Mailing-List: contact cygwin-developers-help AT sourceware DOT cygnus DOT com; run by ezmlm List-Subscribe: List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: , Sender: cygwin-developers-owner AT sources DOT redhat DOT com Delivered-To: mailing list cygwin-developers AT sources DOT redhat DOT com Date: 15 Nov 2001 16:21:56 -0500 Message-ID: <20011115212156.5563.qmail@lizard.curl.com> From: Jonathan Kamens To: cygwin-developers AT cygwin DOT com Subject: TCP connections can occasionally fail because of a winsock bug Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="Multipart_Thu_Nov_15_16:21:56_2001" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit --Multipart_Thu_Nov_15_16:21:56_2001 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII If you run "ssh date" over and over again with the current openssh package from Cygwin installed, it will occasionally fail. You're more likely to get it to happen if you run a bunch of loops, e.g.: HOST= while ssh $HOST date > /dev/null; do true; done & while ssh $HOST date > /dev/null; do true; done & while ssh $HOST date > /dev/null; do true; done & while ssh $HOST date > /dev/null; do true; done & while ssh $HOST date > /dev/null; do true; done & while ssh $HOST date > /dev/null; do true; done & while ssh $HOST date > /dev/null; do true; done & while ssh $HOST date > /dev/null; do true; done & Eventually, all the loops will exit because they'll all encounter a failure. This will happen more quickly on SMP machines, but it'll eventually happen on uniprocessor machines too (although you may need to run more loops concurrently to make it happen). I've dug deeply enough into this to determine that I believe the problem is caused by a bug in winsock. I can get the problem to manifest itself completely independently from Cygwin. See the full description in the attached program, which one of my coworkers with an MSDN subscription is going to forward to Microsoft to see what they have to say about it. This problem is in no way unique to ssh. Any program which uses connect() to connect to remote hosts could occasionally fail. Note, furthermore, that the problem still occurs if the client program doesn't bind() the socket before the connect() -- the only reason I do the bind() in the sample program below is to make it possible to print out the local port number after a failure. I don't think there's anything that Cygwin can do about this. I can't imagine the disgustingness that would ensue if we attempted to code a workaround for this failure. Yech. I'm just sending this message to cygwin-developers as a heads-up so that if anybody encounters any mysterious TCP connection failures with Cygwin in the future, you'll know that there's a possibility that the failures have nothing to do with Cygwin. The reason why this started happening in ssh when it wasn't happening before is this change which was checked into the OpenSSH source tree on August 6: - markus AT cvs DOT openbsd DOT org 2001/07/25 14:35:18 [readconf.c ssh.1 ssh.c sshconnect.c] cleanup connect(); connection_attempts 4 -> 1; from eivind AT freebsd DOT org That is, before August 6, ssh would attempt to connect four times by default before giving up; after August 6, it only attempts to connect once. We should probably do something in the Cygwin ssh package to work around the problem; I'll send a separate message to cygwin-apps about that. Jonathan Kamens --Multipart_Thu_Nov_15_16:21:56_2001 Content-Type: text/plain; name="doecho.c"; charset=US-ASCII Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit /* This program illustrates a bug in the Windows winsock layer. This bug manifests itself both on Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 2000. The bug is that the winsock layer is apparently willing to assign a local port number to a socket which is actually already in use, such that when the program later tries to connect() the socket to a remote port, the connection fails with WSAEADDRINUSE. When you run the program, it will keep creating and closing socket connections over and over again. You will notice in the output that once it gets WSAEADDRINUSE for a particular local port, it is never given that port again by winsock; apparently, winsock keeps track *after the fact* of which local ports are in use, but doesn't notice before the fact. Eventually, bind will fail rather than connect, with WSAENOBUFS rather than WSAEADDRINUSE, and then the program will exit. If you run it again immediately after it exits, you will notice that it ends up using many of the ports which it was previously avoiding using. So, apparently, once winsock decides that a port is in use, it stops using it in that process even when it becomes available again. It could be argued that that's a second bug, in addition to the first bug that it assigns an in-use port in the first place. */ /* With Visual Studio, compile this program as "cl doecho.c ws2_32.lib". With Cygwin, compile this program with "gcc -mno-cygwin -mwindows doecho.c -lws2_32" if you want a native Windows version or "gcc doecho.c -lws32_32" for a Cygwin version. Both the native Windows and Cygwin versions illustrate the bug. With Linux, compile the program with "gcc doecho.c". You can then run it essentially forever and it will never print any errors, thus illustrating that there is a bug in winsock that isn't in Linux. */ /* Run the program with two arguments -- an IP address in dotted quad notation, and a port number. Separately from this program, you need to run a listener on the specified address and port. All the listener should do is accept and close connections. Something like this Perl script: use Socket; ($port = shift) || die; socket(ACCEPTOR, AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0) || die; $iaddr = INADDR_ANY; $sockaddr = sockaddr_in($port, $iaddr); setsockopt(ACCEPTOR, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, pack("l", 1)); bind(ACCEPTOR, $sockaddr) || die; listen(ACCEPTOR, SOMAXCONN) || die; while (accept(CLIENT, ACCEPTOR)) { close(CLIENT); } */ #ifndef WIN32 #ifdef _MSC_VER #define WIN32 #endif #endif #include #include #include #ifdef WIN32 #include #else #include #include #endif #ifndef WIN32 #define wsaperror perror #else void wsaperror(char *); #endif main(int argc, char *argv[]) { #ifdef WIN32 WSADATA wsaData; #endif int succeeded = 0; struct sockaddr_in addr = {0}; int i; char *endptr = NULL; if (argc != 3) { fprintf(stderr, "Must specify IP address and port arguments\n"); exit(1); } addr.sin_family = AF_INET; if ((addr.sin_addr.s_addr = inet_addr(argv[1])) == INADDR_NONE) { fprintf(stderr, "First argument must be IP address\n"); exit(1); } addr.sin_port = strtol(argv[2], &endptr, 10); if (! (*argv[2] && endptr && ! *endptr)) { fprintf(stderr, "Second argument must be port number\n"); exit(1); } addr.sin_port = htons(addr.sin_port); #ifdef WIN32 if (WSAStartup(MAKEWORD(2, 2), &wsaData) != 0) { wsaperror("WSAStartup"); exit(1); } #endif while (1) { int s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0); struct sockaddr_in local_addr = {0}; #ifdef WIN32 int name_len = sizeof(local_addr); #else socklen_t name_len = sizeof(local_addr); #endif if (s < 0) { wsaperror("socket"); break; } i = 1; if (setsockopt(s, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, (char *) &i, sizeof(i)) < 0) { wsaperror("setsockopt"); break; } local_addr.sin_family = AF_INET; local_addr.sin_addr.s_addr = INADDR_ANY; if (bind(s, (struct sockaddr *) &local_addr, sizeof(local_addr)) < 0) { wsaperror("bind"); break; } if (getsockname(s, (struct sockaddr *) &local_addr, &name_len) < 0) { wsaperror("getsockname after bind"); break; } if (connect(s, (struct sockaddr *) &addr, sizeof(addr)) < 0) { fprintf(stderr, "Local port failed: %d\n", ntohs(local_addr.sin_port)); wsaperror("connect"); continue; } succeeded++; if (getsockname(s, (struct sockaddr *) &local_addr, &name_len) < 0) { wsaperror("getsockname"); break; } if (send(s, "foo\n", 4, 0) < 0) { wsaperror("send"); break; } /* shutdown(s, 2); */ #ifdef WIN32 closesocket(s); #else close(s); #endif fprintf(stderr, "%d\n", ntohs(local_addr.sin_port)); fflush(stdout); } fprintf(stderr, "%d connections succeeded\n", succeeded); #ifdef WIN32 WSACleanup(); #endif exit(1); } #ifdef WIN32 void wsaperror(char *str) { int err = WSAGetLastError(); char *errstr; switch (err) { case WSAEADDRINUSE: errstr = "WSAEADDRINUSE"; break; case WSAENOBUFS: errstr = "WSAENOBUFS"; break; default: errstr = "Unknown error"; break; } fprintf(stderr, "%s: Error %d (%s)\n", str, err, errstr); } #endif --Multipart_Thu_Nov_15_16:21:56_2001--