On Fri, Jan 29, 2021 at 09:56:48AM -0800, Shoaib Rao wrote: > On 1/25/21 3:36 PM, Jakub Kicinski wrote: > > On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 15:06:37 +0000 Matthew Wilcox (Oracle) wrote: > > > From: Rao Shoaib <rao.shoaib@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > > > TCP sockets allow SIGURG to be sent to the process holding the other > > > end of the socket. Extend Unix sockets to have the same ability. > > > > > > The API is the same in that the sender uses sendmsg() with MSG_OOB to > > > raise SIGURG. Unix sockets behave in the same way as TCP sockets with > > > SO_OOBINLINE set. > > Noob question, if we only want to support the inline mode, why don't we > > require SO_OOBINLINE to have been called on @other? Wouldn't that > > provide more consistent behavior across address families? > > > > With the current implementation the receiver will also not see MSG_OOB > > set in msg->msg_flags, right? > > SO_OOBINLINE does not control the delivery of signal, It controls how > OOB Byte is delivered. It may not be obvious but this change does not > deliver any Byte, just a signal. So, as long as sendmsg flag contains > MSG_OOB, signal will be delivered just like it happens for TCP. I don't think that's the question Jakub is asking. As I understand it, if you send a MSG_OOB on a TCP socket and the receiver calls recvmsg(), it will see MSG_OOB set, even if SO_OOBINLINE is set. That wouldn't happen with Unix sockets. I'm OK with that difference in behaviour, because MSG_OOB on Unix sockets _is not_ for sending out of band data. It's just for sending an urgent signal. As you say, MSG_OOB does not require data to be sent for unix sockets (unlike TCP which always requires at least one byte), but one can choose to send data as part of a message which has MSG_OOB set. It won't be tagged in any special way. To Jakub's other question, we could require SO_OOBINLINE to be set. That'd provide another layer of insurance against applications being surprised by a SIGURG they weren't expecting. I don't know that it's really worth it though. One thing I wasn't clear about, and maybe you know, if we send a MSG_OOB, does this patch cause this part of the tcp(7) manpage to be true for unix sockets too? When out-of-band data is present, select(2) indicates the file descrip‐ tor as having an exceptional condition and poll (2) indicates a POLLPRI event.