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ovs/lib/socket-util.c

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/*
* Copyright (c) 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 Nicira Networks.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at:
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
#include <config.h>
#include "socket-util.h"
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
poll-loop: Make wakeup logging more portable and easier to understand. Until now, when the poll_loop module's log level was turned up to "debug", it would log a backtrace of the call stack for the event that caused poll() to wake up in poll_block(). This was pretty useful from time to time to find out why ovs-vswitchd was using more CPU than expected, because we could find out what was causing it to wake up. But there were some issues. One is simply that the backtrace was printed as a series of hexadecimal numbers, so GDB or another debugger was needed to translate it into human-readable format. Compiler optimizations meant that even the human-readable backtrace wasn't, in my experience, as helpful as it could have been. And, of course, one needed to have the binary to interpret the backtrace. When the backtrace couldn't be interpreted or wasn't meaningful, there was essentially nothing to fall back on. This commit changes the way that "debug" logging for poll_block() wakeups works. Instead of logging a backtrace, it logs the source code file name and line number of the call to a poll_loop function, using __FILE__ and __LINE__. This is by itself much more meaningful than a sequence of hexadecimal numbers, since no additional interpretation is necessary. It can be useful even if the Open vSwitch version is only approximately known. In addition to the file and line, this commit adds, for wakeups caused by file descriptors, information about the file descriptor itself: what kind of file it is (regular file, directory, socket, etc.), the name of the file (on Linux only), and the local and remote endpoints for socket file descriptors. Here are a few examples of the new output format: 932-ms timeout at ../ofproto/in-band.c:507 [POLLIN] on fd 20 (192.168.0.20:35388<->192.168.0.3:6633) at ../lib/stream-fd.c:149 [POLLIN] on fd 7 (FIFO pipe:[48049]) at ../lib/fatal-signal.c:168
2011-05-13 13:06:49 -07:00
#include <net/if.h>
#include <netdb.h>
#include <poll.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/resource.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/un.h>
#include <unistd.h>
poll-loop: Make wakeup logging more portable and easier to understand. Until now, when the poll_loop module's log level was turned up to "debug", it would log a backtrace of the call stack for the event that caused poll() to wake up in poll_block(). This was pretty useful from time to time to find out why ovs-vswitchd was using more CPU than expected, because we could find out what was causing it to wake up. But there were some issues. One is simply that the backtrace was printed as a series of hexadecimal numbers, so GDB or another debugger was needed to translate it into human-readable format. Compiler optimizations meant that even the human-readable backtrace wasn't, in my experience, as helpful as it could have been. And, of course, one needed to have the binary to interpret the backtrace. When the backtrace couldn't be interpreted or wasn't meaningful, there was essentially nothing to fall back on. This commit changes the way that "debug" logging for poll_block() wakeups works. Instead of logging a backtrace, it logs the source code file name and line number of the call to a poll_loop function, using __FILE__ and __LINE__. This is by itself much more meaningful than a sequence of hexadecimal numbers, since no additional interpretation is necessary. It can be useful even if the Open vSwitch version is only approximately known. In addition to the file and line, this commit adds, for wakeups caused by file descriptors, information about the file descriptor itself: what kind of file it is (regular file, directory, socket, etc.), the name of the file (on Linux only), and the local and remote endpoints for socket file descriptors. Here are a few examples of the new output format: 932-ms timeout at ../ofproto/in-band.c:507 [POLLIN] on fd 20 (192.168.0.20:35388<->192.168.0.3:6633) at ../lib/stream-fd.c:149 [POLLIN] on fd 7 (FIFO pipe:[48049]) at ../lib/fatal-signal.c:168
2011-05-13 13:06:49 -07:00
#include "dynamic-string.h"
#include "fatal-signal.h"
poll-loop: Make wakeup logging more portable and easier to understand. Until now, when the poll_loop module's log level was turned up to "debug", it would log a backtrace of the call stack for the event that caused poll() to wake up in poll_block(). This was pretty useful from time to time to find out why ovs-vswitchd was using more CPU than expected, because we could find out what was causing it to wake up. But there were some issues. One is simply that the backtrace was printed as a series of hexadecimal numbers, so GDB or another debugger was needed to translate it into human-readable format. Compiler optimizations meant that even the human-readable backtrace wasn't, in my experience, as helpful as it could have been. And, of course, one needed to have the binary to interpret the backtrace. When the backtrace couldn't be interpreted or wasn't meaningful, there was essentially nothing to fall back on. This commit changes the way that "debug" logging for poll_block() wakeups works. Instead of logging a backtrace, it logs the source code file name and line number of the call to a poll_loop function, using __FILE__ and __LINE__. This is by itself much more meaningful than a sequence of hexadecimal numbers, since no additional interpretation is necessary. It can be useful even if the Open vSwitch version is only approximately known. In addition to the file and line, this commit adds, for wakeups caused by file descriptors, information about the file descriptor itself: what kind of file it is (regular file, directory, socket, etc.), the name of the file (on Linux only), and the local and remote endpoints for socket file descriptors. Here are a few examples of the new output format: 932-ms timeout at ../ofproto/in-band.c:507 [POLLIN] on fd 20 (192.168.0.20:35388<->192.168.0.3:6633) at ../lib/stream-fd.c:149 [POLLIN] on fd 7 (FIFO pipe:[48049]) at ../lib/fatal-signal.c:168
2011-05-13 13:06:49 -07:00
#include "packets.h"
#include "util.h"
#include "vlog.h"
poll-loop: Make wakeup logging more portable and easier to understand. Until now, when the poll_loop module's log level was turned up to "debug", it would log a backtrace of the call stack for the event that caused poll() to wake up in poll_block(). This was pretty useful from time to time to find out why ovs-vswitchd was using more CPU than expected, because we could find out what was causing it to wake up. But there were some issues. One is simply that the backtrace was printed as a series of hexadecimal numbers, so GDB or another debugger was needed to translate it into human-readable format. Compiler optimizations meant that even the human-readable backtrace wasn't, in my experience, as helpful as it could have been. And, of course, one needed to have the binary to interpret the backtrace. When the backtrace couldn't be interpreted or wasn't meaningful, there was essentially nothing to fall back on. This commit changes the way that "debug" logging for poll_block() wakeups works. Instead of logging a backtrace, it logs the source code file name and line number of the call to a poll_loop function, using __FILE__ and __LINE__. This is by itself much more meaningful than a sequence of hexadecimal numbers, since no additional interpretation is necessary. It can be useful even if the Open vSwitch version is only approximately known. In addition to the file and line, this commit adds, for wakeups caused by file descriptors, information about the file descriptor itself: what kind of file it is (regular file, directory, socket, etc.), the name of the file (on Linux only), and the local and remote endpoints for socket file descriptors. Here are a few examples of the new output format: 932-ms timeout at ../ofproto/in-band.c:507 [POLLIN] on fd 20 (192.168.0.20:35388<->192.168.0.3:6633) at ../lib/stream-fd.c:149 [POLLIN] on fd 7 (FIFO pipe:[48049]) at ../lib/fatal-signal.c:168
2011-05-13 13:06:49 -07:00
#if AF_PACKET && __linux__
#include <linux/if_packet.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_NETLINK
#include "netlink-protocol.h"
#include "netlink-socket.h"
#endif
VLOG_DEFINE_THIS_MODULE(socket_util);
/* #ifdefs make it a pain to maintain code: you have to try to build both ways.
* Thus, this file compiles all of the code regardless of the target, by
* writing "if (LINUX)" instead of "#ifdef __linux__". */
#ifdef __linux__
#define LINUX 1
#else
#define LINUX 0
#endif
#ifndef O_DIRECTORY
#define O_DIRECTORY 0
#endif
/* Sets 'fd' to non-blocking mode. Returns 0 if successful, otherwise a
* positive errno value. */
int
set_nonblocking(int fd)
{
int flags = fcntl(fd, F_GETFL, 0);
if (flags != -1) {
if (fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, flags | O_NONBLOCK) != -1) {
return 0;
} else {
VLOG_ERR("fcntl(F_SETFL) failed: %s", strerror(errno));
return errno;
}
} else {
VLOG_ERR("fcntl(F_GETFL) failed: %s", strerror(errno));
return errno;
}
}
static bool
rlim_is_finite(rlim_t limit)
{
if (limit == RLIM_INFINITY) {
return false;
}
#ifdef RLIM_SAVED_CUR /* FreeBSD 8.0 lacks RLIM_SAVED_CUR. */
if (limit == RLIM_SAVED_CUR) {
return false;
}
#endif
#ifdef RLIM_SAVED_MAX /* FreeBSD 8.0 lacks RLIM_SAVED_MAX. */
if (limit == RLIM_SAVED_MAX) {
return false;
}
#endif
return true;
}
/* Returns the maximum valid FD value, plus 1. */
int
get_max_fds(void)
{
static int max_fds = -1;
if (max_fds < 0) {
struct rlimit r;
if (!getrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE, &r) && rlim_is_finite(r.rlim_cur)) {
max_fds = r.rlim_cur;
} else {
VLOG_WARN("failed to obtain fd limit, defaulting to 1024");
max_fds = 1024;
}
}
return max_fds;
}
/* Translates 'host_name', which must be a string representation of an IP
* address, into a numeric IP address in '*addr'. Returns 0 if successful,
* otherwise a positive errno value. */
int
lookup_ip(const char *host_name, struct in_addr *addr)
{
if (!inet_aton(host_name, addr)) {
static struct vlog_rate_limit rl = VLOG_RATE_LIMIT_INIT(1, 5);
VLOG_ERR_RL(&rl, "\"%s\" is not a valid IP address", host_name);
return ENOENT;
}
return 0;
}
/* Translates 'host_name', which must be a string representation of an IPv6
* address, into a numeric IPv6 address in '*addr'. Returns 0 if successful,
* otherwise a positive errno value. */
int
lookup_ipv6(const char *host_name, struct in6_addr *addr)
{
if (inet_pton(AF_INET6, host_name, addr) != 1) {
static struct vlog_rate_limit rl = VLOG_RATE_LIMIT_INIT(1, 5);
VLOG_ERR_RL(&rl, "\"%s\" is not a valid IPv6 address", host_name);
return ENOENT;
}
return 0;
}
/* Returns the error condition associated with socket 'fd' and resets the
* socket's error status. */
int
get_socket_error(int fd)
{
int error;
socklen_t len = sizeof(error);
if (getsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ERROR, &error, &len) < 0) {
static struct vlog_rate_limit rl = VLOG_RATE_LIMIT_INIT(5, 10);
error = errno;
VLOG_ERR_RL(&rl, "getsockopt(SO_ERROR): %s", strerror(error));
}
return error;
}
int
check_connection_completion(int fd)
{
struct pollfd pfd;
int retval;
pfd.fd = fd;
pfd.events = POLLOUT;
do {
retval = poll(&pfd, 1, 0);
} while (retval < 0 && errno == EINTR);
if (retval == 1) {
return get_socket_error(fd);
} else if (retval < 0) {
static struct vlog_rate_limit rl = VLOG_RATE_LIMIT_INIT(5, 10);
VLOG_ERR_RL(&rl, "poll: %s", strerror(errno));
return errno;
} else {
return EAGAIN;
}
}
/* Drain all the data currently in the receive queue of a datagram socket (and
* possibly additional data). There is no way to know how many packets are in
* the receive queue, but we do know that the total number of bytes queued does
* not exceed the receive buffer size, so we pull packets until none are left
* or we've read that many bytes. */
int
drain_rcvbuf(int fd)
{
socklen_t rcvbuf_len;
size_t rcvbuf;
rcvbuf_len = sizeof rcvbuf;
if (getsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVBUF, &rcvbuf, &rcvbuf_len) < 0) {
static struct vlog_rate_limit rl = VLOG_RATE_LIMIT_INIT(5, 10);
VLOG_ERR_RL(&rl, "getsockopt(SO_RCVBUF) failed: %s", strerror(errno));
return errno;
}
while (rcvbuf > 0) {
/* In Linux, specifying MSG_TRUNC in the flags argument causes the
* datagram length to be returned, even if that is longer than the
* buffer provided. Thus, we can use a 1-byte buffer to discard the
* incoming datagram and still be able to account how many bytes were
* removed from the receive buffer.
*
* On other Unix-like OSes, MSG_TRUNC has no effect in the flags
* argument. */
char buffer[LINUX ? 1 : 2048];
ssize_t n_bytes = recv(fd, buffer, sizeof buffer,
MSG_TRUNC | MSG_DONTWAIT);
if (n_bytes <= 0 || n_bytes >= rcvbuf) {
break;
}
rcvbuf -= n_bytes;
}
return 0;
}
/* Reads and discards up to 'n' datagrams from 'fd', stopping as soon as no
* more data can be immediately read. ('fd' should therefore be in
* non-blocking mode.)*/
void
drain_fd(int fd, size_t n_packets)
{
for (; n_packets > 0; n_packets--) {
/* 'buffer' only needs to be 1 byte long in most circumstances. This
* size is defensive against the possibility that we someday want to
* use a Linux tap device without TUN_NO_PI, in which case a buffer
* smaller than sizeof(struct tun_pi) will give EINVAL on read. */
char buffer[128];
if (read(fd, buffer, sizeof buffer) <= 0) {
break;
}
}
}
/* Stores in '*un' a sockaddr_un that refers to file 'name'. Stores in
* '*un_len' the size of the sockaddr_un. */
static void
make_sockaddr_un__(const char *name, struct sockaddr_un *un, socklen_t *un_len)
{
un->sun_family = AF_UNIX;
ovs_strzcpy(un->sun_path, name, sizeof un->sun_path);
*un_len = (offsetof(struct sockaddr_un, sun_path)
+ strlen (un->sun_path) + 1);
}
/* Stores in '*un' a sockaddr_un that refers to file 'name'. Stores in
* '*un_len' the size of the sockaddr_un.
*
* Returns 0 on success, otherwise a positive errno value. On success,
* '*dirfdp' is either -1 or a nonnegative file descriptor that the caller
* should close after using '*un' to bind or connect. On failure, '*dirfdp' is
* -1. */
static int
make_sockaddr_un(const char *name, struct sockaddr_un *un, socklen_t *un_len,
int *dirfdp)
{
enum { MAX_UN_LEN = sizeof un->sun_path - 1 };
*dirfdp = -1;
if (strlen(name) > MAX_UN_LEN) {
static struct vlog_rate_limit rl = VLOG_RATE_LIMIT_INIT(1, 1);
if (LINUX) {
/* 'name' is too long to fit in a sockaddr_un, but we have a
* workaround for that on Linux: shorten it by opening a file
* descriptor for the directory part of the name and indirecting
* through /proc/self/fd/<dirfd>/<basename>. */
char *dir, *base;
char *short_name;
int dirfd;
dir = dir_name(name);
base = base_name(name);
dirfd = open(dir, O_DIRECTORY | O_RDONLY);
if (dirfd < 0) {
free(base);
free(dir);
return errno;
}
short_name = xasprintf("/proc/self/fd/%d/%s", dirfd, base);
free(dir);
free(base);
if (strlen(short_name) <= MAX_UN_LEN) {
make_sockaddr_un__(short_name, un, un_len);
free(short_name);
*dirfdp = dirfd;
return 0;
}
free(short_name);
close(dirfd);
VLOG_WARN_RL(&rl, "Unix socket name %s is longer than maximum "
"%d bytes (even shortened)", name, MAX_UN_LEN);
} else {
/* 'name' is too long and we have no workaround. */
VLOG_WARN_RL(&rl, "Unix socket name %s is longer than maximum "
"%d bytes", name, MAX_UN_LEN);
}
return ENAMETOOLONG;
} else {
make_sockaddr_un__(name, un, un_len);
return 0;
}
}
/* Binds Unix domain socket 'fd' to a file with permissions 0700. */
static int
bind_unix_socket(int fd, struct sockaddr *sun, socklen_t sun_len)
{
/* According to _Unix Network Programming_, umask should affect bind(). */
mode_t old_umask = umask(0077);
int error = bind(fd, sun, sun_len) ? errno : 0;
umask(old_umask);
return error;
}
/* Creates a Unix domain socket in the given 'style' (either SOCK_DGRAM or
* SOCK_STREAM) that is bound to '*bind_path' (if 'bind_path' is non-null) and
* connected to '*connect_path' (if 'connect_path' is non-null). If 'nonblock'
* is true, the socket is made non-blocking. If 'passcred' is true, the socket
* is configured to receive SCM_CREDENTIALS control messages.
*
* Returns the socket's fd if successful, otherwise a negative errno value. */
int
make_unix_socket(int style, bool nonblock, bool passcred OVS_UNUSED,
const char *bind_path, const char *connect_path)
{
int error;
int fd;
fd = socket(PF_UNIX, style, 0);
if (fd < 0) {
return -errno;
}
/* Set nonblocking mode right away, if we want it. This prevents blocking
* in connect(), if connect_path != NULL. (In turn, that's a corner case:
* it will only happen if style is SOCK_STREAM or SOCK_SEQPACKET, and only
* if a backlog of un-accepted connections has built up in the kernel.) */
if (nonblock) {
int flags = fcntl(fd, F_GETFL, 0);
if (flags == -1) {
error = errno;
goto error;
}
if (fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, flags | O_NONBLOCK) == -1) {
error = errno;
goto error;
}
}
if (bind_path) {
struct sockaddr_un un;
socklen_t un_len;
int dirfd;
if (unlink(bind_path) && errno != ENOENT) {
VLOG_WARN("unlinking \"%s\": %s\n", bind_path, strerror(errno));
}
fatal_signal_add_file_to_unlink(bind_path);
error = make_sockaddr_un(bind_path, &un, &un_len, &dirfd);
if (!error) {
error = bind_unix_socket(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &un, un_len);
}
if (dirfd >= 0) {
close(dirfd);
}
if (error) {
goto error;
}
}
if (connect_path) {
struct sockaddr_un un;
socklen_t un_len;
int dirfd;
error = make_sockaddr_un(connect_path, &un, &un_len, &dirfd);
if (!error
&& connect(fd, (struct sockaddr*) &un, un_len)
&& errno != EINPROGRESS) {
error = errno;
}
if (dirfd >= 0) {
close(dirfd);
}
if (error) {
goto error;
}
}
#ifdef SCM_CREDENTIALS
if (passcred) {
int enable = 1;
if (setsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_PASSCRED, &enable, sizeof(enable))) {
error = errno;
goto error;
}
}
#endif
return fd;
error:
if (error == EAGAIN) {
error = EPROTO;
}
if (bind_path) {
fatal_signal_remove_file_to_unlink(bind_path);
}
close(fd);
return -error;
}
int
get_unix_name_len(socklen_t sun_len)
{
return (sun_len >= offsetof(struct sockaddr_un, sun_path)
? sun_len - offsetof(struct sockaddr_un, sun_path)
: 0);
}
uint32_t
guess_netmask(uint32_t ip)
{
ip = ntohl(ip);
return ((ip >> 31) == 0 ? htonl(0xff000000) /* Class A */
: (ip >> 30) == 2 ? htonl(0xffff0000) /* Class B */
: (ip >> 29) == 6 ? htonl(0xffffff00) /* Class C */
: htonl(0)); /* ??? */
}
/* Parses 'target', which should be a string in the format "<host>[:<port>]".
* <host> is required. If 'default_port' is nonzero then <port> is optional
* and defaults to 'default_port'.
*
* On success, returns true and stores the parsed remote address into '*sinp'.
* On failure, logs an error, stores zeros into '*sinp', and returns false. */
bool
inet_parse_active(const char *target_, uint16_t default_port,
struct sockaddr_in *sinp)
{
char *target = xstrdup(target_);
char *save_ptr = NULL;
const char *host_name;
const char *port_string;
bool ok = false;
/* Defaults. */
sinp->sin_family = AF_INET;
sinp->sin_port = htons(default_port);
/* Tokenize. */
host_name = strtok_r(target, ":", &save_ptr);
port_string = strtok_r(NULL, ":", &save_ptr);
if (!host_name) {
VLOG_ERR("%s: bad peer name format", target_);
goto exit;
}
/* Look up IP, port. */
if (lookup_ip(host_name, &sinp->sin_addr)) {
goto exit;
}
if (port_string && atoi(port_string)) {
sinp->sin_port = htons(atoi(port_string));
} else if (!default_port) {
VLOG_ERR("%s: port number must be specified", target_);
goto exit;
}
ok = true;
exit:
if (!ok) {
memset(sinp, 0, sizeof *sinp);
}
free(target);
return ok;
}
/* Opens a non-blocking IPv4 socket of the specified 'style' and connects to
* 'target', which should be a string in the format "<host>[:<port>]". <host>
* is required. If 'default_port' is nonzero then <port> is optional and
* defaults to 'default_port'.
*
* 'style' should be SOCK_STREAM (for TCP) or SOCK_DGRAM (for UDP).
*
* On success, returns 0 (indicating connection complete) or EAGAIN (indicating
* connection in progress), in which case the new file descriptor is stored
* into '*fdp'. On failure, returns a positive errno value other than EAGAIN
* and stores -1 into '*fdp'.
*
* If 'sinp' is non-null, then on success the target address is stored into
* '*sinp'. */
int
inet_open_active(int style, const char *target, uint16_t default_port,
struct sockaddr_in *sinp, int *fdp)
{
struct sockaddr_in sin;
int fd = -1;
int error;
/* Parse. */
if (!inet_parse_active(target, default_port, &sin)) {
error = EAFNOSUPPORT;
goto exit;
}
/* Create non-blocking socket. */
fd = socket(AF_INET, style, 0);
if (fd < 0) {
VLOG_ERR("%s: socket: %s", target, strerror(errno));
error = errno;
goto exit;
}
error = set_nonblocking(fd);
if (error) {
goto exit_close;
}
/* Connect. */
error = connect(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &sin, sizeof sin) == 0 ? 0 : errno;
if (error == EINPROGRESS) {
error = EAGAIN;
} else if (error && error != EAGAIN) {
goto exit_close;
}
/* Success: error is 0 or EAGAIN. */
goto exit;
exit_close:
close(fd);
exit:
if (!error || error == EAGAIN) {
if (sinp) {
*sinp = sin;
}
*fdp = fd;
} else {
*fdp = -1;
}
return error;
}
/* Opens a non-blocking IPv4 socket of the specified 'style', binds to
* 'target', and listens for incoming connections. 'target' should be a string
* in the format "[<port>][:<ip>]":
*
* - If 'default_port' is -1, then <port> is required. Otherwise, if
* <port> is omitted, then 'default_port' is used instead.
*
* - If <port> (or 'default_port', if used) is 0, then no port is bound
* and the TCP/IP stack will select a port.
*
* - If <ip> is omitted then the IP address is wildcarded.
*
* 'style' should be SOCK_STREAM (for TCP) or SOCK_DGRAM (for UDP).
*
* For TCP, the socket will have SO_REUSEADDR turned on.
*
* On success, returns a non-negative file descriptor. On failure, returns a
* negative errno value.
*
* If 'sinp' is non-null, then on success the bound address is stored into
* '*sinp'. */
int
inet_open_passive(int style, const char *target_, int default_port,
struct sockaddr_in *sinp)
{
char *target = xstrdup(target_);
char *string_ptr = target;
struct sockaddr_in sin;
const char *host_name;
const char *port_string;
int fd = 0, error, port;
unsigned int yes = 1;
/* Address defaults. */
memset(&sin, 0, sizeof sin);
sin.sin_family = AF_INET;
sin.sin_addr.s_addr = htonl(INADDR_ANY);
sin.sin_port = htons(default_port);
/* Parse optional port number. */
port_string = strsep(&string_ptr, ":");
if (port_string && str_to_int(port_string, 10, &port)) {
sin.sin_port = htons(port);
} else if (default_port < 0) {
VLOG_ERR("%s: port number must be specified", target_);
error = EAFNOSUPPORT;
goto exit;
}
/* Parse optional bind IP. */
host_name = strsep(&string_ptr, ":");
if (host_name && host_name[0]) {
error = lookup_ip(host_name, &sin.sin_addr);
if (error) {
goto exit;
}
}
/* Create non-blocking socket, set SO_REUSEADDR. */
fd = socket(AF_INET, style, 0);
if (fd < 0) {
error = errno;
VLOG_ERR("%s: socket: %s", target_, strerror(error));
goto exit;
}
error = set_nonblocking(fd);
if (error) {
goto exit_close;
}
if (style == SOCK_STREAM
&& setsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, &yes, sizeof yes) < 0) {
error = errno;
VLOG_ERR("%s: setsockopt(SO_REUSEADDR): %s", target_, strerror(error));
goto exit_close;
}
/* Bind. */
if (bind(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &sin, sizeof sin) < 0) {
error = errno;
VLOG_ERR("%s: bind: %s", target_, strerror(error));
goto exit_close;
}
/* Listen. */
if (listen(fd, 10) < 0) {
error = errno;
VLOG_ERR("%s: listen: %s", target_, strerror(error));
goto exit_close;
}
if (sinp) {
socklen_t sin_len = sizeof sin;
if (getsockname(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &sin, &sin_len) < 0){
error = errno;
VLOG_ERR("%s: getsockname: %s", target_, strerror(error));
goto exit_close;
}
if (sin.sin_family != AF_INET || sin_len != sizeof sin) {
VLOG_ERR("%s: getsockname: invalid socket name", target_);
goto exit_close;
}
*sinp = sin;
}
error = 0;
goto exit;
exit_close:
close(fd);
exit:
free(target);
return error ? -error : fd;
}
/* Returns a readable and writable fd for /dev/null, if successful, otherwise
* a negative errno value. The caller must not close the returned fd (because
* the same fd will be handed out to subsequent callers). */
int
get_null_fd(void)
{
static int null_fd = -1;
if (null_fd < 0) {
null_fd = open("/dev/null", O_RDWR);
if (null_fd < 0) {
int error = errno;
VLOG_ERR("could not open /dev/null: %s", strerror(error));
return -error;
}
}
return null_fd;
}
int
read_fully(int fd, void *p_, size_t size, size_t *bytes_read)
{
uint8_t *p = p_;
*bytes_read = 0;
while (size > 0) {
ssize_t retval = read(fd, p, size);
if (retval > 0) {
*bytes_read += retval;
size -= retval;
p += retval;
} else if (retval == 0) {
return EOF;
} else if (errno != EINTR) {
return errno;
}
}
return 0;
}
int
write_fully(int fd, const void *p_, size_t size, size_t *bytes_written)
{
const uint8_t *p = p_;
*bytes_written = 0;
while (size > 0) {
ssize_t retval = write(fd, p, size);
if (retval > 0) {
*bytes_written += retval;
size -= retval;
p += retval;
} else if (retval == 0) {
VLOG_WARN("write returned 0");
return EPROTO;
} else if (errno != EINTR) {
return errno;
}
}
return 0;
}
/* Given file name 'file_name', fsyncs the directory in which it is contained.
* Returns 0 if successful, otherwise a positive errno value. */
int
fsync_parent_dir(const char *file_name)
{
int error = 0;
char *dir;
int fd;
dir = dir_name(file_name);
fd = open(dir, O_RDONLY);
if (fd >= 0) {
if (fsync(fd)) {
if (errno == EINVAL || errno == EROFS) {
/* This directory does not support synchronization. Not
* really an error. */
} else {
error = errno;
VLOG_ERR("%s: fsync failed (%s)", dir, strerror(error));
}
}
close(fd);
} else {
error = errno;
VLOG_ERR("%s: open failed (%s)", dir, strerror(error));
}
free(dir);
return error;
}
/* Obtains the modification time of the file named 'file_name' to the greatest
* supported precision. If successful, stores the mtime in '*mtime' and
* returns 0. On error, returns a positive errno value and stores zeros in
* '*mtime'. */
int
get_mtime(const char *file_name, struct timespec *mtime)
{
struct stat s;
if (!stat(file_name, &s)) {
mtime->tv_sec = s.st_mtime;
#if HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_MTIM_TV_NSEC
mtime->tv_nsec = s.st_mtim.tv_nsec;
#elif HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_MTIMENSEC
mtime->tv_nsec = s.st_mtimensec;
#else
mtime->tv_nsec = 0;
#endif
return 0;
} else {
mtime->tv_sec = mtime->tv_nsec = 0;
return errno;
}
}
void
xpipe(int fds[2])
{
if (pipe(fds)) {
VLOG_FATAL("failed to create pipe (%s)", strerror(errno));
}
}
poll-loop: Make wakeup logging more portable and easier to understand. Until now, when the poll_loop module's log level was turned up to "debug", it would log a backtrace of the call stack for the event that caused poll() to wake up in poll_block(). This was pretty useful from time to time to find out why ovs-vswitchd was using more CPU than expected, because we could find out what was causing it to wake up. But there were some issues. One is simply that the backtrace was printed as a series of hexadecimal numbers, so GDB or another debugger was needed to translate it into human-readable format. Compiler optimizations meant that even the human-readable backtrace wasn't, in my experience, as helpful as it could have been. And, of course, one needed to have the binary to interpret the backtrace. When the backtrace couldn't be interpreted or wasn't meaningful, there was essentially nothing to fall back on. This commit changes the way that "debug" logging for poll_block() wakeups works. Instead of logging a backtrace, it logs the source code file name and line number of the call to a poll_loop function, using __FILE__ and __LINE__. This is by itself much more meaningful than a sequence of hexadecimal numbers, since no additional interpretation is necessary. It can be useful even if the Open vSwitch version is only approximately known. In addition to the file and line, this commit adds, for wakeups caused by file descriptors, information about the file descriptor itself: what kind of file it is (regular file, directory, socket, etc.), the name of the file (on Linux only), and the local and remote endpoints for socket file descriptors. Here are a few examples of the new output format: 932-ms timeout at ../ofproto/in-band.c:507 [POLLIN] on fd 20 (192.168.0.20:35388<->192.168.0.3:6633) at ../lib/stream-fd.c:149 [POLLIN] on fd 7 (FIFO pipe:[48049]) at ../lib/fatal-signal.c:168
2011-05-13 13:06:49 -07:00
static int
getsockopt_int(int fd, int level, int optname, int *valuep)
{
socklen_t len = sizeof *valuep;
return (getsockopt(fd, level, optname, valuep, &len) ? errno
: len == sizeof *valuep ? 0
: EINVAL);
}
static void
describe_sockaddr(struct ds *string, int fd,
int (*getaddr)(int, struct sockaddr *, socklen_t *))
{
struct sockaddr_storage ss;
socklen_t len = sizeof ss;
if (!getaddr(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &ss, &len)) {
if (ss.ss_family == AF_INET) {
struct sockaddr_in sin;
memcpy(&sin, &ss, sizeof sin);
ds_put_format(string, IP_FMT":%"PRIu16,
IP_ARGS(&sin.sin_addr.s_addr), ntohs(sin.sin_port));
} else if (ss.ss_family == AF_UNIX) {
struct sockaddr_un sun;
const char *null;
size_t maxlen;
memcpy(&sun, &ss, sizeof sun);
maxlen = len - offsetof(struct sockaddr_un, sun_path);
null = memchr(sun.sun_path, '\0', maxlen);
ds_put_buffer(string, sun.sun_path,
null ? null - sun.sun_path : maxlen);
}
#ifdef HAVE_NETLINK
else if (ss.ss_family == AF_NETLINK) {
int protocol;
/* SO_PROTOCOL was introduced in 2.6.32. Support it regardless of the version
* of the Linux kernel headers in use at build time. */
#ifndef SO_PROTOCOL
#define SO_PROTOCOL 38
#endif
if (!getsockopt_int(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_PROTOCOL, &protocol)) {
switch (protocol) {
case NETLINK_ROUTE:
ds_put_cstr(string, "NETLINK_ROUTE");
break;
case NETLINK_GENERIC:
ds_put_cstr(string, "NETLINK_GENERIC");
break;
default:
ds_put_format(string, "AF_NETLINK family %d", protocol);
break;
}
} else {
ds_put_cstr(string, "AF_NETLINK");
}
}
#endif
#if AF_PACKET && __linux__
else if (ss.ss_family == AF_PACKET) {
struct sockaddr_ll sll;
memcpy(&sll, &ss, sizeof sll);
ds_put_cstr(string, "AF_PACKET");
if (sll.sll_ifindex) {
char name[IFNAMSIZ];
if (if_indextoname(sll.sll_ifindex, name)) {
ds_put_format(string, "(%s)", name);
} else {
ds_put_format(string, "(ifindex=%d)", sll.sll_ifindex);
}
}
if (sll.sll_protocol) {
ds_put_format(string, "(protocol=0x%"PRIu16")",
ntohs(sll.sll_protocol));
}
}
#endif
else if (ss.ss_family == AF_UNSPEC) {
ds_put_cstr(string, "AF_UNSPEC");
} else {
ds_put_format(string, "AF_%d", (int) ss.ss_family);
}
}
}
#ifdef __linux__
static void
put_fd_filename(struct ds *string, int fd)
{
char buf[1024];
char *linkname;
int n;
linkname = xasprintf("/proc/self/fd/%d", fd);
n = readlink(linkname, buf, sizeof buf);
if (n > 0) {
ds_put_char(string, ' ');
ds_put_buffer(string, buf, n);
if (n > sizeof buf) {
ds_put_cstr(string, "...");
}
}
free(linkname);
}
#endif
/* Returns a malloc()'d string describing 'fd', for use in logging. */
char *
describe_fd(int fd)
{
struct ds string;
struct stat s;
ds_init(&string);
if (fstat(fd, &s)) {
ds_put_format(&string, "fstat failed (%s)", strerror(errno));
} else if (S_ISSOCK(s.st_mode)) {
describe_sockaddr(&string, fd, getsockname);
ds_put_cstr(&string, "<->");
describe_sockaddr(&string, fd, getpeername);
} else {
ds_put_cstr(&string, (isatty(fd) ? "tty"
: S_ISDIR(s.st_mode) ? "directory"
: S_ISCHR(s.st_mode) ? "character device"
: S_ISBLK(s.st_mode) ? "block device"
: S_ISREG(s.st_mode) ? "file"
: S_ISFIFO(s.st_mode) ? "FIFO"
: S_ISLNK(s.st_mode) ? "symbolic link"
: "unknown"));
#ifdef __linux__
put_fd_filename(&string, fd);
#endif
}
return ds_steal_cstr(&string);
}