This PR adds server-side limits for JSON-RPC batch requests. Before this change, batches
were limited only by processing time. The server would pick calls from the batch and
answer them until the response timeout occurred, then stop processing the remaining batch
items.
Here, we are adding two additional limits which can be configured:
- the 'item limit': batches can have at most N items
- the 'response size limit': batches can contain at most X response bytes
These limits are optional in package rpc. In Geth, we set a default limit of 1000 items
and 25MB response size.
When a batch goes over the limit, an error response is returned to the client. However,
doing this correctly isn't always possible. In JSON-RPC, only method calls with a valid
`id` can be responded to. Since batches may also contain non-call messages or
notifications, the best effort thing we can do to report an error with the batch itself is
reporting the limit violation as an error for the first method call in the batch. If a batch is
too large, but contains only notifications and responses, the error will be reported with
a null `id`.
The RPC client was also changed so it can deal with errors resulting from too large
batches. An older client connected to the server code in this PR could get stuck
until the request timeout occurred when the batch is too large. **Upgrading to a version
of the RPC client containing this change is strongly recommended to avoid timeout issues.**
For some weird reason, when writing the original client implementation, @fjl worked off of
the assumption that responses could be distributed across batches arbitrarily. So for a
batch request containing requests `[A B C]`, the server could respond with `[A B C]` but
also with `[A B] [C]` or even `[A] [B] [C]` and it wouldn't make a difference to the
client.
So in the implementation of BatchCallContext, the client waited for all requests in the
batch individually. If the server didn't respond to some of the requests in the batch, the
client would eventually just time out (if a context was used).
With the addition of batch limits into the server, we anticipate that people will hit this
kind of error way more often. To handle this properly, the client now waits for a single
response batch and expects it to contain all responses to the requests.
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
Here we add special handling for sending an error response when the write timeout of the
HTTP server is just about to expire. This is surprisingly difficult to get right, since is
must be ensured that all output is fully flushed in time, which needs support from
multiple levels of the RPC handler stack:
The timeout response can't use chunked transfer-encoding because there is no way to write
the final terminating chunk. net/http writes it when the topmost handler returns, but the
timeout will already be over by the time that happens. We decided to disable chunked
encoding by setting content-length explicitly.
Gzip compression must also be disabled for timeout responses because we don't know the
true content-length before compressing all output, i.e. compression would reintroduce
chunked transfer-encoding.
* rpc, node: refactor request validation and add jwt validation
* node, rpc: fix error message, ignore engine api in RegisterAPIs
* node: make authenticated port configurable
* eth/catalyst: enable unauthenticated version of engine api
* node: rework obtainjwtsecret (backport later)
* cmd/geth: added auth port flag
* node: happy lint, happy life
* node: refactor authenticated api
Modifies the authentication mechanism to use default values
* node: trim spaces and newline away from secret
Co-authored-by: Marius van der Wijden <m.vanderwijden@live.de>
This change allows users to set a custom path prefix on which to mount the http-rpc
or ws-rpc handlers via the new flags --http.rpcprefix and --ws.rpcprefix.
Fixes#21826
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
* Only compare hostnames in ws.origins
Also using a helper function for ToLower consolidates all preparation steps in one function for more maintainable consistency.
Spaces => tabs
Remove a semicolon
Add space at start of comment
Remove parens around conditional
Handle case wehre parsed hostname is empty
When passing a single word like "localhost" the parsed hostname is an empty string. Handle this and the error-parsing case together as default, and the nonempty hostname case in the conditional.
Refactor with new originIsAllowed functions
Adds originIsAllowed() & ruleAllowsOrigin(); removes prepOriginForComparison
Remove blank line
Added tests for simple allowed-orign rule
which does not specify a protocol or port, just a hostname
Fix copy-paste: `:=` => `=`
Remove parens around conditional
Remove autoadded whitespace on blank lines
Compare scheme, hostname, and port with rule
if the rule specifies those portions.
Remove one autoadded trailing whitespace
Better handle case where only origin host is given
e.g. "localhost"
Remove parens around conditional
Refactor: attemptWebsocketConnectionFromOrigin DRY
Include return type on helper function
Provide srv obj in helper fn
Provide srv to helper fn
Remove stray underscore
Remove blank line
parent 93e666b4c1e7e49b8406dc83ed93f4a02ea49ac1
author wbt <wbt@users.noreply.github.com> 1598559718 -0400
committer Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se> 1605602257 +0100
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Refactor: drop err var for more concise test lines
Add several tests for new WebSocket origin checks
Remove autoadded whitespace on blank lines
Restore TestWebsocketOrigins originally-named test
and rename the others to be helpers rather than full tests
Remove autoadded whitespace on blank line
Temporarily comment out new test sets
Uncomment test around origin rule with scheme
Remove tests without scheme on browser origin
per https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/pull/21481/files#r479371498
Uncomment tests with port; remove some blank lines
Handle when browser does not specify scheme/port
Uncomment test for including scheme & port in rule
Add IP tests
* node: more tests + table-driven, ws origin changes
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
This PR significantly changes the APIs for instantiating Ethereum nodes in
a Go program. The new APIs are not backwards-compatible, but we feel that
this is made up for by the much simpler way of registering services on
node.Node. You can find more information and rationale in the design
document: https://gist.github.com/renaynay/5bec2de19fde66f4d04c535fd24f0775.
There is also a new feature in Node's Go API: it is now possible to
register arbitrary handlers on the user-facing HTTP server. In geth, this
facility is used to enable GraphQL.
There is a single minor change relevant for geth users in this PR: The
GraphQL API is no longer available separately from the JSON-RPC HTTP
server. If you want GraphQL, you need to enable it using the
./geth --http --graphql flag combination.
The --graphql.port and --graphql.addr flags are no longer available.
This change makes it possible to run geth with JSON-RPC over HTTP and
WebSocket on the same TCP port. The default port for WebSocket
is still 8546.
geth --rpc --rpcport 8545 --ws --wsport 8545
This also removes a lot of deprecated API surface from package rpc.
The rpc package is now purely about serving JSON-RPC and no longer
provides a way to start an HTTP server.