| // Copyright 2020 The Monogon Project Authors. |
| // |
| // SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 |
| // |
| // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| // You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| // |
| // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| // |
| // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| // limitations under the License. |
| |
| package supervisor |
| |
| // Supporting infrastructure to allow running some non-Go payloads under |
| // supervision. |
| |
| import ( |
| "context" |
| "errors" |
| "net" |
| "os" |
| "os/exec" |
| |
| "google.golang.org/grpc" |
| |
| "source.monogon.dev/metropolis/pkg/logtree" |
| ) |
| |
| // GRPCServer creates a Runnable that serves gRPC requests as longs as it's not |
| // canceled. |
| // If graceful is set to true, the server will be gracefully stopped instead of |
| // plain stopped. This means all pending RPCs will finish, but also requires |
| // streaming gRPC handlers to check their context liveliness and exit |
| // accordingly. If the server code does not support this, `graceful` should be |
| // false and the server will be killed violently instead. |
| func GRPCServer(srv *grpc.Server, lis net.Listener, graceful bool) Runnable { |
| return func(ctx context.Context) error { |
| Signal(ctx, SignalHealthy) |
| errC := make(chan error) |
| go func() { |
| errC <- srv.Serve(lis) |
| }() |
| select { |
| case <-ctx.Done(): |
| if graceful { |
| srv.GracefulStop() |
| } else { |
| srv.Stop() |
| } |
| return ctx.Err() |
| case err := <-errC: |
| return err |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // RunCommand will create a Runnable that starts a long-running command, whose |
| // exit is determined to be a failure. |
| func RunCommand(ctx context.Context, cmd *exec.Cmd, opts ...RunCommandOption) error { |
| Signal(ctx, SignalHealthy) |
| |
| var parseKLog bool |
| var signal <-chan os.Signal |
| for _, opt := range opts { |
| if opt.parseKlog { |
| parseKLog = true |
| } |
| if opt.signal != nil { |
| signal = opt.signal |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if parseKLog { |
| // We make two klogs, one for each of stdout/stderr. This is to prevent |
| // accidental interleaving of both. |
| klogStdout := logtree.KLogParser(Logger(ctx)) |
| defer klogStdout.Close() |
| klogStderr := logtree.KLogParser(Logger(ctx)) |
| defer klogStderr.Close() |
| |
| cmd.Stdout = klogStdout |
| cmd.Stderr = klogStderr |
| } else { |
| cmd.Stdout = RawLogger(ctx) |
| cmd.Stderr = RawLogger(ctx) |
| } |
| err := cmd.Start() |
| if err != nil { |
| return err |
| } |
| |
| exited := make(chan struct{}) |
| if signal != nil { |
| go func() { |
| for { |
| var err error |
| select { |
| case s := <-signal: |
| err = cmd.Process.Signal(s) |
| case <-exited: |
| return |
| } |
| if err != nil && !errors.Is(err, os.ErrProcessDone) { |
| Logger(ctx).Warningf("Failed sending signal to process: %v", err) |
| } |
| } |
| }() |
| } |
| |
| err = cmd.Wait() |
| if signal != nil { |
| exited <- struct{}{} |
| } |
| Logger(ctx).Infof("Command returned: %v", err) |
| return err |
| } |
| |
| type RunCommandOption struct { |
| parseKlog bool |
| signal <-chan os.Signal |
| } |
| |
| // ParseKLog signals that the command being run will return klog-compatible |
| // logs to stdout and/or stderr, and these will be re-interpreted as structured |
| // logging and emitted to the supervisor's logger. |
| func ParseKLog() RunCommandOption { |
| return RunCommandOption{ |
| parseKlog: true, |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // SignalChan takes a channel which can be used to send signals to the |
| // supervised process. |
| // |
| // The given channel will be read from as long as the underlying process is |
| // running. If the process doesn't start successfully the channel will not be |
| // read. When the process exits, the channel will stop being read. |
| // |
| // With the above in mind, and also taking into account the inherent lack of |
| // reliability in delivering any process-handled signals in POSIX/Linux, it is |
| // recommended to use unbuffered channels, always write to them in a non-blocking |
| // fashion (eg. in a select { ... default: } block), and to not rely only on the |
| // signal delivery mechanism for the intended behaviour. |
| // |
| // For example, if the signals are used to trigger some configuration reload, |
| // these configuration reloads should either be verified and signal delivery should |
| // be retried until confirmed successful, or there should be a backup periodic |
| // reload performed by the target process independently of signal-based reload |
| // triggers. |
| // |
| // Another example: if the signal delivered is a SIGTERM used to gracefully |
| // terminate some process, it should be attempted to be delivered a number of |
| // times before finally SIGKILLing the process. |
| func SignalChan(s <-chan os.Signal) RunCommandOption { |
| return RunCommandOption{ |
| signal: s, |
| } |
| } |