> Evidently coming from here:
>
> len = piperead(readPipe, ((char *) &msg) + nread,
> targetlen - nread);
> if (len < 0)
> {
> if (errno == EINTR)
> continue;
> ereport(ERROR,
> (errcode_for_socket_access(),
> errmsg("could not read from statistics collector
> pipe: %m")));
> }
>
> So why is piperead() failing, and why doesn't it set errno to
something
> useful?
Well, the win32 piperead() is really just a call to recv() (vs unix
read()). Here is the win32 implemenation:
int
piperead(int s, char *buf, int len)
{
int ret = recv(s, buf, len, 0);
if (ret < 0 && WSAGetLastError() == WSAECONNRESET)
/* EOF on the pipe! (win32 socket based implementation)
*/
ret = 0;
return ret;
}
I think the key to this puzzle is the return code from
WSAGetLastError(). Also, the WSA call *might* be masking the value of
errno. I did a quick search and came up with this:
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-patches/2001-10/msg00160.php
I think maybe errno needs to get set to WSAGetLastError(). In pipe.c:
if (ret < 0)
{
int wsa_errno;
wsa_errno = WSAGetLastError();
if (WSAECONNRESET == wsa_errno)
{ /* EOF on the pipe! (win32 socket based implementation) */
ret = 0;
}
else
{
errno = wsa_errno; /* this *might* be ok */
}
}
return ret;
Maybe Magnus might comment here. This doesn't explain why the read call
is failing but I'm pretty sure the error code is not being properly
returned.
Merlin