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Give remote-test-client a configurable timeout #126959
Give remote-test-client a configurable timeout #126959
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rustbot has assigned @Mark-Simulacrum. Use |
match client.read_exact(&mut b) { | ||
Ok(_) => break, | ||
Err(e) if e.kind() == io::ErrorKind::WouldBlock => panic!( | ||
"TCP timeout of {timeout}ms exceeded, set `{TCP_TIMEOUT_ENV}` to a larger value" |
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I'd have expected https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/io/enum.ErrorKind.html#variant.TimedOut, not WouldBlock?
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That would be a more specific and appropriate error, yes! I wonder why I saw what I did while testing...
I think I'd expect us to just increase the timeout rather than making it configurable. I'm not sure there's any significant value of 100ms vs. something like 2 seconds (which seems likely to be enough for your use case?) |
I'm perfectly happy to simply increase the timeout to 2s! Let me do that instead! |
Closing in favor of #127246 |
…ient-has-longer-timeout, r=Mark-Simulacrum Give remote-test-client a longer timeout In rust-lang#126959, ``@Mark-Simulacrum`` suggested we simply extend the timeout of the `remote-test-client` instead of making it configurable. This is acceptable for my use case. I'm doing some work with a remote host running tests using `x.py`'s remote test runner system. After building the `remote-test-server` with: ```bash ./x build src/tools/remote-test-server --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu ``` I can transfer the `remote-test-server` to the remote and set up a port forwarded SSH connection, then I run: ```bash TEST_DEVICE_ADDR=127.0.0.1:12345 ./x.py test library/core --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu ``` This works great if the host is nearby, however if the average round trip time is over 100ms (the timeout), it creates problems as it silently trips the timeout. This PR extends that timeout to a less strict 2s. r? ``@Mark-Simulacrum``
Rollup merge of rust-lang#127246 - ferrocene:hoverbear/remote-test-client-has-longer-timeout, r=Mark-Simulacrum Give remote-test-client a longer timeout In rust-lang#126959, ``@Mark-Simulacrum`` suggested we simply extend the timeout of the `remote-test-client` instead of making it configurable. This is acceptable for my use case. I'm doing some work with a remote host running tests using `x.py`'s remote test runner system. After building the `remote-test-server` with: ```bash ./x build src/tools/remote-test-server --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu ``` I can transfer the `remote-test-server` to the remote and set up a port forwarded SSH connection, then I run: ```bash TEST_DEVICE_ADDR=127.0.0.1:12345 ./x.py test library/core --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu ``` This works great if the host is nearby, however if the average round trip time is over 100ms (the timeout), it creates problems as it silently trips the timeout. This PR extends that timeout to a less strict 2s. r? ``@Mark-Simulacrum``
I'm doing some work with a remote host running tests using
x.py
's remote test runner system.After building the
remote-test-server
with:I can transfer the
remote-test-server
to the remote and set up a port forwarded SSH connection, then I run:TEST_DEVICE_ADDR=127.0.0.1:12345 ./x.py test library/core --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
This works great if the host is nearby, however if the average round trip time is over 100ms (the timeout), it creates problems as it silently trips the timeout.
This PR checks an environment variable for a user configured timeout, defaulting to the old setting of 100 if it's not present. I picked the environment name because it seemed obvious, but there may be another option more suitable!
Also included is an explicit panic with a (hopefully) useful message if the deadline does get tripped. If it's more appropriate, I could make this a non-panic and simply a printed warning.
Testing
To test, you could run the
remote-test-server
similar to as described in https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/tests/running.html#running-tests-on-a-remote-machine.Then, in another terminal:
TCP_TIMEOUT=300 TEST_DEVICE_ADDR=127.0.0.1:12345 ./x.py test tests/ui
To trigger the timeout, you'll need to introduce latency into your loopback and tune the timeout down to something below that.
That message looks like this: