www.nico.schottelius.org/blog/accept-returns-0.mdwn

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[[!meta title="What went wrong, if accept(2) returns 0?"]]
Today I continued working on the
[[user interface support|ceofhack-ui-support-1]]
for [[ceofhack|software/ceofhack]] and created an interesting
bug, which lead to other interesting "features":
The second time a user interface connected to
[ceofhack-0.5.4-2-ga1a4b17](http://git.schottelius.org/?p=EOF/ceofhack;a=commit;h=a1a4b17fae050faf3f049b15ee20985c1684f46d)
it hung, and at the same time ceofhack got the input from cmd_ui on
stdin:
Ignoring text (2100) (later versions send this to all peers in channel)
Digging a bit into the source, I found out that the accept() call in ui_read
returns 0:
ui_handle.c:35:while((nsock = accept(fds[HP_READ], NULL, NULL)) != -1) {
I've never seen accept returning 0 before. As 0 is the value of
STDIN\_FILENO, this explained the strange behaviour, because
**helper\_check\_input()** found the old stdin handler to be responsable
for that socket (via **helper\_find\_by\_fd()**).
After digging a bit deeper, I found the reason for all the confusion:
**helper\_disable()** closed all **four** helper file descriptors, of
which only **two** (HP\_READ and HP\_WRITE) were initialised by
**helper\_fdonly()**. The other two contained the value 0, because
the code is compiled and linked with the gcc debugging option **-g**.
As only those two are used in ceofhack, **helper\_disable()** was fixed to
close only those two.
Interesting, which ways debugging may take, isn't it?
[[!tag programming]]