Andrew Dunstan <and...@dunslane.net> writes: > On 2024-06-05 We 16:00, Alexander Lakhin wrote: >> That is, psql from the test instance 001_ssltests_34 opened a >> connection to >> the test server with the client port 50072 and it made using the port by >> the server from the test instance 001_ssltests_30 impossible.
> Oh. (kicks self) D'oh. > Should we really be allocating ephemeral server ports in the range > 41952..65535? Maybe we should be looking for an unallocated port > somewhere below 41952, and above, say, 32767, so we couldn't have a > client socket collision. Hmm, are there really any standards about how these port numbers are used? I wonder if we don't need to just be prepared to retry the whole thing a few times. Even if it's true that "clients" shouldn't choose ports below 41952, we still have a small chance of failure against a non-Postgres server starting up at the wrong time. regards, tom lane