Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> writes: > >> That is, does sysconf actually work on such a system (or does it need a >> similar run-time fallback)? And either way, we should try falling back >> to OPEN_MAX rather than 1 if we have it. > > Interesting. > >> As far as the warning, I am not sure I see a point. The user does not >> have any useful recourse, and git should continue to operate as normal. >> Having every single git invocation print "by the way, RLIMIT_NOFILE does >> not work on your system" seems like it would get annoying. > > Very true. That makes the resulting function look like this: > > > -------------------------------- 8< ------------------------------ > > static unsigned int get_max_fd_limit(void) > { > #ifdef RLIMIT_NOFILE > struct rlimit lim; > > if (!getrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE, &lim)) > return lim.rlim_cur; > #endif > > #if defined(_SC_OPEN_MAX) > { > long sc_open_max = sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX); > if (0 < sc_open_max) > return sc_open_max; > } err, here we need #endif /* defined(_SC_OPEN_MAX) */ to truly implement the structure "try all the available functions, and then fall back to OPEN_MAX". > > #if defined(OPEN_MAX) > return OPEN_MAX; > #else > return 1; /* see the caller ;-) */ > #endif > } > > -------------------------------- >8 ------------------------------ > > > But the sysconf part makes me wonder; here is what we see in > http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/sysconf.html > > If name is an invalid value, sysconf() shall return -1 and set errno > to indicate the error. If the variable corresponding to name is > described in <limits.h> as a maximum or minimum value and the > variable has no limit, sysconf() shall return -1 without changing > the value of errno. Note that indefinite limits do not imply > infinite limits; see <limits.h>. > > For a broken system (like RLIMIT_NOFILE defined for the compiler, > but the actual call returns a bogus error), the compiler may see the > _SC_OPEN_MAX defined, while sysconf() may say "I've never heard of > such a name" and return -1, or the system, whether broken or not, > may want to say "Unlimited" and return -1. The caller takes > anything unreasonable as a positive value capped to 25 or something, > so there isn't a real harm if we returned a bogus value from here, > but I am not sure what the safe default behaviour of this function > should be to help such a broken system while not harming systems > that are functioning correctly. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html