3

Solution

As reported by @limulus in the answer I accepted, this was a bug in Net::HTTPS version 6.00. Always be wary of fresh .0 releases. Here's the relevant diff between the buggy and fixed version of that module:

D:\Opt\Perl512.32 :: diff lib\Net\HTTPS.pm site\lib\Net\HTTPS.pm
6c6
< $VERSION = "6.00";
---
> $VERSION = "6.02";
75,78c75,80
< # The underlying SSLeay classes fails to work if the socket is
< # placed in non-blocking mode.  This override of the blocking
< # method makes sure it stays the way it was created.
< sub blocking { }  # noop
---
> if ($SSL_SOCKET_CLASS eq "Net::SSL") {
>     # The underlying SSLeay classes fails to work if the socket is
>     # placed in non-blocking mode.  This override of the blocking
>     # method makes sure it stays the way it was created.
>     *blocking = sub { };
> }

Original question

Relevance: It is annoying to see your HTTPS client block indefinitely because the connection endpoint is unreliable.

This experiment is easy to set up and replay at home. You just need two things, a tarpit to trap an incoming client, and a Perl script. The tarpit can be set up using netcat:

nc -k -l localhost 9999 # on Linux, for multiple requests
nc -l -p 9999 localhost # on Cygwin, for one request only

Then, point the script to this tarpit:

use strict;
use LWP::UserAgent;
use HTTP::Request::Common;

print 'LWP::UserAgent::VERSION  ', $LWP::UserAgent::VERSION, "\n";
print 'IO::Socket::SSL::VERSION ', $IO::Socket::SSL::VERSION, "\n";

my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new( timeout => 5, keep_alive => 1 );
$ua->ssl_opts( timeout => 5, Timeout => 5 ); # Yes - see note below!
my $rsp = $ua->request( GET 'https://localhost:9999' );
if ( $rsp->is_success ) {
  print $rsp->as_string;
} else {
  die $rsp->status_line;
}

What is this going to do? Well, connect to the port opened by NetCat, and then ... hang. Indefinitely. At least in terms of developer time. I mean it might time out after ten minutes or two hours, but I haven't checked; the specified timeout doesn't take effect, not on Linux, and not on Windows (Win32, haven't checked Cygwin).

Versions used:

LWP::UserAgent::VERSION  6.02
IO::Socket::SSL::VERSION 1.44
# on Linux

LWP::UserAgent::VERSION  6.02
IO::Socket::SSL::VERSION 1.44
# on Win32

Now for the timeout and Timeout parameters. The former is the name of the parameter for LWP::UA, the latter is the name for IO::Socket::SSL, used via LWP::Protocol::https. (Incidentally, why is metacpan HTTPS? Well, at least it's not a tarpit.) I am somehow hoping to have these parameters passed along :)

Just so you know, keep_alive doesn't have anything to do with the timeout not working, I verified that empirically. :)

Anyway, before digging deeper, does anyone know what's going on here and how to make the timeout work with HTTPS? Hard to believe I'm the first person running into this.

5
  • Works for me. Linux/LWP 6.04/IO-S-SSL 1.56
    – daxim
    Feb 23, 2012 at 10:10
  • Thanks, @daxim. On Linux/64 (CentOS release 5.7), I upgraded to those versions. Also upgraded to Net::SSLeay::VERSION 1.42. Still blocking. As normal user and as root. - Okay, that was ActivePerl (v5.12.4) built for x86_64-linux-thread-multi. Installed a couple of modules for the system perl and retried: success! The system perl is v5.8.8 built for x86_64-linux-thread-multi; the module versions are the same. Might be a problem pertaining to the perl built. Might. I really don't know. What would be the place to ask about low-level stuff like this?
    – Lumi
    Feb 23, 2012 at 17:42
  • I don't know, try Perlmonks first, knowledgable people hang there. If unsuccessful, ask in #perl-help and the beginners list and you will be forwarded to the appropriate place.
    – daxim
    Feb 23, 2012 at 19:17
  • Asked on Perlmonks.
    – Lumi
    Feb 28, 2012 at 0:37
  • 1
    metacpan allows you to log in and such. To secure the session, https is required. Having both http for not logged in users and https caused to much headache :)
    – monken
    Aug 3, 2012 at 9:20

3 Answers 3

4

This is a result of the Net::HTTPS module overriding the blocking method of IO::Socket with a noop. Upgrading to the latest Net::HTTP package should fix this.

0
3

The timeout (and Timeout) options apply only to the connection -- how many seconds will LWP::UserAgent wait while connecting -- they are not for setting a timeout on the whole transaction.

You'll want to use Perl's alarm with a $SIG{ALRM} handler to timeout the whole transaction. See perldoc -f alarm or perlipc.

local $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die "SSL timeout\n" };
my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new( timeout => 5, keep_alive => 1 );
$ua->ssl_opts( timeout => 5, Timeout => 5 );

eval {
    alarm(10);
    my $rsp = $ua->request( GET 'https://localhost:9999' );
    if ( $rsp->is_success ) {
      print $rsp->as_string;
    } else {
      die $rsp->status_line;
    }
 };
 alarm(0);
 if ($@) {
     if ($@ =~ /SSL timeout/) {
         warn "request timed out";
     } else {
         die "error in request: $@";
     }
 }

(tested on Linux. Alarms can be a bit more cantankerous in Windows/Cygwin)

1
  • Thanks for your answer. If what you say is true, how do you explain that the timeout does work for plain HTTP? Go ahead and try it, just delete the "s" from "https" and you'll see a nice 500 read timeout. At least I do, on Win32 and Cygwin, and on Linux, too, of course. - As for alarm, I ruled it out as non-portable, and while your solution works on Linux as expected, it hangs indefinitely on Windows.
    – Lumi
    Feb 22, 2012 at 20:05
0

I asked this question on PerlMonks, and received an answer to the effect that:

The underlying IO::Socket::INET does not support non-blocking sockets on Win32, thus non-blocking IO::Socket::SSL is not supported on Win32, which means also, that timeouts don't work (because they are based on non-blocking). See also http://www.perlmonks.org/?node_id=378675

http://cpansearch.perl.org/src/SULLR/IO-Socket-SSL-1.60/README.Win32

The PerlMonks post pointed to is from 2004. Not sure the information still applies; after all, I've seen the timeout does work on Windows, just not via SSL.

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