Copyright 1998 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
ARES_FDS 3 "23 July 1998"
NAME
ares_fds - return file descriptors to select on (deprecated)
SYNOPSIS
#include <ares.h> int ares_fds(const ares_channel_t *channel, fd_set *read_fds, fd_set *write_fds)
DESCRIPTION
See the NOTES section on issues with this function and alternatives.
The ares_fds(3) function retrieves the set of file descriptors which the
calling application should select(2) on for reading and writing for the
processing of name service queries pending on the name service channel
identified by channel. Should not be used with ARES_OPT_EVENT_THREAD
is passed to ares_init_options(3).
File descriptors will be set in the file descriptor sets pointed to by
read_fds and write_fds as appropriate. File descriptors already
set in read_fds and write_fds will remain set; initialization of
the file descriptor sets (using FD_ZERO) is the responsibility of the
caller.
RETURN VALUES
ares_fds(3) returns a value that is one greater than the number of the
highest socket set in either read_fds or write_fds. If no queries
are active, ares_fds(3) returns 0.
NOTES
The select(2) call which takes the fd_set parameter has significant
limitations which can impact modern systems. The limitations can vary from
system to system, but in general if the file descriptor value itself is greater
than 1024 (not the count but the actual value), this can lead to
ares_fds(3) writing out of bounds which will cause a system crash. In
modern networking clients, it is not unusual to have file descriptor values
above 1024, especially when a library is pulled in as a dependency into a larger
project.
c-ares does not attempt to detect this condition to prevent crashes due to both
implementation-defined behavior in the OS as well as integrator-controllable
tunables which may impact the limits.
It is recommended to use ARES_OPT_EVENT_THREAD passed to
ares_init_options(3), or socket state callbacks
(ARES_OPT_SOCK_STATE_CB) registered via ares_init_options(3) and use
more modern methods to check for socket readable/writable state such as
poll(2), epoll(2), or kqueue(2).
SEE ALSO
ares_init_options (3), ares_timeout (3), ares_process (3)