//go:build !windows package main import ( "net" "net/http" "net/http/pprof" "os" ) // servePprof starts an HTTP server running the pprof goroutine handler on a local unix domain socket. As described in // https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/14726 it appears this process is sometimes hanging, unable to exit cleanly, // and this prevents additional Coder builds that try to reinstall this provider. A goroutine dump should allow us to // determine what is hanging. // // This function is best-effort, and just returns early if we fail to set up the directory/listener. We don't want to // block the normal functioning of the provider. func servePprof() { // Coder runs terraform in a per-build subdirectory of the work directory. The per-build subdirectory uses a // generated name and is deleted at the end of a build, so we want to place our unix socket up one directory level // in the provisionerd work directory, so we can connect to it from provisionerd. err := os.Mkdir("../.coder", 0o700) if err != nil && !os.IsExist(err) { return } // remove the old file, if it exists. It's probably from the last run of the provider if err = os.Remove("../.coder/pprof"); err != nil && !os.IsNotExist(err) { return } l, err := net.Listen("unix", "../.coder/pprof") if err != nil { return } mux := http.NewServeMux() mux.Handle("/debug/pprof/goroutine", pprof.Handler("goroutine")) srv := http.Server{Handler: mux} go srv.Serve(l) // We just leave the server and domain socket up forever. Go programs exit when the `main()` function returns, so // this won't block exiting, and it ensures the pprof server stays up for the entire lifetime of the provider. }