ID: 21809 Updated by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reported By: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Status: Feedback Bug Type: Sockets related Operating System: RedHat 7.3 PHP Version: 4CVS-2003-01-21 (stable) New Comment:
Are you using the 4.3.0 release or the latest stable snapshot? (the version field above and the version you mention in your comment don't seem to match up). If you're using the released 4.3.0, please try the latest stable snapshot from snaps.php.net first. Previous Comments: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2003-01-21 17:56:05] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thank you for this bug report. To properly diagnose the problem, we need a backtrace to see what is happening behind the scenes. To find out how to generate a backtrace, please read http://bugs.php.net/bugs-generating-backtrace.php Once you have generated a backtrace, please submit it to this bug report and change the status back to "Open". Thank you for helping us make PHP better. Run the cli under gdb (see instructions above), and when it hangs press CTRL-C. You can then type "bt" to generate the backtrace. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2003-01-21 17:50:32] [EMAIL PROTECTED] I've been writing a CLI-based script that connects to an xml wirefeed and continually reads the data with fgets() and parses it accordingly. The script works fine, but occasionally the feed server goes down for maintenance, etc. That in itself isnt a problem, but when the connection to the feed is lost, fgets() stalls and never times out regardless of the stream_set_timeout() usage. I have written the following scripts to verify the problem (note that the "server" script is only to help test the fgets() bug in the "client" script). I run this script (the "server" script) on my workstation (running XP w/ PHP 4.3.0 in CLI mode) to listen on a socket: <?php error_reporting(E_ALL); set_time_limit(0); ob_implicit_flush(); $sock = socket_create (AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0); socket_bind($sock, "192.168.1.11", "10000"); socket_listen($sock, 5); $msgsock = socket_accept($sock); do { $buf = socket_read($msgsock, 2048); } while (true); socket_close($msgsock); socket_close($sock); ?> Then I run this script (the "client" script) on my linux box (running RH7.3 w/ PHP 4CVS-2003-01-20 (stable) in CLI mode) to connect to the socket: <?php error_reporting(E_ALL); set_time_limit(30); ob_implicit_flush(); $fp = fsockopen("192.168.1.10", 10000, $errno, $errstr, 10); if ($fp) { stream_set_timeout($fp, 10); $data = fgets($fp); $sinfo = socket_get_status($fp); echo ($sinfo["timed_out"]?"socket timed out\n":"eof\n"); fclose($fp); } else echo "unable to connect\n"; ?> The client script will time-out properly when I leave the server script running. But if I run the client script, then CTRL-C my server script, the client script never times out. It sits at the fgets() forever, even though I've set_time_limit(30) as well as stream_set_timeout(10). Since the script just sits there and never "crashes" to generate a corefile, I haven't been able to perform a backtrace. Even though i've compiled PHP with --enable-debug, killing the script with CTRL-C doesn't generate a corefile (should it?). If a bt would help, please let me know how I can generate a corefile with the CLI version of PHP. I've configured PHP as as follows: './configure' '--with-apxs' '--with-config-file-path=/etc' '--with-mysql=/usr' '--with-gzip' '--with-xml' '--with-gd' '--with-zlib' '--with-freetype' '--with-ttf' '--enable-debug' Note that I have also verified this problem on a second linux box running RH8 w/ PHP4.3.0. Any help would be appreciated! ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=21809&edit=1