Exemple #1
0
// Wait blocks until i) the new transport is up or ii) ctx is done or iii) cc is closed.
func (cc *Conn) Wait(ctx context.Context) (transport.ClientTransport, error) {
	for {
		cc.mu.Lock()
		switch {
		case cc.state == Shutdown:
			cc.mu.Unlock()
			return nil, ErrClientConnClosing
		case cc.state == Ready:
			cc.mu.Unlock()
			return cc.transport, nil
		default:
			ready := cc.ready
			if ready == nil {
				ready = make(chan struct{})
				cc.ready = ready
			}
			cc.mu.Unlock()
			select {
			case <-ctx.Done():
				return nil, transport.ContextErr(ctx.Err())
			// Wait until the new transport is ready or failed.
			case <-ready:
			}
		}
	}
}
Exemple #2
0
// WaitForStateChange blocks until the state changes to something other than the sourceState.
func (cc *Conn) WaitForStateChange(ctx context.Context, sourceState ConnectivityState) (ConnectivityState, error) {
	cc.mu.Lock()
	defer cc.mu.Unlock()
	if sourceState != cc.state {
		return cc.state, nil
	}
	done := make(chan struct{})
	var err error
	go func() {
		select {
		case <-ctx.Done():
			cc.mu.Lock()
			err = ctx.Err()
			cc.stateCV.Broadcast()
			cc.mu.Unlock()
		case <-done:
		}
	}()
	defer close(done)
	for sourceState == cc.state {
		cc.stateCV.Wait()
		if err != nil {
			return cc.state, err
		}
	}
	return cc.state, nil
}
Exemple #3
0
// When wait returns, either the new transport is up or ClientConn is
// closing. Used to avoid working on a dying transport. It updates and
// returns the transport and its version when there is no error.
func (cc *ClientConn) wait(ctx context.Context, ts int) (transport.ClientTransport, int, error) {
	for {
		cc.mu.Lock()
		switch {
		case cc.state == Shutdown:
			cc.mu.Unlock()
			return nil, 0, ErrClientConnClosing
		case ts < cc.transportSeq:
			// Worked on a dying transport. Try the new one immediately.
			defer cc.mu.Unlock()
			return cc.transport, cc.transportSeq, nil
		default:
			ready := cc.ready
			if ready == nil {
				ready = make(chan struct{})
				cc.ready = ready
			}
			cc.mu.Unlock()
			select {
			case <-ctx.Done():
				return nil, 0, transport.ContextErr(ctx.Err())
			// Wait until the new transport is ready or failed.
			case <-ready:
			}
		}
	}
}
Exemple #4
0
// Do sends an HTTP request with the provided http.Client and returns an HTTP response.
// If the client is nil, http.DefaultClient is used.
// If the context is canceled or times out, ctx.Err() will be returned.
func Do(ctx context.Context, client *http.Client, req *http.Request) (*http.Response, error) {
	if client == nil {
		client = http.DefaultClient
	}

	// Request cancelation changed in Go 1.5, see cancelreq.go and cancelreq_go14.go.
	cancel := canceler(client, req)

	type responseAndError struct {
		resp *http.Response
		err  error
	}
	result := make(chan responseAndError, 1)

	go func() {
		resp, err := client.Do(req)
		result <- responseAndError{resp, err}
	}()

	select {
	case <-ctx.Done():
		cancel()
		return nil, ctx.Err()
	case r := <-result:
		return r.resp, r.err
	}
}
Exemple #5
0
// wait blocks until it can receive from ctx.Done, closing, or proceed.
// If it receives from ctx.Done, it returns 0, the StreamError for ctx.Err.
// If it receives from closing, it returns 0, ErrConnClosing.
// If it receives from proceed, it returns the received integer, nil.
func wait(ctx context.Context, closing <-chan struct{}, proceed <-chan int) (int, error) {
	select {
	case <-ctx.Done():
		return 0, ContextErr(ctx.Err())
	case <-closing:
		return 0, ErrConnClosing
	case i := <-proceed:
		return i, nil
	}
}