Commit 11016134 authored by monty@narttu.mysql.fi's avatar monty@narttu.mysql.fi

Better fix for connect timeout problem.

parent 9277579c
......@@ -121,14 +121,15 @@ static int connect2(my_socket s, const struct sockaddr *name, uint namelen,
#if defined(__WIN__) || defined(OS2)
return connect(s, (struct sockaddr*) name, namelen);
#else
int flags, res, s_err, result=0;
int flags, res, s_err;
SOCKOPT_OPTLEN_TYPE s_err_size = sizeof(uint);
fd_set sfds;
struct timeval tv;
time_t start_time, now_time;
/* If they passed us a timeout of zero, we should behave
* exactly like the normal connect() call does.
/*
If they passed us a timeout of zero, we should behave
exactly like the normal connect() call does.
*/
if (timeout == 0)
......@@ -150,30 +151,31 @@ static int connect2(my_socket s, const struct sockaddr *name, uint namelen,
if (res == 0) /* Connected quickly! */
return(0);
/* Otherwise, our connection is "in progress." We can use
* the select() call to wait up to a specified period of time
* for the connection to suceed. If select() returns 0
* (after waiting howevermany seconds), our socket never became
* writable (host is probably unreachable.) Otherwise, if
* select() returns 1, then one of two conditions exist:
*
* 1. An error occured. We use getsockopt() to check for this.
* 2. The connection was set up sucessfully: getsockopt() will
* return 0 as an error.
*
* Thanks goes to Andrew Gierth <andrew@erlenstar.demon.co.uk>
* who posted this method of timing out a connect() in
* comp.unix.programmer on August 15th, 1997.
/*
Otherwise, our connection is "in progress." We can use
the select() call to wait up to a specified period of time
for the connection to suceed. If select() returns 0
(after waiting howevermany seconds), our socket never became
writable (host is probably unreachable.) Otherwise, if
select() returns 1, then one of two conditions exist:
1. An error occured. We use getsockopt() to check for this.
2. The connection was set up sucessfully: getsockopt() will
return 0 as an error.
Thanks goes to Andrew Gierth <andrew@erlenstar.demon.co.uk>
who posted this method of timing out a connect() in
comp.unix.programmer on August 15th, 1997.
*/
FD_ZERO(&sfds);
FD_SET(s, &sfds);
/*
* select could be interrupted by a signal, and if it is,
* the timeout should be adjusted and the select restarted
* to work around OSes that don't restart select and
* implementations of select that don't adjust tv upon
* failure to reflect the time remaining
select could be interrupted by a signal, and if it is,
the timeout should be adjusted and the select restarted
to work around OSes that don't restart select and
implementations of select that don't adjust tv upon
failure to reflect the time remaining
*/
start_time = time(NULL);
for (;;)
......@@ -181,21 +183,24 @@ static int connect2(my_socket s, const struct sockaddr *name, uint namelen,
tv.tv_sec = (long) timeout;
tv.tv_usec = 0;
#if defined(HPUX) && defined(THREAD)
if ((result = select(s+1, NULL, (int*) &sfds, NULL, &tv)) >= 0)
if ((res = select(s+1, NULL, (int*) &sfds, NULL, &tv)) > 0)
break;
#else
if ((result = select(s+1, NULL, &sfds, NULL, &tv)) >= 0)
if ((res = select(s+1, NULL, &sfds, NULL, &tv)) > 0)
break;
#endif
if (res == 0) /* timeout */
return -1;
now_time=time(NULL);
timeout-= (uint) (now_time - start_time);
if (errno != EINTR || (int) timeout <= 0)
return -1;
}
/* select() returned something more interesting than zero, let's
* see if we have any errors. If the next two statements pass,
* we've got an open socket!
/*
select() returned something more interesting than zero, let's
see if we have any errors. If the next two statements pass,
we've got an open socket!
*/
s_err=0;
......@@ -207,10 +212,8 @@ static int connect2(my_socket s, const struct sockaddr *name, uint namelen,
errno = s_err;
return(-1); /* but return an error... */
}
if (res && result > 0)
result=res=0; // We did it in select() !!!
return (0); /* ok */
return((res) ? res : result); /* It's all good! */
#endif
}
......
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