The memory subsystem is leaving open a file descriptor for each rtemap file. This can lead to hundreds of extra open file descriptors which has negative side effects. For example, the application may go over its maximum file descriptor limit, or the application may be using limited API's like select that only allow 1024 file descriptors.
The EAL memory subsystem does not need to hold the file open. Probably the original intention was to keep the file locked, but that is not necessary. The Linux kernel keeps a reference count on the file, and the mmap counts is a reference and therefore maintains the file as locked. The fix is one line just close the file after it is setup. Fixes: 582bed1e1d1d ("mem: support mapping hugepages at runtime") Cc: anatoly.bura...@intel.com Signed-off-by: Stephen Hemminger <step...@networkplumber.org> --- lib/librte_eal/linux/eal_memalloc.c | 6 ++++++ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+) diff --git a/lib/librte_eal/linux/eal_memalloc.c b/lib/librte_eal/linux/eal_memalloc.c index 6dc1b2baecdc..99600adda568 100644 --- a/lib/librte_eal/linux/eal_memalloc.c +++ b/lib/librte_eal/linux/eal_memalloc.c @@ -651,6 +651,12 @@ alloc_seg(struct rte_memseg *ms, void *addr, int socket_id, __func__); #endif + /* + * reference count is held by mmap() now + * don't need to hold file open to keep it locked + */ + close(fd); + ms->addr = addr; ms->hugepage_sz = alloc_sz; ms->len = alloc_sz; -- 2.27.0