mirror of
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer.git
synced 2024-11-25 11:11:08 +00:00
20e3454c26
The `reuse` property end up setting the SO_REUSEADDR socket option for the UDP socket. This setting have surprising effects. On Linux systems the man page (`socket(7)`) states: ``` SO_REUSEADDR Indicates that the rules used in validating addresses supplied in a bind(2) call should allow reuse of local addresses. For AF_INET sockets this means that a socket may bind, except when there is an active listening socket bound to the address. ``` But since UDP does not listen this ends up meaning that when an ephemeral port is allocated (setting the `port` to `0`) the kernel is free to reuse any other UDP port that has `SO_REUSEADDR` set. Tests checking the likelyhood of port conflict when using multiple `udpsrc` shows port conflicts starting to occur after ~100-300 udpsrc with port allocation enabled. See issue #3411 for more details. Changing the default value of a property is not a small thing we risk breaking application that rely on the current default value. But since the effects of having `reuse` default `TRUE` on can also have damaging and hard-to-debug consequences, it might be worth to consider. Having `SO_REUSEADDR` enabled for multicast, might have some use cases but for unicast, with dynamic port allocation, it does not make sense. When not using an multicast address we will disable port reuse if the `port` property is set to 0 (=allocate) and warn the user that we did so. Closes #3411 Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7841> |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
gstdynudpsink.c | ||
gstdynudpsink.h | ||
gstmultiudpsink.c | ||
gstmultiudpsink.h | ||
gstudp.c | ||
gstudpelement.c | ||
gstudpelements.h | ||
gstudpnetutils.c | ||
gstudpnetutils.h | ||
gstudpsink.c | ||
gstudpsink.h | ||
gstudpsrc.c | ||
gstudpsrc.h | ||
meson.build | ||
README |
* What is UDP src/sink? It is a set of element to transfer data using UDP, nothing more, nothing less. Its main purpose is to be used in conjunction with RTP but they are kept as separate elements because we can.