When developing go-micro services, it is frequently possible to set invalid results in the response pointer. When this happens (as I and @trushton personally experienced), `sendResponse()` returns an error correctly explaining what happened (e.g. protobuf refused to encode a bad struct) but the `call()` function one above it in the stack ignores the returned error object.
Thus, invalid structs go un-encoded and the _client side times out_. @trushton and I first caught this in our CI builds when we left a protobuf.Empty field uninitialized (nil) instead of setting it to `&ptypes.Empty{}`. This resulted in an `proto: oneof field has nil value` error, but it was dropped and became a terribly confusing client timeout instead.
This patch is two independent changes:
* In rpc_codec, when a serialization failure occurs serialize an error message, which will correctly become a 500 for HTTP services, about the encoding failure. This means rpc_codec only returns an `error` when a socket failure occurs, which I believe is the behavior that rpc_service is expecting anyway.
* In rpc_service, log any errors returned by sendResponse instead of dropping the error object. This will make debugging client timeouts less of a hassle.
By using a DefaultHealthChecker - as with a DefaultName, DefaultServer,
... - it is possible to overwrite the default implementation. This means
we can now do extra actions in our health check that is necessary for
the applications specific needs.