On Thu, Jan 24, 2002 at 01:27:24PM -0500, Pierre A. Humblet wrote: > The attached file demonstrates a problem with a > combination of socket, fdopen and exec. It was observed > on Win98/ME/NT4/2000. Latest everything. > Please cc: me directly. > > A server is listening on port 999 and forking worker > processes. It can be restarted by kill -HUP. Under some > conditions, new connections stop being accepted and > netstat -a shows two listen on port 999. > > The demo is based on a widely ported program (exim) > where the problem first surfaced. It appears to be related > to the use of fdopen(). > > To reproduce: > 1) Compile and run in a window. > 2) In another window, > a) telnet localhost 999 then quit > b) kill -HUP pid > c) netstat -a shows two listen on port 999 > New connections may or may not be accepted, and > mayhem can occasionally be observed with netstat. > > Yes, all sockets are closed. No, playing with the > "close on exec" bit or with "linger" does not seem > to help.
Isn't that just the usual effect that sockets remain in TIME_WAIT state for 2MSL seconds? Corinna -- Corinna Vinschen Please, send mails regarding Cygwin to Cygwin Developer mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Red Hat, Inc. -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Bug reporting: http://cygwin.com/bugs.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/