EOF from net_disconnect(fd)

Aki Tuomi aki.tuomi at dovecot.fi
Fri Sep 8 10:21:42 EEST 2017


If you are using unix socket, you could use socat to see what's going on
there. It might require little setting up though.

Aki


On 08.09.2017 10:16, Steffan Cline wrote:
> I'm not the originator. I'm just trying to do some maintenance on the code to make it work for CentOS 7. 
>
> I'll check out those two. 
>
> Any ideas on how to check exactly what's sent via the socket? If the EOF is sent, I know to dig further into the daemon code. 
>
>
> Thanks,
> Steffan Cline
> steffan at hldns.com
> 602-793-0014
>
>> On Sep 7, 2017, at 11:43 PM, Aki Tuomi <aki.tuomi at dovecot.fi> wrote:
>>
>> Hi!
>>
>> Nice to hear you are developing this, I'll add it to our wiki if it's
>> not there.
>>
>> Please don't use net_transmit, it's going away. You should use ostream
>> and istream instead.
>>
>> Aki
>>
>>
>>> On 08.09.2017 09:29, Steffan Cline wrote:
>>> I’m working on an OS project from github. There are two parts:
>>>
>>> Dovecot plugin - https://github.com/st3fan/dovecot-xaps-plugin
>>>
>>> Daemon written in Go - https://github.com/st3fan/dovecot-xaps-daemon
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> # dovecot --version
>>>
>>> 2.2.10
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Both parts worked fine on CentOS 6 but I recently rebuilt them both for CentOS 7 and have run into some errors.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The plugin sends a notification over a socket to the daemon. The daemon then processes the request and returns a message to the plugin.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The plugin reads the response then closes the socket and at that point, I’m running into an issue. 
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The daemon reports the following: read unix /tmp/xapsd.sock->@: read: connection reset by peer
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In reading the Go language docs, it says that it will throw the first error it hits before the EOF from the socket. This led me to think that perhaps the plugin was not sending an EOF when closing the socket.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I tried to write an EOF to the socket before the close but no change. Everything works between the plugin and daemon right up until the socket close.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Is there a way to monitor the stream through the socket so I can see if the plugin is indeed sending the EOF? Knowing that lets me know if I need to chase down the issue in the Go daemon code.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I’m no pro with C but I tried. The snippet from the plugin follows:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> alarm(1);                  
>>>
>>> {
>>>
>>> if (net_transmit(fd, str_data(req), str_len(req)) < 0) {
>>>
>>>  i_error("write(%s) failed: %m", socket_path);
>>>
>>>  ret = -1;
>>>
>>> } else {
>>>
>>>  char res[1024];
>>>
>>>  ret = net_receive(fd, res, sizeof(res)-1);
>>>
>>>  if (ret < 0) {
>>>
>>>                i_error("read(%s) failed: %m", socket_path);
>>>
>>>  } else {
>>>
>>>                res[ret] = '\0';
>>>
>>>                if (strncmp(res, "OK ", 3) == 0) {
>>>
>>>                  ret = 0;
>>>
>>>                }
>>>
>>>  }
>>>
>>> }
>>>
>>> }
>>>
>>> alarm(0);
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> char stx[1];
>>>
>>> stx[0]=(char) 4;
>>>
>>> //stx[1]='\0';
>>>
>>> if ( net_transmit(fd, stx, sizeof(stx) ) < 0 ) {
>>>
>>>  i_error("Error writing EOF");
>>>
>>> }
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> //string_t *testEOF= t_str_new(2);
>>>
>>> //str_append(testEOF, (char*) 4);
>>>
>>> //if ( net_transmit(fd, str_data(testEOF), str_len(testEOF) ) < 0 ) {
>>>
>>> //      i_error("Error writing EOF");
>>>
>>> //    }
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> //i_close_fd(&fd);
>>>
>>> net_disconnect(fd);
>>>
>>> fd=-1;
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Thank you,
>>>
>>> Steffan Cline
>>>
>>> 602-793-0014
>>>
>>>



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