@luminati-io/node-unlisten

Temporarily stop accepting connections on a TCP or HTTP(S) server

Usage no npm install needed!

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README

unlisten

const unlisten = require('unlisten');

Node.js module: Temporarily stop accepting connections on a TCP or HTTP(S) server.

Introduction

Once you get a net.Server, http.Server or https.Server in Node.js to start listening on a port, they will automatically accept every connection that comes their way. Node.js doesn't let you stop accepting temporarily without tearing down the whole server (which involves closing the listening socket).

Why would you want to stop accepting?

If you're using cluster.SCHED_NONE instead of the default cluster.SCHED_RR as Node.js' scheduling policy, your workers share the listening socket. When a new connection comes, all workers that are currently blocked in epoll_wait wake up and race to accept it; if none is in epoll_wait, the next one to call epoll_wait gets it. This naturally excludes workers that are very busy. Still, other workers can bite more than they can chew, especially given that the way the kernel seems to work, the same worker tends to win the race every time.

So if the workers have some kind of safeguard against overload, such as the toobusy-js module, they can do better than just denying service: using the unlisten module, a worker can temporarily stop participating in the accept race and let other, less busy workers help out.

Usage

To make an instance of net.Server, http.Server or https.Server stop accepting connections:

unlisten.pause(server);

To resume accepting:

unlisten.resume(server);

The calls are idempotent (that means, calling pause or resume the second time in a row on the same server does nothing).

This is only for listening servers! Don't try it on sockets that represent established connections rather than servers, or on servers that haven't started listening or have been closed.

Limitations

  • This module only works (and compiles) on Linux.
  • In Node.js cluster workers, it requires cluster.SCHED_NONE.
  • It fiddles with the libuv internals, and might stop working with future versions of Node.js. PRs to keep it compatible are welcome.
  • The server instance must have already started listening.