When making an outgoing TCP or UDP connection, set AI_ADDRCONFIG in the
hints we send to getaddrinfo(3) (if supported). This will prompt the
resolver to _NOT_ issue A or AAAA queries if the system does not
actually have an IPv4 or IPv6 address (respectively).
This makes outgoing connections marginally more efficient on
non-dual-stack systems, since we don't have to try connecting to an
address which can't possibly work.
More importantly, however, this works around a race condition present
in some older versions of glibc on aarch64 where it could accidently
send the two outgoing DNS queries with the same DNS txnid, and get
confused when receiving the responses. This manifests as outgoing
connections sometimes taking 5 seconds (the DNS timeout before retry) to
be made.
Fixes#19144
The test for Socket::ResolutionError#error_code fails in the FreeBSD environment with this test condition. Because Socket::ResolutionError#error_code returns Socket::EAI_FAIL instead of Socket::EAI_FAMILY.
20231130T103002Z.fail.html.gz
This PR avoids the test failure by relaxing the condition.
Also changed the domain for testing to `example.com`.
Since Linux 4.5, sendmsg(2) fails with ETOOMANYREFS if the number of
"in-flight" IOs, which has been sent by sendmsg(2) but has not yet
accepted by recvmsg(2), exceeds the RLIMIT_NOFILE resource limit.
20231025T090004Z.fail.html.gz
```
1) Error:
TestSocket_UNIXSocket#test_fd_passing_race_condition:
Errno::ETOOMANYREFS: Too many references: cannot splice - sendmsg(2)
```
This change reduces the number of times of IO passing under 1024,
which is a default limit in many environments.
OpenBSD and Solaris behave differently here.
Linux does deliver the empty packet, which is questionable
as it's undistinguishable from a closed connection.
It seems that OpenBSD and Solaris simply drop it.
We could test the platform before doing the assertion, but
it would likely be fragile, and the entire web recommend
to not ever send an empty packet, so the value of this
assertion is low.
[Bug #19012]
man recvmsg(2) states:
> Return Value
> These calls return the number of bytes received, or -1 if an error occurred.
> The return value will be 0 when the peer has performed an orderly shutdown.
Not too sure how one is supposed to make the difference between a packet of
size 0 and a closed connection.
* Windows: Fix warning about undefined if_indextoname()
* Windows: Fix UNIXSocket on MINGW and make .pair more reliable
* Windows: Use nonblock=true for read tests with scheduler
* Windows: Move socket detection from File.socket? to File.stat
Add S_IFSOCK to Windows and interpret reparse points accordingly.
Enable tests that work now.
* Windows: Use wide-char functions to UNIXSocket
This fixes behaviour with non-ASCII characters.
It also fixes deletion of temporary UNIXSocket.pair files.
* Windows: Add UNIXSocket tests for specifics of Windows impl.
* Windows: fix VC build due to missing _snwprintf
Avoid usage of _snwprintf, since it fails linking ruby.dll like so:
linking shared-library x64-vcruntime140-ruby320.dll
x64-vcruntime140-ruby320.def : error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol snwprintf
x64-vcruntime140-ruby320.def : error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol vsnwprintf_l
whereas linking miniruby.exe succeeds.
This patch uses snprintf on the UTF-8 string instead.
Also remove branch GetWindowsDirectoryW, since it doesn't work.
* Windows: Fix dangling symlink test failures
Co-authored-by: Lars Kanis <kanis@comcard.de>
The test fails on Solaris 10. Maybe due to the IPv6 configuration on the
server, but I have no idea at all. I've asked @ngoto to investigate the
issue, so will tentatively skip the tests on Solaris
20210729T040002Z.fail.html.gz
because the name "MJIT" is an internal code name, it's inconsistent with
--jit while they are related to each other, and I want to discourage future
JIT implementation-specific (e.g. MJIT-specific) APIs by this rename.
[Feature #17490]
getaddrinfo_a() gets stuck after fork().
To avoid this, we need 1 second sleep to wait for internal
worker threads of getaddrinfo_a() to be finished, but that is unacceptable.
[Bug #17220] [Feature #17134] [Feature #17187]
We need stop worker threads in getaddrinfo_a() before fork().
This change adds a hook before fork() that cancel all outstanding requests
and wait for all ongoing requests. Then, it waits for all worker
threads to be finished.
Fixes [Bug #17220]
Receiving UnixSocket works fine if you don't provide a mode, and
I think it is reasonable to expect that you should not provide
a mode if klass.for_fd would not accept a mode.
Fixes [Bug #11778]
Before, Socket.getaddrinfo was using a blocking getaddrinfo(3) call.
That didn't allow to wrap it into Timeout.timeout or interrupt the thread in any way.
Combined with the default 10 sec resolv timeout on many Unix systems, this can
have a very noticeable effect on production Ruby apps being not
resilient to DNS outages and timing out name resolution, and being unable to fail fast even
with Timeout.timeout.
Since we already have support for getaddrinfo_a(3), the async version
of getaddrinfo, we should be able to make Socket.getaddrinfo leverage that
when getaddrinfo_a version is available in the system (hence #ifdef
HAVE_GETADDRINFO_A).
Related tickets:
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16476https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16381https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/14997