The point of calling sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX) is to allocate big enough bitmap so that subsequent call to virCommandMassCloseGetFDsDir() can just set the bit instead of expanding memory (this code runs in a forked off child and thus using async-signal-unsafe functions like malloc() is a bit tricky). But on some systems the limit for opened FDs is virtually non-existent (typically macOS Ventura started reporting EINVAL). But with both glibc and musl using malloc() after fork() is safe. And with sufficiently new glib too, as it's using malloc() with newer releases instead of their own allocator. Therefore, pick a sufficiently large value (glibc falls back to 256, [1], so 1024 should be good enough) to fall back to and make the error non-fatal. 1: https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=blob;f=sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/getdtsz.c;h=4c5a6208067d2f9eaaac6dba652702fb4af9b7e3;hb=HEAD Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@xxxxxxxxxx> --- src/util/vircommand.c | 8 +++----- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/util/vircommand.c b/src/util/vircommand.c index c0aab85c53..e48f361114 100644 --- a/src/util/vircommand.c +++ b/src/util/vircommand.c @@ -493,7 +493,7 @@ virCommandMassCloseGetFDsDir(virBitmap *fds, return -1; } - ignore_value(virBitmapSetBit(fds, fd)); + virBitmapSetBitExpand(fds, fd); } if (rc < 0) @@ -537,10 +537,8 @@ virCommandMassCloseFrom(virCommand *cmd, * Therefore we can safely allocate memory here (and transitively call * opendir/readdir) without a deadlock. */ - if (openmax < 0) { - virReportSystemError(errno, "%s", _("sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX) failed")); - return -1; - } + if (openmax <= 0) + openmax = 1024; fds = virBitmapNew(openmax); -- 2.44.2