The global stagesLock sync.RWMutex protected map[string]*Stage, causing
all stage operations to contend on a single lock even for unrelated
stages. Any stage creation or deletion blocked all reads server-wide.
Replace with a typed StageMap wrapper around sync.Map which provides
lock-free reads and allows concurrent writes to disjoint keys. Per-stage
sync.RWMutex remains unchanged for protecting individual stage state.
StageMap exposes Get, GetOrCreate, StoreIfAbsent, Store, Delete, and
Range methods. Updated ~50 call sites across 6 production files and
9 test files.
The config package used `package _config` with a leading underscore,
which is unconventional in Go. Rename to `package config` (matching the
directory name) and use `cfg` as the standard import alias across all
93 importing files.
golangci-lint's errcheck rule requires explicit handling of error
return values from Close, Write, and Logout calls. Use blank
identifier assignment for cleanup paths where errors are
intentionally discarded.
The channel server had several concurrency issues found by the race
detector during isolation testing:
- acceptClients could send on a closed acceptConns channel during
shutdown, causing a panic. Replace close(acceptConns) with a done
channel and select-based shutdown signaling in both acceptClients
and manageSessions.
- invalidateSessions read isShuttingDown and iterated sessions without
holding the lock. Rewrite with ticker + done channel select and
snapshot sessions under lock before processing timeouts.
- sendLoop/recvLoop accessed global _config.ErupeConfig.LoopDelay
which races with tests modifying the global. Use the per-server
erupeConfig instead.
- logoutPlayer panicked on DB errors and crashed on nil DB (no-db
test scenarios). Guard with nil check and log errors instead.
- Shutdown was not idempotent, double-calling caused double-close
panic on done channel.
Add 5 channel isolation tests verifying independent shutdown,
listener failure, session panic recovery, cross-channel registry
after shutdown, and stage isolation.