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.
Net::SSLeay::VERSION 1.42
. Still blocking. As normal user and asroot
. - 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?