# perf trace -e setsockopt
0.000 ( 0.019 ms): systemd-resolv/1121 setsockopt(fd: 22, level: IP, optname: 50, optval: 0x7ffee2c0c134, optlen: 4) = 0
0.022 ( 0.003 ms): systemd-resolv/1121 setsockopt(fd: 22, level: IP, optname: 11, optval: 0x7ffee2c0c114, optlen: 4) = 0
0.027 ( 0.003 ms): systemd-resolv/1121 setsockopt(fd: 22, level: IP, optname: 8, optval: 0x7ffee2c0c134, optlen: 4) = 0
0.032 ( 0.002 ms): systemd-resolv/1121 setsockopt(fd: 22, level: IP, optname: 10, optval: 0x7ffee2c0c134, optlen: 4) = 0
0.036 ( 0.002 ms): systemd-resolv/1121 setsockopt(fd: 22, level: IP, optname: 25, optval: 0x7ffee2c0c114, optlen: 4) = 0
0.043 ( 0.003 ms): systemd-resolv/1121 setsockopt(fd: 22, level: 1, optname: 62, optval: 0x7ffee2c0c0fc, optlen: 4) = 0
0.055 ( 0.003 ms): systemd-resolv/1121 setsockopt(fd: 22, level: 1, optname: 25)
^C#
So the simple straight STRARRAY method is not enough as SOL_SOCKET is
'1' in most architectures but some use 0xffff (alpha, mips, parisc and
sparc), so a followup patch will create a specialized scnprintf to cover
that.
Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
.arg = { [0] = STRARRAY(which, itimers), }, },
{ .name = "setrlimit",
.arg = { [0] = STRARRAY(resource, rlimit_resources), }, },
+ { .name = "setsockopt",
+ .arg = { [1] = STRARRAY(level, socket_level), }, },
{ .name = "socket",
.arg = { [0] = STRARRAY(family, socket_families),
[1] = { .scnprintf = SCA_SK_TYPE, /* type */ },