I will, eventually convert all files here to html - just right now I have no time to do it. Anyone who'd like to - please feel free, mail me the file and I will check it in sonmi@netscape.com The NSS 3.1 SSL Stress Tests fail for me on FreeBSD 3.5. The end of the output of './ssl.sh stress' looks like this: ********************* Stress Test **************************** ********************* Stress SSL2 RC4 128 with MD5 **************************** selfserv -p 8443 -d /local/llennox/NSS-PSM/mozilla/tests_results/security/conrail.20/server -n conrail.cs.columbia.edu -w nss -i /tmp/tests_pid.5505 & strsclnt -p 8443 -d . -w nss -c 1000 -C A conrail.cs.columbia.edu strsclnt: -- SSL: Server Certificate Validated. strsclnt: PR_NewTCPSocket returned error -5974: Insufficient system resources. Terminated ********************* Stress SSL3 RC4 128 with MD5 **************************** selfserv -p 8443 -d /local/llennox/NSS-PSM/mozilla/tests_results/security/conrail.20/server -n conrail.cs.columbia.edu -w nss -i /tmp/tests_pid.5505 & strsclnt -p 8443 -d . -w nss -c 1000 -C c conrail.cs.columbia.edu strsclnt: -- SSL: Server Certificate Validated. strsclnt: PR_NewTCPSocket returned error -5974: Insufficient system resources. Terminated Running ktrace on the process (ktrace is a system-call tracer, the equivalent of Linux's strace) reveals that socket() failed with ENOBUFS after it was called for the 953rd time for the first test, and it failed after the 27th time it was called for the second test. The failure is consistent, both for debug and optimized builds; I haven't tested to see whether the count of socket() failures is consistent. All the other NSS tests pass successfully. ------- Additional Comments From Nelson Bolyard 2000-11-01 23:08 ------- I see no indication of any error on NSS's part from this description. It sounds like an OS kernel configuration problem on the submittor's system. The stress test is just that. It stresses the server by pounding it with SSL connections. Apparently this test exhausts some kernel resource on the submittor's system. The only change to NSS that might be beneficial to this test would be to respond to this error by waiting and trying again for some limited number of times, rather than immediately treating it as a fatal error. However, while such a change might make the test appear to pass, it would merely be hiding a very serious problem, namely, chronic system resource exhaustion. So, I suggest that, in this case, the failure serves the useful purpose of revealing the system problem, which needs to be cured apart from any changes to NSS. I'll leave this bug open for a few more days, to give others a chance to persuade me that some NSS change would and should solve this problem. ------- Additional Comments From Jonathan Lennox 2000-11-02 13:13 ------- Okay, some more investigation leads me to agree with you. What's happening is that the TCP connections from the stress test stick around in TIME_WAIT for two minutes; my kernel is only configured to support 1064 simultaneous open sockets, which isn't enough for the 2K sockets opened by the stress test plus the 100 or so normally in use on my system. So I'd just suggest adding a note to the NSS test webpage to the effect of "The SSL stress test opens 2,048 TCP connections in quick succession. Kernel data structures may remain allocated for these connections for up to two minutes. Some systems may not be configured to allow this many simulatenous connections by default; if the stress tests fail, try increasing the number of simultaneous sockets supported." On FreeBSD, you can display the number of simultaneous sockets with the command sysctl kern.ipc.maxsockets which on my system returns 1064. It looks like this can be fixed with the kernel config option options NMBCLUSTERS=[something-large] or by increasing the 'maxusers' parameter. It looks like more recent FreeBSD implementations still have this limitation, and the same solutions apply, plus you can alternatively specify the maxsockets parameter in the boot loader. --------------------------------- hpux HP-UX hp64 B.11.00 A 9000/800 2014971275 two-user license we had to change following kernelparameters to make our tests pass 1. maxfiles. old value = 60. new value = 100. 2. nkthread. old value = 499. new value = 1328. 3. max_thread_proc. old value = 64. new value = 512. 4. maxusers. old value = 32. new value = 64. 5. maxuprc. old value = 75. new value = 512. 6. nproc. old formula = 20+8*MAXUSERS, which evaluated to 276. new value (note: not a formula) = 750. A few other kernel parameters were also changed automatically as a result of the above changes.