I want to increase FD_SETSIZE macro value for my system. Is there any way to increase FD_SETSIZE so select will not fail
5 Answers
Per the standards, there is no way to increase FD_SETSIZE
. Some programs and libraries (libevent comes to mind) try to work around this by allocating additional space for the fd_set
object and passing values larger than FD_SETSIZE
to the FD_*
macros, but this is a very bad idea since robust implementations may perform bounds-checking on the argument and abort if it's out of range.
I have an alternate solution that should always work (even though it's not required to by the standards). Instead of a single fd_set
object, allocate an array of them large enough to hold the max fd you'll need, then use FD_SET(fd%FD_SETSIZE, &fds_array[fd/FD_SETSIZE])
etc. to access the set.
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6@dns: That is false documentation. :-) Please read pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/pselect.html. OK, joking aside, please explain what you think is "false" about my answer. May 14, 2013 at 14:15
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4as per microsoft themselves "Per the standards, there is no way to increase FD_SETSIZE" is false because and I'm quoting word for word from Microsoft themselves: "This value is used in constructing the fd_set structures used in select(). The default value in WINSOCK.H is 64. If an application is designed to be capable of working with more than 64 sockets, define the manifest FD_SETSIZE in every source file before including WINSOCK.H." please read support.microsoft.com/kb/111855– BrierMayAug 11, 2013 at 23:30
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3ok well then to fit in with the "standards" you can also increase it on Linux/unix/mac varients by simply changing #define __FD_SETSIZE 1024 the following 2 files /usr/include/bits/typesizes.h /usr/include/linux/posix_types.h nonethe less you stated that you cannot increase it and you can so either way the answer is false– BrierMayAug 13, 2013 at 17:37
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9That's also not standard. That's an implementation-specific hack. I agree that on many implementations you can make an implementations-specific hack of this form, but it's not correct per the standards. Aug 13, 2013 at 17:41
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7@AndrewHacking: When will people get tired of posting wrong comments on this? Yes, some implementations allow it. No, it is not not valid per the specification of the interface. The relevant text is... Sep 9, 2014 at 15:03
I also suggest using poll
if possible. And there exist several "event" processing libraries like libevent or libev (or the event abilities of Glib from GTK, or QtCore, etc) which should help you. There are also things like epoll. And your problem is related to C10k
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1yes. i think this is the ultimate answer. If one of yours monitored descriptor falls over 1024 under linux, either you have to HACK through fd_set structure ( and risk further problems anyway ), or to use poll what is ... better. Dec 15, 2013 at 21:11
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And you have to pray that every library you use does it correctly. The only working solution to live with 1024 handles or to 100% understand your programs code including all libraries and make sure "select" is never used.– LotharNov 24, 2019 at 15:14
It would be better (and easy) to replace with poll. Generally poll() is a simple drop-in replacement for select() and isn't limited by the 1024 of FD_SETSIZE...
fd_set fd_read;
int id = 42;
FD_ZERO(fd_read);
FD_SET(id, &fd_read);
struct timeval tv;
tv.tv_sec = 5;
tv.tv_usec = 0;
if (select(id + 1, &fd_read, NULL, NULL, &tv) != 1) {
// Error.
}
becomes:
struct pollfd pfd_read;
int id = 42;
int timeout = 5000;
pfd_read.fd = id;
pfd_read.events = POLLIN;
if (poll(&pfd_read, 1, timeout) != 1) {
// Error
}
You need to include poll.h for the pollfd structure.
If you need to write as well as read then set the events flag as POLLIN | POLLOUT.
In order to use a fd_set
larger than FD_SETSIZE, it is possible to define an extended one like this :
#include <sys/select.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#define EXT_FD_SETSIZE 2048
typedef struct
{
long __fds_bits[EXT_FD_SETSIZE / 8 / sizeof(long)];
} ext_fd_set;
int main()
{
ext_fd_set fd;
int s;
printf("FD_SETSIZE:%d sizeof(fd):%ld\n", EXT_FD_SETSIZE, sizeof(fd));
FD_ZERO(&fd);
while ( ((s=dup(0)) != -1) && (s < EXT_FD_SETSIZE) )
{
FD_SET(s, &fd);
}
printf("select:%d\n", select(EXT_FD_SETSIZE,(fd_set*)&fd, NULL, NULL, NULL));
return 0;
}
This prints :
FD_SETSIZE:2048 sizeof(fd):256
select:2045
In order to open more than 1024 filedescriptors, it is needed to increase the limit using for instance
ulimit -n 2048
.
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1This is potentially dangerous. Without entering in to the (valid, IMO) issue of standards compliance, there is a more obvious use case where this could fail, and that is when linking against a library compiled to use the system-defined FD_SETSIZE. Using
poll()
is the correct approach.– edamJun 14, 2016 at 13:44
Actually there IS a way to increase FD_SETSIZE
on Windows. It's defined in winsock.h
and per Microsoft themselves you can increase it by simply defining it BEFORE you include winsock.h
:
See Maximum Number of Sockets an Application Can Use (old link), or the more recent page Maximum Number of Sockets Supported.
I do it all the time and have had no problems. The largest value I have used was around 5000 for a server I was developing.
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4BSD and Windows allows FD_SETSIZE to be set. Not Linux where fd_set internal size is in fact set by __FD_SETSIZE that is hardcoded to 1024. For linux, it is better to use poll since slecet can't work for more than first 1024 descriptors. in fact it can appear to work on linux but will use bits outside allocated fd_set, what for sure will corrupt stack and cause crashes. That's why current answer is to allocate yourself more place on stack what is not very pretty. Dec 15, 2013 at 21:02
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1
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It's also mentioned here: learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock2/… (ctrl+f 'FD_SETSIZE')– TomJun 25, 2021 at 12:12
FD_SETSIZE
is a pretty dumb thing to do. 2048 concurrent connections (or rather, more than that) is well within the range whereepoll_wait
greatly outperforms bothselect
andpoll
simply because it doesn't need to copy 8 kilobytes of data every time and doesn't need to iterate over two thousand descriptors every time.