Guide Network Programminng
Guide Network Programminng
Version 3.0.13
March 23, 2009
I dedicate this guide to some of my biggest heroes and inpirators in the world of computers: Donald Knuth, Bruce
Schneier, W. Richard Stevens, and The Woz, my Readership, and the entire Free and Open Source Software
Community.
This book is written in XML using the vim editor on a Slackware Linux box loaded with GNU tools. The cover
“art” and diagrams are produced with Inkscape. The XML is converted into HTML and XSL-FO by custom Python
scripts. The XSL-FO output is then munged by Apache FOP to produce PDF documents, using Liberation fonts.
The toolchain is composed of 100% Free and Open Source Software.
Unless otherwise mutually agreed by the parties in writing, the author offers the work as-is and makes no
representations or warranties of any kind concerning the work, express, implied, statutory or otherwise, including,
without limitation, warranties of title, merchantibility, fitness for a particular purpose, noninfringement, or the absence
of latent or other defects, accuracy, or the presence of absence of errors, whether or not discoverable.
Except to the extent required by applicable law, in no event will the author be liable to you on any legal theory for
any special, incidental, consequential, punitive or exemplary damages arising out of the use of the work, even if the
author has been advised of the possibility of such damages.
This document is freely distributable under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No
Derivative Works 3.0 License. See the Copyright and Distribution section for details.
9. Man Pages............................................................................................................................................. 61
9.1. accept() 62
iii
Contents
9.2. bind() 64
9.3. connect() 66
9.4. close() 67
9.5. getaddrinfo(), freeaddrinfo(), gai_strerror() 68
9.6. gethostname() 71
9.7. gethostbyname(), gethostbyaddr() 72
9.8. getnameinfo() 74
9.9. getpeername() 75
9.10. errno 76
9.11. fcntl() 77
9.12. htons(), htonl(), ntohs(), ntohl() 78
9.13. inet_ntoa(), inet_aton(), inet_addr 79
9.14. inet_ntop(), inet_pton() 80
9.15. listen() 82
9.16. perror(), strerror() 83
9.17. poll() 84
9.18. recv(), recvfrom() 86
9.19. select() 88
9.20. setsockopt(), getsockopt() 90
9.21. send(), sendto() 92
9.22. shutdown() 94
9.23. socket() 95
9.24. struct sockaddr and pals 96
10. More References................................................................................................................................. 99
10.1. Books 99
10.2. Web References 99
10.3. RFCs 100
Index 103
iv
1. Intro
Hey! Socket programming got you down? Is this stuff just a little too difficult to figure out from the
man pages? You want to do cool Internet programming, but you don't have time to wade through a gob
of structs trying to figure out if you have to call bind() before you connect(), etc., etc.
Well, guess what! I've already done this nasty business, and I'm dying to share the information
with everyone! You've come to the right place. This document should give the average competent C
programmer the edge s/he needs to get a grip on this networking noise.
And check it out: I've finally caught up with the future (just in the nick of time, too!) and have
updated the Guide for IPv6! Enjoy!
1.1. Audience
This document has been written as a tutorial, not a complete reference. It is probably at its best
when read by individuals who are just starting out with socket programming and are looking for a
foothold. It is certainly not the complete and total guide to sockets programming, by any means.
Hopefully, though, it'll be just enough for those man pages to start making sense... :-)
1.2. Platform and Compiler
The code contained within this document was compiled on a Linux PC using Gnu's gcc compiler.
It should, however, build on just about any platform that uses gcc. Naturally, this doesn't apply if you're
programming for Windows—see the section on Windows programming, below.
1.3. Official Homepage and Books For Sale
This official location of this document is http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/. There you will also
find example code and translations of the guide into various languages.
To buy nicely bound print copies (some call them “books”), visit http://beej.us/guide/url/
bgbuy. I'll appreciate the purchase because it helps sustain my document-writing lifestyle!
1
2 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
So I still encourage you to try Linux1, BSD2, or some flavor of Unix, instead.
But people like what they like, and you Windows folk will be pleased to know that this information
is generally applicable to you guys, with a few minor changes, if any.
One cool thing you can do is install Cygwin3, which is a collection of Unix tools for Windows. I've
heard on the grapevine that doing so allows all these programs to compile unmodified.
But some of you might want to do things the Pure Windows Way. That's very gutsy of you, and
this is what you have to do: run out and get Unix immediately! No, no—I'm kidding. I'm supposed to be
Windows-friendly(er) these days...
This is what you'll have to do (unless you install Cygwin!): first, ignore pretty much all of the
system header files I mention in here. All you need to include is:
#include <winsock.h>
Wait! You also have to make a call to WSAStartup() before doing anything else with the sockets
library. The code to do that looks something like this:
#include <winsock.h>
{
WSADATA wsaData; // if this doesn't work
//WSAData wsaData; // then try this instead
if (WSAStartup(MAKEWORD(1,1), &wsaData) != 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "WSAStartup failed.\n");
exit(1);
}
You also have to tell your compiler to link in the Winsock library, usually called wsock32.lib
or winsock32.lib, or ws2_32.lib for Winsock 2.0. Under VC++, this can be done through the
Project menu, under Settings.... Click the Link tab, and look for the box titled “Object/library
modules”. Add “wsock32.lib” (or whichever lib is your preference) to that list.
Or so I hear.
Finally, you need to call WSACleanup() when you're all through with the sockets library. See your
online help for details.
Once you do that, the rest of the examples in this tutorial should generally apply, with a few
exceptions. For one thing, you can't use close() to close a socket—you need to use closesocket(),
instead. Also, select() only works with socket descriptors, not file descriptors (like 0 for stdin).
There is also a socket class that you can use, CSocket. Check your compilers help pages for more
information.
To get more information about Winsock, read the Winsock FAQ4 and go from there.
Finally, I hear that Windows has no fork() system call which is, unfortunately, used in some of
my examples. Maybe you have to link in a POSIX library or something to get it to work, or you can
use CreateProcess() instead. fork() takes no arguments, and CreateProcess() takes about 48
billion arguments. If you're not up to that, the CreateThread() is a little easier to digest...unfortunately
a discussion about multithreading is beyond the scope of this document. I can only talk about so much,
you know!
1.6. Email Policy
I'm generally available to help out with email questions so feel free to write in, but I can't guarantee
a response. I lead a pretty busy life and there are times when I just can't answer a question you have.
When that's the case, I usually just delete the message. It's nothing personal; I just won't ever have the
time to give the detailed answer you require.
1. http://www.linux.com/
2. http://www.bsd.org/
3. http://www.cygwin.com/
4. http://tangentsoft.net/wskfaq/
Intro 3
As a rule, the more complex the question, the less likely I am to respond. If you can narrow down
your question before mailing it and be sure to include any pertinent information (like platform, compiler,
error messages you're getting, and anything else you think might help me troubleshoot), you're much
more likely to get a response. For more pointers, read ESR's document, How To Ask Questions The
Smart Way5.
If you don't get a response, hack on it some more, try to find the answer, and if it's still elusive, then
write me again with the information you've found and hopefully it will be enough for me to help out.
Now that I've badgered you about how to write and not write me, I'd just like to let you know that
I fully appreciate all the praise the guide has received over the years. It's a real morale boost, and it
gladdens me to hear that it is being used for good! :-) Thank you!
1.7. Mirroring
You are more than welcome to mirror this site, whether publicly or privately. If you publicly mirror
the site and want me to link to it from the main page, drop me a line at [email protected].
1.8. Note for Translators
If you want to translate the guide into another language, write me at [email protected] and I'll link to
your translation from the main page. Feel free to add your name and contact info to the translation.
Please note the license restrictions in the Copyright and Distribution section, below.
If you want me to host the translation, just ask. I'll also link to it if you want to host it; either way is
fine.
1.9. Copyright and Distribution
Beej's Guide to Network Programming is Copyright © 2009 Brian “Beej Jorgensen” Hall.
With specific exceptions for source code and translations, below, this work is licensed under the
Creative Commons Attribution- Noncommercial- No Derivative Works 3.0 License. To view a copy of
this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ or send a letter to
Creative Commons, 171 Second Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA.
One specific exception to the “No Derivative Works” portion of the license is as follows: this
guide may be freely translated into any language, provided the translation is accurate, and the guide is
reprinted in its entirety. The same license restrictions apply to the translation as to the original guide. The
translation may also include the name and contact information for the translator.
The C source code presented in this document is hereby granted to the public domain, and is
completely free of any license restriction.
Educators are freely encouraged to recommend or supply copies of this guide to their students.
Contact [email protected] for more information.
5. http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
2. What is a socket?
You hear talk of “sockets” all the time, and perhaps you are wondering just what they are exactly.
Well, they're this: a way to speak to other programs using standard Unix file descriptors.
What?
Ok—you may have heard some Unix hacker state, “Jeez, everything in Unix is a file!” What that
person may have been talking about is the fact that when Unix programs do any sort of I/O, they do it by
reading or writing to a file descriptor. A file descriptor is simply an integer associated with an open file.
But (and here's the catch), that file can be a network connection, a FIFO, a pipe, a terminal, a real on-
the-disk file, or just about anything else. Everything in Unix is a file! So when you want to communicate
with another program over the Internet you're gonna do it through a file descriptor, you'd better believe it.
“Where do I get this file descriptor for network communication, Mr. Smarty-Pants?” is probably
the last question on your mind right now, but I'm going to answer it anyway: You make a call to the
socket() system routine. It returns the socket descriptor, and you communicate through it using the
specialized send() and recv() (man send, man recv) socket calls.
“But, hey!” you might be exclaiming right about now. “If it's a file descriptor, why in the name of
Neptune can't I just use the normal read() and write() calls to communicate through the socket?” The
short answer is, “You can!” The longer answer is, “You can, but send() and recv() offer much greater
control over your data transmission.”
What next? How about this: there are all kinds of sockets. There are DARPA Internet addresses
(Internet Sockets), path names on a local node (Unix Sockets), CCITT X.25 addresses (X.25 Sockets
that you can safely ignore), and probably many others depending on which Unix flavor you run. This
document deals only with the first: Internet Sockets.
2.1. Two Types of Internet Sockets
What's this? There are two types of Internet sockets? Yes. Well, no. I'm lying. There are more, but I
didn't want to scare you. I'm only going to talk about two types here. Except for this sentence, where I'm
going to tell you that “Raw Sockets” are also very powerful and you should look them up.
All right, already. What are the two types? One is “Stream Sockets”; the other is “Datagram
Sockets”, which may hereafter be referred to as “SOCK_STREAM” and “SOCK_DGRAM”, respectively.
Datagram sockets are sometimes called “connectionless sockets”. (Though they can be connect()'d if
you really want. See connect(), below.)
Stream sockets are reliable two-way connected communication streams. If you output two items into
the socket in the order “1, 2”, they will arrive in the order “1, 2” at the opposite end. They will also be
error-free. I'm so certain, in fact, they will be error-free, that I'm just going to put my fingers in my ears
and chant la la la la if anyone tries to claim otherwise.
What uses stream sockets? Well, you may have heard of the telnet application, yes? It uses stream
sockets. All the characters you type need to arrive in the same order you type them, right? Also, web
browsers use the HTTP protocol which uses stream sockets to get pages. Indeed, if you telnet to a web
site on port 80, and type “GET / HTTP/1.0” and hit RETURN twice, it'll dump the HTML back at you!
How do stream sockets achieve this high level of data transmission quality? They use a protocol
called “The Transmission Control Protocol”, otherwise known as “TCP” (see RFC 7936 for extremely
detailed info on TCP.) TCP makes sure your data arrives sequentially and error-free. You may have heard
“TCP” before as the better half of “TCP/IP” where “IP” stands for “Internet Protocol” (see RFC 7917.)
IP deals primarily with Internet routing and is not generally responsible for data integrity.
Cool. What about Datagram sockets? Why are they called connectionless? What is the deal, here,
anyway? Why are they unreliable? Well, here are some facts: if you send a datagram, it may arrive. It
may arrive out of order. If it arrives, the data within the packet will be error-free.
6. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc793
7. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc791
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6 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Datagram sockets also use IP for routing, but they don't use TCP; they use the “User Datagram
Protocol”, or “UDP” (see RFC 7688.)
Why are they connectionless? Well, basically, it's because you don't have to maintain an open
connection as you do with stream sockets. You just build a packet, slap an IP header on it with
destination information, and send it out. No connection needed. They are generally used either when
a TCP stack is unavailable or when a few dropped packets here and there don't mean the end of the
Universe. Sample applications: tftp (trivial file transfer protocol, a little brother to FTP), dhcpcd (a
DHCP client), multiplayer games, streaming audio, video conferencing, etc.
“Wait a minute! tftp and dhcpcd are used to transfer binary applications from one host to another!
Data can't be lost if you expect the application to work when it arrives! What kind of dark magic is this?”
Well, my human friend, tftp and similar programs have their own protocol on top of UDP. For
example, the tftp protocol says that for each packet that gets sent, the recipient has to send back a packet
that says, “I got it!” (an “ACK” packet.) If the sender of the original packet gets no reply in, say, five
seconds, he'll re-transmit the packet until he finally gets an ACK. This acknowledgment procedure is
very important when implementing reliable SOCK_DGRAM applications.
For unreliable applications like games, audio, or video, you just ignore the dropped packets, or
perhaps try to cleverly compensate for them. (Quake players will know the manifestation this effect by
the technical term: accursed lag. The word “accursed”, in this case, represents any extremely profane
utterance.)
Why would you use an unreliable underlying protocol? Two reasons: speed and speed. It's way
faster to fire-and-forget than it is to keep track of what has arrived safely and make sure it's in order and
all that. If you're sending chat messages, TCP is great; if you're sending 40 positional updates per second
of the players in the world, maybe it doesn't matter so much if one or two get dropped, and UDP is a
good choice.
2.2. Low level Nonsense and Network Theory
Since I just mentioned layering of protocols, it's time to talk about how networks really work, and
to show some examples of how SOCK_DGRAM packets are built. Practically, you can probably skip this
section. It's good background, however.
Data Encapsulation.
Hey, kids, it's time to learn about Data Encapsulation! This is very very important. It's so important
that you might just learn about it if you take the networks course here at Chico State ;-). Basically, it
says this: a packet is born, the packet is wrapped (“encapsulated”) in a header (and rarely a footer) by
the first protocol (say, the TFTP protocol), then the whole thing (TFTP header included) is encapsulated
again by the next protocol (say, UDP), then again by the next (IP), then again by the final protocol on the
hardware (physical) layer (say, Ethernet).
When another computer receives the packet, the hardware strips the Ethernet header, the kernel
strips the IP and UDP headers, the TFTP program strips the TFTP header, and it finally has the data.
Now I can finally talk about the infamous Layered Network Model (aka “ISO/OSI”). This Network
Model describes a system of network functionality that has many advantages over other models. For
instance, you can write sockets programs that are exactly the same without caring how the data is
physically transmitted (serial, thin Ethernet, AUI, whatever) because programs on lower levels deal with
it for you. The actual network hardware and topology is transparent to the socket programmer.
Without any further ado, I'll present the layers of the full-blown model. Remember this for network
class exams:
• Application
8. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc768
What is a socket? 7
• Presentation
• Session
• Transport
• Network
• Data Link
• Physical
The Physical Layer is the hardware (serial, Ethernet, etc.). The Application Layer is just about as far
from the physical layer as you can imagine—it's the place where users interact with the network.
Now, this model is so general you could probably use it as an automobile repair guide if you really
wanted to. A layered model more consistent with Unix might be:
At this point in time, you can probably see how these layers correspond to the encapsulation of the
original data.
See how much work there is in building a simple packet? Jeez! And you have to type in the packet
headers yourself using “cat”! Just kidding. All you have to do for stream sockets is send() the data out.
All you have to do for datagram sockets is encapsulate the packet in the method of your choosing and
sendto() it out. The kernel builds the Transport Layer and Internet Layer on for you and the hardware
does the Network Access Layer. Ah, modern technology.
So ends our brief foray into network theory. Oh yes, I forgot to tell you everything I wanted to say
about routing: nothing! That's right, I'm not going to talk about it at all. The router strips the packet to
the IP header, consults its routing table, blah blah blah. Check out the IP RFC9 if you really really care. If
you never learn about it, well, you'll live.
9. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc791
3. IP Addresses, structs, and Data Munging
Here's the part of the game where we get to talk code for a change.
But first, let's discuss more non-code! Yay! First I want to talk about IP addresses and ports for just
a tad so we have that sorted out. Then we'll talk about how the sockets API stores and manipulates IP
addresses and other data.
3.1. IP Addresses, versions 4 and 6
In the good old days back when Ben Kenobi was still called Obi Wan Kenobi, there was a
wonderful network routing system called The Internet Protocol Version 4, also called IPv4. It had
addresses made up of four bytes (A.K.A. four “octets”), and was commonly written in “dots and
numbers” form, like so: 192.0.2.111.
You've probably seen it around.
In fact, as of this writing, virtually every site on the Internet uses IPv4.
Everyone, including Obi Wan, was happy. Things were great, until some naysayer by the name of
Vint Cerf warned everyone that we were about to run out of IPv4 addresses!
(Besides warning everyone of the Coming IPv4 Apocalypse Of Doom And Gloom, Vint Cerf10 is
also well-known for being The Father Of The Internet. So I really am in no position to second-guess his
judgment.)
Run out of addresses? How could this be? I mean, there are like billions of IP addresses in a 32-bit
IPv4 address. Do we really have billions of computers out there?
Yes.
Also, in the beginning, when there were only a few computers and everyone thought a billion was
an impossibly large number, some big organizations were generously allocated millions of IP addresses
for their own use. (Such as Xerox, MIT, Ford, HP, IBM, GE, AT&T, and some little company called
Apple, to name a few.)
In fact, if it weren't for several stopgap measures, we would have run out a long time ago.
But now we're living in an era where we're talking about every human having an IP address, every
computer, every calculator, every phone, every parking meter, and (why not) every puppy dog, as well.
And so, IPv6 was born. Since Vint Cerf is probably immortal (even if his physical form should pass
on, heaven forbid, he is probably already existing as some kind of hyper-intelligent ELIZA11 program
out in the depths of the Internet2), no one wants to have to hear him say again “I told you so” if we don't
have enough addresses in the next version of the Internet Protocol.
What does this suggest to you?
That we need a lot more addresses. That we need not just twice as many addresses, not a billion
times as many, not a thousand trillion times as many, but 79 MILLION BILLION TRILLION times as
many possible addresses! That'll show 'em!
You're saying, “Beej, is that true? I have every reason to disbelieve large numbers.” Well, the
difference between 32 bits and 128 bits might not sound like a lot; it's only 96 more bits, right? But
remember, we're talking powers here: 32 bits represents some 4 billion numbers (232), while 128 bits
represents about 340 trillion trillion trillion numbers (for real, 2128). That's like a million IPv4 Internets for
every single star in the Universe.
Forget this dots-and-numbers look of IPv4, too; now we've got a hexadecimal
representation, with each two-byte chunk separated by a colon, like this:
2001:0db8:c9d2:aee5:73e3:934a:a5ae:9551.
That's not all! Lots of times, you'll have an IP address with lots of zeros in it, and you can compress
them between two colons. And you can leave off leading zeros for each byte pair. For instance, each of
these pairs of addresses are equivalent:
2001:0db8:c9d2:0012:0000:0000:0000:0051
2001:db8:c9d2:12::51
10. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinton_Cerf
11. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELIZA
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10 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
2001:0db8:ab00:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000
2001:db8:ab00::
0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0001
::1
The address ::1 is the loopback address. It always means “this machine I'm running on now”. In
IPv4, the loopback address is 127.0.0.1.
Finally, there's an IPv4-compatibility mode for IPv6 addresses that you might come across. If you
want, for example, to represent the IPv4 address 192.0.2.33 as an IPv6 address, you use the following
notation: “::ffff:192.0.2.33”.
We're talking serious fun.
In fact, it's such serious fun, that the Creators of IPv6 have quite cavalierly lopped off trillions and
trillions of addresses for reserved use, but we have so many, frankly, who's even counting anymore?
There are plenty left over for every man, woman, child, puppy, and parking meter on every planet in the
galaxy. And believe me, every planet in the galaxy has parking meters. You know it's true.
3.1.1. Subnets
For organizational reasons, it's sometimes convenient to declare that “this first part of this IP address
up through this bit is the network portion of the IP address, and the remainder is the host portion.
For instance, with IPv4, you might have 192.0.2.12, and we could say that the first three bytes are
the network and the last byte was the host. Or, put another way, we're talking about host 12 on network
192.0.2.0 (see how we zero out the byte that was the host.)
And now for more outdated information! Ready? In the Ancient Times, there were “classes” of
subnets, where the first one, two, or three bytes of the address was the network part. If you were lucky
enough to have one byte for the network and three for the host, you could have 24 bits-worth of hosts on
your network (24 million or so). That was a “Class A” network. On the opposite end was a “Class C”,
with three bytes of network, and one byte of host (256 hosts, minus a couple that were reserved.)
So as you can see, there were just a few Class As, a huge pile of Class Cs, and some Class Bs in the
middle.
The network portion of the IP address is described by something called the netmask, which you
bitwise-AND with the IP address to get the network number out of it. The netmask usually looks
something like 255.255.255.0. (E.g. with that netmask, if your IP is 192.0.2.12, then your network
is 192.0.2.12 AND 255.255.255.0 which gives 192.0.2.0.)
Unfortunately, it turned out that this wasn't fine-grained enough for the eventual needs of
the Internet; we were running out of Class C networks quite quickly, and we were most definitely
out of Class As, so don't even bother to ask. To remedy this, The Powers That Be allowed for the
netmask to be an arbitrary number of bits, not just 8, 16, or 24. So you might have a netmask of, say
255.255.255.252, which is 30 bits of network, and 2 bits of host allowing for four hosts on the
network. (Note that the netmask is ALWAYS a bunch of 1-bits followed by a bunch of 0-bits.)
But it's a bit unwieldy to use a big string of numbers like 255.192.0.0 as a netmask. First of all,
people don't have an intuitive idea of how many bits that is, and secondly, it's really not compact. So the
New Style came along, and it's much nicer. You just put a slash after the IP address, and then follow that
by the number of network bits in decimal. Like this: 192.0.2.12/30.
Or, for IPv6, something like this: 2001:db8::/32 or 2001:db8:5413:4028::9db9/64.
3.1.2. Port Numbers
If you'll kindly remember, I presented you earlier with the Layered Network Model which had the
Internet Layer (IP) split off from the Host-to-Host Transport Layer (TCP and UDP). Get up to speed on
that before the next paragraph.
Turns out that besides an IP address (used by the IP layer), there is another address that is used by
TCP (stream sockets) and, coincidentally, by UDP (datagram sockets). It is the port number. It's a 16-bit
number that's like the local address for the connection.
Think of the IP address as the street address of a hotel, and the port number as the room number.
That's a decent analogy; maybe later I'll come up with one involving the automobile industry.
IP Addresses, structs, and Data Munging 11
Say you want to have a computer that handles incoming mail AND web services—how do you
differentiate between the two on a computer with a single IP address?
Well, different services on the Internet have different well-known port numbers. You can see them
all in the Big IANA Port List12 or, if you're on a Unix box, in your /etc/services file. HTTP (the
web) is port 80, telnet is port 23, SMTP is port 25, the game DOOM13 used port 666, etc. and so on. Ports
under 1024 are often considered special, and usually require special OS privileges to use.
And that's about it!
3.2. Byte Order
By Order of the Realm! There shall be two byte orderings, hereafter to be known as Lame and
Magnificent!
I joke, but one really is better than the other. :-)
There really is no easy way to say this, so I'll just blurt it out: your computer might have been
storing bytes in reverse order behind your back. I know! No one wanted to have to tell you.
The thing is, everyone in the Internet world has generally agreed that if you want to represent the
two-byte hex number, say b34f, you'll store it in two sequential bytes b3 followed by 4f. Makes sense,
and, as Wilford Brimley14 would tell you, it's the Right Thing To Do. This number, stored with the big
end first, is called Big-Endian.
Unfortunately, a few computers scattered here and there throughout the world, namely anything with
an Intel or Intel-compatible processor, store the bytes reversed, so b34f would be stored in memory as
the sequential bytes 4f followed by b3. This storage method is called Little-Endian.
But wait, I'm not done with terminology yet! The more-sane Big-Endian is also called Network Byte
Order because that's the order us network types like.
Your computer stores numbers in Host Byte Order. If it's an Intel 80x86, Host Byte Order is Little-
Endian. If it's a Motorola 68k, Host Byte Order is Big-Endian. If it's a PowerPC, Host Byte Order is...
well, it depends!
A lot of times when you're building packets or filling out data structures you'll need to make sure
your two- and four-byte numbers are in Network Byte Order. But how can you do this if you don't know
the native Host Byte Order?
Good news! You just get to assume the Host Byte Order isn't right, and you always run the value
through a function to set it to Network Byte Order. The function will do the magic conversion if it has to,
and this way your code is portable to machines of differing endianness.
All righty. There are two types of numbers that you can convert: short (two bytes) and long (four
bytes). These functions work for the unsigned variations as well. Say you want to convert a short
from Host Byte Order to Network Byte Order. Start with “h” for “host”, follow it with “to”, then “n” for
“network”, and “s” for “short”: h-to-n-s, or htons() (read: “Host to Network Short”).
It's almost too easy...
You can use every combination of “n”, “h”, “s”, and “l” you want, not counting the really stupid
ones. For example, there is NOT a stolh() (“Short to Long Host”) function—not at this party, anyway.
But there are:
htons() host to network short
htonl() host to network long
ntohs() network to host short
ntohl() network to host long
Basically, you'll want to convert the numbers to Network Byte Order before they go out on the wire,
and convert them to Host Byte Order as they come in off the wire.
I don't know of a 64-bit variant, sorry. And if you want to do floating point, check out the section on
Serialization, far below.
12. http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers
13. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doom_(video_game)
14. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilford_Brimley
12 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Assume the numbers in this document are in Host Byte Order unless I say otherwise.
3.3. structs
Well, we're finally here. It's time to talk about programming. In this section, I'll cover various data
types used by the sockets interface, since some of them are a real bear to figure out.
First the easy one: a socket descriptor. A socket descriptor is the following type:
int
Just a regular int.
Things get weird from here, so just read through and bear with me.
My First StructTM—struct addrinfo. This structure is a more recent invention, and is used to
prep the socket address structures for subsequent use. It's also used in host name lookups, and service
name lookups. That'll make more sense later when we get to actual usage, but just know for now that it's
one of the first things you'll call when making a connection.
struct addrinfo {
int ai_flags; // AI_PASSIVE, AI_CANONNAME, etc.
int ai_family; // AF_INET, AF_INET6, AF_UNSPEC
int ai_socktype; // SOCK_STREAM, SOCK_DGRAM
int ai_protocol; // use 0 for "any"
size_t ai_addrlen; // size of ai_addr in bytes
struct sockaddr *ai_addr; // struct sockaddr_in or _in6
char *ai_canonname; // full canonical hostname
struct sockaddr_in {
short int sin_family; // Address family, AF_INET
unsigned short int sin_port; // Port number
struct in_addr sin_addr; // Internet address
unsigned char sin_zero[8]; // Same size as struct sockaddr
};
This structure makes it easy to reference elements of the socket address. Note that sin_zero
(which is included to pad the structure to the length of a struct sockaddr) should be set to all zeros
with the function memset(). Also, notice that sin_family corresponds to sa_family in a struct
sockaddr and should be set to “AF_INET”. Finally, the sin_port must be in Network Byte Order (by
using htons()!)
Let's dig deeper! You see the sin_addr field is a struct in_addr. What is that thing? Well, not
to be overly dramatic, but it's one of the scariest unions of all time:
// (IPv4 only--see struct in6_addr for IPv6)
struct sockaddr_in6 {
u_int16_t sin6_family; // address family, AF_INET6
u_int16_t sin6_port; // port number, Network Byte Order
u_int32_t sin6_flowinfo; // IPv6 flow information
struct in6_addr sin6_addr; // IPv6 address
u_int32_t sin6_scope_id; // Scope ID
};
struct in6_addr {
unsigned char s6_addr[16]; // IPv6 address
};
Note that IPv6 has an IPv6 address and a port number, just like IPv4 has an IPv4 address and a port
number.
Also note that I'm not going to talk about the IPv6 flow information or Scope ID fields for the
moment... this is just a starter guide. :-)
Last but not least, here is another simple structure, struct sockaddr_storage that is designed
to be large enough to hold both IPv4 and IPv6 structures. (See, for some calls, sometimes you don't know
in advance if it's going to fill out your struct sockaddr with an IPv4 or IPv6 address. So you pass in
this parallel structure, very similar to struct sockaddr except larger, and then cast it to the type you
need:
struct sockaddr_storage {
sa_family_t ss_family; // address family
What's important is that you can see the address family in the ss_family field—check this to see
if it's AF_INET or AF_INET6 (for IPv4 or IPv6). Then you can cast it to a struct sockaddr_in or
struct sockaddr_in6 if you wanna.
// IPv6:
15. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1918
16. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4193
4. Jumping from IPv4 to IPv6
But I just want to know what to change in my code to get it going with IPv6! Tell me now!
Ok! Ok!
Almost everything in here is something I've gone over, above, but it's the short version for the
impatient. (Of course, there is more than this, but this is what applies to the guide.)
1. First of all, try to use getaddrinfo() to get all the struct sockaddr info, instead of
packing the structures by hand. This will keep you IP version-agnostic, and will eliminate
many of the subsequent steps.
2. Any place that you find you're hard-coding anything related to the IP version, try to wrap up in
a helper function.
3. Change AF_INET to AF_INET6.
4. Change PF_INET to PF_INET6.
5. Change INADDR_ANY assignments to in6addr_any assignments, which are slightly different:
struct sockaddr_in sa;
struct sockaddr_in6 sa6;
6. Instead of struct sockaddr_in use struct sockaddr_in6, being sure to add “6” to the
fields as appropriate (see structs, above). There is no sin6_zero field.
7. Instead of struct in_addr use struct in6_addr, being sure to add “6” to the fields as
appropriate (see structs, above).
8. Instead of inet_aton() or inet_addr(), use inet_pton().
9. Instead of inet_ntoa(), use inet_ntop().
10. Instead of gethostbyname(), use the superior getaddrinfo().
11. Instead of gethostbyaddr(), use the superior getnameinfo() (although
gethostbyaddr() can still work with IPv6).
12. INADDR_BROADCAST no longer works. Use IPv6 multicast instead.
Et voila!
17
5. System Calls or Bust
This is the section where we get into the system calls (and other library calls) that allow you to
access the network functionality of a Unix box, or any box that supports the sockets API for that matter
(BSD, Windows, Linux, Mac, what-have-you.) When you call one of these functions, the kernel takes
over and does all the work for you automagically.
The place most people get stuck around here is what order to call these things in. In that, the man
pages are no use, as you've probably discovered. Well, to help with that dreadful situation, I've tried to
lay out the system calls in the following sections in exactly (approximately) the same order that you'll
need to call them in your programs.
That, coupled with a few pieces of sample code here and there, some milk and cookies (which I fear
you will have to supply yourself), and some raw guts and courage, and you'll be beaming data around the
Internet like the Son of Jon Postel!
(Please note that for brevity, many code snippets below do not include necessary error checking.
And they very commonly assume that the result from calls to getaddrinfo() succeed and return a
valid entry in the linked list. Both of these situations are properly addressed in the stand-alone programs,
though, so use those as a model.)
5.1. getaddrinfo()—Prepare to launch!
This is a real workhorse of a function with a lot of options, but usage is actually pretty simple. It
helps set up the structs you need later on.
A tiny bit of history: it used to be that you would use a function called gethostbyname() to do
DNS lookups. Then you'd load that information by hand into a struct sockaddr_in, and use that in
your calls.
This is no longer necessary, thankfully. (Nor is it desirable, if you want to write code that works
for both IPv4 and IPv6!) In these modern times, you now have the function getaddrinfo() that does
all kinds of good stuff for you, including DNS and service name lookups, and fills out the structs you
need, besides!
Let's take a look!
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netdb.h>
17. http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers
19
20 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
// etc.
I keep saying that servinfo is a linked list with all kinds of address information. Let's write a
quick demo program to show off this information. This short program18 will print the IP addresses for
whatever host you specify on the command line:
/*
** showip.c -- show IP addresses for a host given on the command line
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netdb.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
18. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/showip.c
System Calls or Bust 21
if (argc != 2) {
fprintf(stderr,"usage: showip hostname\n");
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
As you see, the code calls getaddrinfo() on whatever you pass on the command line, that
fills out the linked list pointed to by res, and then we can iterate over the list and print stuff out or do
whatever.
(There's a little bit of ugliness there where we have to dig into the different types of struct
sockaddrs depending on the IP version. Sorry about that! I'm not sure of a better way around it.)
Sample run! Everyone loves screenshots:
$ showip www.example.net
IP addresses for www.example.net:
IPv4: 192.0.2.88
$ showip ipv6.example.com
IP addresses for ipv6.example.com:
IPv4: 192.0.2.101
IPv6: 2001:db8:8c00:22::171
Now that we have that under control, we'll use the results we get from getaddrinfo() to pass to
other socket functions and, at long last, get our network connection established! Keep reading!
22 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
// do the lookup
// [pretend we already filled out the "hints" struct]
getaddrinfo("www.example.com", "http", &hints, &res);
sockfd is the socket file descriptor returned by socket(). my_addr is a pointer to a struct
sockaddr that contains information about your address, namely, port and IP address. addrlen is the
length in bytes of that address.
Whew. That's a bit to absorb in one chunk. Let's have an example that binds the socket to the host
the program is running on, port 3490:
struct addrinfo hints, *res;
int sockfd;
// make a socket:
int sockfd;
struct sockaddr_in my_addr;
my_addr.sin_family = AF_INET;
my_addr.sin_port = htons(MYPORT); // short, network byte order
my_addr.sin_addr.s_addr = inet_addr("10.12.110.57");
memset(my_addr.sin_zero, '\0', sizeof my_addr.sin_zero);
if (setsockopt(listener,SOL_SOCKET,SO_REUSEADDR,&yes,sizeof(int)) == -1) {
perror("setsockopt");
exit(1);
}
One small extra final note about bind(): there are times when you won't absolutely have to call it.
If you are connect()ing to a remote machine and you don't care what your local port is (as is the case
with telnet where you only care about the remote port), you can simply call connect(), it'll check to
see if the socket is unbound, and will bind() it to an unused local port if necessary.
5.4. connect()—Hey, you!
Let's just pretend for a few minutes that you're a telnet application. Your user commands you (just
like in the movie TRON) to get a socket file descriptor. You comply and call socket(). Next, the user
tells you to connect to “10.12.110.57” on port “23” (the standard telnet port.) Yow! What do you do
now?
Lucky for you, program, you're now perusing the section on connect()—how to connect to a
remote host. So read furiously onward! No time to lose!
The connect() call is as follows:
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
// make a socket:
// connect!
int main(void)
{
struct sockaddr_storage their_addr;
socklen_t addr_size;
struct addrinfo hints, *res;
int sockfd, new_fd;
sockfd is the socket descriptor to read from, buf is the buffer to read the information into, len is
the maximum length of the buffer, and flags can again be set to 0. (See the recv() man page for flag
information.)
recv() returns the number of bytes actually read into the buffer, or -1 on error (with errno set,
accordingly.)
Wait! recv() can return 0. This can mean only one thing: the remote side has closed the connection
on you! A return value of 0 is recv()'s way of letting you know this has occurred.
There, that was easy, wasn't it? You can now pass data back and forth on stream sockets! Whee!
You're a Unix Network Programmer!
5.8. sendto() and recvfrom()—Talk to me, DGRAM-style
“This is all fine and dandy,” I hear you saying, “but where does this leave me with unconnected
datagram sockets?” No problemo, amigo. We have just the thing.
Since datagram sockets aren't connected to a remote host, guess which piece of information we need
to give before we send a packet? That's right! The destination address! Here's the scoop:
int sendto(int sockfd, const void *msg, int len, unsigned int flags,
const struct sockaddr *to, socklen_t tolen);
As you can see, this call is basically the same as the call to send() with the addition of two other
pieces of information. to is a pointer to a struct sockaddr (which will probably be another struct
sockaddr_in or struct sockaddr_in6 or struct sockaddr_storage that you cast at the last
minute) which contains the destination IP address and port. tolen, an int deep-down, can simply be set
to sizeof *to or sizeof(struct sockaddr_storage).
To get your hands on the destination address structure, you'll probably either get it from
getaddrinfo(), or from recvfrom(), below, or you'll fill it out by hand.
Just like with send(), sendto() returns the number of bytes actually sent (which, again, might be
less than the number of bytes you told it to send!), or -1 on error.
Equally similar are recv() and recvfrom(). The synopsis of recvfrom() is:
int recvfrom(int sockfd, void *buf, int len, unsigned int flags,
struct sockaddr *from, int *fromlen);
Again, this is just like recv() with the addition of a couple fields. from is a pointer to a local
struct sockaddr_storage that will be filled with the IP address and port of the originating machine.
fromlen is a pointer to a local int that should be initialized to sizeof *from or sizeof(struct
sockaddr_storage). When the function returns, fromlen will contain the length of the address
actually stored in from.
recvfrom() returns the number of bytes received, or -1 on error (with errno set accordingly.)
So, here's a question: why do we use struct sockaddr_storage as the socket type? Why not
struct sockaddr_in? Because, you see, we want to not tie ourselves down to IPv4 or IPv6. So we
use the generic struct sockaddr_storage which we know will be big enough for either.
(So... here's another question: why isn't struct sockaddr itself big enough for any address?
We even cast the general-purpose struct sockaddr_storage to the general-purpose struct
sockaddr! Seems extraneous and redundant, huh. The answer is, it just isn't big enough, and I'd guess
that changing it at this point would be Problematic. So they made a new one.)
Remember, if you connect() a datagram socket, you can then simply use send() and recv()
for all your transactions. The socket itself is still a datagram socket and the packets still use UDP, but the
socket interface will automatically add the destination and source information for you.
5.9. close() and shutdown()—Get outta my face!
Whew! You've been send()ing and recv()ing data all day long, and you've had it. You're ready
to close the connection on your socket descriptor. This is easy. You can just use the regular Unix file
descriptor close() function:
close(sockfd);
This will prevent any more reads and writes to the socket. Anyone attempting to read or write the
socket on the remote end will receive an error.
28 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Just in case you want a little more control over how the socket closes, you can use the shutdown()
function. It allows you to cut off communication in a certain direction, or both ways (just like close()
does.) Synopsis:
int shutdown(int sockfd, int how);
sockfd is the socket file descriptor you want to shutdown, and how is one of the following:
19. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1413
6. Client-Server Background
It's a client-server world, baby. Just about everything on the network deals with client processes
talking to server processes and vice-versa. Take telnet, for instance. When you connect to a remote host
on port 23 with telnet (the client), a program on that host (called telnetd, the server) springs to life. It
handles the incoming telnet connection, sets you up with a login prompt, etc.
Client-Server Interaction.
The exchange of information between client and server is summarized in the above diagram.
Note that the client-server pair can speak SOCK_STREAM, SOCK_DGRAM, or anything else (as long as
they're speaking the same thing.) Some good examples of client-server pairs are telnet/telnetd, ftp/ftpd,
or Firefox/Apache. Every time you use ftp, there's a remote program, ftpd, that serves you.
Often, there will only be one server on a machine, and that server will handle multiple clients
using fork(). The basic routine is: server will wait for a connection, accept() it, and fork() a child
process to handle it. This is what our sample server does in the next section.
6.1. A Simple Stream Server
All this server does is send the string “Hello, World!\n” out over a stream connection. All you
need to do to test this server is run it in one window, and telnet to it from another with:
$ telnet remotehostname 3490
where remotehostname is the name of the machine you're running it on.
The server code20:
/*
** server.c -- a stream socket server demo
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <netdb.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <signal.h>
void sigchld_handler(int s)
{
while(waitpid(-1, NULL, WNOHANG) > 0);
}
20. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/server.c
29
30 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
int main(void)
{
int sockfd, new_fd; // listen on sock_fd, new connection on new_fd
struct addrinfo hints, *servinfo, *p;
struct sockaddr_storage their_addr; // connector's address information
socklen_t sin_size;
struct sigaction sa;
int yes=1;
char s[INET6_ADDRSTRLEN];
int rv;
// loop through all the results and bind to the first we can
for(p = servinfo; p != NULL; p = p->ai_next) {
if ((sockfd = socket(p->ai_family, p->ai_socktype,
p->ai_protocol)) == -1) {
perror("server: socket");
continue;
}
break;
}
if (p == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "server: failed to bind\n");
return 2;
}
inet_ntop(their_addr.ss_family,
get_in_addr((struct sockaddr *)&their_addr),
s, sizeof s);
printf("server: got connection from %s\n", s);
return 0;
}
In case you're curious, I have the code in one big main() function for (I feel) syntactic clarity. Feel
free to split it into smaller functions if it makes you feel better.
(Also, this whole sigaction() thing might be new to you—that's ok. The code that's there is
responsible for reaping zombie processes that appear as the fork()ed child processes exit. If you make
lots of zombies and don't reap them, your system administrator will become agitated.)
You can get the data from this server by using the client listed in the next section.
6.2. A Simple Stream Client
This guy's even easier than the server. All this client does is connect to the host you specify on the
command line, port 3490. It gets the string that the server sends.
The client source21:
/*
** client.c -- a stream socket client demo
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <netdb.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
21. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/client.c
32 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
if (argc != 2) {
fprintf(stderr,"usage: client hostname\n");
exit(1);
}
// loop through all the results and connect to the first we can
for(p = servinfo; p != NULL; p = p->ai_next) {
if ((sockfd = socket(p->ai_family, p->ai_socktype,
p->ai_protocol)) == -1) {
perror("client: socket");
continue;
}
break;
}
if (p == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "client: failed to connect\n");
return 2;
}
exit(1);
}
buf[numbytes] = '\0';
close(sockfd);
return 0;
}
Notice that if you don't run the server before you run the client, connect() returns “Connection
refused”. Very useful.
6.3. Datagram Sockets
We've already covered the basics of UDP datagram sockets with our discussion of sendto() and
recvfrom(), above, so I'll just present a couple of sample programs: talker.c and listener.c.
listener sits on a machine waiting for an incoming packet on port 4950. talker sends a packet to that
port, on the specified machine, that contains whatever the user enters on the command line.
Here is the source for listener.c22:
/*
** listener.c -- a datagram sockets "server" demo
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <netdb.h>
int main(void)
{
int sockfd;
struct addrinfo hints, *servinfo, *p;
int rv;
int numbytes;
struct sockaddr_storage their_addr;
char buf[MAXBUFLEN];
size_t addr_len;
char s[INET6_ADDRSTRLEN];
22. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/listener.c
34 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
hints.ai_socktype = SOCK_DGRAM;
hints.ai_flags = AI_PASSIVE; // use my IP
// loop through all the results and bind to the first we can
for(p = servinfo; p != NULL; p = p->ai_next) {
if ((sockfd = socket(p->ai_family, p->ai_socktype,
p->ai_protocol)) == -1) {
perror("listener: socket");
continue;
}
break;
}
if (p == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "listener: failed to bind socket\n");
return 2;
}
freeaddrinfo(servinfo);
close(sockfd);
return 0;
}
Notice that in our call to getaddrinfo() we're finally using SOCK_DGRAM. Also, note that there's
no need to listen() or accept(). This is one of the perks of using unconnected datagram sockets!
Next comes the source for talker.c23:
/*
** talker.c -- a datagram "client" demo
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
23. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/talker.c
Client-Server Background 35
#include <errno.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <netdb.h>
if (argc != 3) {
fprintf(stderr,"usage: talker hostname message\n");
exit(1);
}
break;
}
if (p == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "talker: failed to bind socket\n");
return 2;
}
freeaddrinfo(servinfo);
return 0;
}
And that's all there is to it! Run listener on some machine, then run talker on another. Watch them
communicate! Fun G-rated excitement for the entire nuclear family!
You don't even have to run the server this time! You can run talker by itself, and it just happily fires
packets off into the ether where they disappear if no one is ready with a recvfrom() on the other side.
Remember: data sent using UDP datagram sockets isn't guaranteed to arrive!
36 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Except for one more tiny detail that I've mentioned many times in the past: connected datagram
sockets. I need to talk about this here, since we're in the datagram section of the document. Let's say that
talker calls connect() and specifies the listener's address. From that point on, talker may only sent to
and receive from the address specified by connect(). For this reason, you don't have to use sendto()
and recvfrom(); you can simply use send() and recv().
7. Slightly Advanced Techniques
These aren't really advanced, but they're getting out of the more basic levels we've already covered.
In fact, if you've gotten this far, you should consider yourself fairly accomplished in the basics of Unix
network programming! Congratulations!
So here we go into the brave new world of some of the more esoteric things you might want to learn
about sockets. Have at it!
7.1. Blocking
Blocking. You've heard about it—now what the heck is it? In a nutshell, “block” is techie jargon
for “sleep”. You probably noticed that when you run listener, above, it just sits there until a packet
arrives. What happened is that it called recvfrom(), there was no data, and so recvfrom() is said to
“block” (that is, sleep there) until some data arrives.
Lots of functions block. accept() blocks. All the recv() functions block. The reason they can do
this is because they're allowed to. When you first create the socket descriptor with socket(), the kernel
sets it to blocking. If you don't want a socket to be blocking, you have to make a call to fcntl():
#include <unistd.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
.
.
.
sockfd = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
fcntl(sockfd, F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK);
.
.
.
By setting a socket to non-blocking, you can effectively “poll” the socket for information. If you try
to read from a non-blocking socket and there's no data there, it's not allowed to block—it will return -1
and errno will be set to EWOULDBLOCK.
Generally speaking, however, this type of polling is a bad idea. If you put your program in a busy-
wait looking for data on the socket, you'll suck up CPU time like it was going out of style. A more
elegant solution for checking to see if there's data waiting to be read comes in the following section on
select().
37
38 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
the values of the highest file descriptor plus one. In this example, it should be set to sockfd+1, since it is
assuredly higher than standard input (0).
When select() returns, readfds will be modified to reflect which of the file descriptors you
selected which is ready for reading. You can test them with the macro FD_ISSET(), below.
Before progressing much further, I'll talk about how to manipulate these sets. Each set is of the type
fd_set. The following macros operate on this type:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int main(void)
{
struct timeval tv;
fd_set readfds;
tv.tv_sec = 2;
tv.tv_usec = 500000;
FD_ZERO(&readfds);
24. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/select.c
Slightly Advanced Techniques 39
FD_SET(STDIN, &readfds);
if (FD_ISSET(STDIN, &readfds))
printf("A key was pressed!\n");
else
printf("Timed out.\n");
return 0;
}
If you're on a line buffered terminal, the key you hit should be RETURN or it will time out anyway.
Now, some of you might think this is a great way to wait for data on a datagram socket—and you
are right: it might be. Some Unices can use select in this manner, and some can't. You should see what
your local man page says on the matter if you want to attempt it.
Some Unices update the time in your struct timeval to reflect the amount of time still
remaining before a timeout. But others do not. Don't rely on that occurring if you want to be portable.
(Use gettimeofday() if you need to track time elapsed. It's a bummer, I know, but that's the way it is.)
What happens if a socket in the read set closes the connection? Well, in that case, select() returns
with that socket descriptor set as “ready to read”. When you actually do recv() from it, recv() will
return 0. That's how you know the client has closed the connection.
One more note of interest about select(): if you have a socket that is listen()ing, you can
check to see if there is a new connection by putting that socket's file descriptor in the readfds set.
And that, my friends, is a quick overview of the almighty select() function.
But, by popular demand, here is an in-depth example. Unfortunately, the difference between the dirt-
simple example, above, and this one here is significant. But have a look, then read the description that
follows it.
This program25 acts like a simple multi-user chat server. Start it running in one window, then telnet
to it (“telnet hostname 9034”) from multiple other windows. When you type something in one telnet
session, it should appear in all the others.
/*
** selectserver.c -- a cheezy multiperson chat server
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <netdb.h>
int main(void)
{
25. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/selectserver.c
40 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
char remoteIP[INET6_ADDRSTRLEN];
break;
}
// listen
if (listen(listener, 10) == -1) {
perror("listen");
exit(3);
}
// main loop
for(;;) {
read_fds = master; // copy it
if (select(fdmax+1, &read_fds, NULL, NULL, NULL) == -1) {
perror("select");
exit(4);
}
if (newfd == -1) {
perror("accept");
} else {
FD_SET(newfd, &master); // add to master set
if (newfd > fdmax) { // keep track of the max
fdmax = newfd;
}
printf("selectserver: new connection from %s on "
"socket %d\n",
inet_ntop(remoteaddr.ss_family,
get_in_addr((struct sockaddr*)&remoteaddr),
remoteIP, INET6_ADDRSTRLEN),
newfd);
}
} else {
// handle data from a client
if ((nbytes = recv(i, buf, sizeof buf, 0)) <= 0) {
// got error or connection closed by client
if (nbytes == 0) {
// connection closed
printf("selectserver: socket %d hung up\n", i);
} else {
perror("recv");
}
close(i); // bye!
FD_CLR(i, &master); // remove from master set
} else {
// we got some data from a client
for(j = 0; j <= fdmax; j++) {
// send to everyone!
if (FD_ISSET(j, &master)) {
// except the listener and ourselves
if (j != listener && j != i) {
if (send(j, buf, nbytes, 0) == -1) {
perror("send");
}
}
}
}
}
} // END handle data from client
} // END got new incoming connection
} // END looping through file descriptors
} // END for(;;)--and you thought it would never end!
return 0;
42 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
}
Notice I have two file descriptor sets in the code: master and read_fds. The first, master, holds
all the socket descriptors that are currently connected, as well as the socket descriptor that is listening for
new connections.
The reason I have the master set is that select() actually changes the set you pass into it to
reflect which sockets are ready to read. Since I have to keep track of the connections from one call of
select() to the next, I must store these safely away somewhere. At the last minute, I copy the master
into the read_fds, and then call select().
But doesn't this mean that every time I get a new connection, I have to add it to the master set?
Yup! And every time a connection closes, I have to remove it from the master set? Yes, it does.
Notice I check to see when the listener socket is ready to read. When it is, it means I have a new
connection pending, and I accept() it and add it to the master set. Similarly, when a client connection
is ready to read, and recv() returns 0, I know the client has closed the connection, and I must remove it
from the master set.
If the client recv() returns non-zero, though, I know some data has been received. So I get it, and
then go through the master list and send that data to all the rest of the connected clients.
And that, my friends, is a less-than-simple overview of the almighty select() function.
In addition, here is a bonus afterthought: there is another function called poll() which behaves
much the same way select() does, but with a different system for managing the file descriptor sets.
Check it out!
7.3. Handling Partial send()s
Remember back in the section about send(), above, when I said that send() might not send all
the bytes you asked it to? That is, you want it to send 512 bytes, but it returns 412. What happened to the
remaining 100 bytes?
Well, they're still in your little buffer waiting to be sent out. Due to circumstances beyond your
control, the kernel decided not to send all the data out in one chunk, and now, my friend, it's up to you to
get the data out there.
You could write a function like this to do it, too:
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
int len;
len = strlen(buf);
if (sendall(s, buf, &len) == -1) {
perror("sendall");
printf("We only sent %d bytes because of the error!\n", len);
}
What happens on the receiver's end when part of a packet arrives? If the packets are variable length,
how does the receiver know when one packet ends and another begins? Yes, real-world scenarios are a
royal pain in the donkeys. You probably have to encapsulate (remember that from the data encapsulation
section way back there at the beginning?) Read on for details!
7.4. Serialization—How to Pack Data
It's easy enough to send text data across the network, you're finding, but what happens if you want
to send some “binary” data like ints or floats? It turns out you have a few options.
1. Convert the number into text with a function like sprintf(), then send the text. The receiver
will parse the text back into a number using a function like strtol().
2. Just send the data raw, passing a pointer to the data to send().
3. Encode the number into a portable binary form. The receiver will decode it.
26. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Relay_Chat
44 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
What do I mean by “known binary format”? Well, we've already seen the htons() example, right?
It changes (or “encodes”, if you want to think of it that way) a number from whatever the host format is
into Network Byte Order. To reverse (unencode) the number, the receiver calls ntohs().
But didn't I just get finished saying there wasn't any such function for other non-integer types? Yes.
I did. And since there's no standard way in C to do this, it's a bit of a pickle (that a gratuitous pun there
for you Python fans).
The thing to do is to pack the data into a known format and send that over the wire for decoding. For
example, to pack floats, here's something quick and dirty with plenty of room for improvement:27
#include <stdint.h>
uint32_t htonf(float f)
{
uint32_t p;
uint32_t sign;
return p;
}
float ntohf(uint32_t p)
{
float f = ((p>>16)&0x7fff); // whole part
f += (p&0xffff) / 65536.0f; // fraction
return f;
}
The above code is sort of a naive implementation that stores a float in a 32-bit number. The high
bit (31) is used to store the sign of the number (“1” means negative), and the next seven bits (30-16) are
used to store the whole number portion of the float. Finally, the remaining bits (15-0) are used to store
the fractional portion of the number.
Usage is fairly straightforward:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
float f = 3.1415926, f2;
uint32_t netf;
return 0;
}
On the plus side, it's small, simple, and fast. On the minus side, it's not an efficient use of space
and the range is severely restricted—try storing a number greater-than 32767 in there and it won't be
very happy! You can also see in the above example that the last couple decimal places are not correctly
preserved.
27. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/pack.c
Slightly Advanced Techniques 45
What can we do instead? Well, The Standard for storing floating point numbers is known as
IEEE-75428. Most computers use this format internally for doing floating point math, so in those cases,
strictly speaking, conversion wouldn't need to be done. But if you want your source code to be portable,
that's an assumption you can't necessarily make.
Here's some code that encodes floats and doubles into IEEE-754 format29. (Mostly—it doesn't
encode NaN or Infinity, but it could be modified to do that.)
#define pack754_32(f) (pack754((f), 32, 8))
#define pack754_64(f) (pack754((f), 64, 11))
#define unpack754_32(i) (unpack754((i), 32, 8))
#define unpack754_64(i) (unpack754((i), 64, 11))
if (i == 0) return 0.0;
// sign it
result *= (i>>(bits-1))&1? -1.0: 1.0;
28. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_754
29. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/ieee754.c
46 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
return result;
}
I put some handy macros up there at the top for packing and unpacking 32-bit (probably a float)
and 64-bit (probably a double) numbers, but the pack754() function could be called directly and told
to encode bits-worth of data (expbits of which are reserved for the normalized number's exponent.)
Here's sample usage:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdint.h> // defines uintN_t types
int main(void)
{
float f = 3.1415926, f2;
double d = 3.14159265358979323, d2;
uint32_t fi;
uint64_t di;
fi = pack754_32(f);
f2 = unpack754_32(fi);
di = pack754_64(d);
d2 = unpack754_64(di);
return 0;
}
The above code produces this output:
float before : 3.1415925
float encoded: 0x40490FDA
float after : 3.1415925
30. http://cm.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/tpop/
31. http://tpl.sourceforge.net/
Slightly Advanced Techniques 47
check out their language's pack() and unpack() functions for accomplishing the same thing. And Java
has a big-ol' Serializable interface that can be used in a similar way.
But if you want to write your own packing utility in C, K&P's trick is to use variable argument lists
to make printf()-like functions to build the packets. Here's a version I cooked up32 on my own based
on that which hopefully will be enough to give you an idea of how such a thing can work.
(This code references the pack754() functions, above. The packi*() functions operate like the
familiar htons() family, except they pack into a char array instead of another integer.)
#include <ctype.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <string.h>
/*
** packi16() -- store a 16-bit int into a char buffer (like htons())
*/
void packi16(unsigned char *buf, unsigned int i)
{
*buf++ = i>>8; *buf++ = i;
}
/*
** packi32() -- store a 32-bit int into a char buffer (like htonl())
*/
void packi32(unsigned char *buf, unsigned long i)
{
*buf++ = i>>24; *buf++ = i>>16;
*buf++ = i>>8; *buf++ = i;
}
/*
** unpacki16() -- unpack a 16-bit int from a char buffer (like ntohs())
*/
unsigned int unpacki16(unsigned char *buf)
{
return (buf[0]<<8) | buf[1];
}
/*
** unpacki32() -- unpack a 32-bit int from a char buffer (like ntohl())
*/
unsigned long unpacki32(unsigned char *buf)
{
return (buf[0]<<24) | (buf[1]<<16) | (buf[2]<<8) | buf[3];
}
/*
** pack() -- store data dictated by the format string in the buffer
**
** h - 16-bit l - 32-bit
** c - 8-bit char f - float, 32-bit
** s - string (16-bit length is automatically prepended)
*/
size_t pack(unsigned char *buf, char *format, ...)
{
va_list ap;
int h;
int l;
char c;
float f;
char *s;
size_t size = 0, len;
va_start(ap, format);
32. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/pack2.c
48 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
va_end(ap);
return size;
}
/*
** unpack() -- unpack data dictated by the format string into the buffer
*/
void unpack(unsigned char *buf, char *format, ...)
{
va_list ap;
short *h;
int *l;
int pf;
char *c;
float *f;
char *s;
size_t len, count, maxstrlen=0;
va_start(ap, format);
h = va_arg(ap, short*);
*h = unpacki16(buf);
buf += 2;
break;
default:
if (isdigit(*format)) { // track max str len
maxstrlen = maxstrlen * 10 + (*format-'0');
}
}
if (!isdigit(*format)) maxstrlen = 0;
}
va_end(ap);
}
And here is a demonstration program33 of the above code that packs some data into buf and then
unpacks it into variables. Note that when calling unpack() with a string argument (format specifier
“s”), it's wise to put a maximum length count in front of it to prevent a buffer overrun, e.g. “96s”. Be
wary when unpacking data you get over the network—a malicious user might send badly-constructed
packets in an effort to attack your system!
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
unsigned char buf[1024];
char magic;
short monkeycount;
long altitude;
float absurdityfactor;
char *s = "Great unmitigated Zot! You've found the Runestaff!";
char s2[96];
size_t packetsize, ps2;
33. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/pack2.c
50 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
return 0;
}
Whether you roll your own code or use someone else's, it's a good idea to have a general set of data
packing routines for the sake of keeping bugs in check, rather than packing each bit by hand each time.
When packing the data, what's a good format to use? Excellent question. Fortunately, RFC 450634,
the External Data Representation Standard, already defines binary formats for a bunch of different types,
like floating point types, integer types, arrays, raw data, etc. I suggest conforming to that if you're going
to roll the data yourself. But you're not obligated to. The Packet Police are not right outside your door. At
least, I don't think they are.
In any case, encoding the data somehow or another before you send it is the right way of doing
things!
7.5. Son of Data Encapsulation
What does it really mean to encapsulate data, anyway? In the simplest case, it means you'll stick a
header on there with either some identifying information or a packet length, or both.
What should your header look like? Well, it's just some binary data that represents whatever you feel
is necessary to complete your project.
Wow. That's vague.
Okay. For instance, let's say you have a multi-user chat program that uses SOCK_STREAMs. When a
user types (“says”) something, two pieces of information need to be transmitted to the server: what was
said and who said it.
So far so good? “What's the problem?” you're asking.
The problem is that the messages can be of varying lengths. One person named “tom” might say,
“Hi”, and another person named “Benjamin” might say, “Hey guys what is up?”
So you send() all this stuff to the clients as it comes in. Your outgoing data stream looks like this:
t o m H i B e n j a m i n H e y g u y s w h a t i s u p ?
And so on. How does the client know when one message starts and another stops? You could, if you
wanted, make all messages the same length and just call the sendall() we implemented, above. But
that wastes bandwidth! We don't want to send() 1024 bytes just so “tom” can say “Hi”.
So we encapsulate the data in a tiny header and packet structure. Both the client and server know
how to pack and unpack (sometimes referred to as “marshal” and “unmarshal”) this data. Don't look now,
but we're starting to define a protocol that describes how a client and server communicate!
In this case, let's assume the user name is a fixed length of 8 characters, padded with '\0'. And
then let's assume the data is variable length, up to a maximum of 128 characters. Let's have a look a
sample packet structure that we might use in this situation:
1. len (1 byte, unsigned)—The total length of the packet, counting the 8-byte user name and chat
data.
2. name (8 bytes)—The user's name, NUL-padded if necessary.
3. chatdata (n-bytes)—The data itself, no more than 128 bytes. The length of the packet should
be calculated as the length of this data plus 8 (the length of the name field, above).
34. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4506
Slightly Advanced Techniques 51
Why did I choose the 8-byte and 128-byte limits for the fields? I pulled them out of the air,
assuming they'd be long enough. Maybe, though, 8 bytes is too restrictive for your needs, and you can
have a 30-byte name field, or whatever. The choice is up to you.
Using the above packet definition, the first packet would consist of the following information (in
hex and ASCII):
0A 74 6F 6D 00 00 00 00 00 48 69
(length) T o m (padding) H i
And the second is similar:
18 42 65 6E 6A 61 6D 69 6E 48 65 79 20 67 75 79 73 20 77 ...
(length) B e n j a m i n H e y g u y s w ...
(The length is stored in Network Byte Order, of course. In this case, it's only one byte so it doesn't
matter, but generally speaking you'll want all your binary integers to be stored in Network Byte Order in
your packets.)
When you're sending this data, you should be safe and use a command similar to sendall(),
above, so you know all the data is sent, even if it takes multiple calls to send() to get it all out.
Likewise, when you're receiving this data, you need to do a bit of extra work. To be safe, you
should assume that you might receive a partial packet (like maybe we receive “18 42 65 6E 6A” from
Benjamin, above, but that's all we get in this call to recv()). We need to call recv() over and over
again until the packet is completely received.
But how? Well, we know the number of bytes we need to receive in total for the packet to be
complete, since that number is tacked on the front of the packet. We also know the maximum packet size
is 1+8+128, or 137 bytes (because that's how we defined the packet.)
There are actually a couple things you can do here. Since you know every packet starts off with a
length, you can call recv() just to get the packet length. Then once you have that, you can call it again
specifying exactly the remaining length of the packet (possibly repeatedly to get all the data) until you
have the complete packet. The advantage of this method is that you only need a buffer large enough for
one packet, while the disadvantage is that you need to call recv() at least twice to get all the data.
Another option is just to call recv() and say the amount you're willing to receive is the maximum
number of bytes in a packet. Then whatever you get, stick it onto the back of a buffer, and finally check
to see if the packet is complete. Of course, you might get some of the next packet, so you'll need to have
room for that.
What you can do is declare an array big enough for two packets. This is your work array where you
will reconstruct packets as they arrive.
Every time you recv() data, you'll append it into the work buffer and check to see if the packet is
complete. That is, the number of bytes in the buffer is greater than or equal to the length specified in the
header (+1, because the length in the header doesn't include the byte for the length itself.) If the number
of bytes in the buffer is less than 1, the packet is not complete, obviously. You have to make a special
case for this, though, since the first byte is garbage and you can't rely on it for the correct packet length.
Once the packet is complete, you can do with it what you will. Use it, and remove it from your work
buffer.
Whew! Are you juggling that in your head yet? Well, here's the second of the one-two punch: you
might have read past the end of one packet and onto the next in a single recv() call. That is, you have a
work buffer with one complete packet, and an incomplete part of the next packet! Bloody heck. (But this
is why you made your work buffer large enough to hold two packets—in case this happened!)
Since you know the length of the first packet from the header, and you've been keeping track of the
number of bytes in the work buffer, you can subtract and calculate how many of the bytes in the work
buffer belong to the second (incomplete) packet. When you've handled the first one, you can clear it out
of the work buffer and move the partial second packet down the to front of the buffer so it's all ready to
go for the next recv().
(Some of you readers will note that actually moving the partial second packet to the beginning of
the work buffer takes time, and the program can be coded to not require this by using a circular buffer.
Unfortunately for the rest of you, a discussion on circular buffers is beyond the scope of this article. If
you're still curious, grab a data structures book and go from there.)
52 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
I never said it was easy. Ok, I did say it was easy. And it is; you just need practice and pretty soon
it'll come to you naturally. By Excalibur I swear it!
7.6. Broadcast Packets—Hello, World!
So far, this guide has talked about sending data from one host to one other host. But it is possible, I
insist, that you can, with the proper authority, send data to multiple hosts at the same time!
With UDP (only UDP, not TCP) and standard IPv4, this is done through a mechanism called
broadcasting. With IPv6, broadcasting isn't supported, and you have to resort to the often superior
technique of multicasting, which, sadly I won't be discussing at this time. But enough of the starry-eyed
future—we're stuck in the 32-bit present.
But wait! You can't just run off and start broadcasting willy-nilly; You have to set the socket option
SO_BROADCAST before you can send a broadcast packet out on the network. It's like a one of those little
plastic covers they put over the missile launch switch! That's just how much power you hold in your
hands!
But seriously, though, there is a danger to using broadcast packets, and that is: every system that
receives a broadcast packet must undo all the onion-skin layers of data encapsulation until it finds out
what port the data is destined to. And then it hands the data over or discards it. In either case, it's a lot of
work for each machine that receives the broadcast packet, and since it is all of them on the local network,
that could be a lot of machines doing a lot of unnecessary work. When the game Doom first came out,
this was a complaint about its network code.
Now, there is more than one way to skin a cat... wait a minute. Is there really more than one way
to skin a cat? What kind of expression is that? Uh, and likewise, there is more than one way to send
a broadcast packet. So, to get to the meat and potatoes of the whole thing: how do you specify the
destination address for a broadcast message? There are two common ways:
1. Send the data to a specific subnet's broadcast address. This is the subnet's network number
with all one-bits set for the host portion of the address. For instance, at home my network
is 192.168.1.0, my netmask is 255.255.255.0, so the last byte of the address is my host
number (because the first three bytes, according to the netmask, are the network number).
So my broadcast address is 192.168.1.255. Under Unix, the ifconfig command will actually
give you all this data. (If you're curious, the bitwise logic to get your broadcast address is
network_number OR (NOT netmask).) You can send this type of broadcast packet to remote
networks as well as your local network, but you run the risk of the packet being dropped by the
destination's router. (If they didn't drop it, then some random smurf could start flooding their
LAN with broadcast traffic.)
2. Send the data to the “global” broadcast address. This is 255.255.255.255, aka
INADDR_BROADCAST. Many machines will automatically bitwise AND this with your network
number to convert it to a network broadcast address, but some won't. It varies. Routers do not
forward this type of broadcast packet off your local network, ironically enough.
So what happens if you try to send data on the broadcast address without first setting the
SO_BROADCAST socket option? Well, let's fire up good old talker and listener and see what happens.
$ talker 192.168.1.2 foo
sent 3 bytes to 192.168.1.2
$ talker 192.168.1.255 foo
sendto: Permission denied
$ talker 255.255.255.255 foo
sendto: Permission denied
Yes, it's not happy at all...because we didn't set the SO_BROADCAST socket option. Do that, and now
you can sendto() anywhere you want!
Slightly Advanced Techniques 53
In fact, that's the only difference between a UDP application that can broadcast and one that can't. So
let's take the old talker application and add one section that sets the SO_BROADCAST socket option. We'll
call this program broadcaster.c35:
/*
** broadcaster.c -- a datagram "client" like talker.c, except
** this one can broadcast
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <netdb.h>
if (argc != 3) {
fprintf(stderr,"usage: broadcaster hostname message\n");
exit(1);
}
35. http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/examples/broadcaster.c
54 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
close(sockfd);
return 0;
}
What's different between this and a “normal” UDP client/server situation? Nothing! (With the
exception of the client being allowed to send broadcast packets in this case.) As such, go ahead and run
the old UDP listener program in one window, and broadcaster in another. You should be now be able to
do all those sends that failed, above.
$ broadcaster 192.168.1.2 foo
sent 3 bytes to 192.168.1.2
$ broadcaster 192.168.1.255 foo
sent 3 bytes to 192.168.1.255
$ broadcaster 255.255.255.255 foo
sent 3 bytes to 255.255.255.255
And you should see listener responding that it got the packets. (If listener doesn't respond, it could
be because it's bound to an IPv6 address. Try changing the AF_UNSPEC in listener.c to AF_INET to
force IPv4.)
Well, that's kind of exciting. But now fire up listener on another machine next to you on the same
network so that you have two copies going, one on each machine, and run broadcaster again with your
broadcast address... Hey! Both listeners get the packet even though you only called sendto() once!
Cool!
If the listener gets data you send directly to it, but not data on the broadcast address, it could be that
you have a firewall on your local machine that is blocking the packets. (Yes, Pat and Bapper, thank you
for realizing before I did that this is why my sample code wasn't working. I told you I'd mention you in
the guide, and here you are. So nyah.)
Again, be careful with broadcast packets. Since every machine on the LAN will be forced to deal
with the packet whether it recvfrom()s it or not, it can present quite a load to the entire computing
network. They are definitely to be used sparingly and appropriately.
8. Common Questions
Where can I get those header files?
If you don't have them on your system already, you probably don't need them. Check the manual for
your particular platform. If you're building for Windows, you only need to #include <winsock.h>.
How can I run the client and server programs if I only have one computer? Don't I need a network
to write network programs?
Fortunately for you, virtually all machines implement a loopback network “device” that sits in the
kernel and pretends to be a network card. (This is the interface listed as “lo” in the routing table.)
Pretend you're logged into a machine named “goat”. Run the client in one window and the server
in another. Or start the server in the background (“server &”) and run the client in the same window. The
upshot of the loopback device is that you can either client goat or client localhost (since “localhost”
is likely defined in your /etc/hosts file) and you'll have the client talking to the server without a
network!
In short, no changes are necessary to any of the code to make it run on a single non-networked
machine! Huzzah!
How do I implement a “ping” utility? What is ICMP? Where can I find out more about raw
sockets and SOCK_RAW?
All your raw sockets questions will be answered in W. Richard Stevens' UNIX Network
Programming books. Also, look in the ping/ subdirectory in Stevens' UNIX Network Programming
source code, available online36.
36. http://www.unpbook.com/src.html
37. http://www.unpbook.com/src.html
55
56 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Finally, you'll probably want to set the socket back to be blocking again before you start transferring
data over it.
Notice that this has the added benefit of allowing your program to do something else while it's
connecting, too. You could, for example, set the timeout to something low, like 500 ms, and update an
indicator onscreen each timeout, then call select() again. When you've called select() and timed-
out, say, 20 times, you'll know it's time to give up on the connection.
Like I said, check out Stevens' source for a perfectly excellent example.
How do I build for Solaris/SunOS? I keep getting linker errors when I try to compile!
The linker errors happen because Sun boxes don't automatically compile in the socket libraries. See
the section on building for Solaris/SunOS in the introduction for an example of how to do this.
if (n == -1) {
// error occurred
perror("recvtimeout");
}
else if (n == -2) {
// timeout occurred
} else {
// got some data in buf
}
.
.
.
Notice that recvtimeout() returns -2 in case of a timeout. Why not return 0? Well, if you recall,
a return value of 0 on a call to recv() means that the remote side closed the connection. So that return
value is already spoken for, and -1 means “error”, so I chose -2 as my timeout indicator.
How do I encrypt or compress the data before sending it through the socket?
One easy way to do encryption is to use SSL (secure sockets layer), but that's beyond the scope of
this guide. (Check out the OpenSSL project38 for more info.)
But assuming you want to plug in or implement your own compressor or encryption system, it's just
a matter of thinking of your data as running through a sequence of steps between both ends. Each step
changes the data in some way.
If you're going to compress and encrypt, just remember to compress first. :-)
Just as long as the client properly undoes what the server does, the data will be fine in the end no
matter how many intermediate steps you add.
So all you need to do to use my code is to find the place between where the data is read and the data
is sent (using send()) over the network, and stick some code in there that does the encryption.
38. http://www.openssl.org/
58 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
How can I write a server that accepts shell commands from a client and executes them?
For simplicity, lets say the client connect()s, send()s, and close()s the connection (that is,
there are no subsequent system calls without the client connecting again.)
The process the client follows is this:
1. connect() to server
2. send(“/sbin/ls > /tmp/client.out”)
3. close() the connection
Beware! Having the server execute what the client says is like giving remote shell access and people
can do things to your account when they connect to the server. For instance, in the above example, what
if the client sends “rm -rf ~”? It deletes everything in your account, that's what!
So you get wise, and you prevent the client from using any except for a couple utilities that you
know are safe, like the foobar utility:
if (!strncmp(str, "foobar", 6)) {
sprintf(sysstr, "%s > /tmp/server.out", str);
system(sysstr);
}
But you're still unsafe, unfortunately: what if the client enters “foobar; rm -rf ~”? The safest
thing to do is to write a little routine that puts an escape (“\”) character in front of all non-alphanumeric
characters (including spaces, if appropriate) in the arguments for the command.
As you can see, security is a pretty big issue when the server starts executing things the client sends.
I'm sending a slew of data, but when I recv(), it only receives 536 bytes or 1460 bytes at a time.
But if I run it on my local machine, it receives all the data at the same time. What's going on?
You're hitting the MTU—the maximum size the physical medium can handle. On the local machine,
you're using the loopback device which can handle 8K or more no problem. But on Ethernet, which can
only handle 1500 bytes with a header, you hit that limit. Over a modem, with 576 MTU (again, with
header), you hit the even lower limit.
You have to make sure all the data is being sent, first of all. (See the sendall() function
implementation for details.) Once you're sure of that, then you need to call recv() in a loop until all
your data is read.
Read the section Son of Data Encapsulation for details on receiving complete packets of data using
multiple calls to recv().
I'm on a Windows box and I don't have the fork() system call or any kind of struct sigaction.
What to do?
If they're anywhere, they'll be in POSIX libraries that may have shipped with your compiler. Since I
don't have a Windows box, I really can't tell you the answer, but I seem to remember that Microsoft has a
POSIX compatibility layer and that's where fork() would be. (And maybe even sigaction.)
Search the help that came with VC++ for “fork” or “POSIX” and see if it gives you any clues.
If that doesn't work at all, ditch the fork()/sigaction stuff and replace it with the Win32
equivalent: CreateProcess(). I don't know how to use CreateProcess()—it takes a bazillion
arguments, but it should be covered in the docs that came with VC++.
Common Questions 59
I'm behind a firewall—how do I let people outside the firewall know my IP address so they can
connect to my machine?
Unfortunately, the purpose of a firewall is to prevent people outside the firewall from connecting to
machines inside the firewall, so allowing them to do so is basically considered a breach of security.
This isn't to say that all is lost. For one thing, you can still often connect() through the firewall if
it's doing some kind of masquerading or NAT or something like that. Just design your programs so that
you're always the one initiating the connection, and you'll be fine.
If that's not satisfactory, you can ask your sysadmins to poke a hole in the firewall so that people can
connect to you. The firewall can forward to you either through it's NAT software, or through a proxy or
something like that.
Be aware that a hole in the firewall is nothing to be taken lightly. You have to make sure you don't
give bad people access to the internal network; if you're a beginner, it's a lot harder to make software
secure than you might imagine.
Don't make your sysadmin mad at me. ;-)
How do I write a packet sniffer? How do I put my Ethernet interface into promiscuous mode?
For those not in the know, when a network card is in “promiscuous mode”, it will forward ALL
packets to the operating system, not just those that were addressed to this particular machine. (We're
talking Ethernet-layer addresses here, not IP addresses--but since ethernet is lower-layer than IP, all IP
addresses are effectively forwarded as well. See the section Low Level Nonsense and Network Theory
for more info.)
This is the basis for how a packet sniffer works. It puts the interface into promiscuous mode, then
the OS gets every single packet that goes by on the wire. You'll have a socket of some type that you can
read this data from.
Unfortunately, the answer to the question varies depending on the platform, but if you Google for,
for instance, “windows promiscuous ioctl” you'll probably get somewhere. There's what looks like a
decent writeup in Linux Journal39, as well.
How can I set a custom timeout value for a TCP or UDP socket?
It depends on your system. You might search the net for SO_RCVTIMEO and SO_SNDTIMEO (for use
with setsockopt()) to see if your system supports such functionality.
The Linux man page suggests using alarm() or setitimer() as a substitute.
How can I tell which ports are available to use? Is there a list of “official” port numbers?
Usually this isn't an issue. If you're writing, say, a web server, then it's a good idea to use the well-
known port 80 for your software. If you're writing just your own specialized server, then choose a port at
random (but greater than 1023) and give it a try.
If the port is already in use, you'll get an “Address already in use” error when you try to bind().
Choose another port. (It's a good idea to allow the user of your software to specify an alternate port either
with a config file or a command line switch.)
There is a list of official port numbers40 maintained by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority
(IANA). Just because something (over 1023) is in that list doesn't mean you can't use the port. For
instance, Id Software's DOOM uses the same port as “mdqs”, whatever that is. All that matters is that no
one else on the same machine is using that port when you want to use it.
39. http://interactive.linuxjournal.com/article/4659
40. http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers
9. Man Pages
In the Unix world, there are a lot of manuals. They have little sections that describe individual
functions that you have at your disposal.
Of course, manual would be too much of a thing to type. I mean, no one in the Unix world,
including myself, likes to type that much. Indeed I could go on and on at great length about how much
I prefer to be terse but instead I shall be brief and not bore you with long-winded diatribes about how
utterly amazingly brief I prefer to be in virtually all circumstances in their entirety.
[Applause]
Thank you. What I am getting at is that these pages are called “man pages” in the Unix world, and I
have included my own personal truncated variant here for your reading enjoyment. The thing is, many of
these functions are way more general purpose than I'm letting on, but I'm only going to present the parts
that are relevant for Internet Sockets Programming.
But wait! That's not all that's wrong with my man pages:
• They are incomplete and only show the basics from the guide.
• There are many more man pages than this in the real world.
• They are different than the ones on your system.
• The header files might be different for certain functions on your system.
• The function parameters might be different for certain functions on your system.
If you want the real information, check your local Unix man pages by typing man whatever, where
“whatever” is something that you're incredibly interested in, such as “accept”. (I'm sure Microsoft
Visual Studio has something similar in their help section. But “man” is better because it is one byte more
concise than “help”. Unix wins again!)
So, if these are so flawed, why even include them at all in the Guide? Well, there are a few reasons,
but the best are that (a) these versions are geared specifically toward network programming and are
easier to digest than the real ones, and (b) these versions contain examples!
Oh! And speaking of the examples, I don't tend to put in all the error checking because it really
increases the length of the code. But you should absolutely do error checking pretty much any time
you make any of the system calls unless you're totally 100% sure it's not going to fail, and you should
probably do it even then!
61
62 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
9.1. accept()
Accept an incoming connection on a listening socket
Prototypes
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
Description
Once you've gone through the trouble of getting a SOCK_STREAM socket and setting it up for
incoming connections with listen(), then you call accept() to actually get yourself a new socket
descriptor to use for subsequent communication with the newly connected client.
The old socket that you are using for listening is still there, and will be used for further accept()
calls as they come in.
s The listen()ing socket descriptor.
addr This is filled in with the address of the site that's connecting to you.
addrlen This is filled in with the sizeof() the structure returned in the addr parameter.
You can safely ignore it if you assume you're getting a struct sockaddr_in
back, which you know you are, because that's the type you passed in for addr.
accept() will normally block, and you can use select() to peek on the listening socket
descriptor ahead of time to see if it's “ready to read”. If so, then there's a new connection waiting to
be accept()ed! Yay! Alternatively, you could set the O_NONBLOCK flag on the listening socket using
fcntl(), and then it will never block, choosing instead to return -1 with errno set to EWOULDBLOCK.
The socket descriptor returned by accept() is a bona fide socket descriptor, open and connected to
the remote host. You have to close() it when you're done with it.
Return Value
accept() returns the newly connected socket descriptor, or -1 on error, with errno set
appropriately.
Example
struct sockaddr_storage their_addr;
socklen_t addr_size;
struct addrinfo hints, *res;
int sockfd, new_fd;
See Also
socket(), getaddrinfo(), listen(), struct sockaddr_in
64 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
9.2. bind()
Associate a socket with an IP address and port number
Prototypes
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
Description
When a remote machine wants to connect to your server program, it needs two pieces of
information: the IP address and the port number. The bind() call allows you to do just that.
First, you call getaddrinfo() to load up a struct sockaddr with the destination address and
port information. Then you call socket() to get a socket descriptor, and then you pass the socket and
address into bind(), and the IP address and port are magically (using actual magic) bound to the socket!
If you don't know your IP address, or you know you only have one IP address on the machine, or
you don't care which of the machine's IP addresses is used, you can simply pass the AI_PASSIVE flag
in the hints parameter to getaddrinfo(). What this does is fill in the IP address part of the struct
sockaddr with a special value that tells bind() that it should automatically fill in this host's IP address.
What what? What special value is loaded into the struct sockaddr's IP address to cause it to
auto-fill the address with the current host? I'll tell you, but keep in mind this is only if you're filling
out the struct sockaddr by hand; if not, use the results from getaddrinfo(), as per above. In
IPv4, the sin_addr.s_addr field of the struct sockaddr_in structure is set to INADDR_ANY. In
IPv6, the sin6_addr field of the struct sockaddr_in6 structure is assigned into from the global
variable in6addr_any. Or, if you're declaring a new struct in6_addr, you can initialize it to
IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT.
Lastly, the addrlen parameter should be set to sizeof my_addr.
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
Example
// modern way of doing things with getaddrinfo()
// make a socket:
// (you should actually walk the "res" linked list and error-check!)
myaddr.sin_family = AF_INET;
myaddr.sin_port = htons(3490);
See Also
getaddrinfo(), socket(), struct sockaddr_in, struct in_addr
66 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
9.3. connect()
Connect a socket to a server
Prototypes
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
Description
Once you've built a socket descriptor with the socket() call, you can connect() that socket to
a remote server using the well-named connect() system call. All you need to do is pass it the socket
descriptor and the address of the server you're interested in getting to know better. (Oh, and the length of
the address, which is commonly passed to functions like this.)
Usually this information comes along as the result of a call to getaddrinfo(), but you can fill out
your own struct sockaddr if you want to.
If you haven't yet called bind() on the socket descriptor, it is automatically bound to your IP
address and a random local port. This is usually just fine with you if you're not a server, since you
really don't care what your local port is; you only care what the remote port is so you can put it in the
serv_addr parameter. You can call bind() if you really want your client socket to be on a specific IP
address and port, but this is pretty rare.
Once the socket is connect()ed, you're free to send() and recv() data on it to your heart's
content.
Special note: if you connect() a SOCK_DGRAM UDP socket to a remote host, you can use send()
and recv() as well as sendto() and recvfrom(). If you want.
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
Example
// connect to www.example.com port 80 (http)
// make a socket:
See Also
socket(), bind()
Man Pages 67
9.4. close()
Close a socket descriptor
Prototypes
#include <unistd.h>
Description
After you've finished using the socket for whatever demented scheme you have concocted and you
don't want to send() or recv() or, indeed, do anything else at all with the socket, you can close() it,
and it'll be freed up, never to be used again.
The remote side can tell if this happens one of two ways. One: if the remote side calls recv(), it
will return 0. Two: if the remote side calls send(), it'll receive a signal SIGPIPE and send() will return
-1 and errno will be set to EPIPE.
Windows users: the function you need to use is called closesocket(), not close(). If you try
to use close() on a socket descriptor, it's possible Windows will get angry... And you wouldn't like it
when it's angry.
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
Example
s = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0);
.
.
.
// a whole lotta stuff...*BRRRONNNN!*
.
.
.
close(s); // not much to it, really.
See Also
socket(), shutdown()
68 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
struct addrinfo {
int ai_flags; // AI_PASSIVE, AI_CANONNAME, ...
int ai_family; // AF_xxx
int ai_socktype; // SOCK_xxx
int ai_protocol; // 0 (auto) or IPPROTO_TCP, IPPROTO_UDP
Description
getaddrinfo() is an excellent function that will return information on a particular host name
(such as its IP address) and load up a struct sockaddr for you, taking care of the gritty details (like
if it's IPv4 or IPv6.) It replaces the old functions gethostbyname() and getservbyname().The
description, below, contains a lot of information that might be a little daunting, but actual usage is pretty
simple. It might be worth it to check out the examples first.
The host name that you're interested in goes in the nodename parameter. The address can be either a
host name, like “www.example.com”, or an IPv4 or IPv6 address (passed as a string). This parameter can
also be NULL if you're using the AI_PASSIVE flag (see below.)
The servname parameter is basically the port number. It can be a port number (passed as a string,
like “80”), or it can be a service name, like “http” or “tftp” or “smtp” or “pop”, etc. Well-known service
names can be found in the IANA Port List41 or in your /etc/services file.
Lastly, for input parameters, we have hints. This is really where you get to define what the
getaddinfo() function is going to do. Zero the whole structure before use with memset(). Let's take a
look at the fields you need to set up before use.
The ai_flags can be set to a variety of things, but here are a couple important ones. (Multiple
flags can be specified by bitwise-ORing them together with the | operator.) Check your man page for the
complete list of flags.
AI_CANONNAME causes the ai_canonname of the result to the filled out with the host's canonical
(real) name. AI_PASSIVE causes the result's IP address to be filled out with INADDR_ANY (IPv4)or
in6addr_any (IPv6); this causes a subsequent call to bind() to auto-fill the IP address of the struct
sockaddr with the address of the current host. That's excellent for setting up a server when you don't
want to hardcode the address.
If you do use the AI_PASSIVE, flag, then you can pass NULL in the nodename (since bind() will
fill it in for you later.)
41. http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers
Man Pages 69
Continuing on with the input paramters, you'll likely want to set ai_family to AF_UNSPEC which
tells getaddrinfo() to look for both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. You can also restrict yourself to one or
the other with AF_INET or AF_INET6.
Next, the socktype field should be set to SOCK_STREAM or SOCK_DGRAM, depending on which
type of socket you want.
Finally, just leave ai_protocol at 0 to automatically choose your protocol type.
Now, after you get all that stuff in there, you can finally make the call to getaddrinfo()!
Of course, this is where the fun begins. The res will now point to a linked list of struct
addrinfos, and you can go through this list to get all the addresses that match what you passed in with
the hints.
Now, it's possible to get some addresses that don't work for one reason or another, so what the Linux
man page does is loops through the list doing a call to socket() and connect() (or bind() if you're
setting up a server with the AI_PASSIVE flag) until it succeeds.
Finally, when you're done with the linked list, you need to call freeaddrinfo() to free up the
memory (or it will be leaked, and Some People will get upset.)
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or nonzero on error. If it returns nonzero, you can use the function
gai_strerror() to get a printable version of the error code in the return value.
Example
// code for a client connecting to a server
// namely a stream socket to www.example.com on port 80 (http)
// either IPv4 or IPv6
int sockfd;
struct addrinfo hints, *servinfo, *p;
int rv;
// loop through all the results and connect to the first we can
for(p = servinfo; p != NULL; p = p->ai_next) {
if ((sockfd = socket(p->ai_family, p->ai_socktype,
p->ai_protocol)) == -1) {
perror("socket");
continue;
}
if (p == NULL) {
// looped off the end of the list with no connection
fprintf(stderr, "failed to connect\n");
exit(2);
}
int sockfd;
struct addrinfo hints, *servinfo, *p;
int rv;
// loop through all the results and bind to the first we can
for(p = servinfo; p != NULL; p = p->ai_next) {
if ((sockfd = socket(p->ai_family, p->ai_socktype,
p->ai_protocol)) == -1) {
perror("socket");
continue;
}
if (p == NULL) {
// looped off the end of the list with no successful bind
fprintf(stderr, "failed to bind socket\n");
exit(2);
}
See Also
gethostbyname(), getnameinfo()
Man Pages 71
9.6. gethostname()
Returns the name of the system
Prototypes
#include <sys/unistd.h>
Description
Your system has a name. They all do. This is a slightly more Unixy thing than the rest of the
networky stuff we've been talking about, but it still has its uses.
For instance, you can get your host name, and then call gethostbyname() to find out your IP
address.
The parameter name should point to a buffer that will hold the host name, and len is the size of
that buffer in bytes. gethostname() won't overwrite the end of the buffer (it might return an error, or it
might just stop writing), and it will NUL-terminate the string if there's room for it in the buffer.
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
Example
char hostname[128];
See Also
gethostbyname()
72 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Description
PLEASE NOTE: these two functions are superseded by getaddrinfo() and getnameinfo()! In
particular, gethostbyname() doesn't work well with IPv6.
These functions map back and forth between host names and IP addresses. For instance, if you have
“www.example.com”, you can use gethostbyname() to get its IP address and store it in a struct
in_addr.
Conversely, if you have a struct in_addr or a struct in6_addr, you can use
gethostbyaddr() to get the hostname back. gethostbyaddr() is IPv6 compatible, but you should
use the newer shinier getnameinfo() instead.
(If you have a string containing an IP address in dots-and-numbers format that you want to look up
the hostname of, you'd be better off using getaddrinfo() with the AI_CANONNAME flag.)
gethostbyname() takes a string like “www.yahoo.com”, and returns a struct hostent which
contains tons of information, including the IP address. (Other information is the official host name, a list
of aliases, the address type, the length of the addresses, and the list of addresses—it's a general-purpose
structure that's pretty easy to use for our specific purposes once you see how.)
gethostbyaddr() takes a struct in_addr or struct in6_addr and brings you up a
corresponding host name (if there is one), so it's sort of the reverse of gethostbyname(). As for
parameters, even though addr is a char*, you actually want to pass in a pointer to a struct in_addr.
len should be sizeof(struct in_addr), and type should be AF_INET.
So what is this struct hostent that gets returned? It has a number of fields that contain
information about the host in question.
char *h_name The real canonical host name.
char **h_aliases A list of aliases that can be accessed with arrays—the last element is
NULL
int h_addrtype The result's address type, which really should be AF_INET for our
purposes.
int length The length of the addresses in bytes, which is 4 for IP (version 4)
addresses.
char **h_addr_list A list of IP addresses for this host. Although this is a char**, it's
really an array of struct in_addr*s in disguise. The last array
element is NULL.
h_addr A commonly defined alias for h_addr_list[0]. If you just want any
old IP address for this host (yeah, they can have more than one) just
use this field.
Return Value
Returns a pointer to a resultant struct hostent or success, or NULL on error.
Instead of the normal perror() and all that stuff you'd normally use for error reporting, these
functions have parallel results in the variable h_errno, which can be printed using the functions
herror() or hstrerror(). These work just like the classic errno, perror(), and strerror()
functions you're used to.
Man Pages 73
Example
// THIS IS A DEPRECATED METHOD OF GETTING HOST NAMES
// use getaddrinfo() instead!
#include <stdio.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <netdb.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
if (argc != 2) {
fprintf(stderr,"usage: ghbn hostname\n");
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
// THIS HAS BEEN SUPERCEDED
// use getnameinfo() instead!
See Also
getaddrinfo(), getnameinfo(), gethostname(), errno, perror(), strerror(), struct
in_addr
74 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
9.8. getnameinfo()
Look up the host name and service name information for a given struct sockaddr.
Prototypes
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netdb.h>
Description
This function is the opposite of getaddrinfo(), that is, this function takes an already
loaded struct sockaddr and does a name and service name lookup on it. It replaces the old
gethostbyaddr() and getservbyport() functions.
You have to pass in a pointer to a struct sockaddr (which in actuality is probably a struct
sockaddr_in or struct sockaddr_in6 that you've cast) in the sa parameter, and the length of that
struct in the salen.
The resultant host name and service name will be written to the area pointed to by the host and
serv parameters. Of course, you have to specify the max lengths of these buffers in hostlen and
servlen.
Finally, there are several flags you can pass, but here a a couple good ones. NI_NOFQDN will cause
the host to only contain the host name, not the whole domain name. NI_NAMEREQD will cause the
function to fail if the name cannot be found with a DNS lookup (if you don't specify this flag and the
name can't be found, getnameinfo() will put a string version of the IP address in host instead.)
As always, check your local man pages for the full scoop.
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or non-zero on error. If the return value is non-zero, it can be passed to
gai_strerror() to get a human-readable string. See getaddrinfo for more information.
Example
struct sockaddr_in6 sa; // could be IPv4 if you want
char host[1024];
char service[20];
getnameinfo(&sa, sizeof sa, host, sizeof host, service, sizeof service, 0);
See Also
getaddrinfo(), gethostbyaddr()
Man Pages 75
9.9. getpeername()
Return address info about the remote side of the connection
Prototypes
#include <sys/socket.h>
Description
Once you have either accept()ed a remote connection, or connect()ed to a server, you now
have what is known as a peer. Your peer is simply the computer you're connected to, identified by an IP
address and a port. So...
getpeername() simply returns a struct sockaddr_in filled with information about the
machine you're connected to.
Why is it called a “name”? Well, there are a lot of different kinds of sockets, not just Internet
Sockets like we're using in this guide, and so “name” was a nice generic term that covered all cases. In
our case, though, the peer's “name” is it's IP address and port.
Although the function returns the size of the resultant address in len, you must preload len with
the size of addr.
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
Example
// assume s is a connected socket
socklen_t len;
struct sockaddr_storage addr;
char ipstr[INET6_ADDRSTRLEN];
int port;
See Also
gethostname(), gethostbyname(), gethostbyaddr()
76 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
9.10. errno
Holds the error code for the last system call
Prototypes
#include <errno.h>
int errno;
Description
This is the variable that holds error information for a lot of system calls. If you'll recall, things like
socket() and listen() return -1 on error, and they set the exact value of errno to let you know
specifically which error occurred.
The header file errno.h lists a bunch of constant symbolic names for errors, such as EADDRINUSE,
EPIPE, ECONNREFUSED, etc. Your local man pages will tell you what codes can be returned as an error,
and you can use these at run time to handle different errors in different ways.
Or, more commonly, you can call perror() or strerror() to get a human-readable version of
the error.
One thing to note, for you multithreading enthusiasts, is that on most systems errno is defined in
a threadsafe manner. (That is, it's not actually a global variable, but it behaves just like a global variable
would in a single-threaded environment.)
Return Value
The value of the variable is the latest error to have transpired, which might be the code for “success”
if the last action succeeded.
Example
s = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
if (s == -1) {
perror("socket"); // or use strerror()
}
tryagain:
if (select(n, &readfds, NULL, NULL) == -1) {
// an error has occurred!!
See Also
perror(), strerror()
Man Pages 77
9.11. fcntl()
Control socket descriptors
Prototypes
#include <sys/unistd.h>
#include <sys/fcntl.h>
Description
This function is typically used to do file locking and other file-oriented stuff, but it also has a couple
socket-related functions that you might see or use from time to time.
Parameter s is the socket descriptor you wish to operate on, cmd should be set to F_SETFL, and arg
can be one of the following commands. (Like I said, there's more to fcntl() than I'm letting on here,
but I'm trying to stay socket-oriented.)
O_NONBLOCK Set the socket to be non-blocking. See the section on blocking for more
details.
O_ASYNC Set the socket to do asynchronous I/O. When data is ready to be recv()'d
on the socket, the signal SIGIO will be raised. This is rare to see, and
beyond the scope of the guide. And I think it's only available on certain
systems.
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
Different uses of the fcntl() system call actually have different return values, but I haven't
covered them here because they're not socket-related. See your local fcntl() man page for more
information.
Example
int s = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
See Also
Blocking, send()
78 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Description
Just to make you really unhappy, different computers use different byte orderings internally for their
multibyte integers (i.e. any integer that's larger than a char.) The upshot of this is that if you send() a
two-byte short int from an Intel box to a Mac (before they became Intel boxes, too, I mean), what one
computer thinks is the number 1, the other will think is the number 256, and vice-versa.
The way to get around this problem is for everyone to put aside their differences and agree that
Motorola and IBM had it right, and Intel did it the weird way, and so we all convert our byte orderings
to “big-endian” before sending them out. Since Intel is a “little-endian” machine, it's far more politically
correct to call our preferred byte ordering “Network Byte Order”. So these functions convert from your
native byte order to network byte order and back again.
(This means on Intel these functions swap all the bytes around, and on PowerPC they do nothing
because the bytes are already in Network Byte Order. But you should always use them in your code
anyway, since someone might want to build it on an Intel machine and still have things work properly.)
Note that the types involved are 32-bit (4 byte, probably int) and 16-bit (2 byte, very likely short)
numbers. 64-bit machines might have a htonll() for 64-bit ints, but I've not seen it. You'll just have to
write your own.
Anyway, the way these functions work is that you first decide if you're converting from host (your
machine's) byte order or from network byte order. If “host”, the the first letter of the function you're
going to call is “h”. Otherwise it's “n” for “network”. The middle of the function name is always “to”
because you're converting from one “to” another, and the penultimate letter shows what you're converting
to. The last letter is the size of the data, “s” for short, or “l” for long. Thus:
htons() host to network short
htonl() host to network long
ntohs() network to host short
ntohl() network to host long
Return Value
Each function returns the converted value.
Example
uint32_t some_long = 10;
uint16_t some_short = 20;
uint32_t network_byte_order;
Description
These functions are deprecated because they don't handle IPv6! Use inet_ntop() or
inet_pton() instead! They are included here because they can still be found in the wild.
All of these functions convert from a struct in_addr (part of your struct sockaddr_in,
most likely) to a string in dots-and-numbers format (e.g. “192.168.5.10”) and vice-versa. If you have
an IP address passed on the command line or something, this is the easiest way to get a struct
in_addr to connect() to, or whatever. If you need more power, try some of the DNS functions like
gethostbyname() or attempt a coup d'État in your local country.
The function inet_ntoa() converts a network address in a struct in_addr to a dots-and-
numbers format string. The “n” in “ntoa” stands for network, and the “a” stands for ASCII for historical
reasons (so it's “Network To ASCII”—the “toa” suffix has an analogous friend in the C library called
atoi() which converts an ASCII string to an integer.)
The function inet_aton() is the opposite, converting from a dots-and-numbers string into a
in_addr_t (which is the type of the field s_addr in your struct in_addr.)
Finally, the function inet_addr() is an older function that does basically the same thing as
inet_aton(). It's theoretically deprecated, but you'll see it a lot and the police won't come get you if
you use it.
Return Value
inet_aton() returns non-zero if the address is a valid one, and it returns zero if the address is
invalid.
inet_ntoa() returns the dots-and-numbers string in a static buffer that is overwritten with each
call to the function.
inet_addr() returns the address as an in_addr_t, or -1 if there's an error. (That is the same
result as if you tried to convert the string “255.255.255.255”, which is a valid IP address. This is why
inet_aton() is better.)
Example
struct sockaddr_in antelope;
char *some_addr;
See Also
inet_ntop(), inet_pton(), gethostbyname(), gethostbyaddr()
80 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Description
These functions are for dealing with human-readable IP addresses and converting them to their
binary representation for use with various functions and system calls. The “n” stands for “network”, and
“p” for “presentation”. Or “text presentation”. But you can think of it as “printable”. “ntop” is “network
to printable”. See?
Sometimes you don't want to look at a pile of binary numbers when looking at an IP address. You
want it in a nice printable form, like 192.0.2.180, or 2001:db8:8714:3a90::12. In that case,
inet_ntop() is for you.
inet_ntop() takes the address family in the af parameter (either AF_INET or AF_INET6). The
src parameter should be a pointer to either a struct in_addr or struct in6_addr containing the
address you wish to convert to a string. Finally dst and size are the pointer to the destination string and
the maximum length of that string.
What should the maximum length of the dst string be? What is the maximum length for IPv4 and
IPv6 addresses? Fortunately there are a couple of macros to help you out. The maximum lengths are:
INET_ADDRSTRLEN and INET6_ADDRSTRLEN.
Other times, you might have a string containing an IP address in readable form, and you want to
pack it into a struct sockaddr_in or a struct sockaddr_in6. In that case, the opposite funcion
inet_pton() is what you're after.
inet_pton() also takes an address family (either AF_INET or AF_INET6) in the af parameter.
The src parameter is a pointer to a string containing the IP address in printable form. Lastly the dst
parameter points to where the result should be stored, which is probably a struct in_addr or struct
in6_addr.
These functions don't do DNS lookups—you'll need getaddinfo() for that.
Return Value
inet_ntop() returns the dst parameter on success, or NULL on failure (and errno is set).
inet_pton() returns 1 on success. It returns -1 if there was an error (errno is set), or 0 if the
input isn't a valid IP address.
Example
// IPv4 demo of inet_ntop() and inet_pton()
char str[INET6_ADDRSTRLEN];
case AF_INET6:
inet_ntop(AF_INET6, &(((struct sockaddr_in6 *)sa)->sin6_addr),
s, maxlen);
break;
default:
strncpy(s, "Unknown AF", maxlen);
return NULL;
}
return s;
}
See Also
getaddrinfo()
82 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
9.15. listen()
Tell a socket to listen for incoming connections
Prototypes
#include <sys/socket.h>
Description
You can take your socket descriptor (made with the socket() system call) and tell it to listen for
incoming connections. This is what differentiates the servers from the clients, guys.
The backlog parameter can mean a couple different things depending on the system you on, but
loosely it is how many pending connections you can have before the kernel starts rejecting new ones. So
as the new connections come in, you should be quick to accept() them so that the backlog doesn't fill.
Try setting it to 10 or so, and if your clients start getting “Connection refused” under heavy load, set it
higher.
Before calling listen(), your server should call bind() to attach itself to a specific port number.
That port number (on the server's IP address) will be the one that clients connect to.
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
Example
struct addrinfo hints, *res;
int sockfd;
// make a socket:
See Also
accept(), bind(), socket()
Man Pages 83
Description
Since so many functions return -1 on error and set the value of the variable errno to be some
number, it would sure be nice if you could easily print that in a form that made sense to you.
Mercifully, perror() does that. If you want more description to be printed before the error, you
can point the parameter s to it (or you can leave s as NULL and nothing additional will be printed.)
In a nutshell, this function takes errno values, like ECONNRESET, and prints them nicely, like
“Connection reset by peer.”
The function strerror() is very similar to perror(), except it returns a pointer to the error
message string for a given value (you usually pass in the variable errno.)
Return Value
strerror() returns a pointer to the error message string.
Example
int s;
// similarly:
if (listen(s, 10) == -1) {
// this prints "an error: " + the error message from errno:
printf("an error: %s\n", strerror(errno));
}
See Also
errno
84 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
9.17. poll()
Test for events on multiple sockets simultaneously
Prototypes
#include <sys/poll.h>
Description
This function is very similar to select() in that they both watch sets of file descriptors for events,
such as incoming data ready to recv(), socket ready to send() data to, out-of-band data ready to
recv(), errors, etc.
The basic idea is that you pass an array of nfds struct pollfds in ufds, along with a timeout in
milliseconds (1000 milliseconds in a second.) The timeout can be negative if you want to wait forever.
If no event happens on any of the socket descriptors by the timeout, poll() will return.
Each element in the array of struct pollfds represents one socket descriptor, and contains the
following fields:
struct pollfd {
int fd; // the socket descriptor
short events; // bitmap of events we're interested in
short revents; // when poll() returns, bitmap of events that occurred
};
Before calling poll(), load fd with the socket descriptor (if you set fd to a negative number, this
struct pollfd is ignored and its revents field is set to zero) and then construct the events field by
bitwise-ORing the following macros:
POLLIN Alert me when data is ready to recv() on this socket.
POLLOUT Alert me when I can send() data to this socket without blocking.
POLLPRI Alert me when out-of-band data is ready to recv() on this socket.
Once the poll() call returns, the revents field will be constructed as a bitwise-OR of the above
fields, telling you which descriptors actually have had that event occur. Additionally, these other fields
might be present:
POLLERR An error has occurred on this socket.
POLLHUP The remote side of the connection hung up.
POLLNVAL Something was wrong with the socket descriptor fd—maybe it's
uninitialized?
Return Value
Returns the number of elements in the ufds array that have had event occur on them; this can be
zero if the timeout occurred. Also returns -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
Example
int s1, s2;
int rv;
char buf1[256], buf2[256];
struct pollfd ufds[2];
ufds[0].fd = s1;
ufds[0].events = POLLIN | POLLPRI; // check for normal or out-of-band
ufds[1] = s2;
ufds[1].events = POLLIN; // check for just normal data
if (rv == -1) {
perror("poll"); // error occurred in poll()
} else if (rv == 0) {
printf("Timeout occurred! No data after 3.5 seconds.\n");
} else {
// check for events on s1:
if (ufds[0].revents & POLLIN) {
recv(s1, buf1, sizeof buf1, 0); // receive normal data
}
if (ufds[0].revents & POLLPRI) {
recv(s1, buf1, sizeof buf1, MSG_OOB); // out-of-band data
}
See Also
select()
86 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Description
Once you have a socket up and connected, you can read incoming data from the remote side using
the recv() (for TCP SOCK_STREAM sockets) and recvfrom() (for UDP SOCK_DGRAM sockets).
Both functions take the socket descriptor s, a pointer to the buffer buf, the size (in bytes) of the
buffer len, and a set of flags that control how the functions work.
Additionally, the recvfrom() takes a struct sockaddr*, from that will tell you where the
data came from, and will fill in fromlen with the size of struct sockaddr. (You must also initialize
fromlen to be the size of from or struct sockaddr.)
So what wondrous flags can you pass into this function? Here are some of them, but you should
check your local man pages for more information and what is actually supported on your system. You
bitwise-or these together, or just set flags to 0 if you want it to be a regular vanilla recv().
MSG_OOB Receive Out of Band data. This is how to get data that has been sent to
you with the MSG_OOB flag in send(). As the receiving side, you will
have had signal SIGURG raised telling you there is urgent data. In your
handler for that signal, you could call recv() with this MSG_OOB flag.
MSG_PEEK If you want to call recv() “just for pretend”, you can call it with this
flag. This will tell you what's waiting in the buffer for when you call
recv() “for real” (i.e. without the MSG_PEEK flag. It's like a sneak
preview into the next recv() call.
MSG_WAITALL Tell recv() to not return until all the data you specified in the len
parameter. It will ignore your wishes in extreme circumstances,
however, like if a signal interrupts the call or if some error occurs or if
the remote side closes the connection, etc. Don't be mad with it.
When you call recv(), it will block until there is some data to read. If you want to not block, set
the socket to non-blocking or check with select() or poll() to see if there is incoming data before
calling recv() or recvfrom().
Return Value
Returns the number of bytes actually received (which might be less than you requested in the len
parameter), or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
If the remote side has closed the connection, recv() will return 0. This is the normal method for
determining if the remote side has closed the connection. Normality is good, rebel!
Example
// stream sockets and recv()
// all right! now that we're connected, we can receive some data!
byte_count = recv(sockfd, buf, sizeof buf, 0);
printf("recv()'d %d bytes of data in buf\n", byte_count);
// datagram sockets and recvfrom()
See Also
send(), sendto(), select(), poll(), Blocking
88 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
9.19. select()
Check if sockets descriptors are ready to read/write
Prototypes
#include <sys/select.h>
Description
The select() function gives you a way to simultaneously check multiple sockets to see if they
have data waiting to be recv()d, or if you can send() data to them without blocking, or if some
exception has occurred.
You populate your sets of socket descriptors using the macros, like FD_SET(), above. Once you
have the set, you pass it into the function as one of the following parameters: readfds if you want to
know when any of the sockets in the set is ready to recv() data, writefds if any of the sockets is ready
to send() data to, and/or exceptfds if you need to know when an exception (error) occurs on any of
the sockets. Any or all of these parameters can be NULL if you're not interested in those types of events.
After select() returns, the values in the sets will be changed to show which are ready for reading or
writing, and which have exceptions.
The first parameter, n is the highest-numbered socket descriptor (they're just ints, remember?) plus
one.
Lastly, the struct timeval, timeout, at the end—this lets you tell select() how long to check
these sets for. It'll return after the timeout, or when an event occurs, whichever is first. The struct
timeval has two fields: tv_sec is the number of seconds, to which is added tv_usec, the number of
microseconds (1,000,000 microseconds in a second.)
The helper macros do the following:
FD_SET(int fd, fd_set *set); Add fd to the set.
FD_CLR(int fd, fd_set *set); Remove fd from the set.
FD_ISSET(int fd, fd_set *set); Return true if fd is in the set.
FD_ZERO(fd_set *set); Clear all entries from the set.
Return Value
Returns the number of descriptors in the set on success, 0 if the timeout was reached, or -1 on error
(and errno will be set accordingly.) Also, the sets are modified to show which sockets are ready.
Example
int s1, s2, n;
fd_set readfds;
struct timeval tv;
char buf1[256], buf2[256];
// wait until either socket has data ready to be recv()d (timeout 10.5 secs)
tv.tv_sec = 10;
tv.tv_usec = 500000;
rv = select(n, &readfds, NULL, NULL, &tv);
if (rv == -1) {
perror("select"); // error occurred in select()
} else if (rv == 0) {
printf("Timeout occurred! No data after 10.5 seconds.\n");
} else {
// one or both of the descriptors have data
if (FD_ISSET(s1, &readfds)) {
recv(s1, buf1, sizeof buf1, 0);
}
if (FD_ISSET(s2, &readfds)) {
recv(s1, buf2, sizeof buf2, 0);
}
}
See Also
poll()
90 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Description
Sockets are fairly configurable beasts. In fact, they are so configurable, I'm not even going to cover
it all here. It's probably system-dependent anyway. But I will talk about the basics.
Obviously, these functions get and set certain options on a socket. On a Linux box, all the socket
information is in the man page for socket in section 7. (Type: “man 7 socket” to get all these goodies.)
As for parameters, s is the socket you're talking about, level should be set to SOL_SOCKET. Then
you set the optname to the name you're interested in. Again, see your man page for all the options, but
here are some of the most fun ones:
SO_BINDTODEVICE Bind this socket to a symbolic device name like eth0 instead of using
bind() to bind it to an IP address. Type the command ifconfig under
Unix to see the device names.
SO_REUSEADDR Allows other sockets to bind() to this port, unless there is an active
listening socket bound to the port already. This enables you to get
around those “Address already in use” error messages when you try to
restart your server after a crash.
SO_BROADCAST Allows UDP datagram (SOCK_DGRAM) sockets to send and receive
packets sent to and from the broadcast address. Does nothing
—NOTHING!!—to TCP stream sockets! Hahaha!
As for the parameter optval, it's usually a pointer to an int indicating the value in question. For
booleans, zero is false, and non-zero is true. And that's an absolute fact, unless it's different on your
system. If there is no parameter to be passed, optval can be NULL.
The final parameter, optlen, is filled out for you by getsockopt() and you have to specify it for
setsockopt(), where it will probably be sizeof(int).
Warning: on some systems (notably Sun and Windows), the option can be a char instead of an
int, and is set to, for example, a character value of '1' instead of an int value of 1. Again, check your
own man pages for more info with “man setsockopt” and “man 7 socket”!
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
Example
int optval;
int optlen;
char *optval2;
See Also
fcntl()
92 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
Description
These functions send data to a socket. Generally speaking, send() is used for TCP SOCK_STREAM
connected sockets, and sendto() is used for UDP SOCK_DGRAM unconnected datagram sockets. With
the unconnected sockets, you must specify the destination of a packet each time you send one, and that's
why the last parameters of sendto() define where the packet is going.
With both send() and sendto(), the parameter s is the socket, buf is a pointer to the data you
want to send, len is the number of bytes you want to send, and flags allows you to specify more
information about how the data is to be sent. Set flags to zero if you want it to be “normal” data. Here
are some of the commonly used flags, but check your local send() man pages for more details:
MSG_OOB Send as “out of band” data. TCP supports this, and it's a way to tell the
receiving system that this data has a higher priority than the normal
data. The receiver will receive the signal SIGURG and it can then
receive this data without first receiving all the rest of the normal data
in the queue.
MSG_DONTROUTE Don't send this data over a router, just keep it local.
MSG_DONTWAIT If send() would block because outbound traffic is clogged, have it
return EAGAIN. This is like a “enable non-blocking just for this send.”
See the section on blocking for more details.
MSG_NOSIGNAL If you send() to a remote host which is no longer recv()ing, you'll
typically get the signal SIGPIPE. Adding this flag prevents that signal
from being raised.
Return Value
Returns the number of bytes actually sent, or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.) Note
that the number of bytes actually sent might be less than the number you asked it to send! See the section
on handling partial send()s for a helper function to get around this.
Also, if the socket has been closed by either side, the process calling send() will get the signal
SIGPIPE. (Unless send() was called with the MSG_NOSIGNAL flag.)
Example
int spatula_count = 3490;
char *secret_message = "The Cheese is in The Toaster";
See Also
recv(), recvfrom()
94 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
9.22. shutdown()
Stop further sends and receives on a socket
Prototypes
#include <sys/socket.h>
Description
That's it! I've had it! No more send()s are allowed on this socket, but I still want to recv() data
on it! Or vice-versa! How can I do this?
When you close() a socket descriptor, it closes both sides of the socket for reading and
writing, and frees the socket descriptor. If you just want to close one side or the other, you can use this
shutdown() call.
As for parameters, s is obviously the socket you want to perform this action on, and what action that
is can be specified with the how parameter. How can be SHUT_RD to prevent further recv()s, SHUT_WR
to prohibit further send()s, or SHUT_RDWR to do both.
Note that shutdown() doesn't free up the socket descriptor, so you still have to eventually
close() the socket even if it has been fully shut down.
This is a rarely used system call.
Return Value
Returns zero on success, or -1 on error (and errno will be set accordingly.)
Example
int s = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
// and now that we're done, don't allow any more sends()s:
shutdown(s, SHUT_WR);
See Also
close()
Man Pages 95
9.23. socket()
Allocate a socket descriptor
Prototypes
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
Description
Returns a new socket descriptor that you can use to do sockety things with. This is generally the
first call in the whopping process of writing a socket program, and you can use the result for subsequent
calls to listen(), bind(), accept(), or a variety of other functions.
In usual usage, you get the values for these parameters from a call to getaddrinfo(), as shown in
the example below. But you can fill them in by hand if you really want to.
domain domain describes what kind of socket you're interested in. This can, believe
me, be a wide variety of things, but since this is a socket guide, it's going to be
PF_INET for IPv4, and PF_INET6 for IPv6.
type Also, the type parameter can be a number of things, but you'll probably be
setting it to either SOCK_STREAM for reliable TCP sockets (send(), recv()) or
SOCK_DGRAM for unreliable fast UDP sockets (sendto(), recvfrom().)
(Another interesting socket type is SOCK_RAW which can be used to construct
packets by hand. It's pretty cool.)
protocol Finally, the protocol parameter tells which protocol to use with a certain
socket type. Like I've already said, for instance, SOCK_STREAM uses TCP.
Fortunately for you, when using SOCK_STREAM or SOCK_DGRAM, you can just set
the protocol to 0, and it'll use the proper protocol automatically. Otherwise, you
can use getprotobyname() to look up the proper protocol number.
Return Value
The new socket descriptor to be used in subsequent calls, or -1 on error (and errno will be set
accordingly.)
Example
struct addrinfo hints, *res;
int sockfd;
See Also
accept(), bind(), getaddrinfo(), listen()
96 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
struct sockaddr {
unsigned short sa_family; // address family, AF_xxx
char sa_data[14]; // 14 bytes of protocol address
};
struct sockaddr_in {
short sin_family; // e.g. AF_INET, AF_INET6
unsigned short sin_port; // e.g. htons(3490)
struct in_addr sin_addr; // see struct in_addr, below
char sin_zero[8]; // zero this if you want to
};
struct in_addr {
unsigned long s_addr; // load with inet_pton()
};
struct sockaddr_in6 {
u_int16_t sin6_family; // address family, AF_INET6
u_int16_t sin6_port; // port number, Network Byte Order
u_int32_t sin6_flowinfo; // IPv6 flow information
struct in6_addr sin6_addr; // IPv6 address
u_int32_t sin6_scope_id; // Scope ID
};
struct in6_addr {
unsigned char s6_addr[16]; // load with inet_pton()
};
struct sockaddr_storage {
sa_family_t ss_family; // address family
Description
These are the basic structures for all syscalls and functions that deal with internet addresses. Often
you'll use getaddinfo() to fill these structures out, and then will read them when you have to.
In memory, the struct sockaddr_in and struct sockaddr_in6 share the same beginning
structure as struct sockaddr, and you can freely cast the pointer of one type to the other without any
harm, except the possible end of the universe.
Man Pages 97
Just kidding on that end-of-the-universe thing...if the universe does end when you cast a struct
sockaddr_in* to a struct sockaddr*, I promise you it's pure coincidence and you shouldn't even
worry about it.
So, with that in mind, remember that whenever a function says it takes a struct sockaddr* you
can cast your struct sockaddr_in*, struct sockaddr_in6*, or struct sockadd_storage* to
that type with ease and safety.
struct sockaddr_in is the structure used with IPv4 addresses (e.g. “192.0.2.10”). It holds an
address family (AF_INET), a port in sin_port, and an IPv4 address in sin_addr.
There's also this sin_zero field in struct sockaddr_in which some people claim must be set
to zero. Other people don't claim anything about it (the Linux documentation doesn't even mention it at
all), and setting it to zero doesn't seem to be actually necessary. So, if you feel like it, set it to zero using
memset().
Now, that struct in_addr is a weird beast on different systems. Sometimes it's a crazy union
with all kinds of #defines and other nonsense. But what you should do is only use the s_addr field in
this structure, because many systems only implement that one.
struct sockadd_in6 and struct in6_addr are very similar, except they're used for IPv6.
struct sockaddr_storage is a struct you can pass to accept() or recvfrom() when you're
trying to write IP version-agnostic code and you don't know if the new address is going to be IPv4 or
IPv6. The struct sockaddr_storage structure is large enough to hold both types, unlike the original
small struct sockaddr.
Example
// IPv4:
ip4addr.sin_family = AF_INET;
ip4addr.sin_port = htons(3490);
inet_pton(AF_INET, "10.0.0.1", &ip4addr.sin_addr);
ip6addr.sin6_family = AF_INET6;
ip6addr.sin6_port = htons(4950);
inet_pton(AF_INET6, "2001:db8:8714:3a90::12", &ip6addr.sin6_addr);
See Also
accept(), bind(), connect(), inet_aton(), inet_ntoa()
10. More References
You've come this far, and now you're screaming for more! Where else can you go to learn more
about all this stuff?
10.1. Books
For old-school actual hold-it-in-your-hand pulp paper books, try some of the following excellent
books. I used to be an affiliate with a very popular internet bookseller, but their new customer tracking
system is incompatible with a print document. As such, I get no more kickbacks. If you feel compassion
for my plight, paypal a donation to [email protected]. :-)
Unix Network Programming, volumes 1-2 by W. Richard Stevens. Published by Prentice Hall.
ISBNs for volumes 1-2: 013141155142, 013081081943.
Internetworking with TCP/IP, volumes I-III by Douglas E. Comer and David L. Stevens.
Published by Prentice Hall. ISBNs for volumes I, II, and III: 013187671644, 013031996145,
013032071446.
TCP/IP Illustrated, volumes 1-3 by W. Richard Stevens and Gary R. Wright. Published by
Addison Wesley. ISBNs for volumes 1, 2, and 3 (and a 3-volume set): 020163346947,
020163354X48, 020163495349, (020177631650).
TCP/IP Network Administration by Craig Hunt. Published by O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.
ISBN 059600297151.
Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment by W. Richard Stevens. Published by
Addison Wesley. ISBN 020143307952.
10.2. Web References
On the web:
BSD Sockets: A Quick And Dirty Primer53 (Unix system programming info, too!)
The Unix Socket FAQ54
Intro to TCP/IP55
TCP/IP FAQ56
The Winsock FAQ57
And here are some relevant Wikipedia pages:
Berkeley Sockets58
Internet Protocol (IP)59
42. http://beej.us/guide/url/unixnet1
43. http://beej.us/guide/url/unixnet2
44. http://beej.us/guide/url/intertcp1
45. http://beej.us/guide/url/intertcp2
46. http://beej.us/guide/url/intertcp3
47. http://beej.us/guide/url/tcpi1
48. http://beej.us/guide/url/tcpi2
49. http://beej.us/guide/url/tcpi3
50. http://beej.us/guide/url/tcpi123
51. http://beej.us/guide/url/tcpna
52. http://beej.us/guide/url/advunix
53. http://www.frostbytes.com/~jimf/papers/sockets/sockets.html
54. http://www.developerweb.net/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=70
55. http://pclt.cis.yale.edu/pclt/COMM/TCPIP.HTM
56. http://www.faqs.org/faqs/internet/tcp-ip/tcp-ip-faq/part1/
57. http://tangentsoft.net/wskfaq/
58. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkeley_sockets
59. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Protocol
99
100 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
RFC 165—The First RFC; this gives you an idea of what the “Internet” was like just as it was
coming to life, and an insight into how it was being designed from the ground up. (This
RFC is completely obsolete, obviously!)
RFC 76866—The User Datagram Protocol (UDP)
RFC 79167—The Internet Protocol (IP)
RFC 79368—The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)
RFC 85469—The Telnet Protocol
RFC 95970—File Transfer Protocol (FTP)
RFC 135071—The Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP)
RFC 145972—Internet Relay Chat Protocol (IRC)
RFC 191873—Address Allocation for Private Internets
RFC 213174—Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)
RFC 261675—Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)
RFC 282176—Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)
RFC 333077—Special-Use IPv4 Addresses
RFC 349378—Basic Socket Interface Extensions for IPv6
RFC 354279—Advanced Sockets Application Program Interface (API) for IPv6
RFC 384980—IPv6 Address Prefix Reserved for Documentation
RFC 392081—Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP)
60. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_Control_Protocol
61. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_Datagram_Protocol
62. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Client-server
63. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serialization
64. http://www.rfc-editor.org/
65. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1
66. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc768
67. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc791
68. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc793
69. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc854
70. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc959
71. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1350
72. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1459
73. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1918
74. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2131
75. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616
76. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2821
77. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3330
78. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3493
79. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3542
80. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3849
81. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3920
More References 101
82. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3977
83. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4193
84. http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4506
85. http://tools.ietf.org/rfc/
Index
10.x.x.x 15 FD_ISSET() 38, 88
192.168.x.x 15 FD_SET() 38, 88
FD_ZERO() 38, 88
255.255.255.255 52, 79 file descriptor 5
firewall 15, 54, 59
accept() 24, 25, 62 poking holes in 59
Address already in use 23, 55 footer 6
AF_INET 12, 22, 57 fork() 2, 29, 58
AF_INET6 12 FTP 100
asynchronous I/O 77
getaddrinfo() 12, 17, 19
Bapper 54 gethostbyaddr() 28, 72
bind() 22, 55, 64 gethostbyname() 28, 71, 72
implicit 24, 24 gethostname() 28, 71
blah blah blah 7 getnameinfo() 17, 28
blocking 37 getpeername() 28, 75
books 99 getprotobyname() 95
broadcast 52 getsockopt() 90
byte ordering 11, 13, 43, 78 gettimeofday() 39
goat 55
client
goto 56
datagram 34
stream 31 header 6
client/server 29 header files 55
close() 27, 67 herror() 72
closesocket() 2, 28, 67 hstrerror() 72
compilers htonl() 11, 78, 78
gcc 1 htons() 11, 13, 43, 78, 78
compression 57 HTTP 100
connect() 5, 22, 24, 24, 66 HTTP protocol 5
on datagram sockets 27, 36, 66
Connection refused 33 ICMP 55
CreateProcess() 2, 58 IEEE-754 45
CreateThread() 2 INADDR_ANY
CSocket 2 INADDR_BROADCAST 52
Cygwin 2 inet_addr() 14, 79
inet_aton() 14, 79
data encapsulation 6, 43 inet_ntoa() 14, 79
DHCP 100 inet_ntoa() 14, 28
disconnected network see private network. inet_pton() 14
DNS Internet Control Message Protocol see ICMP.
domain name service see DNS. Internet protocol see IP.
donkeys 43 Internet Relay Chat see IRC.
ioctl() 59
EAGAIN 92
IP 5, 6, 9, 14, 23, 27, 28, 100
email to Beej 2
IP address 64, 71, 72, 75
encryption 57
IPv4 9
EPIPE 67
IPv6 9, 13, 15, 17
errno 76, 83
IRC 43, 100
Ethernet 6
ISO/OSI 6
EWOULDBLOCK 37, 62
Excalibur 52 layered network model see ISO/OSI.
external data representation standard see XDR. Linux 2
listen() 22, 24, 82
F_SETFL 77
backlog 25
fcntl() 37, 62, 77
with select() 39
FD_CLR() 38, 88
lo see loopback device.
103
104 Beej's Guide to Network Programming
localhost 55 stream 29
loopback device 55 setsockopt() 23, 52, 55, 59, 90
shutdown() 28, 94
man pages 61 sigaction() 31, 56
Maximum Transmission Unit see MTU. SIGIO 77
mirroring 3 SIGPIPE 67, 92
MSG_DONTROUTE 92 SIGURG 86, 92
MSG_DONTWAIT 92 SMTP 100
MSG_NOSIGNAL 92 SO_BINDTODEVICE 90
MSG_OOB 86, 92 SO_BROADCAST 52, 90
MSG_PEEK 86 SO_RCVTIMEO 59
MSG_WAITALL 86 SO_REUSEADDR 23, 55, 90
MTU 58 SO_SNDTIMEO 59
SOCK_DGRAM see socket;datagram.
NAT 15 SOCK_RAW 95
netstat 55, 55 SOCK_STREAM see socket;stream.
network address translation see NAT. socket 5
NNTP 101 datagram 5, 5, 6, 27, 86, 90, 92, 95
non-blocking sockets 37, 62, 77, 92 raw 5
ntohl() 11, 78, 78 stream 5, 5, 62, 86, 92, 95
ntohs() 11, 78, 78 types 5, 5
socket descriptor 5, 12
O_ASYNC see asynchronous I/O.
socket() 5, 22, 95
O_NONBLOCK see non-blocking sockets.
SOL_SOCKET 90
OpenSSL 57
Solaris 1, 90
out-of-band data 86, 92
SSL 57
packet sniffer 59 strerror() 76, 83
Pat 54 struct addrinfo 12
perror() 76, 83 struct hostent 72
PF_INET 57, 95 struct in_addr 96
ping 55 struct pollfd 84
poll() 42, 84 struct sockaddr 12, 27, 86, 96
port 27, 64, 75 struct sockaddr_in 12, 62, 96
ports 22, 23 struct timeval 38, 88
private network 15 SunOS 1, 90
promiscuous mode 59
TCP 5, 95, 100
raw sockets 5, 55 gcc 5, 100
read() 5 TFTP 6, 100
recv() 5, 5, 26, 86 timeout, setting 59
timeout 56 translations 3
recvfrom() 27, 86 transmission control protocol see TCP.
recvtimeout() 57 TRON 24
references 99
UDP 6, 6, 52, 95, 100
web-based 99
user datagram protocol see UDP.
RFCs 100
route 55 Vint Cerf 9
SA_RESTART 56 Windows 1, 28, 55, 67, 90
Secure Sockets Layer see SSL. Winsock 2, 28
security 58 Winsock FAQ 2
select() 2, 37, 37, 55, 56, 88 write() 5
with listen() 39 WSACleanup() 2
send() 5, 5, 7, 26, 92 WSAStartup() 2
sendall() 42, 50
sendto() 7, 92 XDR 50, 101
serialization 43 XMPP 100
server
datagram 33 zombie process 31