socket file descriptor a/m/c-timestamps broken in <= 3.8.8?

From: Felix Becker
Date: Mon Apr 22 2013 - 19:39:40 EST


Hi,

I tried to figure out how old my TCP connections are and took a look
at /proc/<pid>/fd/<socketfdnum> using 'ls -la' / 'stat'.

When I'm creating a new socket in my application, the time stamps
returned by stat / ls -la are correct - as expected. After closing the
socket, the fd isn't visible in /proc/<pid>/fd anymore - as expected.
When creating a new socket a few minutes later (which gets the same
number as the socket closed before), the newly created socket has the
same time stamps (access / modify / change) as the old socket - I
didn't expect this.

When using fstat() from <sys/stat.h> I'm getting 0 for a/m/c-time.
Only in /proc/<pid>/fd/ i can see (the wrong) times.

I attached a test code for reproducing the issue. In my production
environments i have new socket file descriptors which have timestamps
indicating that they are many hours old.

Q1: is it a bug that fstat() returns 0-values for a/m/c-time?

Q2: is it a bug that a new socket, with the file descriptor number of
an older socket which existed before, have the a/m/c-times of the old
socket in /proc/<pid>/fd/?

Best regards

Felix

p.s. test setup is a normal x86_64 architecture (intel xeon).

=======================================================================
// sockettest.c

#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/un.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>


void print_socket_stats(int sfd){
struct stat socket_stats;
fstat(sfd, &socket_stats);
printf("Socket stats for socket %d\n", sfd);
printf("socket stat: st_atime: %ld\n", socket_stats.st_atime);
printf("socket stat: st_mtime: %ld\n", socket_stats.st_mtime);
printf("socket stat: st_ctime: %ld\n", socket_stats.st_ctime);
}

void print_with_time(const char* message){
time_t t;
time(&t);
printf("%s @ %s\n", message, ctime(&t));

}

int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {

int sfd;

printf("pid: %d\n", getpid());

print_with_time("Opening socket");
sfd = socket(AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
printf("opened socket: %d\n",sfd);
print_socket_stats(sfd);

print_with_time("sleeping 30\n");

sleep(30);

printf("closing socket %d", sfd);
close(sfd);

printf("closed socket: %d\n",sfd);
print_with_time("sleeping 61 seconds");

sleep(61);

print_with_time("opening new socket");
sfd = socket(AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
printf("opened socket: %d\n",sfd);
print_socket_stats(sfd);
print_with_time("sleeping 999");

sleep(999);
}

=======================================================================

./sockettest &

pid: 18267
Opening socket @ Mon Apr 22 23:05:37 2013

opened socket: 3
Socket stats for socket 3
socket stat: st_atime: 0
socket stat: st_mtime: 0
socket stat: st_ctime: 0
sleeping 30 @ Mon Apr 22 23:05:37 2013

>>> ls -la /proc/18267/fd/3
lrwx------ 1 becker becker 64 Apr 22 23:05 /proc/18267/fd/3 ->
socket:[210268]


>>> stat /proc/18267/fd/3
File: `/proc/18267/fd/3' -> `socket:[210268]'
Size: 64 Blocks: 0 IO Block: 1024 symbolic link
Device: 3h/3d Inode: 52177 Links: 1
Access: (0700/lrwx------) Uid: ( 1001/ becker) Gid: ( 1001/ becker)
Access: 2013-04-22 23:05:46.179813835 +0000
Modify: 2013-04-22 23:05:46.175813886 +0000
Change: 2013-04-22 23:05:46.175813886 +0000

closing socket 3
closed socket: 3

sleeping 61 seconds @ Mon Apr 22 23:06:07 2013

opening new socket @ Mon Apr 22 23:07:08 2013

opened socket: 3
Socket stats for socket 3
socket stat: st_atime: 0
socket stat: st_mtime: 0
socket stat: st_ctime: 0
sleeping 999 @ Mon Apr 22 23:07:08 2013


>>> ls -la /proc/18267/fd/3
lrwx------ 1 becker becker 64 Apr 22 23:05 /proc/18267/fd/3 ->
socket:[210320]

>>> stat /proc/18267/fd/3



File: `/proc/18267/fd/3' -> `socket:[210320]'
Size: 64 Blocks: 0 IO Block: 1024 symbolic link
Device: 3h/3d Inode: 52177 Links: 1
Access: (0700/lrwx------) Uid: ( 1001/ becker) Gid: ( 1001/ becker)
Access: 2013-04-22 23:05:46.179813835 +0000
Modify: 2013-04-22 23:05:46.175813886 +0000
Change: 2013-04-22 23:05:46.175813886 +0000
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