s6
Software
skarnet.org
The s6-fdholder error codes
The following error messages (and corresponding
errno codes)
can be returned by the
s6-fdholderd daemon to its various clients.
This page explains why they occur.
- Protocol error (EPROTO) or Protocol wrong type
for socket (EPROTOTYPE): the client connected to the wrong
kind of server and they cannot communicate. This is generally a
programming error. It can also
signal a bug in the s6-fdholder tools, but protocol bugs have
usually been wiped out before an s6 release.
- Broken pipe (EPIPE): the client was not authorized to
connect to the server, which closed the connection. You need to
configure the access
rights to the server.
- Operation not permitted (EPERM): even though the
client was authorized to connect to the server, the specific
operation it wanted to perform was denied. You need to
configure the access
rights to the server.
- Too many open files in system (ENFILE): the client
attempted to store more file descriptors than the server can hold.
Or, the client attempted to retrieve more file descriptors than it
can hold. You should check the -n option to
s6-fdholderd, as well as the
RLIMIT_NOFILE
resource limits used by the client and the server, and adjust them
accordingly.
- Resource busy (EBUSY): the client attempted to store
a descriptor under an identifier that is already used.
- Filename too long (ENAMETOOLONG): the identifier
provided by the client was too long.
- No such file or directory (ENOENT): the identifier
provided by the client was not found in the server database.
- Bad file descriptor (EBADF): the client attempted
to transmit a closed, or otherwise unsuitable for fd-passing,
file descriptor.
- Operation timed out (ETIMEDOUT): the client, or the
server, took too long to perform the wanted operation. This is most
probably a programming error, because both client and server should
have a very fast reaction time. Check that the client is connecting
to the right server, and check -t options to both client and
server (the argument is interpreted as milliseconds!).
- Other errors indicate a transient error such as lack of memory,
hardware failure, etc.