection. BUT, when server is sending this request, client is sending a new request which is already on flight to the server end. Since this connection is invalid now, server will reject with ECONNRESET error. So the problem occurs due to fewer requests to the server end. So please disable keep-alive and it will work fine.
I had this Error too and was able to solve it after days of debugging and analysis:
my solution
For me VirtualBox (for Docker) was the Problem. I had Port Forwarding configured on my VM and the error only occured on the forwarded port.
general conclusions
The following observations may save you days of work I had to invest:
For me the problem only occurred on connections from localhost to localhost on one port. -> check changing any of these constants solves the problem.
For me the problem only occurred on my machine -> let someone else try it.
For me the problem only occurred after a while and couldn't be reproduced reliably
My Problem couldn't be inspected with any of nodes or expresses (debug-)tools. -> don't waste time on this
-> figure out if something is messing around with your network (-settings), like VMs, Firewalls etc., this is probably the cause of the problem.
I solved the problem by simply connecting to a different network. That is one of the possible problems.
As discussed above, ECONNRESET means that the TCP conversation abruptly closed its end of the connection.
Your internet connection might be blocking you from connecting to some servers. In my case, I was trying to connect to mLab ( cloud database service that hosts MongoDB databases). And my ISP is blocking it.
I had resolved this problem by:
Turning off my wifi/ethernet connection and turn on.
I typed: npm update in terminal to update npm.
I tried to log out from the session and log in again
After that I tried the same npm command and the good thing was it worked out. I wasn't sure it is that simple.
I am using CENTOS 7
I just figured this out, at least in my use case.
I was getting ECONNRESET. It turned out that the way my client was set up, it was hitting the server with an API call a ton of times really quickly -- and it only needed to hit the endpoint once.
When I fixed that, the error was gone.
I had the same issue and it appears that the Node.js version was the problem.
I installed the previous version of Node.js (10.14.2) and everything was ok using nvm (allow you to install several version of Node.js and quickly switch from a version to another).
It is not a "clean" solution, but it can serve you temporarly.
Try adding these options to socket.io:
const options = { transports: ['websocket'], pingTimeout: 3000, pingInterval: 5000 };
I hope this will help you !
Node JS socket is non-blocking io. Consider using a non-blocking io connection from other sources. For instance, if you use a blocking Java socket with node it will only work for a few seconds after which the error will be served. Mitigate this by implementing a non-blocking connection I.e. socketchannel with the selector.
First I run my app I got ECONNRESET after that I got error like ECONNREFUSED . I had faced both of this problem while running my node app.For both of the Problem, I found that this was occuring because of not starting the wampserver.I am using mysql database in my app for getting the data with the help of wampserver. I resolve this by starting the wampserver and then after running my node app. It works fine.You can use node or nodemon for running the node application It's not the problem in my case.
Few options I tried and worked as a temporary solutions
If using node, try to switch between different node versions using node use #version#. Worked for me
Try switching internet connection

Debugging in node.js

I build a server which get many requests and response to them.
In some cases, there is an error which cause the server to crush:
events.js:72
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
^
Error: ENOENT, open '/mnt/ace/0/file'
I have two problems:
the stack trace doesn't give me any information about the line in my application that cause this exception (I can't do manually debugging because it happens just when I get 1000 request or more).
I don't want that my server ould crush. I prefer that it will raise an exception, but will continue to work.
What the best implementation for this?
You can listen for that kind of stuff and not have it crash the app, but that's not always a great idea.
process.on('uncaughtException', function(err) {
console.log('Something bad happened');
console.log(err.stack);
});
In your case, have you tried checking ulimit settings? You may be having problems opening file handles under loads of 1000+.
Another way of thinking about this is to use domains (if you're using >= 0.8). Domains give you a finer grain of control over how you handle errors based on what contexts cause them.
var domain = require('domain').create();
domain.on('error', function(err) {
console.log(err);
});
domain.run(function() {
// Your code that might throw
});

Sails - catch global adapter errors that crash the server

I'm trying to find the best place to handle connectivity errors, or any other global errors that crash the server.
What is the right place to catch adapter/global errors and not have them crash the server?
Specifically, I want to handle these types of errors in a graceful way:
Error spawning mySQL connection:
error: Hook failed to load: orm (Error: connect ECONNREFUSED)
error: Error encountered while loading Sails core!
error: Error: connect ECONNREFUSED
from the sails docs: http://sailsjs.org/#!documentation/config.500
thats the error handling sails exposes from within the config
if your error passes that, you can hook in there, otherwise you can hook in node's process
process.on('uncaughtException', function (err) {
if (err.toString() === 'Error spawning mySQL connection') {
//rende some error page
}
})
if the exception thrown is async the only way to catch it is trough process
do note however, that these kinds of errors are almost always unrecoverable, so crashing (and restarting) is the best approach
most modules loaded use local variables and expose only a subset of their internals trough module.exports, unloading a module and restarting its local code can be done, but you would need to unload all dependant modules and all modules holding references to it also. Thats why the normal approach is to let it crash

How do I debug error ECONNRESET in Node.js?

I'm running an Express.js application using Socket.io for a chat webapp
and I get the following error randomly around 5 times during 24h.
The node process is wrapped in forever and it restarts itself immediately.
The problem is that restarting Express kicks my users out of their rooms
and nobody wants that.
The web server is proxied by HAProxy. There are no socket stability issues,
just using websockets and flashsockets transports.
I cannot reproduce this on purpose.
This is the error with Node v0.10.11:
events.js:72
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
^
Error: read ECONNRESET //alternatively it s a 'write'
at errnoException (net.js:900:11)
at TCP.onread (net.js:555:19)
error: Forever detected script exited with code: 8
error: Forever restarting script for 2 time
EDIT (2013-07-22)
Added both socket.io client error handler and the uncaught exception handler.
Seems that this one catches the error:
process.on('uncaughtException', function (err) {
console.error(err.stack);
console.log("Node NOT Exiting...");
});
So I suspect it's not a Socket.io issue but an HTTP request to another server
that I do or a MySQL/Redis connection. The problem is that the error stack
doesn't help me identify my code issue. Here is the log output:
Error: read ECONNRESET
at errnoException (net.js:900:11)
at TCP.onread (net.js:555:19)
How do I know what causes this? How do I get more out of the error?
Ok, not very verbose but here's the stacktrace with Longjohn:
Exception caught: Error ECONNRESET
{ [Error: read ECONNRESET]
code: 'ECONNRESET',
errno: 'ECONNRESET',
syscall: 'read',
__cached_trace__:
[ { receiver: [Object],
fun: [Function: errnoException],
pos: 22930 },
{ receiver: [Object], fun: [Function: onread], pos: 14545 },
{},
{ receiver: [Object],
fun: [Function: fireErrorCallbacks],
pos: 11672 },
{ receiver: [Object], fun: [Function], pos: 12329 },
{ receiver: [Object], fun: [Function: onread], pos: 14536 } ],
__previous__:
{ [Error]
id: 1061835,
location: 'fireErrorCallbacks (net.js:439)',
__location__: 'process.nextTick',
__previous__: null,
__trace_count__: 1,
__cached_trace__: [ [Object], [Object], [Object] ] } }
Here I serve the flash socket policy file:
net = require("net")
net.createServer( (socket) =>
socket.write("<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\n")
socket.write("<!DOCTYPE cross-domain-policy SYSTEM \"http://www.macromedia.com/xml/dtds/cross-domain-policy.dtd\">\n")
socket.write("<cross-domain-policy>\n")
socket.write("<allow-access-from domain=\"*\" to-ports=\"*\"/>\n")
socket.write("</cross-domain-policy>\n")
socket.end()
).listen(843)
Can this be the cause?
You might have guessed it already: it's a connection error.
"ECONNRESET" means the other side of the TCP conversation abruptly closed its end of the connection. This is most probably due to one or more application protocol errors. You could look at the API server logs to see if it complains about something.
But since you are also looking for a way to check the error and potentially debug the problem, you should take a look at "How to debug a socket hang up error in NodeJS?" which was posted at stackoverflow in relation to an alike question.
Quick and dirty solution for development:
Use longjohn, you get long stack traces that will contain the async operations.
Clean and correct solution:
Technically, in node, whenever you emit an 'error' event and no one listens to it, it will throw. To make it not throw, put a listener on it and handle it yourself. That way you can log the error with more information.
To have one listener for a group of calls you can use domains and also catch other errors on runtime. Make sure each async operation related to http(Server/Client) is in different domain context comparing to the other parts of the code, the domain will automatically listen to the error events and will propagate it to its own handler. So you only listen to that handler and get the error data. You also get more information for free.
EDIT (2013-07-22)
As I wrote above:
"ECONNRESET" means the other side of the TCP conversation abruptly closed its end of the connection. This is most probably due to one or more application protocol errors. You could look at the API server logs to see if it complains about something.
What could also be the case: at random times, the other side is overloaded and simply kills the connection as a result. If that's the case, depends on what you're connecting to exactly…
But one thing's for sure: you indeed have a read error on your TCP connection which causes the exception. You can see that by looking at the error code you posted in your edit, which confirms it.
A simple tcp server I had for serving the flash policy file was causing this. I can now catch the error using a handler:
# serving the flash policy file
net = require("net")
net.createServer((socket) =>
//just added
socket.on("error", (err) =>
console.log("Caught flash policy server socket error: ")
console.log(err.stack)
)
socket.write("<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\n")
socket.write("<!DOCTYPE cross-domain-policy SYSTEM \"http://www.macromedia.com/xml/dtds/cross-domain-policy.dtd\">\n")
socket.write("<cross-domain-policy>\n")
socket.write("<allow-access-from domain=\"*\" to-ports=\"*\"/>\n")
socket.write("</cross-domain-policy>\n")
socket.end()
).listen(843)
I had a similar problem where apps started erroring out after an upgrade of Node. I believe this can be traced back to Node release v0.9.10 this item:
net: don't suppress ECONNRESET (Ben Noordhuis)
Previous versions wouldn't error out on interruptions from the client. A break in the connection from the client throws the error ECONNRESET in Node. I believe this is intended functionality for Node, so the fix (at least for me) was to handle the error, which I believe you did in unCaught exceptions. Although I handle it in the net.socket handler.
You can demonstrate this:
Make a simple socket server and get Node v0.9.9 and v0.9.10.
require('net')
.createServer( function(socket)
{
// no nothing
})
.listen(21, function()
{
console.log('Socket ON')
})
Start it up using v0.9.9 and then attempt to FTP to this server. I'm using FTP and port 21 only because I'm on Windows and have an FTP client, but no telnet client handy.
Then from the client side, just break the connection. (I'm just doing Ctrl-C)
You should see NO ERROR when using Node v0.9.9, and ERROR when using Node v.0.9.10 and up.
In production, I use v.0.10. something and it still gives the error. Again, I think this is intended and the solution is to handle the error in your code.
Had the same problem today.
After some research i found a very useful --abort-on-uncaught-exception node.js option. Not only it provides much more verbose and useful error stack trace, but also saves core file on application crash allowing further debug.
I also get ECONNRESET error during my development, the way I solve it is by not using nodemon to start my server, just use "node server.js" to start my server fixed my problem.
It's weird, but it worked for me, now I never see the ECONNRESET error again.
I was facing the same issue but I mitigated it by placing:
server.timeout = 0;
before server.listen. server is an HTTP server here. The default timeout is 2 minutes as per the API documentation.
Yes, your serving of the policy file can definitely cause the crash.
To repeat, just add a delay to your code:
net.createServer( function(socket)
{
for (i=0; i<1000000000; i++) ;
socket.write("<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\n");
…
… and use telnet to connect to the port. If you disconnect telnet before the delay has expired, you'll get a crash (uncaught exception) when socket.write throws an error.
To avoid the crash here, just add an error handler before reading/writing the socket:
net.createServer(function(socket)
{
for(i=0; i<1000000000; i++);
socket.on('error', function(error) { console.error("error", error); });
socket.write("<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\n");
}
When you try the above disconnect, you'll just get a log message instead of a crash.
And when you're done, remember to remove the delay.
Another possible case (but rare) could be if you have server to server communications and have set server.maxConnections to a very low value.
In node's core lib net.js it will call clientHandle.close() which will also cause error ECONNRESET:
if (self.maxConnections && self._connections >= self.maxConnections) {
clientHandle.close(); // causes ECONNRESET on the other end
return;
}
ECONNRESET occurs when the server side closes the TCP connection and your request to the server is not fulfilled. The server responds with the message that the connection, you are referring to a invalid connection.
Why the server sends a request with invalid connection?
Suppose you have enabled a keep-alive connection between client and server. The keep-alive timeout is configured to 15 seconds. This means that if keep-alive is idle for 15 seconds, it will send connection close request. So after 15 seconds, server tells the client to close the connection. BUT, when server is sending this request, client is sending a new request which is already on flight to the server end. Since this connection is invalid now, server will reject with ECONNRESET error. So the problem occurs due to fewer requests to the server end. So please disable keep-alive and it will work fine.
I had this Error too and was able to solve it after days of debugging and analysis:
my solution
For me VirtualBox (for Docker) was the Problem. I had Port Forwarding configured on my VM and the error only occured on the forwarded port.
general conclusions
The following observations may save you days of work I had to invest:
For me the problem only occurred on connections from localhost to localhost on one port. -> check changing any of these constants solves the problem.
For me the problem only occurred on my machine -> let someone else try it.
For me the problem only occurred after a while and couldn't be reproduced reliably
My Problem couldn't be inspected with any of nodes or expresses (debug-)tools. -> don't waste time on this
-> figure out if something is messing around with your network (-settings), like VMs, Firewalls etc., this is probably the cause of the problem.
I solved the problem by simply connecting to a different network. That is one of the possible problems.
As discussed above, ECONNRESET means that the TCP conversation abruptly closed its end of the connection.
Your internet connection might be blocking you from connecting to some servers. In my case, I was trying to connect to mLab ( cloud database service that hosts MongoDB databases). And my ISP is blocking it.
I had resolved this problem by:
Turning off my wifi/ethernet connection and turn on.
I typed: npm update in terminal to update npm.
I tried to log out from the session and log in again
After that I tried the same npm command and the good thing was it worked out. I wasn't sure it is that simple.
I am using CENTOS 7
I just figured this out, at least in my use case.
I was getting ECONNRESET. It turned out that the way my client was set up, it was hitting the server with an API call a ton of times really quickly -- and it only needed to hit the endpoint once.
When I fixed that, the error was gone.
I had the same issue and it appears that the Node.js version was the problem.
I installed the previous version of Node.js (10.14.2) and everything was ok using nvm (allow you to install several version of Node.js and quickly switch from a version to another).
It is not a "clean" solution, but it can serve you temporarly.
Try adding these options to socket.io:
const options = { transports: ['websocket'], pingTimeout: 3000, pingInterval: 5000 };
I hope this will help you !
Node JS socket is non-blocking io. Consider using a non-blocking io connection from other sources. For instance, if you use a blocking Java socket with node it will only work for a few seconds after which the error will be served. Mitigate this by implementing a non-blocking connection I.e. socketchannel with the selector.
First I run my app I got ECONNRESET after that I got error like ECONNREFUSED . I had faced both of this problem while running my node app.For both of the Problem, I found that this was occuring because of not starting the wampserver.I am using mysql database in my app for getting the data with the help of wampserver. I resolve this by starting the wampserver and then after running my node app. It works fine.You can use node or nodemon for running the node application It's not the problem in my case.
Few options I tried and worked as a temporary solutions
If using node, try to switch between different node versions using node use #version#. Worked for me
Try switching internet connection

How do I properly detect and report that my CouchDB instance is down, when using the couch_client library?

I'm using nodejs, with the couch_client library, and trying to connect to an instance of CouchDB which ain't there. As a result, node crashes giving me something along these lines as output:
node.js:116
throw e; // process.nextTick error, or 'error' event on first tick
^
Error: ECONNREFUSED, Connection refused
at Client._onConnect (net.js:576:18)
at IOWatcher.onWritable [as callback] (net.js:165:12)
I bet I'm making an obvious mistake somewhere - maybe someone with a fresh mind can point it out for me? Thanks.
Just catch the exception.
try {
go_ding({when:"there's stuff"});
} catch(e) {
couldnt_connect();
// Maybe setTimeout and retry, etc.
}
you could just query the couchdb node with a simple get request to the basic url. I doubt you need a CouchDB driver or framework for this?
CouchDB, the definitive guide about the Core API, Server API.

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