From: "Michael Kerrisk" <m.kerrisk@gmx.net>
To: "Alan Cox" <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk>
Cc: <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: Weirdness with AF_INET listen() backlog [2.4.18]
Date: Tue, 30 Jul 2002 17:31:20 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <008a01c237de$29d6b700$0200a8c0@MichaelKerrisk> (raw)
Hello Alan (et al.),
Thanks for the quick replies.
>> I had expected that if a server creates a listening socket, but does not
>> accept() the incoming connections, then after the (possibly
fudge-factored)
>> Is this all expected behaviour? If so, is there a way of getting Linux
to
>> behave more like other implementations here? (As a wild shot I tried
setting
>> /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_syncookies to 0, but this made no apparent
>> difference.)
>
>The world of tcp synflooding changed how stacks handle this sort of
>stuff forever. Welcome to the new world order 8)
Yes, I was gathering that it was synflooding that led to these changes.
>You will get connections completing, they will time out.
What causes the delay of a few seconds following each of the connect()s
in excess of backlog?
> If you expect
>the server to say something you'll see the timeout there instead of
>seeing it on the connect.
Sorry, I don't quite understand this last sentence! Can you elaborate?
>Since a timeout on the data can happen in the real world Im sure your
>code already correctly handles this case ;)
You mean on a send() or write(), right?
Cheers
Michael
next reply other threads:[~2002-07-30 15:28 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 8+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2002-07-30 15:31 Michael Kerrisk [this message]
2002-07-30 17:18 ` Weirdness with AF_INET listen() backlog [2.4.18] Alan Cox
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2002-07-30 16:59 Michael Kerrisk
2002-07-30 16:13 Michael Kerrisk
2002-07-30 14:35 Michael Kerrisk
2002-07-30 15:01 ` Richard B. Johnson
2002-07-30 15:03 ` kuznet
2002-07-30 15:59 ` Alan Cox
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