Windows sockets have some strange behavior when it comes to WSAECONNREFUSED (which means backlog full or port not available, see https://stackoverflow.com/a/10308338/851737). If Windows detects one of these conditions, it retries (up to) two times with an interval of 0.5s. This means it takes at least 1 second to detect WSAECONNREFUSED on a socket connection attempt (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/175523/en-us).
Is there any way to speed up this detection without messing with the registry values? I need to simulate refusing socket connections in unittests. A workaround like simulating a refused connection with raw sockets would be acceptable, too.
Here is a simple Python script demonstrating the issue:
import errno
import socket
import time
PORT = 50123
def main():
s = socket.socket()
s.bind(('127.0.0.1', PORT))
s.listen(0)
client = socket.socket()
client.connect(('127.0.0.1', PORT))
client2 = socket.socket()
start = time.time()
try:
client2.connect(('127.0.0.1', PORT))
except socket.error as e:
assert e.errno == errno.WSAECONNREFUSED
print 'connection attempt took', time.time() - start
finally:
client2.close()
client.close()
s.close()
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()