8

Is there a way to find out the current number of connection attempts awaiting accept() on a TCP socket on Linux?

I suppose I could count the number of accepts() that succeed before hitting EWOULDBLOCK on each event loop, but I'm using a high-level library (Python/Twisted) that hides these details. Also it's using epoll() rather than an old-fashioned select()/poll() loop.

I am trying to get a general sense of the load on a high-performance non-blocking network server, and I think this number would be a good characterization. Load average/CPU statistics aren't helping much, because I'm doing a lot of disk I/O in concurrent worker processes. Most of these stats on Linux count time spent waiting on disk I/O as part of the load (which it isn't, for my particular server architecture). Latency between accept() and response isn't a good measure either, since each request usually gets processed very quickly once the server gets around to it. I'm just trying to find out how close I am to reaching a breaking point where the server can't dispatch requests faster than they are coming in.

3 Answers 3

3

Assuming SYN cookies aren't enabled (or haven't been triggered due to volume), I think you should be able to get an approximate figure just by examing the output of netstat and seeing how many connections targeting your port are in a SYN_RECV state.

Here's a little Python hack that will get that figure for you for a given listening port:

!/usr/bin/python

import sys

STATE_SYN_RECV = '03'

def count_state(find_port, find_state):
    count = 0
    with open('/proc/net/tcp', 'r') as f:
        first = True
        for line in f:
            if first:
                first = False
                continue
            entries = line.split()
            local_addr, local_port = entries[1].split(':')
            local_port = int(local_port, 16)
            if local_port != find_port:
                continue
            state = entries[3]
            if state == find_state:
                count += 1
    return count


if __name__ == '__main__':
    if len(sys.argv) != 2:
        print "Usage: count_syn_recv.py <port>"
        sys.exit(1)

    port = int(sys.argv[1])

    count = count_state(port, STATE_SYN_RECV)
    print "syn_recv_count=%d" % count
5
  • 1
    That won't do what he is asking for. Connections in the listen(2) backlog queue are complete (SYN-SYN/ACK-ACK), not in the SYN_RECV state. There is another queue for those.
    – user207421
    Nov 14, 2012 at 3:49
  • 1
    Once the listen backlog is filled, they are still listed as SYN_RECV on my Linux server - At least, that's what I found after writing a little server that calls listen() but never calls accept() - If I call listen(fd, 3) and open 6 connections to it, I'll see 3 in the ESTABLISHED state and 3 in SYN_RECV
    – gareth
    Nov 14, 2012 at 4:47
  • 1
    What he is asking for is the number of connections currently in the backlog queue, i.e. the ones that would be immediately returned by accept() without blocking: in your test case, the 3 ESTABLISHED ones.
    – user207421
    Nov 14, 2012 at 8:12
  • Ah yep.. good point.. Is there really no other value lurking somewhere that would help? Thanks for taking the time to comment
    – gareth
    Nov 14, 2012 at 17:24
  • voting up since even though it didn't do what the original question wanted, it did do what I wanted :) Thanks!
    – Rob Fagen
    Jul 7, 2014 at 22:59
3

You can look at the unacked value in the output of ss, for example when examining port 80:

ss -lti '( sport = :http )'

The output could look like this:

State  Recv-Q  Send-Q  Local Address:Port  Peer Address:Port   
LISTEN    123      0              :::http               :::*
    rto:0.99 mss:536 cwnd:10 unacked:123

For a detailed proof (with kernel sources and all) that unacked is indeed the TCP connection backlog, see the detailed article "Apache TCP Backlog" by Ryan Frantz. Note that you may need a pretty new version of ss for the unacked output to be included. At least mine (iproute2-ss131122) does not provide it.

2
  • There is a typo on the link, this is the correct one:
    – rags
    Aug 5, 2020 at 6:36
  • @rags: Fixed it. Thank you!
    – tanius
    Aug 5, 2020 at 20:11
2

There is no function for this in the BSD Sockets API that I have ever seen. I question whether it is really a useful measure of load. You are assuming no connection pooling by clients, for one thing, and you are also assuming that latency is entirely manifested as pending connections. But as you can't get the number anyway the point is moot.

1

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.