Merge remote-tracking branch 'public/pr/1210' into development

* public/pr/1210:
  compat.sh: use wait_server_start
  wait_server_start: minor efficiency improvement
This commit is contained in:
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard 2017-12-21 11:11:02 +01:00
commit 7000e574b6
2 changed files with 51 additions and 32 deletions

View File

@ -866,6 +866,33 @@ has_mem_err() {
fi
}
# Wait for process $2 to be listening on port $1
if type lsof >/dev/null 2>/dev/null; then
wait_server_start() {
START_TIME=$(date +%s)
if is_dtls "$MODE"; then
proto=UDP
else
proto=TCP
fi
while ! lsof -a -n -b -i "$proto:$1" -p "$2" >/dev/null 2>/dev/null; do
if [ $(( $(date +%s) - $START_TIME )) -gt $DOG_DELAY ]; then
echo "SERVERSTART TIMEOUT"
echo "SERVERSTART TIMEOUT" >> $SRV_OUT
break
fi
# Linux and *BSD support decimal arguments to sleep. On other
# OSes this may be a tight loop.
sleep 0.1 2>/dev/null || true
done
}
else
wait_server_start() {
sleep 1
}
fi
# start_server <name>
# also saves name and command
start_server() {
@ -895,7 +922,7 @@ start_server() {
while :; do echo bla; sleep 1; done | $SERVER_CMD >> $SRV_OUT 2>&1 &
PROCESS_ID=$!
sleep 1
wait_server_start "$PORT" "$PROCESS_ID"
}
# terminate the running server

View File

@ -286,40 +286,32 @@ has_mem_err() {
fi
}
# wait for server to start: two versions depending on lsof availability
wait_server_start() {
if which lsof >/dev/null 2>&1; then
START_TIME=$( date +%s )
DONE=0
# make a tight loop, server usually takes less than 1 sec to start
# Wait for process $2 to be listening on port $1
if type lsof >/dev/null 2>/dev/null; then
wait_server_start() {
START_TIME=$(date +%s)
if [ "$DTLS" -eq 1 ]; then
while [ $DONE -eq 0 ]; do
if lsof -nbi UDP:"$SRV_PORT" 2>/dev/null | grep UDP >/dev/null
then
DONE=1
elif [ $(( $( date +%s ) - $START_TIME )) -gt $DOG_DELAY ]; then
echo "SERVERSTART TIMEOUT"
echo "SERVERSTART TIMEOUT" >> $SRV_OUT
DONE=1
fi
done
proto=UDP
else
while [ $DONE -eq 0 ]; do
if lsof -nbi TCP:"$SRV_PORT" 2>/dev/null | grep LISTEN >/dev/null
then
DONE=1
elif [ $(( $( date +%s ) - $START_TIME )) -gt $DOG_DELAY ]; then
echo "SERVERSTART TIMEOUT"
echo "SERVERSTART TIMEOUT" >> $SRV_OUT
DONE=1
fi
done
proto=TCP
fi
else
# Make a tight loop, server normally takes less than 1s to start.
while ! lsof -a -n -b -i "$proto:$1" -p "$2" >/dev/null 2>/dev/null; do
if [ $(( $(date +%s) - $START_TIME )) -gt $DOG_DELAY ]; then
echo "SERVERSTART TIMEOUT"
echo "SERVERSTART TIMEOUT" >> $SRV_OUT
break
fi
# Linux and *BSD support decimal arguments to sleep. On other
# OSes this may be a tight loop.
sleep 0.1 2>/dev/null || true
done
}
else
wait_server_start() {
sleep "$START_DELAY"
fi
}
}
fi
# Given the client or server debug output, parse the unix timestamp that is
# included in the first 4 bytes of the random bytes and check that it's within
@ -466,7 +458,7 @@ run_test() {
echo "$SRV_CMD" > $SRV_OUT
provide_input | $SRV_CMD >> $SRV_OUT 2>&1 &
SRV_PID=$!
wait_server_start
wait_server_start "$SRV_PORT" "$SRV_PID"
echo "$CLI_CMD" > $CLI_OUT
eval "$CLI_CMD" >> $CLI_OUT 2>&1 &