// Copyright 2018-2021 the Deno authors. All rights reserved. MIT license. // This is not a real HTTP server. We read blindly one time into 'requestBuf', // then write this fixed 'responseBuf'. The point of this benchmark is to // exercise the event loop in a simple yet semi-realistic way. const requestBuf = new Uint8Array(64 * 1024); const responseBuf = new Uint8Array( "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\nContent-Length: 12\r\n\r\nHello World\n" .split("") .map((c) => c.charCodeAt(0)), ); /** Listens on 0.0.0.0:4500, returns rid. */ function listen() { return Deno.core.jsonOpSync("listen"); } /** Accepts a connection, returns rid. */ function accept(serverRid) { return Deno.core.jsonOpAsync("accept", serverRid); } /** * Reads a packet from the rid, presumably an http request. data is ignored. * Returns bytes read. */ function read(rid, data) { return Deno.core.jsonOpAsync("read", rid, data); } /** Writes a fixed HTTP response to the socket rid. Returns bytes written. */ function write(rid, data) { return Deno.core.jsonOpAsync("write", rid, data); } function close(rid) { Deno.core.jsonOpSync("close", rid); } async function serve(rid) { while (true) { const nread = await read(rid, requestBuf); if (nread <= 0) { break; } const nwritten = await write(rid, responseBuf); if (nwritten < 0) { break; } } close(rid); } async function main() { Deno.core.ops(); Deno.core.registerErrorClass("Error", Error); const listenerRid = listen(); Deno.core.print(`http_bench_json_ops listening on http://127.0.0.1:4544/\n`); for (;;) { const rid = await accept(listenerRid); if (rid < 0) { Deno.core.print(`accept error ${rid}`); return; } serve(rid); } } main();