// Copyright 2013 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // This file implements sysSocket and accept for platforms that do not // provide a fast path for setting SetNonblock and CloseOnExec. // +build darwin dragonfly nacl netbsd openbsd solaris package net import "syscall" // Wrapper around the socket system call that marks the returned file // descriptor as nonblocking and close-on-exec. func sysSocket(family, sotype, proto int) (int, error) { // See ../syscall/exec_unix.go for description of ForkLock. syscall.ForkLock.RLock() s, err := syscall.Socket(family, sotype, proto) if err == nil { syscall.CloseOnExec(s) } syscall.ForkLock.RUnlock() if err != nil { return -1, err } if err = syscall.SetNonblock(s, true); err != nil { syscall.Close(s) return -1, err } return s, nil } // Wrapper around the accept system call that marks the returned file // descriptor as nonblocking and close-on-exec. func accept(s int) (int, syscall.Sockaddr, error) { // See ../syscall/exec_unix.go for description of ForkLock. // It is probably okay to hold the lock across syscall.Accept // because we have put fd.sysfd into non-blocking mode. // However, a call to the File method will put it back into // blocking mode. We can't take that risk, so no use of ForkLock here. ns, sa, err := syscall.Accept(s) if err == nil { syscall.CloseOnExec(ns) } if err != nil { return -1, nil, err } if err = syscall.SetNonblock(ns, true); err != nil { syscall.Close(ns) return -1, nil, err } return ns, sa, nil }