Hi, thank you for the new version. This compiles on Windows. (I didn't comfirmed that it works correctly..)
# ȁ (I inserted this garbage to force my mailer to send in utf-8). At Fri, 29 Mar 2019 06:52:41 +0000, "Nagaura, Ryohei" <nagaura.ryo...@jp.fujitsu.com> wrote in <EDA4195584F5064680D8130B1CA91C4540F81D@G01JPEXMBYT04> > Hi all. > > I found my mistake in backend patch. > > I modified from > + port->keepalives_count = count; > to > + port->tcp_user_timeout = timeout; > in line 113. I hadn't noticed^^; It look good, but still I have some comments. + Specifies the number of milliseconds that transmitted data may + remain unacknowledged before a connection is forcefully closed. Hmm. "forcefully" means powerful or assertive, in Japanese "力強く " or "強硬に". "forcibly" means acoomplished through force, in Japanesee "無理やり" or "強引に". Actually the latter is used in man 7 tcp. http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/tcp.7.html > time in milliseconds that transmitted data may remain > unacknowledged before TCP will forcibly close the > corresponding connection and return ETIMEDOUT to the +#tcp_user_timeout = 0 # TCP_USER_TIMEOUT, in milliseconds; The comment protrudes left. +# - TCP USER TIMEOUT - Just above in the sample file, there are lines like this: > # - TCP Keepalives - > # see "man 7 tcp" for details > > #tcp_keepalives_idle = 0 # TCP_KEEPIDLE, in seconds; Couldn't we have the new variable in the section, like this? -# - TCP Keepalives - +# - TCP timeout settings - # see "man 7 tcp" for details .. #tcp_keepalives_count = 0 # TCP_KEEPCNT; # 0 selects the system default +#tcp_user_timeout = 0 # TCP_USER_TIMEOUT, in milliseconds; # 0 selects the system default regars. -- Kyotaro Horiguchi NTT Open Source Software Center