oh, that's a good question - maybe I was on the wrong path. I need to investigate.
Rainer El mié., 29 abr. 2020 a las 13:45, Peter Viskup (<[email protected]>) escribió: > > What's the purpose of inputs.timeout.shutdown then. > Thought it should cover this scenario in a way that the clients will have > enough time to send the data from buffers before closing the socket. > Shouldn't the listener wait the time defined in inputs.timeout.shutdown for > client's response with FIN,ACK? Would expect that. > > Peter > > On Wed, Apr 29, 2020 at 1:03 PM Rainer Gerhards <[email protected]> > wrote: >> >> no, the receiver shuts down as soon as possible. This is intended. >> Otherwise you get even longer shutdown times. >> >> Rainer >> >> El mié., 29 abr. 2020 a las 13:00, Peter Viskup via rsyslog >> (<[email protected]>) escribió: >> > >> > Just testing the message forwarding and reliability of plain TCP. Am aware >> > of the un-reliability of that forwarding. >> > See some missing messages after the rsyslog proper process restart on >> > destination side. >> > Configured simple TCP omfwd action with keepalive enabled. >> > On receiving side imptcp input with keepalive enabled and >> > global(inputs.timeout.shutdown="10000"). >> > Unfortunately see rsyslog going down and closing listeners too fast - not >> > accepting the timeout.shutdown value. After that the receiver does not wait >> > for FIN,ACK from client side and just close the socket. The data being >> > flushed from buffer on client side are responded with RST packet. Would >> > expect the receiver to wait up to 10 seconds to let the clients flush the >> > data. Have some remote sites with slow link - due to long distance - >> > causing the socket sending queue being occupied most of the time. >> > >> > Do not see this behavior as appropriate. Could anybody review the code? Is >> > it bug or configuration issue? >> > >> > Found this code: >> > https://github.com/rsyslog/rsyslog/blob/69f8e1d1f7fe62fd2c5f38a81d4102a9a62d1722/plugins/imptcp/imptcp.c#L2381 >> > >> > According to the documentation the two shutdown()s can be called before >> > close(), but are not strictly required. >> > Digging a little deeper discovered SO_LINGER is referenced, but with value >> > of 0 >> > https://github.com/rsyslog/rsyslog/blob/6f74f7e7b43eb32ab165c5975a0f7777cbbf0f21/runtime/nsd_ptcp.c#L359 >> > which might be ok as with plain TCP there is no data transferred to >> > client from the listener. And the SO_LINGER covers only flush buffered >> > output (does not wait for incoming data) >> > https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Opening-and-Closing-Files.html#Opening-and-Closing-Files >> > >> > Was not able to find the LINGERing on client side code. Traced socket >> > handling in omfwd >> > https://github.com/rsyslog/rsyslog/blob/1f8f621a97df6b1989e1aebd8cb15cd6a552fa9c/tools/omfwd.c >> > was able to find the abort data in netstrm driver >> > https://github.com/rsyslog/rsyslog/blob/6f74f7e7b43eb32ab165c5975a0f7777cbbf0f21/runtime/netstrm.c#L83 >> > which seems related. >> > Hopefully from the tcpdump that part of the code seems to be working as it >> > is seen the client is trying to flush the data, all of which are responded >> > with RST packet. >> > Both sides are running Debian10 with Debian's rsyslog 8.1901.0-1. >> > >> > Any help to sort this out is appreciated. >> > >> > Peter >> > _______________________________________________ >> > rsyslog mailing list >> > https://lists.adiscon.net/mailman/listinfo/rsyslog >> > http://www.rsyslog.com/professional-services/ >> > What's up with rsyslog? Follow https://twitter.com/rgerhards >> > NOTE WELL: This is a PUBLIC mailing list, posts are ARCHIVED by a myriad >> > of sites beyond our control. PLEASE UNSUBSCRIBE and DO NOT POST if you >> > DON'T LIKE THAT. _______________________________________________ rsyslog mailing list https://lists.adiscon.net/mailman/listinfo/rsyslog http://www.rsyslog.com/professional-services/ What's up with rsyslog? Follow https://twitter.com/rgerhards NOTE WELL: This is a PUBLIC mailing list, posts are ARCHIVED by a myriad of sites beyond our control. PLEASE UNSUBSCRIBE and DO NOT POST if you DON'T LIKE THAT.

