For TCP sockets, SO_REUSEADDR relaxes the rules for binding addresses.
gVisor/netstack already supported a behavior similar to SO_REUSEADDR, but did
not allow disabling it. This change brings the SO_REUSEADDR behavior closer to
the behavior implemented by Linux and adds a new SO_REUSEADDR disabled
behavior. Like Linux, SO_REUSEADDR is now disabled by default.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 317984380
On UDP sockets, SO_REUSEADDR allows multiple sockets to bind to the same
address, but only delivers packets to the most recently bound socket. This
differs from the behavior of SO_REUSEADDR on TCP sockets. SO_REUSEADDR for TCP
sockets will likely need an almost completely independent implementation.
SO_REUSEADDR has some odd interactions with the similar SO_REUSEPORT. These
interactions are tested fairly extensively and all but one particularly odd
one (that honestly seems like a bug) behave the same on gVisor and Linux.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 315844832
And Type* over Type *. This is basically a whitespace only change.
gVisor code already prefers left-alignment of pointers and references, but
clang-format formats for consistency with the majority of a file, and some
files leaned the wrong way. This is a one-time pass to make us completely
conforming.
Autogenerated with:
$ find . \( -name "*.cc" -or -name "*.c" -or -name "*.h" \) \
| xargs clang-format -i -style="{BasedOnStyle: Google, \
DerivePointerAlignment: false, PointerAlignment: Left}"
PiperOrigin-RevId: 291972421