From: matthew@... Date: 2020-07-31T22:51:28+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:99424] [Ruby master Bug#15773] Net::HTTP doesn't try next IP address in case of timeout Issue #15773 has been updated by phluid61 (Matthew Kerwin). benlangfeld (Ben Langfeld) wrote in #note-4: > > RFC3484 (https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3484.txt) very clearly states: > Minor point, I don't think it affects much, but RFC 3484 is obsolete and is replaced by RFC 6724 https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6724 Cheers ---------------------------------------- Bug #15773: Net::HTTP doesn't try next IP address in case of timeout https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/15773#change-86877 * Author: nicolasnoble (Nicolas Noble) * Status: Rejected * Priority: Normal * Backport: 2.4: UNKNOWN, 2.5: UNKNOWN, 2.6: UNKNOWN ---------------------------------------- This example requires to have a working IPv6 address. Since IPv6 is used in first priority, I am using it to demonstrate the problem, but it exists with plain IPv4, which will be more round-robin-style, so less deterministic to show a reproduction case. I have made two URLs that have both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses: http://ipv6.grumpycoder.net/ and http://bad-ipv6.grumpycoder.net/ - both URLs should work in an IPv6-enabled web browser, as well as curl or wget for instance. The difference is that the bad-ipv6 subdomain doesn't have an IPv6 that will actually connect. Therefore, browsers, curl and wget will fallback to using the IPv4 when the initial IPv6 connection attempt failed: ``` $ wget -T1 http://bad-ipv6.grumpycoder.net -O - # demonstrating using wget because its output is more clear than curl's verbose --2019-04-16 15:56:52-- http://bad-ipv6.grumpycoder.net/ Resolving bad-ipv6.grumpycoder.net (bad-ipv6.grumpycoder.net)... 2001:bc8:3690:200::2, 62.210.214.144 Connecting to bad-ipv6.grumpycoder.net (bad-ipv6.grumpycoder.net)|2001:bc8:3690:200::2|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Connecting to bad-ipv6.grumpycoder.net (bad-ipv6.grumpycoder.net)|62.210.214.144|:80... connected. HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK Length: 45 [text/html] Saving to: ���STDOUT��� - 0%[ ] 0 --.-KB/s

It works!

- 100%[=====================================================================>] 45 --.-KB/s in 0s 2019-04-16 15:56:53 (6.55 MB/s) - written to stdout [45/45] ``` However, in Ruby, using Net::HTTP (or OpenURI), that's not going to be the case: ``` $ ruby bad-ipv6.rb http://ipv6.grumpycoder.net

It works!

http://bad-ipv6.grumpycoder.net Net::OpenTimeout: execution expired ``` Contents of my test file: ```ruby require 'open-uri' ['ipv6', 'bad-ipv6'].each do |s| url = 'http://%s.grumpycoder.net' %[s] puts url begin puts open(url).read rescue StandardError => e puts "#{e.class}: #{e.message}" next end end ``` The proper behavior should be to retry the next IP address and exhaust all of the IPs in the DNS resolution results before throwing out an error. -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ Unsubscribe: