Previously this code used the tcpip error space. Since it is no longer part of
netstack, it can use the sentry's error space (except for a few cases where
there is still some shared code. This reduces the number of error space
conversions required for hot Unix socket operations.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 218541611
Change-Id: I3d13047006a8245b5dfda73364d37b8a453784bb
This allows us to release messages in the queue when all users close.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 218033550
Change-Id: I2f6e87650fced87a3977e3b74c64775c7b885c1b
This queue only has a single user, so there is no need for it to use an
interface. Merging it into the same package as its sole user allows us to avoid
a circular dependency.
This simplifies the code and should slightly improve performance.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 217595889
Change-Id: Iabbd5164240b935f79933618c61581bc8dcd2822
Currently, in the face of FileMem fragmentation and a large sendmsg or
recvmsg call, host sockets may pass > 1024 iovecs to the host, which
will immediately cause the host to return EMSGSIZE.
When we detect this case, use a single intermediate buffer to pass to
the kernel, copying to/from the src/dst buffer.
To avoid creating unbounded intermediate buffers, enforce message size
checks and truncation w.r.t. the send buffer size. The same
functionality is added to netstack unix sockets for feature parity.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 216590198
Change-Id: I719a32e71c7b1098d5097f35e6daf7dd5190eff7
Previously, processes which used file-system Unix Domain Sockets could not be
checkpoint-ed in runsc because the sockets were saved with their inode
numbers which do not necessarily remain the same upon restore. Now,
the sockets are also saved with their paths so that the new inodes
can be determined for the sockets based on these paths after restoring.
Tests for cases with UDS use are included. Test cleanup to come.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 208268781
Change-Id: Ieaa5d5d9a64914ca105cae199fd8492710b1d7ec
We have been unnecessarily creating too many savable types implicitly.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 206334201
Change-Id: Idc5a3a14bfb7ee125c4f2bb2b1c53164e46f29a8
This should fix the socket Dirent memory leak.
fs.NewFile takes a new reference. It should hold the *only* reference.
DecRef that socket Dirent.
Before the globalDirentMap was introduced, a mis-refcounted Dirent
would be garbage collected when all references to it were gone. For
socket Dirents, this meant that they would be garbage collected when
the associated fs.Files disappeared.
After the globalDirentMap, Dirents *must* be reference-counted
correctly to be garbage collected, as Dirents remove themselves
from the global map when their refcount goes to -1 (see Dirent.destroy).
That removes the last pointer to that Dirent.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 196878973
Change-Id: Ic7afcd1de97c7101ccb13be5fc31de0fb50963f0