// Copyright 2024 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // This file implements sysSocket for platforms that provide a fast path for // setting SetNonblock and CloseOnExec, but don't necessarily support it. // Support for SOCK_* flags as part of the type parameter was added to Oracle // Solaris in the 11.4 release. Thus, on releases prior to 11.4, we fall back // to the combination of socket(3c) and fcntl(2). package net import ( "internal/poll" "internal/syscall/unix" "os" "syscall" ) // Wrapper around the socket system call that marks the returned file // descriptor as nonblocking and close-on-exec. func sysSocket(family, sotype, proto int) (int, error) { // Perform a cheap test and try the fast path first. if unix.SupportSockNonblockCloexec() { s, err := socketFunc(family, sotype|syscall.SOCK_NONBLOCK|syscall.SOCK_CLOEXEC, proto) if err != nil { return -1, os.NewSyscallError("socket", err) } return s, nil } // See ../syscall/exec_unix.go for description of ForkLock. syscall.ForkLock.RLock() s, err := socketFunc(family, sotype, proto) if err == nil { syscall.CloseOnExec(s) } syscall.ForkLock.RUnlock() if err != nil { return -1, os.NewSyscallError("socket", err) } if err = syscall.SetNonblock(s, true); err != nil { poll.CloseFunc(s) return -1, os.NewSyscallError("setnonblock", err) } return s, nil }