Feature #20108
closedIntroduction of Happy Eyeballs Version 2 (RFC8305) in Socket.tcp
Description
This is an implementation of Happy Eyeballs version 2 (RFC 8305) in Socket.tcp.
Background¶
Currently, Socket.tcp
synchronously resolves names and makes connection attempts with Addrinfo::foreach.
This implementation has the following two problems.
- In hostname resolution, the program stops until the DNS server responds to all DNS queries.
- In a connection attempt, while an IP address is trying to connect to the destination host and is taking time, the program stops, and other resolved IP addresses cannot try to connect.
Proposal¶
"Happy Eyeballs" (RFC 8305) is an algorithm to solve this kind of problem. It avoids delays to the user whenever possible and also uses IPv6 preferentially.
I implemented it into Socket.tcp
by using Addrinfo.getaddrinfo
in each thread spawned per address family to resolve the hostname asynchronously, and using Socket::connect_nonblock
to try to connect with multiple addrinfo in parallel.
See https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/9374
Outcome¶
This change eliminates a fatal defect in the following cases.
Case 1. One of the A or AAAA DNS queries does not return¶
require 'socket'
class Addrinfo
class << self
# Current Socket.tcp depends on foreach
def foreach(nodename, service, family=nil, socktype=nil, protocol=nil, flags=nil, timeout: nil, &block)
getaddrinfo(nodename, service, Socket::AF_INET6, socktype, protocol, flags, timeout: timeout)
.concat(getaddrinfo(nodename, service, Socket::AF_INET, socktype, protocol, flags, timeout: timeout))
.each(&block)
end
def getaddrinfo(_, _, family, *_)
case family
when Socket::AF_INET6 then sleep
when Socket::AF_INET then [Addrinfo.tcp("127.0.0.1", 4567)]
end
end
end
end
Socket.tcp("localhost", 4567)
Because the current Socket.tcp
cannot resolve IPv6 names, the program stops in this case. It cannot start to connect with IPv4 address.
Though Socket.tcp
with HEv2 can promptly start a connection attempt with IPv4 address in this case.
Case 2. Server does not promptly return ack for syn of either IPv4 / IPv6 address family¶
require 'socket'
fork do
socket = Socket.new(Socket::AF_INET6, :STREAM)
socket.setsockopt(:SOCKET, :REUSEADDR, true)
socket.bind(Socket.pack_sockaddr_in(4567, '::1'))
sleep
socket.listen(1)
connection, _ = socket.accept
connection.close
socket.close
end
fork do
socket = Socket.new(Socket::AF_INET, :STREAM)
socket.setsockopt(:SOCKET, :REUSEADDR, true)
socket.bind(Socket.pack_sockaddr_in(4567, '127.0.0.1'))
socket.listen(1)
connection, _ = socket.accept
connection.close
socket.close
end
Socket.tcp("localhost", 4567)
The current Socket.tcp
tries to connect serially, so when its first name resolves an IPv6 address and initiates a connection to an IPv6 server, this server does not return an ACK, and the program stops.
Though Socket.tcp
with HEv2 starts to connect sequentially and in parallel so a connection can be established promptly at the socket that attempted to connect to the IPv4 server.
In exchange, the performance of Socket.tcp
with HEv2 will be degraded.
100.times { Socket.tcp("www.ruby-lang.org", 80) }
# Socket.tcp (Before) 0.123809
# Socket.tcp (After) 0.224684
This is due to the addition of the creation of IO objects, Thread objects, etc., and calls to IO::select
in the implementation.