The fact
In the POSIX documentation, I can't see anything preventing the use of the SO_REUSEADDR
socket option with AF_UNIX
for UNIX Domain Sockets.
However, it invariably fails at bind
time if the socket node already exists, and seems to be ignored and seems it is required to unlink the socket node on the file‑system first prior to invoke bind
; in short, it does not reuse the address. There are plenty of threads on the web about this issue, and none with a solution.
The question
I won't insist, if it doesn't work, it doesn't work (seems to be the same at least on both BSD and Linux systems), and just have a question: is this normal behaviour or not? Is there any pointers suggesting it should be supported, or on the opposite, any pointers suggesting it should not? Or is this unspecified? Note the question is asked in the POSIX context, not in any particular platform context.
I welcome any POSIX reference on the matter.
Extra: a tiny snippet to not blindly unlink
who‑know‑what
I've seen some threads on the web, suggesting to unlink
any node of the expected name prior to bind
. I feel it's unsafe, and one should only unlink a node which is already a socket node in this case: ex. it's probably wrong, to unlink a text file named mysocket
to recreate a socket node of the same name in place. In this purpose, here is a tiny snippet:
/* Create the socket node
* ----------------------
* Note `SO_REUSEADDR` does not work with `AF_UNIX` sockets,
* so we will have to unlink the socket node if it already exists,
* before we bind. For safety, we won't unlink an already existing node
* which is not a socket node.
*/
status = stat (path, &st);
if (status == 0) {
/* A file already exists. Check if this file is a socket node.
* * If yes: unlink it.
* * If no: treat it as an error condition.
*/
if ((st.st_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFSOCK) {
status = unlink (path);
if (status != 0) {
perror ("Error unlinking the socket node");
exit (1);
}
}
else {
/* We won't unlink to create a socket in place of who-know-what.
* Note: don't use `perror` here, as `status == 0` (this is an
* error we've defined, not an error returned by a system-call).
*/
fprintf (stderr, "The path already exists and is not a socket node.\n");
exit (1);
}
}
else {
if (errno == ENOENT) {
/* No file of the same path: do nothing. */
}
else {
perror ("Error stating the socket node path");
exit (1);
}
}
/* … invoke `bind` here, which will create the socket node … */
connect()
. If that fails, then no service is listening on that socket so it can safely be deleted. Also I think that deleting a file which is not a socket should not happen automatically. That could be an important file!