[PATCH] Cygwin: getdtablesize: always return OPEN_MAX_MAX
Ken Brown
kbrown@cornell.edu
Thu Jan 28 20:33:39 GMT 2021
On 1/28/2021 11:07 AM, Corinna Vinschen via Cygwin-patches wrote:
> On Jan 28 08:42, Ken Brown via Cygwin-patches wrote:
>> On 1/28/2021 5:20 AM, Corinna Vinschen via Cygwin-patches wrote:
>>> On Jan 27 21:51, Ken Brown via Cygwin-patches wrote:
>>>> According to the Linux man page for getdtablesize(3), the latter is
>>>> supposed to return "the maximum number of files a process can have
>>>> open, one more than the largest possible value for a file descriptor."
>>>> The constant OPEN_MAX_MAX is the only limit enforced by Cygwin, so we
>>>> now return that.
>>>>
>>>> Previously getdtablesize returned the current size of cygheap->fdtab,
>>>> Cygwin's internal file descriptor table. But this is a dynamically
>>>> growing table, and its current size does not reflect an actual limit
>>>> on the number of open files.
>>>>
>>>> With this change, gnulib now reports that getdtablesize and
>>>> fcntl(F_DUPFD) work on Cygwin. Packages like GNU tar that use the
>>>> corresponding gnulib modules will no longer use gnulib replacements on
>>>> Cygwin.
>>>> ---
>>>> winsup/cygwin/syscalls.cc | 2 +-
>>>> 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/winsup/cygwin/syscalls.cc b/winsup/cygwin/syscalls.cc
>>>> index 5da05b18a..1f16d54b9 100644
>>>> --- a/winsup/cygwin/syscalls.cc
>>>> +++ b/winsup/cygwin/syscalls.cc
>>>> @@ -2887,7 +2887,7 @@ setdtablesize (int size)
>>>> extern "C" int
>>>> getdtablesize ()
>>>> {
>>>> - return cygheap->fdtab.size;
>>>> + return OPEN_MAX_MAX;
>>>> }
>>>
>>> getdtablesize is used internally, too. After this change, the values
>>> returned by sysconf and getrlimit should be revisited as well.
>>
>> They will now return OPEN_MAX_MAX, as I think they should. The only
>> question in my mind is whether to simplify the code by removing the calls to
>> getdtablesize, something like this (untested):
>
> But then again, what happens with OPEN_MAX in limits.h? Linux removed
> it entirely. Given we have such a limit and it's not flexible as on
> Linux, should we go ahead, drop OPEN_MAX_MAX entirely and define
> OPEN_MAX as 3200?
Makes sense to me.
> One problem is that there are some applications in the wild which run
> loops up to either sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX) or OPEN_MAX to handle open
> descriptors. tcsh is one of them. It may slow done tcsh quite a bit
> if the loop runs to 3200 now every time.
I don't use tcsh. Is it easy to test this?
Ken
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