When conducting a stress test on some server code I wrote, I noticed that even though I am calling close() on the descriptor handle (and verifying the result for errors) that the descriptor is not released which eventually causes accept() to return an error "Too many open files".
Now I understand that this is because of the ulimit, what I don't understand is why I am hitting it if I call close() after each synchronous accept/read/send cycle?
I am validating that the descriptors are in fact there by running a watch with lsof:
ctsvr 9733 mike 1017u sock 0,7 0t0 3323579 can't identify protocol ctsvr 9733 mike 1018u sock 0,7 0t0 3323581 can't identify protocol ...
And sure enough there are about 1000 or so of them. Further more, checking with netstat I can see that there are no hanging TCP states (no WAIT or STOPPED or anything).
If I simply do a single connect/send/recv from the client, I do notice that the socket does stay listed in lsof; so this is not even a load issue.
The server is running on an Ubuntu Linux 64-bit machine.
Any thoughts?
shutdown
and/or consuming all data in the socket before closing the socket handles? Do you have hangingread
s orwrite
s when you callclose
?netstat --inet
will tell you the state of the TCP sessions. If they're "established", you haven't calledclose()
.