> On Nov 3, 2022, at 10:17, Michael Wojcik via openssl-users 
> <openssl-users@openssl.org> wrote:
> 
>> Does OpenSSL’s documentation mention that? (I’m not exhaustively
>> familiar with it, but I don’t remember having seen such.)
> 
> I doubt it. I don't see anything on the wiki, and this is a pretty obscure 
> issue, all things considered.

You probably know this, but: On Linux, at least, if a TCP socket close()s with 
a non-empty read buffer, the kernel sends TCP RST to the peer. Some 
applications “panic” when they receive the RST and discard data. It’s a rare 
issue, but when it does it’s a head-scratcher. To avoid that, it’s necessary to 
shutdown(SHUT_RD) then drain the read buffer before close().

So it seems like this *shouldn’t* be obscure, if applications do the 
shutdown/drain thing. I would guess that many don’t and just don’t see the RST 
thing frequently enough to worry about it. Regardless, the documentation is 
already pretty voluminous, so if this doesn’t bite many folks, then hey.

Thank you!

-F

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