It seems to be there is some race and/or leak in tcp stack:

1. Netstat show connections in closed state (for a long time):

> netstat -n | egrep '(Proto|CLOSED)'
Proto Recv-Q Send-Q  Local Address          Foreign Address       (state)
tcp4       0      0 10.25.1.54.35543       10.25.1.54.35544       CLOSED
tcp4       0      0 10.25.1.54.57273       10.25.1.54.57274       CLOSED
tcp4       0      0 10.25.1.54.40445       10.25.1.54.62378       CLOSED
tcp4       0      0 10.25.1.54.43403       10.25.1.54.43404       CLOSED
tcp4       0      0 10.25.1.54.36380       10.25.1.54.36381       CLOSED
...

2. sockstat don't show any processes to which this sockets can belong to.

some info from kgdb:

> netstat -nA -p tcp | egrep '(Tcpcb|CLOSED)'
Tcpcb    Proto Recv-Q Send-Q  Local Address      Foreign Address   (state)
ffffff01abfb8370 tcp4       0      0 10.25.1.54.35543   10.25.1.54.35544   
CLOSED

(kgdb) set $t = (struct tcpcb) *0xffffff01abfb8370
(kgdb) p $t->t_inpcb->inp_socket->so_count
$18 = 0

> uname -srp
FreeBSD 8.2-PRERELEASE-20110101 amd64

--
 Anton Yuzhaninov
_______________________________________________
freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-net-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"

Reply via email to