I'm trying out Node.js by writing a very basic http/web caching proxy, and have hit something I haven't managed to break through.
Assuming I have a very basic proxy functionality (listen to request, pipe it to external server, wait for response, pipe it back to client), how do I detect when the client (web browser) cancels the request? When the user clicks "Stop"/Esc on his browser, the browser doesn't send me any "request" or info and attaching a callback for when the "response" connection ends doesn't get called.
Here's what I mean:
http.createServer (clientRequest, clientResponse) {
var client = http.createClient (port, hostname);
var request = client.request (method, url, headers);
request.addListener ('response', function(response){
response.addListener ('data', function(chunk){
// forward data to clientResponse..
}
response.addListener ('end', function(){
// end clientResponse..
}
});
clientResponse.addListener('end', function(){
// this never gets called :(
// I want it to terminate the request/response created just above
}
}