Our application has a feature to actively connect to the customers' internal factory network and send a message when inspection events occur. The customer enters the IP address and port number of their machine and application into our software.
I'm using a TClientSocket in blocking mode and have provided callback functions for the OnConnect
and OnError
events. Assuming the abovementioned feature has been activated, when the application starts I call the following code in a separate thread:
// Attempt active connection
try
m_socketClient.Active := True;
except
end;
// Later...
// If `OnConnect` and socket is connected...send some data!
// If `OnError`...call `m_socketClient.Active := True;` again
When IP + port are valid, the feature works well. But if not, after several thousand errors (and many hours or even days) eventually Windows socket error 10055 (WSAENOBUFS) occurs and the application crashes.
Various articles such as this one from ServerFramework and this one from Microsoft talk about exhausting the Windows non-paged pool
and mention (1) actively managing the number outstanding asynchronous send operations and (2) releasing the data buffers that were used for the I/O operations.
My question is how to achieve this and is three-fold:
A) Am I doing something wrong that memory is being leaked? For example, is there some missing cleanup code in the OnError
handler?
B) How do you monitor I/O buffers to see if they are being exhausted? I've used Process Explorer
to confirm my application is the cause of the leak, but ideally I'd need some programmatic way of measuring this.
C) Apart from restarting the application, is there a way to ask Windows to clear out or release I/O operation data buffers?
Code samples in Delphi, C/C++, C# fine.
TClientSocket
has been deprecated since Delphi 6 which is now sixteen and half a year ago. I'd not be surprised if those components don't clean up handles properly. Other Delphi components that were very poorly written (like the shell components) had also been deprecated and were removed later.OnError
event, you're supposed to callm_socketClient.Socket.Close()
. Am busy completing my investigations and will knock up an answer based on that.TClientSocket
may be deprecated, but it is a fairly rock-solid component. I've never had any memory/resource issues with it, and I've used it for a very long time. But I've never tried settingActive := True
in theOnError
event. I alwaysClose()
the failed socket in that event, and then let the thread decide when to open the socket again. If an error occurs when opening a connection, it is best to wait a few seconds before trying to open the connection again. If an error occurs during reading/writing I/O, then re-connect right away.TClientSocket
is excellent...I just neglected to callClose()
on the socket after an error. Do you have to callClose()
every time you stop using the socket (such as when the server disconnects)? I'm sure the Embarcadero documentation states this all clearly somewhere, but I didn't spot it. We didn't spot this but in development because its an advanced feature generally tested on a connected system (or only for a few hours on a non-connected system). Shame to discover at the customer...but at least I'm ready to release a fix :o)