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net: do not use RLock around Accept

It might be non-blocking, but it also might be blocking.
Cannot take the chance, as Accept might block indefinitely
and make it impossible to acquire ForkLock exclusively
(during fork+exec).

Fixes #4737.

R=golang-dev, dave, iant, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7309050
This commit is contained in:
Russ Cox 2013-02-07 22:45:12 -05:00
parent 3c1dfb2b9a
commit 18441e8ade
3 changed files with 9 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -661,6 +661,9 @@ func (fd *netFD) dup() (f *os.File, err error) {
syscall.ForkLock.RUnlock()
// We want blocking mode for the new fd, hence the double negative.
// This also puts the old fd into blocking mode, meaning that
// I/O will block the thread instead of letting us use the epoll server.
// Everything will still work, just with more threads.
if err = syscall.SetNonblock(ns, false); err != nil {
return nil, &OpError{"setnonblock", fd.net, fd.laddr, err}
}

View File

@ -50,14 +50,14 @@ func accept(fd int) (int, syscall.Sockaddr, error) {
}
// See ../syscall/exec_unix.go for description of ForkLock.
// It is okay to hold the lock across syscall.Accept
// It is probably okay to hold the lock across syscall.Accept
// because we have put fd.sysfd into non-blocking mode.
syscall.ForkLock.RLock()
// However, a call to the File method will put it back into
// blocking mode. We can't take that risk, so no use of ForkLock here.
nfd, sa, err = syscall.Accept(fd)
if err == nil {
syscall.CloseOnExec(nfd)
}
syscall.ForkLock.RUnlock()
if err != nil {
return -1, nil, err
}

View File

@ -35,14 +35,14 @@ func sysSocket(f, t, p int) (int, error) {
// descriptor as nonblocking and close-on-exec.
func accept(fd int) (int, syscall.Sockaddr, error) {
// See ../syscall/exec_unix.go for description of ForkLock.
// It is okay to hold the lock across syscall.Accept
// It is probably okay to hold the lock across syscall.Accept
// because we have put fd.sysfd into non-blocking mode.
syscall.ForkLock.RLock()
// However, a call to the File method will put it back into
// blocking mode. We can't take that risk, so no use of ForkLock here.
nfd, sa, err := syscall.Accept(fd)
if err == nil {
syscall.CloseOnExec(nfd)
}
syscall.ForkLock.RUnlock()
if err != nil {
return -1, nil, err
}