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Full Discussion: Truss output interpretation
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Truss output interpretation Post 302921541 by Don Cragun on Saturday 18th of October 2014 03:39:16 AM
Old 10-18-2014
OK. So you're sending a request to a server on a socket and immediately after sending the request, you try to read a response from the server with NDELAY set in the socket options. There is no server and no network that can respond that fast to a request.

There are a couple of obvious things you could try:
  1. Drop the TCP_NDELAY socket option so the read() will wait for data instead of returning immediately if no data is present.
  2. Drop the 1st read() and start with the poll() or pollsys() to wait for data to be present before attempting the read().
I haven't tried to evaluate the arguments to pollsys() to see if your program is waiting for data on a group of file descriptors or just waiting for data on fd #4. If it is just waiting for data on fd #4, I would start by trying #1; but if your program can continue processing if data is available on another file descriptor as well, choose option 2.

With what you have shown us there is no way for us to guess why it is taking more than 24 seconds for the server to respond to your request.
 

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xparace(3)							SAORD Documentation							xparace(3)

NAME
XPARace - XPA Race Conditions SYNOPSIS
Potential XPA race conditions and how to avoid them. DESCRIPTION
Currently, there is only one known circumstance in which XPA can get (temporarily) deadlocked in a race condition: if two or more XPA servers send messages to one another using an XPA client routine such as XPASet(), they can deadlock while each waits for the other server to respond. (This can happen if the servers call XPAPoll() with a time limit, and send messages in between the polling call.) The reason this happens is that both client routines send a string to the other server to establish the handshake and then wait for the server response. Since each client is waiting for a response, neither is able to enter its event-handling loop and respond to the other's request. This deadlock will continue until one of the timeout periods expire, at which point an error condition will be triggered and the timed-out server will return to its event loop. Starting with version 2.1.6, this rare race condition can be avoided by setting the XPA_IOCALLSXPA environment variable for servers that will make client calls. Setting this variable causes all XPA socket IO calls to process outstanding XPA requests whenever the primary socket is not ready for IO. This means that a server making a client call will (recursively) process incoming server requests while waiting for client completion. It also means that a server callback routine can handle incoming XPA messages if it makes its own XPA call. The semi-public routine oldvalue=XPAIOCallsXPA(newvalue) can be used to turn this behavior off and on temporarily. Passing a 0 will turn off IO processing, 1 will turn it back on. The old value is returned by the call. By default, the XPA_IOCALLSXPA option is turned off, because we judge that the added code complication and overhead involved will not be justified by the amount of its use. Moreover, processing XPA requests within socket IO can lead to non-intuitive results, since incoming server requests will not necessarily be processed to completion in the order in which they are received. Aside from setting XPA_IOCALLSXPA, the simplest way to avoid this race condition is to multi-process: when you want to send a client mes- sage, simply start a separate process to call the client routine, so that the server is not stopped. It probably is fastest and easiest to use fork() and then have the child call the client routine and exit. But you also can use either the system() or popen() routine to start one of the command line programs and do the same thing. Alternatively, you can use XPA's internal launch() routine instead of system(). Based on fork() and exec(), this routine is more secure than system() because it does not call /bin/sh. Starting with version 2.1.5, you also can send an XPAInfo() message with the mode string "ack=false". This will cause the client to send a message to the server and then exit without waiting for any return message from the server. This UDP-like behavior will avoid the server deadlock when sending short XPAInfo messages. SEE ALSO
See xpa(7) for a list of XPA help pages version 2.1.14 June 7, 2012 xparace(3)
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