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Piping readable stream to multiple writeable streams results in crash #5820
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though the error in question isn't actually an error related to running out of memory which is the error you'd expect if it was actually due to improper back pressure handling between 2 streams. |
From the error and the observed memory behaviour, maybe the 'size' variable is becoming too big and overflowing before another memory-related error can occur? |
There’s a maximum size of 2^31-1 bytes for a Buffer, so that would definitely make sense, even without an actual overflow occurring. |
I’ve looked a bit into this and it seems @Fishrock123 is right, #2325 effectively – and probably inadvertently – disabled the |
cc @mscdex here too |
PR: #6023 |
In 6899094 (nodejs#2325), the conditions for increasing `readableState.awaitDrain` when writing to a piping destination returns false were changed so that they could not actually be met, effectively leaving `readableState.awaitDrain` with a constant value of 0. This patch changes the conditions to testing whether the stream for which `.write()` returned false is still a piping destination, which was likely the intention of the original patch. Fixes: nodejs#5820
In 6899094 (#2325), the conditions for increasing `readableState.awaitDrain` when writing to a piping destination returns false were changed so that they could not actually be met, effectively leaving `readableState.awaitDrain` with a constant value of 0. This patch changes the conditions to testing whether the stream for which `.write()` returned false is still a piping destination, which was likely the intention of the original patch. Fixes: #5820 Fixes: #5257 PR-URL: #6023 Reviewed-By: Brian White <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
In 6899094 (#2325), the conditions for increasing `readableState.awaitDrain` when writing to a piping destination returns false were changed so that they could not actually be met, effectively leaving `readableState.awaitDrain` with a constant value of 0. This patch changes the conditions to testing whether the stream for which `.write()` returned false is still a piping destination, which was likely the intention of the original patch. Fixes: #5820 Fixes: #5257 PR-URL: #6023 Reviewed-By: Brian White <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
In 6899094 (#2325), the conditions for increasing `readableState.awaitDrain` when writing to a piping destination returns false were changed so that they could not actually be met, effectively leaving `readableState.awaitDrain` with a constant value of 0. This patch changes the conditions to testing whether the stream for which `.write()` returned false is still a piping destination, which was likely the intention of the original patch. Fixes: #5820 Fixes: #5257 PR-URL: #6023 Reviewed-By: Brian White <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
In 6899094 (#2325), the conditions for increasing `readableState.awaitDrain` when writing to a piping destination returns false were changed so that they could not actually be met, effectively leaving `readableState.awaitDrain` with a constant value of 0. This patch changes the conditions to testing whether the stream for which `.write()` returned false is still a piping destination, which was likely the intention of the original patch. Fixes: #5820 Fixes: #5257 PR-URL: #6023 Reviewed-By: Brian White <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
In 6899094 (#2325), the conditions for increasing `readableState.awaitDrain` when writing to a piping destination returns false were changed so that they could not actually be met, effectively leaving `readableState.awaitDrain` with a constant value of 0. This patch changes the conditions to testing whether the stream for which `.write()` returned false is still a piping destination, which was likely the intention of the original patch. Fixes: #5820 Fixes: #5257 PR-URL: #6023 Reviewed-By: Brian White <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
In 6899094 (#2325), the conditions for increasing `readableState.awaitDrain` when writing to a piping destination returns false were changed so that they could not actually be met, effectively leaving `readableState.awaitDrain` with a constant value of 0. This patch changes the conditions to testing whether the stream for which `.write()` returned false is still a piping destination, which was likely the intention of the original patch. Fixes: #5820 Fixes: #5257 PR-URL: #6023 Reviewed-By: Brian White <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
In 6899094 (#2325), the conditions for increasing `readableState.awaitDrain` when writing to a piping destination returns false were changed so that they could not actually be met, effectively leaving `readableState.awaitDrain` with a constant value of 0. This patch changes the conditions to testing whether the stream for which `.write()` returned false is still a piping destination, which was likely the intention of the original patch. Fixes: #5820 Fixes: #5257 PR-URL: #6023 Reviewed-By: Brian White <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
If I execute the following code snippet in node >= 4.2.0, it results in the read stream reading the data very fast but not being able to write them out to wr2 equally fast. The memory usage of the process increases very fast until the process exits with an error.
The script ends with this error:
Earlier versions of node (4.1.2 and below) do not show the same behaviour.
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