Module
socket
Module Summary
Socket interface.
Since
Module socket was introduced in OTP 22.0.
Description
This module provides an API for network socket. Functions are provided to create, delete and manipulate the sockets as well as sending and receiving data on them.
The intent is that it shall be as "close as possible" to the OS level socket interface. The only significant addition is that some of the functions, e.g. recv/3
, have a time-out argument.
Some functions allow for an asynchronous call. This is achieved by setting the Timeout
argument to nowait
. For instance, if calling the recv/3
function with Timeout set to nowait
(recv(Sock, 0, nowait)
) when there is actually nothing to read, it will return with {select,
SelectInfo
}
(SelectInfo
contains the SelectHandle
). When data eventually arrives a 'select' message will be sent to the caller:
{'$socket', socket(), select, SelectHandle}
The caller can now call the recv
function again and probably expect data (it is really up to the OS network protocol implementation).
Note that all other users are locked out until the 'current user' has called the function (recv
in this case) and its return value shows that the operation has completed. An operation can also be cancelled with cancel/2
.
Instead of Timeout = nowait
it is equivalent to create a SelectHandle
) with make_ref()
and give as Timeout
. This will then be the SelectHandle
in the 'select' message, which enables a compiler optimization for receiving a message containing a newly created reference()
(ignore the part of the message queue that had arrived before the the reference()
was created).
Another message the user must be prepared for (when making asynchronous calls) is the abort
message:
{'$socket', socket(), abort, Info}
This message indicates that the (asynchronous) operation has been aborted. If, for instance, the socket has been closed (by another process), Info
will be {SelectHandle, closed}
.
There is currently no support for Windows.
Support for IPv6 has been implemented but not tested.
SCTP has only been partly implemented (and not tested).
Data Types
invalid() = {invalid, What :: term()}
domain() = local | inet | inet6
A lowercase atom()
representing a protocol domain on the platform named AF_*
(or PF_*
).
The calls supports()
, is_supported(ipv6)
and is_supported(local)
tells if the IPv6 protocol for the inet6
protocol domain / address family, and if the local
protocol domain / address family is supported by the platform's header files.
type() = stream | dgram | raw | rdm | seqpacket
A lowercase atom()
representing a protocol type on the platform named SOCK_*
.
protocol() = atom()
An atom()
means any protocol as enumerated by the C
library call getprotoent()
on the platform, or at least the supported ones of ip | ipv6 | tcp | udp | sctp
.
See open/2,3,4
The call supports(protocols)
returns which protocols are supported, and is_supported(protocols, Protocol)
tells if Protocol
is among the enumerated.
socket() = {'$socket', socket_handle()}
As returned by open/1,2,3,4
and accept/1,2
.
socket_handle()
An opaque socket handle unique for the socket.
select_tag()
A tag that describes the (select) operation, contained in the returned select_info()
.
select_handle() = reference()
A reference()
that uniquely identifies the (select) operation, contained in the returned select_info()
.
select_info() =
{select_info,
SelectTag :: select_tag(),
SelectHandle :: select_handle()}
Returned by an operation that requires the caller to wait for a select message
containing the SelectHandle
.
info() =
#{counters := #{atom() := integer() >= 0},
iov_max := integer() >= 0,
use_registry := boolean()}
The smallest allowed iov_max
value according to POSIX is 16
, but check your platform documentation to be sure.
socket_counters() =
#{read_byte := integer() >= 0,
read_fails := integer() >= 0,
read_pkg := integer() >= 0,
read_pkg_max := integer() >= 0,
read_tries := integer() >= 0,
read_waits := integer() >= 0,
write_byte := integer() >= 0,
write_fails := integer() >= 0,
write_pkg := integer() >= 0,
write_pkg_max := integer() >= 0,
write_tries := integer() >= 0,
write_waits := integer() >= 0,
sendfile => integer() >= 0,
sendfile_byte => integer() >= 0,
sendfile_fails => integer() >= 0,
sendfile_max => integer() >= 0,
sendfile_pkg => integer() >= 0,
sendfile_pkg_max => integer() >= 0,
sendfile_tries => integer() >= 0,
sendfile_waits => integer() >= 0,
acc_success := integer() >= 0,
acc_fails := integer() >= 0,
acc_tries := integer() >= 0,
acc_waits := integer() >= 0}
socket_info() =
#{domain := domain() | integer(),
type := type() | integer(),
protocol := protocol() | integer(),
owner := pid(),
ctype := normal | fromfd | {fromfd, integer()},
counters := socket_counters(),
num_readers := integer() >= 0,
num_writers := integer() >= 0,
num_acceptors := integer() >= 0,
writable := boolean(),
readable := boolean(),
rstates := [atom()],
wstates := [atom()]}
in_addr() = {0..255, 0..255, 0..255, 0..255}
in6_addr() =
{0..65535,
0..65535,
0..65535,
0..65535,
0..65535,
0..65535,
0..65535,
0..65535}
sockaddr() =
sockaddr_in() | sockaddr_in6() | sockaddr_un() | sockaddr_ll()
sockaddr_in() =
#{family := inet,
port := port_number(),
addr := any | broadcast | loopback | in_addr()}
sockaddr_in6() =
#{family := inet6,
port := port_number(),
addr := any | loopback | in6_addr(),
flowinfo := in6_flow_info(),
scope_id := in6_scope_id()}
sockaddr_un() = #{family := local, path := binary() | string()}
The path
element will always be a binary
when returned from this module. When supplied to an API function in this module it may be a string()
, which will be encoded into a binary according to the native file name encoding
on the platform.
A terminating zero character will be appended before the address path is given to the OS, and the terminating zero will be stripped before giving the address path to the caller.
Linux's non-portable abstract socket address extension is handled by not doing any terminating zero processing in either direction, if the first byte of the address is zero.
sockaddr_ll() =
#{family := packet,
protocol := integer() >= 0,
ifindex := integer(),
pkttype := packet_type(),
hatype := integer() >= 0,
addr := binary()}
sockaddr_recv() =
sockaddr() |
#{family := integer(), addr := binary()} |
binary()
packet_type() =
host | broadcast | multicast | otherhost | outgoing |
loopback | user | kernel | fastroute |
integer() >= 0
port_number() = 0..65535
in6_flow_info() = 0..1048575
in6_scope_id() = 0..4294967295
msg_flag() =
cmsg_cloexec | confirm | ctrunc | dontroute | eor | errqueue |
more | oob | peek | trunc
Flags corresponding to the message flag constants on the platform. The flags are lowercase and the constants are uppercase with the prefix MSG_
.
Some flags are only used for sending, some only for receiving, some in received control messages, and some for several of these. Not all flags are supported on all platforms. See the platform's documentation, supports(msg_flags)
, and is_supported(msg_flags, MsgFlag)
.
level() = socket | protocol()
The OS protocol levels for, for example, socket options and control messages, with the following names in the OS header files:
socket
-
SOL_SOCKET
with options namedSO_
*. ip
-
IPPROTO_IP
a.k.aSOL_IP
with options namedIP_
*. ipv6
-
IPPROTO_IPV6
a.k.aSOL_IPV6
with options namedIPV6_
*. tcp
-
IPPROTO_TCP
with options namedTCP_
*. udp
-
IPPROTO_UDP
with options namedUDP_
*. sctp
-
IPPROTO_SCTP
with options namedSCTP_
*.
There are many other possible protocols, but the ones above are those for which this socket library implements socket options and/or control messages.
All protocols known to the OS are enumerated when the Erlang VM is started. See the OS man page for protocols(5). The protocol level 'socket' is always implemented as SOL_SOCKET
and all the others mentioned in the list above are valid, if supported by the platform, enumerated or not.
The calls supports()
and is_supported(protocols, Protocol)
can be used to find out if protocols ipv6
and/or sctp
are supported according to the platform's header files.
otp_socket_option() =
debug | iow | controlling_process | rcvbuf | rcvctrlbuf |
sndctrlbuf | meta | use_registry | fd | domain
These are socket options for the otp
protocol level, that is {otp, Name}
options, above all OS protocol levels. They affect Erlang/OTP's socket implementation.
debug
-
boolean()
- Activate debug printout. iow
-
boolean()
- Inform On Wrap of statistics counters. controlling_process
-
pid()
- The socket "owner". Only the current controlling process can set this option. rcvbuf
-
BufSize :: (default | integer()>0) | {N :: integer()>0, BufSize :: (default | integer()>0)}
- Receive buffer size. The valuedefault
is only valid to set.N
specifies the number of read attempts to do in a tight loop before assuming no more data is pending. rcvctrlbuf
-
BufSize :: (default | integer()>0)
- Buffer size for received ancillary messages. The valuedefault
is only valid to set. sndctrlbuf
-
BufSize :: (default | integer()>0)
- Buffer size for sent ancillary messages. The valuedefault
is only valid to set. fd
-
integer()
- Only valid to get. The OS protocol levels' socket descriptor. Functionsopen/1,2
can be used to create a socket according to this module from an existing OS socket descriptor. use_registry
-
boolean()
- Only valid to get. The value is set when the socket is created withopen/2
oropen/4
.
Options not described here are intentionally undocumented and for Erlang/OTP internal use only.
socket_option() =
{Level :: socket,
Opt ::
acceptconn | acceptfilter | bindtodevice | broadcast |
busy_poll | debug | domain | dontroute | error |
keepalive | linger | mark | oobinline | passcred |
peek_off | peercred | priority | protocol | rcvbuf |
rcvbufforce | rcvlowat | rcvtimeo | reuseaddr |
reuseport | rxq_ovfl | setfib | sndbuf | sndbufforce |
sndlowat | sndtimeo | timestamp | type} |
{Level :: ip,
Opt ::
add_membership | add_source_membership | block_source |
dontfrag | drop_membership | drop_source_membership |
freebind | hdrincl | minttl | msfilter | mtu |
mtu_discover | multicast_all | multicast_if |
multicast_loop | multicast_ttl | nodefrag | options |
pktinfo | recvdstaddr | recverr | recvif | recvopts |
recvorigdstaddr | recvtos | recvttl | retopts |
router_alert | sndsrcaddr | tos | transparent | ttl |
unblock_source} |
{Level :: ipv6,
Opt ::
addrform | add_membership | authhdr | auth_level |
checksum | drop_membership | dstopts | esp_trans_level |
esp_network_level | faith | flowinfo | hopopts |
ipcomp_level | join_group | leave_group | mtu |
mtu_discover | multicast_hops | multicast_if |
multicast_loop | portrange | pktoptions | recverr |
recvhoplimit | hoplimit | recvpktinfo | pktinfo |
recvtclass | router_alert | rthdr | tclass |
unicast_hops | use_min_mtu | v6only} |
{Level :: tcp,
Opt ::
congestion | cork | info | keepcnt | keepidle |
keepintvl | maxseg | md5sig | nodelay | noopt | nopush |
syncnt | user_timeout} |
{Level :: udp, Opt :: cork} |
{Level :: sctp,
Opt ::
adaption_layer | associnfo | auth_active_key |
auth_asconf | auth_chunk | auth_key | auth_delete_key |
autoclose | context | default_send_params |
delayed_ack_time | disable_fragments | hmac_ident |
events | explicit_eor | fragment_interleave |
get_peer_addr_info | initmsg | i_want_mapped_v4_addr |
local_auth_chunks | maxseg | maxburst | nodelay |
partial_delivery_point | peer_addr_params |
peer_auth_chunks | primary_addr | reset_streams |
rtoinfo | set_peer_primary_addr | status |
use_ext_recvinfo}
Socket option on the form {Level, Opt}
where the OS protocol Level
= level()
and Opt
is a socket option on that protocol level.
The OS name for an options is, except where otherwise noted, the Opt
atom, in capitals, with prefix according to level()
.
The IPv6
option pktoptions
is a special (barf) case. It is intended for backward compatibility usage only.
Do not use this option.
See the OS documentation for every socket option.
An option below that has the value type boolean()
will translate the value false
to a C int
with value 0
, and the value true
to !!0
(not (not false)).
An option with value type integer()
will be translated to a C int
that may have a restricted range, for example byte: 0..255
. See the OS documentation.
The calls supports(options)
, supports(options, Level)
and is_supported(options, {Level, Opt})
can be used to find out which socket options that are supported by the platform.
Options for protocol level socket:
{socket, acceptconn}
Value = boolean()
{socket, bindtodevice}
Value = string()
{socket, broadcast}
Value = boolean()
{socket, debug}
Value = integer()
{socket, domain}
-
Value =
domain()
Only valid to get.
The socket's protocol domain. Does not work on for instance FreeBSD.
{socket, dontroute}
Value = boolean()
{socket, keepalive}
Value = boolean()
{socket, linger}
-
Value = abort |
linger()
The value
abort
is shorthand for#{onoff => true, linger => 0}
, and only valid to set. {socket, oobinline}
Value = boolean()
{socket, passcred}
Value = boolean()
{socket, peek_off}
-
Value = integer()
Currently disabled due to a possible infinite loop when calling
recv/1-4
withpeek
inFlags
. {socket, priority}
Value = integer()
{socket, protocol}
-
Value =
protocol()
Only valid to get.
The socket's protocol. Does not work on for instance Darwin.
{socket, rcvbuf}
Value = integer()
{socket, rcvlowat}
Value = integer()
{socket, rcvtimeo}
-
Value =
timeval()
This option is unsupported per default; OTP has to be explicitly built with the
--enable-esock-rcvsndtimeo
configure option for this to be available.Since our implementation uses nonblocking sockets, it is unknown if and how this option works, or even if it may cause malfunction. Therefore, we do not recommend setting this option.
Instead, use the
Timeout
argument to, for instance, therecv/3
function. {socket, reuseaddr}
Value = boolean()
{socket, reuseport}
Value = boolean()
{socket, sndbuf}
Value = integer()
{socket, sndlowat}
Value = integer()
{socket, sndtimeo}
-
Value =
timeval()
This option is unsupported per default; OTP has to be explicitly built with the
--enable-esock-rcvsndtimeo
configure option for this to be available.Since our implementation uses nonblocking sockets, it is unknown if and how this option works, or even if it may cause malfunction. Therefore, we do not recommend setting this option.
Instead, use the
Timeout
argument to, for instance, thesend/3
function. {socket, timestamp}
Value = boolean()
{socket, type}
-
Value =
type()
Only valid to get.
The socket's type.
Options for protocol level ip:
{ip, add_membership}
-
Value =
ip_mreq()
Only valid to set.
{ip, add_source_membership}
-
Value =
ip_mreq_source()
Only valid to set.
{ip, block_source}
-
Value =
ip_mreq_source()
Only valid to set.
{ip, drop_membership}
-
Value =
ip_mreq()
Only valid to set.
{ip, drop_source_membership}
-
Value =
ip_mreq_source()
Only valid to set.
{ip, freebind}
Value = boolean()
{ip, hdrincl}
Value = boolean()
{ip, minttl}
Value = integer()
{ip, msfilter}
-
Value =
null |
ip_msfilter()
Only valid to set.
The value
null
passes aNULL
pointer and size0
to the C library call. {ip, mtu}
-
Value = integer()
Only valid to get.
{ip, mtu_discover}
-
Value =
ip_pmtudisc()
| integer()
An
integer()
value is according to the platform's header files. {ip, multicast_all}
Value = boolean()
{ip, multicast_if}
-
Value =
any |
in_addr()
{ip, multicast_loop}
Value = boolean()
{ip, multicast_ttl}
Value = integer()
{ip, nodefrag}
Value = boolean()
{ip, pktinfo}
Value = boolean()
{ip, recvdstaddr}
Value = boolean()
{ip, recverr}
-
Value = boolean()
Warning! When this option is enabled, error messages may arrive on the socket's error queue, which should be read using the message flag
errqueue
, and usingrecvmsg/1,2,3,4,5
to get all error information in themessage's
ctrl
field as acontrol message
#{level := ip, type := recverr}
.A working strategy should be to first poll the error queue using
recvmsg/2,3,4
withTimeout =:= 0
andFlags
containingerrqueue
(ignore the return value{error, timeout}
) before reading the actual data to ensure that the error queue gets cleared. And read the data using one of thenowait |
select_handle()
recv functions:recv/3,4
,recvfrom/3,4
orrecvmsg/3,4,5
. Otherwise you might accidentally cause a busy loop in and out of 'select' for the socket. {ip, recvif}
Value = boolean()
{ip, recvopts}
Value = boolean()
{ip, recvorigdstaddr}
Value = boolean()
{ip, recvtos}
Value = boolean()
{ip, recvttl}
Value = boolean()
{ip, retopts}
Value = boolean()
{ip, router_alert}
Value = integer()
{ip, sendsrcaddr}
Value = boolean()
{ip, tos}
-
Value =
ip_tos()
| integer()
An
integer()
value is according to the platform's header files. {ip, transparent}
Value = boolean()
{ip, ttl}
Value = integer()
{ip, unblock_source}
-
Value =
ip_mreq_source()
Only valid to set.
Options for protocol level ipv6:
{ipv6, addrform}
-
Value =
domain()
As far as we know the only valid value is
inet
and it is only allowed for an IPv6 socket that is connected and bound to an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address. {ipv6, add_membership}
-
Value =
ipv6_mreq()
Only valid to set.
{ipv6, authhdr}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, drop_membership}
-
Value =
ipv6_mreq()
Only valid to set.
{ipv6, dstopts}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, flowinfo}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, hoplimit}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, hopopts}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, mtu}
Value = integer()
{ipv6, mtu_discover}
-
Value =
ipv6_pmtudisc()
| integer()
An
integer()
value is according to the platform's header files. {ipv6, multicast_hops}
-
Value =
ipv6_hops()
{ipv6, multicast_if}
Value = integer()
{ipv6, multicast_loop}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, recverr}
-
Value = boolean()
Warning! See the socket option
{ip, recverr}
regarding the socket's error queue. The same warning applies for this option. {ipv6, recvhoplimit}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, recvpktinfo}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, recvtclass}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, router_alert}
Value = integer()
{ipv6, rthdr}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, tclass}
Value = boolean()
{ipv6, unicast_hops}
-
Value =
ipv6_hops()
{ipv6, v6only}
Value = boolean()
Options for protocol level sctp
. See also RFC 6458.
{sctp, associnfo}
-
Value =
sctp_assocparams()
{sctp, autoclose}
Value = integer()
{sctp, disable_fragments}
Value = boolean()
{sctp, events}
-
Value =
sctp_event_subscribe()
Only valid to set.
{sctp, initmsg}
-
Value =
sctp_initmsg()
{sctp, maxseg}
Value = integer()
{sctp, nodelay}
Value = boolean()
{sctp, rtoinfo}
-
Value =
sctp_rtoinfo()
Options for protocol level tcp:
{tcp, congestion}
Value = string()
{tcp, cork}
Value = boolean()
{tcp, maxseg}
Value = integer()
{tcp, nodelay}
Value = boolean()
Options for protocol level udp:
{udp, cork}
Value = boolean()
linger() = #{onoff := boolean(), linger := integer() >= 0}
Corresponds to the C struct linger
for managing the socket option
{socket, linger}
.
timeval() = #{sec := integer(), usec := integer()}
Corresponds to the C struct timeval
. The field sec
holds seconds, and usec
microseconds.
Corresponds to the C struct ip_mreq
for managing multicast groups.
Corresponds to the C struct ip_mreq_source
for managing multicast groups.
ip_msfilter() =
#{multiaddr := in_addr(),
interface := in_addr(),
mode := include | exclude,
slist := [in_addr()]}
Corresponds to the C struct ip_msfilter
for managing multicast source filtering (RFC 3376).
ip_pmtudisc() = want | dont | do | probe
Lowercase atom()
values corresponding to the C library constants IP_PMTUDISC_*
. Some constant(s) may be unsupported by the platform.
ip_tos() = lowdelay | throughput | reliability | mincost
Lowercase atom()
values corresponding to the C library constants IPTOS_*
. Some constant(s) may be unsupported by the platform.
ipv6_mreq() =
#{multiaddr := in6_addr(), interface := integer() >= 0}
Corresponds to the C struct ipv6_mreq
for managing multicast groups. See also RFC 2553.
ipv6_hops() = default | 0..255
The value default
is only valid to set and is translated to the C value -1
, meaning the route default.
ipv6_pmtudisc() = want | dont | do | probe
Lowercase atom()
values corresponding to the C library constants IPV6_PMTUDISC_*
. Some constant(s) may be unsupported by the platform.
ipv6_pktinfo() = #{addr := in6_addr(), ifindex := integer()}
sctp_assocparams() =
#{assoc_id := integer(),
asocmaxrxt := 0..65535,
numbe_peer_destinations := 0..65535,
peer_rwnd := 0..4294967295,
local_rwnd := 0..4294967295,
cookie_life := 0..4294967295}
Corresponds to the C struct sctp_assocparams
.
sctp_event_subscribe() =
#{data_io := boolean(),
association := boolean(),
address := boolean(),
send_failure := boolean(),
peer_error := boolean(),
shutdown := boolean(),
partial_delivery := boolean(),
adaptation_layer => boolean(),
sender_dry => boolean()}
Corresponds to the C struct sctp_event_subscribe
.
Not all fields are implemented on all platforms; unimplemented fields are ignored, but implemented fields are mandatory. Note that the '_event' suffixes have been stripped from the C struct field names, for convenience.
sctp_initmsg() =
#{num_ostreams := 0..65535,
max_instreams := 0..65535,
max_attempts := 0..65535,
max_init_timeo := 0..65535}
Corresponds to the C struct sctp_initmsg
.
sctp_rtoinfo() =
#{assoc_id := integer(),
initial := 0..4294967295,
max := 0..4294967295,
min := 0..4294967295}
Corresponds to the C struct sctp_rtoinfo
.
msg() = msg_send() | msg_recv()
msg_send() =
#{addr => sockaddr(),
iov := erlang:iovec(),
ctrl =>
[cmsg_send() |
#{level := level() | integer(),
type := integer(),
data := binary()}]}
Message sent by sendmsg/2,3,4
.
Corresponds to a C struct msghdr
, see your platform documentation for sendmsg(2)
.
addr
- Optional peer address, used on unconnected sockets. Corresponds to
msg_name
andmsg_namelen
fields of astruct msghdr
. If not used they are set toNULL
,0
. iov
- Mandatory data as a list of binaries. The
msg_iov
andmsg_iovlen
fields of astruct msghdr
. ctrl
- Optional list of control messages (CMSG). Corresponds to the
msg_control
andmsg_controllen
fields of astruct msghdr
. If not used they are set toNULL
,0
.
The msg_flags
field of the struct msghdr
is set to 0
.
msg_recv() =
#{addr => sockaddr_recv(),
iov := erlang:iovec(),
ctrl :=
[cmsg_recv() |
#{level := level() | integer(),
type := integer(),
data := binary()}],
flags := [msg_flag() | integer()]}
Message returned by recvmsg/1,2,3,5
.
Corresponds to a C struct msghdr
, see your platform documentation for recvmsg(2)
.
addr
- Optional peer address, used on unconnected sockets. Corresponds to
msg_name
andmsg_namelen
fields of astruct msghdr
. IfNULL
the map key is not present. iov
- Data as a list of binaries. The
msg_iov
andmsg_iovlen
fields of astruct msghdr
. ctrl
- A possibly empty list of control messages (CMSG). Corresponds to the
msg_control
andmsg_controllen
fields of astruct msghdr
. flags
- Message flags. Corresponds to the
msg_flags
field of astruct msghdr
. Unknown flags, if any, are returned in oneinteger()
, last in the containing list.
native_value() = integer() | boolean() | binary()
cmsg_send() =
#{level := socket,
type := timestamp,
data => native_value(),
value => timeval()} |
#{level := socket, type := rights, data := native_value()} |
#{level := socket,
type := credentials,
data := native_value()} |
#{level := ip,
type := tos,
data => native_value(),
value => ip_tos() | integer()} |
#{level := ip,
type := ttl,
data => native_value(),
value => integer()} |
#{level := ip,
type := hoplimit,
data => native_value(),
value => integer()} |
#{level := ipv6,
type := tclass,
data => native_value(),
value => integer()}
Control messages (ancillary messages) accepted by sendmsg/2,3,4
.
A control message may for some message types have a value
field with a symbolic value, or a data
field with a native value, that has to be binary compatible what is defined in the platform's header files.
cmsg_recv() =
#{level := socket,
type := timestamp,
data := binary(),
value => timeval()} |
#{level := socket, type := rights, data := binary()} |
#{level := socket, type := credentials, data := binary()} |
#{level := ip,
type := tos,
data := binary(),
value => ip_tos() | integer()} |
#{level := ip,
type := recvtos,
data := binary(),
value := ip_tos() | integer()} |
#{level := ip,
type := ttl,
data := binary(),
value => integer()} |
#{level := ip,
type := recvttl,
data := binary(),
value := integer()} |
#{level := ip,
type := pktinfo,
data := binary(),
value => ip_pktinfo()} |
#{level := ip,
type := origdstaddr,
data := binary(),
value => sockaddr_recv()} |
#{level := ip,
type := recverr,
data := binary(),
value => extended_err()} |
#{level := ipv6,
type := hoplimit,
data := binary(),
value => integer()} |
#{level := ipv6,
type := pktinfo,
data := binary(),
value => ipv6_pktinfo()} |
#{level := ipv6,
type := recverr,
data := binary(),
value => extended_err()} |
#{level := ipv6,
type := tclass,
data := binary(),
value => integer()}
Control messages (ancillary messages) returned by recvmsg/1,2,3,5
.
A control message has got a data
field with a native (binary
) value for the message data, and may also have a decoded value
field if this socket library succesfully decoded the data.
icmp_dest_unreach() =
net_unreach | host_unreach | port_unreach | frag_needed |
net_unknown | host_unknown
icmpv6_dest_unreach() =
noroute | adm_prohibited | not_neighbour | addr_unreach |
port_unreach | policy_fail | reject_route
ee_origin() = none | local | icmp | icmp6
extended_err() =
#{error := posix(),
origin := icmp,
type := dest_unreach,
code := icmp_dest_unreach() | 0..255,
info := 0..4294967295,
data := 0..4294967295,
offender := sockaddr_recv()} |
#{error := posix(),
origin := icmp,
type := time_exceeded | 0..255,
code := 0..255,
info := 0..4294967295,
data := 0..4294967295,
offender := sockaddr_recv()} |
#{error := posix(),
origin := icmp6,
type := dest_unreach,
code := icmpv6_dest_unreach() | 0..255,
info := 0..4294967295,
data := 0..4294967295,
offender := sockaddr_recv()} |
#{error := posix(),
origin := icmp6,
type := pkt_toobig | time_exceeded | 0..255,
code := 0..255,
info := 0..4294967295,
data := 0..4294967295,
offender := sockaddr_recv()} |
#{error := posix(),
origin := ee_origin() | 0..255,
type := 0..255,
code := 0..255,
info := 0..4294967295,
data := 0..4294967295,
offender := sockaddr_recv()}
posix() = inet:posix()
The POSIX error codes originates from the OS level socket interface.
Exports
accept(ListenSocket) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
accept(ListenSocket, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Accept a connection on a socket.
This call is used with connection oriented socket types (stream
or seqpacket
). It returns the first pending incoming connection for a listen socket, or waits for one to arrive, and returns the (newly) connected socket.
accept(ListenSocket, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
The same as accept/1
but returns {error, timeout}
if no connection has been accepted after Timeout
milliseconds.
accept(ListenSocket, Timeout :: nowait) -> {ok, Socket} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
accept(ListenSocket, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, Socket} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
The same as accept/1
but returns promptly.
When there is no pending connection to return, the function will return {select, SelectInfo}
, and the caller will later receive a select message, {'$socket', Socket, select, SelectHandle}
( with the SelectHandle
contained in the SelectInfo
) when a client connects. A subsequent call to accept/1,2
will then return the socket.
If the time-out argument is SelectHandle
, that term will be contained in a returned SelectInfo
and the corresponding select message. The SelectHandle
is presumed to be unique to this call.
If the time-out argument is nowait
, and a SelectInfo
is returned, it will contain a select_handle()
generated by the call.
If the caller doesn't want to wait for a connection, it must immediately call cancel/2
to cancel the operation.
bind(Socket, Addr) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Bind a name to a socket.
When a socket is created (with open
), it has no address assigned to it. bind
assigns the address specified by the Addr
argument.
The rules used for name binding vary between domains.
If you bind a socket to an address in for example the 'inet' or 'inet6' address families, with an ephemeral port number (0), and want to know which port that was chosen, you can find out using something like: {ok, #{port := Port}} =
socket:sockname(Socket)
cancel(Socket, SelectInfo) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
Types
Cancel an asynchronous request.
Call this function in order to cancel a previous asynchronous call to, e.g. recv/3
.
An ongoing asynchronous operation blocks the socket until the operation has been finished in good order, or until it has been cancelled by this function.
Any other process that tries an operation of the same basic type (accept / send / recv) will be enqueued and notified with the regular select
mechanism for asynchronous operations when the current operation and all enqueued before it has been completed.
If SelectInfo
does not match an operation in progress for the calling process, this function returns {error, {invalid, SelectInfo}}
.
close(Socket) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Closes the socket.
Note that for e.g. protocol
= tcp
, most implementations doing a close does not guarantee that any data sent is delivered to the recipient before the close is detected at the remote side.
One way to handle this is to use the shutdown
function (socket:shutdown(Socket, write)
) to signal that no more data is to be sent and then wait for the read side of the socket to be closed.
connect(Socket, SockAddr) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
connect(Socket, SockAddr, Timeout :: infinity) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
This function connects the socket to the address specified by the SockAddr
argument, and returns when the connection has been established or failed.
If a connection attempt is already in progress (by another process), {error, already}
is returned.
connect(Socket, SockAddr, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
The same as connect/2
but returns {error, timeout}
if no connection has been established after Timeout
milliseconds.
Note that when this call has returned {error, timeout
the connection state of the socket is uncertain since the platform's network stack may complete the connection at any time, up to some platform specific time-out.
Repeating a connection attempt towards the same address would be ok, but towards a different address could end up with a connection to either address.
The safe play would be to close the socket and start over.
Also note that all this applies to cancelling a connect call with a no-wait time-out described below.
connect(Socket, SockAddr, Timeout :: nowait) -> ok | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
connect(Socket, SockAddr, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->ok | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
The same as connect/2
but returns promptly.
If it is not possible to immediately establish a connection, the function will return {select, SelectInfo}
, and the caller will later receive a select message, {'$socket', Socket, select, SelectHandle}
( with the SelectHandle
contained in the SelectInfo
) when the connection has been completed or failed. A subsequent call to connect/1
will then finalize the connection and return the result.
If the time-out argument is SelectHandle
, that term will be contained in a returned SelectInfo
and the corresponding select message. The SelectHandle
is presumed to be unique to this call.
If the time-out argument is nowait
, and a SelectInfo
is returned, it will contain a select_handle()
generated by the call.
If the caller doesn't want to wait for the connection to complete, it must immediately call cancel/2
to cancel the operation.
connect(Socket) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
This function finalizes a connection setup on a socket, after calling connect(_, _, nowait | select_handle())
that returned {select, SelectInfo}
, and receiving the select message {'$socket', Socket, select, SelectHandle}
, and returns whether the connection setup was succesful or not.
Instead of calling this function, for backwards compatibility, it is allowed to call connect/2,3
, but that incurs more overhead since the connect address and time-out are processed in vain.
cancel_monitor(MRef) -> boolean() | OTP 24.0 |
Types
If MRef
is a reference that the calling process obtained by calling monitor/1
, this monitor is turned off. If the monitoring is already turned off, nothing happens.
The returned value is one of the following:
true
-
The monitor was found and removed. In this case, no
'DOWN'
message corresponding to this monitor has been delivered and will not be delivered. false
-
The monitor was not found and could not be removed. This probably because a
'DOWN'
message corresponding to this monitor has already been placed in the caller message queue.
Failure: It is an error if MRef
refers to a monitor started by another process.
getopt(X1 :: socket() ,SocketOption :: {Level :: otp, Opt :: otp_socket_option() }) ->{ok, Value :: term()} | {error, invalid() | closed} | OTP 24.0 |
Gets a socket option from the protocol level otp
, which is this implementation's level above the OS protocol layers.
See the type otp_socket_option()
for a description of the options on this level.
getopt(X1 :: socket() , SocketOption :: socket_option() ) ->{ok, Value :: term()} | {error, posix() | invalid() | closed} | OTP 24.0 |
Gets a socket option from one of the OS's protocol levels. See the type socket_option()
for which options that this implementation knows about, how they are related to option names in the OS, and if there are known pecularities with any of them.
What options are valid depends on what kind of socket it is (domain()
, type()
and protocol()
).
See the socket options
chapter of the users guide for more info.
Not all options are valid, nor possible to get, on all platforms. That is, even if "we" support an option; it does not mean that the underlying OS does.
getopt(Socket, Level, Opt) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
getopt_native(X1 :: socket() ,SocketOption :: socket_option() |{Level :: level() | (NativeLevel :: integer()),NativeOpt :: integer()}, ValueType :: integer) -> {ok, Value :: integer()} | {error, posix() | invalid() | closed} | OTP 24.0 |
getopt_native(X1 :: socket() ,SocketOption :: socket_option() |{Level :: level() | (NativeLevel :: integer()),NativeOpt :: integer()}, ValueType :: boolean) -> {ok, Value :: boolean()} | {error, posix() | invalid() | closed} | OTP 24.0 |
getopt_native(X1 :: socket() ,SocketOption :: socket_option() |{Level :: level() | (NativeLevel :: integer()),NativeOpt :: integer()}, ValueSize :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, Value :: binary()} | {error, posix() | invalid() | closed} | OTP 24.0 |
getopt_native(X1 :: socket() ,SocketOption :: socket_option() |{Level :: level() | (NativeLevel :: integer()),NativeOpt :: integer()}, ValueSpec :: binary()) -> {ok, Value :: binary()} | {error, posix() | invalid() | closed} | OTP 24.0 |
Gets a socket option that may be unknown to our implementation, or that has a type not compatible with our implementation, that is; in "native mode".
The socket option may be specified with an ordinary socket_option()
tuple, with a known Level = level()
and an integer NativeOpt
, or with both an integer NativeLevel
and NativeOpt
.
How to decode the option value has to be specified either with ValueType
, by specifying the ValueSize
for a binary()
that will contain the fetched option value, or by specifying a binary()
ValueSpec
that will be copied to a buffer for the getsockopt()
call to write the value in which will be returned as a new binary()
.
If ValueType
is integer
a C
type (int)
will be fetched, if it is boolean
a C
type (int)
will be fetched and converted into a boolean()
according to the C
implementation.
What options are valid depends on what kind of socket it is (domain()
, type()
and protocol()
).
The integer values for NativeLevel
and NativeOpt
as well as the Value
encoding has to be deduced from the header files for the running system.
info() -> info() | OTP 24.0 |
Get miscellaneous info about the socket library.
The function returns a map with each info item as a key-value binding.
In order to ensure data integrity, mutex'es are taken when needed. So, do not call this function often.
info(Socket) -> socket_info() | OTP 22.1 |
Types
Get miscellaneous info about the socket.
The function returns a map with each info item as a key-value binding. It reflects the "current" state of the socket.
In order to ensure data integrity, mutex'es are taken when needed. So, do not call this function often.
is_supported(Key1 :: term()) -> boolean() | OTP 23.0 |
is_supported(Key1 :: term(), Key2 :: term()) -> boolean() | OTP 23.0 |
This function retreives information about what the platform supports, such as if SCTP is supported, or if a socket options are supported.
For keys other than the known false
is returned. Note that in a future version or on a different platform there might be more supported items.
This functions returns a boolean
corresponding to what supports/0-2
reports for the same Key1
(and Key2
).
listen(Socket) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
listen(Socket, Backlog) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Listen for connections on a socket.
monitor(Socket) -> reference() | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Start monitor the socket Socket
.
If the monitored socket does not exist or when the monitor is triggered, a 'DOWN'
message is sent that has the following pattern:
{'DOWN', MonitorRef, socket, Object, Info}
In the monitor message MonitorRef
and Type
are the same as described earlier, and:
Object
-
The monitored entity, socket, which triggered the event.
Info
-
Either the termination reason of the socket or
nosock
(socketSocket
did not exist at the time of monitor creation).
Making several calls to socket:monitor/1
for the same Socket
is not an error; it results in as many independent monitoring instances.
number_of() -> integer() >= 0 | OTP 22.3 |
Returns the number of active sockets.
open(FD) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason} | OTP 23.0 |
open(FD, Opts) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason} | OTP 23.0 |
Types
Creates an endpoint (socket) for communication based on an already existing file descriptor. The function attempts to retrieve domain
, type
and protocol
from the system. This is however not possible on all platforms, and they should then be specified in Opts
.
The Opts
argument is intended for providing extra information for the open call:
-
domain
-
Which protocol domain is the descriptor of. See also
open/2,3,4
. -
type
-
Which protocol type type is the descriptor of.
See also
open/2,3,4
. -
protocol
-
Which protocol is the descriptor of. The atom
default
is equivalent to the integer protocol number0
which means the default protocol for a given domain and type.If the protocol can not be retrieved from the platform for the socket, and
protocol
is not specified, the default protocol is used, which may or may not be correct.See also
open/2,3,4
. dup
-
Shall the provided descriptor be duplicated (dup) or not.
Defaults totrue
. debug
-
Enable or disable debug during the open call.
Defaults tofalse
. use_registry>
-
Enable or disable use of the socket registry for this socket. This overrides the global value.
Defaults to the global value, seeuse_registry/1
.
This function should be used with care!
On some platforms it is necessary to provide domain
, type
and protocol
since they cannot be retreived from the platform.
open(Domain, Type) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
open(Domain, Type, Opts) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Creates an endpoint (socket) for communication.
The same as open(Domain, Type, default)
and open(Domain, Type, default, Opts)
respectively.
open(Domain, Type, Protocol) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
open(Domain, Type, Protocol, Opts) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Creates an endpoint (socket) for communication.
Domain
and Type
may be integer()
s, as defined in the platform's header files. The same goes for Protocol
as defined in the platform's services(5)
database. See also the OS man page for the library call socket(2)
.
For some combinations of Domain
and Type
the platform has got a default protocol that can be selected with Protocol = default
, and the platform may allow or require selecting the default protocol, a specific protocol, or either.
Examples:
socket:open(inet, stream, tcp)
-
It is common that for protocol domain and type
inet,stream
it is allowed to select thetcp
protocol although that mostly is the default. socket:open(local, dgram)
-
It is common that for the protocol domain
local
it is mandatory to not select a protocol, that is; to select the default protocol.
The Opts
argument is intended for "other" options. The supported option(s) are described below:
netns: string()
-
Used to set the network namespace during the open call. Only supported on the Linux platform.
debug: boolean()
-
Enable or disable debug during the open call.
Defaults tofalse
. use_registry: boolean()
-
Enable or disable use of the socket registry for this socket. This overrides the global value.
Defaults to the global value, seeuse_registry/1
.
peername(Socket) -> {ok, SockAddr} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Returns the address of the peer connected to the socket.
recv(Socket) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 22.0 |
recv(Socket, Flags) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 24.0 |
recv(Socket, Length) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 22.0 |
recv(Socket, Flags, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 24.0 |
recv(Socket, Length, Flags) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 22.0 |
recv(Socket, Length, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 22.0 |
recv(Socket, Length, Flags, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Receives data from a socket, waiting for it to arrive.
The argument Length
specifies how many bytes to receive, with the special case 0
meaning "all available".
For a socket of type stream
this call will not return until all requested data can be delivered, or if "all available" data was requested when the first data chunk arrives.
The message Flags
may be symbolic msg_flag()
s and/or integer()
s, as in the platform's appropriate header files. The values of all symbolic flags and integers are or:ed together.
When there is a socket error this function returns {error, Reason}
, or if some data arrived before the error; {error, {Reason, Data}}
.
recv(Socket, Flags, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 24.0 |
recv(Socket, Length, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 22.0 |
recv(Socket, Length, Flags, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, Data} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Receives data from a socket, waiting at most Timeout
milliseconds for it to arrive.
The same as infinite time-out recv/1,2,3,4
but returns {error, timeout}
or {error, {timeout, Data}}
after Timeout
milliseconds, if the requested data has not been delivered.
recv(Socket, Flags, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> {ok, Data} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, Data}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 24.0 |
recv(Socket, Flags, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, Data} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, Data}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 24.0 |
recv(Socket, Length, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> {ok, Data} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, Data}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 22.1 |
recv(Socket, Length, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, Data} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, Data}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 24.0 |
recv(Socket, Length, Flags, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> {ok, Data} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, Data}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 22.1 |
recv(Socket, Length, Flags, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, Data} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, Data}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, Data}} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Receives data from a socket, but returns a select continuation if the data could not be returned immediately.
The same as infinite time-out recv/1,2,3,4
but if the data cannot be delivered immediately, the function returns {select, SelectInfo}
, and the caller will then receive a select message, {'$socket', Socket, select, SelectHandle}
( with the SelectHandle
contained in the SelectInfo
) when data has arrived. A subsequent call to recv/1,2,3,4
will then return the data.
If the time-out argument is SelectHandle
, that term will be contained in a returned SelectInfo
and the corresponding select message. The SelectHandle
is presumed to be unique to this call.
If the time-out argument is nowait
, and a SelectInfo
is returned, it will contain a select_handle()
generated by the call.
Note that for a socket of type stream
, if Length > 0
and only part of that amount of data is available, the function will return {ok, {Data, SelectInfo
with partial data. If the caller doesn't want to wait for more data, it must immediately call cancel/2
to cancel the operation.
recvfrom(Socket) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvfrom(Socket, Flags) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
recvfrom(Socket, BufSz) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvfrom(Socket, Flags, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvfrom(Socket, BufSz, Flags) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvfrom(Socket, BufSz, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvfrom(Socket, BufSz, Flags, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Receive a message from a socket, waiting for it to arrive.
The function returns when a message is received, or when there is a socket error. Argument BufSz
specifies the number of bytes for the receive buffer. If the buffer size is too small, the message will be truncated.
If BufSz
is not specified or 0
, a default buffer size is used, which can be set by socket:setopt(Socket, {otp,recvbuf}, BufSz).
If it is impossible to know the appropriate buffer size, it may be possible to use the receive message flag
peek
. When this flag is used, the message is not "consumed" from the underlying buffers, so another recvfrom/1,2,3,4
call is needed, possibly with an adjusted buffer size.
The message Flags
may be symbolic msg_flag()
s and/or integer()
s, as in the platform's appropriate header files. The values of all symbolic flags and integers are or:ed together.
recvfrom(Socket, Flags, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvfrom(Socket, BufSz, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvfrom(Socket, BufSz, Flags, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Receives a message from a socket, waiting at most Timeout
milliseconds for it to arrive.
The same as infinite time-out recvfrom/1,2,3,4
but returns {error, timeout}
after Timeout
milliseconds, if no message has been delivered.
recvfrom(Socket, Flags, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
recvfrom(Socket, Flags, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, {Source, Data}} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
recvfrom(Socket, BufSz, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
recvfrom(Socket, BufSz, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, {Source, Data}} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
recvfrom(Socket, BufSz, Flags, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> {ok, {Source, Data}} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
recvfrom(Socket, BufSz, Flags, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, {Source, Data}} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Receives a message from a socket, but returns a select continuation if no message could be returned immediately.
The same as infinite time-out recvfrom/1,2,3,4
but if no message cannot delivered immediately, the function returns {select, SelectInfo}
, and the caller will then receive a select message, {'$socket', Socket, select, SelectHandle}
( with the SelectHandle
contained in the SelectInfo
) when data has arrived. A subsequent call to recvfrom/1,2,3,4
will then return the message.
If the time-out argument is SelectHandle
, that term will be contained in a returned SelectInfo
and the corresponding select message. The SelectHandle
is presumed to be unique to this call.
If the time-out argument is nowait
, and a SelectInfo
is returned, it will contain a select_handle()
generated by the call.
If the caller doesn't want to wait for the data, it must immediately call cancel/2
to cancel the operation.
recvmsg(Socket) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, Flags) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, Flags, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, BufSz, CtrlSz) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, BufSz, CtrlSz, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, BufSz, CtrlSz, Flags, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Receive a message from a socket, waiting for it to arrive.
The function returns when a message is received, or when there is a socket error. Arguments BufSz
and CtrlSz
specifies the number of bytes for the receive buffer and the control message buffer. If the buffer size(s) is(are) too small, the message and/or control message list will be truncated.
If BufSz
is not specified or 0
, a default buffer size is used, which can be set by socket:setopt(Socket, {otp,recvbuf}, BufSz).
The same applies to CtrlSz
and socket:setopt(Socket, {otp,recvctrlbuf}, CtrlSz).
If it is impossible to know the appropriate buffer size, it may be possible to use the receive message flag
peek
. When this flag is used, the message is not "consumed" from the underlying buffers, so another recvfrom/1,2,3,4,5
call is needed, possibly with an adjusted buffer size.
The message Flags
may be symbolic msg_flag()
s and/or integer()
s, as in the platform's appropriate header files. The values of all symbolic flags and integers are or:ed together.
recvmsg(Socket, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, Flags, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, BufSz, CtrlSz, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, BufSz, CtrlSz, Flags, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, Msg} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Receives a message from a socket, waiting at most Timeout
milliseconds for it to arrive.
The same as recvmsg/1,2,3,4,5
but returns {error, timeout}
after Timeout
milliseconds, if no message has been delivered.
recvmsg(Socket, Timeout :: nowait) -> {ok, Msg} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
recvmsg(Socket, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, Msg} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, Flags, Timeout :: nowait) -> {ok, Msg} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
recvmsg(Socket, Flags, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, Msg} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, BufSz, CtrlSz, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> {ok, Msg} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, BufSz, CtrlSz, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, Msg} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
recvmsg(Socket, BufSz, CtrlSz, Flags, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> {ok, Msg} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
recvmsg(Socket, BufSz, CtrlSz, Flags, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, Msg} | {select, SelectInfo} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Receives a message from a socket, but returns a select continuation if no message could be returned immediately.
The same as infinite time-out recvfrom/1,2,3,4
but if no message cannot delivered immediately, the function returns {select, SelectInfo}
, and the caller will then receive a select message, {'$socket', Socket, select, SelectHandle}
( with the SelectHandle
contained in the SelectInfo
) when data has arrived. A subsequent call to recvmsg/1,2,3,4,5
will then return the data.
If the time-out argument is SelectHandle
, that term will be contained in a returned SelectInfo
and the corresponding select message. The SelectHandle
is presumed to be unique to this call.
If the time-out argument is nowait
, and a SelectInfo
is returned, it will contain a select_handle()
generated by the call.
If the caller doesn't want to wait for the data, it must immediately call cancel/2
to cancel the operation.
send(Socket, Data) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
send(Socket, Data, Flags) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
send(Socket, Data, Timeout :: infinity) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
send(Socket, Data, Flags, Timeout :: infinity) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Sends data on a connected socket, waiting for it to be sent.
This call will not return until the Data
has been accepted by the platform's network layer, or it reports an error.
The message Flags
may be symbolic msg_flag()
s and/or integer()
s, matching the platform's appropriate header files. The values of all symbolic flags and integers are or:ed together.
The Data
, if it is not a binary()
, is copied into one before calling the platform network API, because a single buffer is required. A returned RestData
is a sub binary of this data binary.
The return value indicates the result from the platform's network layer:
ok
-
All data has been accepted.
{ok, RestData}
-
Not all data has been accepted, but no error has been reported.
RestData
is the tail ofData
that has not been accepted.This cannot happen for a socket of
type stream
where a partially succesful send is retried until the data is either accepted or there is an error.For a socket of
type dgram
this should probably also not happen since a message that cannot be passed atomically should render an error.It is nevertheless possible for the platform's network layer to return this.
{error, Reason}
-
An error has been reported and no data has been accepted. The
posix()
Reasons
are from the platform's network layer.closed
means that this socket library knows that the socket is closed, andinvalid()
means that something about an argument is invalid. -
{error, {Reason, RestData}}
-
An error has been reported but before that some data was accepted.
RestData
is the tail ofData
that has not been accepted. See{error, Reason}
above.This can only happen for a socket of
type stream
when a partially succesful send is retried untill there is an error.
send(Socket, Data, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
send(Socket, Data, Flags, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Sends data on a connected socket, waiting at most Timeout
milliseconds for it to be sent.
The same as infinite time-out send/2,3,4
but returns {error, timeout}
or {error, {timeout, RestData}}
after Timeout
milliseconds, if no Data
or only some of it was accepted by the platform's network layer.
send(Socket, Data, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
send(Socket, Data, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
send(Socket, Data, Flags, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
send(Socket, Data, Flags, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Sends data on a connected socket, but returns a select continuation if the data could not be sent immediately.
The same as infinite time-out send/2,3
but if the data is not immediately accepted by the platform network layer, the function returns {select, SelectInfo}
, and the caller will then receive a select message, {'$socket', Socket, select, SelectHandle}
( with the SelectHandle
that was contained in the SelectInfo
) when there is room for more data. A subsequent call to send/2-4
will then send the data.
If SelectHandle
is a select_handle()
, that term will be contained in a returned SelectInfo
and the corresponding select message. The SelectHandle
is presumed to be unique to this call.
If SelectHandle
is nowait
, and a SelectInfo
is returned, it will contain a select_handle()
generated by the call.
If some of the data was sent, the function will return {ok, {RestData, SelectInfo},
which can only happen for a socket of type stream
. If the caller does not want to wait to send the rest of the data, it should immediately cancel the operation with cancel/2
.
send(Socket, Data, Cont) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
send(Socket, Data, Cont, Timeout :: infinity) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
send(Socket, Data, Cont, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
send(Socket, Data, Cont, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
send(Socket, Data, Cont, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Continues sending data on a connected socket, where the send operation was initiated by send/3,4
that returned a SelectInfo
continuation. Otherwise like infinite time-out send/2,3,4
, limited time-out send/3,4
or nowait send/3,4
respectively.
Cont
is the SelectInfo
that was returned from the previous send()
call.
If Data
is not a binary()
, it will be copied into one, again.
The return value indicates the result from the platform's network layer. See send/2,3,4
and nowait send/3,4
.
sendmsg(Socket, Msg) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
sendmsg(Socket, Msg, Flags) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
sendmsg(Socket, Msg, Timeout :: infinity) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
sendmsg(Socket, Msg, Flags, Timeout :: infinity) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Sends a message on a socket, waiting for it to be sent.
The destination, if needed, that is: if the socket is not connected, is provided in Msg
, which also contains the data to send as a list of binaries
. Msg
may also contain an list of optional control messages
(depending on what the protocol and platform supports).
For a connected socket no address field should be present in Msg
, the platform may return an error or ignore one.
The message data is given to to the platform's network layer in the form of an I/O vector without copying the content. If the number of elements in the I/O vector is larger than allowed on the platform (reported in the iov_max
field from info/0
), on a socket of type stream
the send is iterated over all elements, but for other socket types the call fails.
This call will not return until the data has been handed over to the platform's network layer, or when it reports an error.
The message Flags
may be symbolic msg_flag()
s and/or integer()
s, matching the platform's appropriate header files. The values of all symbolic flags and integers are or:ed together.
The return value indicates the result from the platform's network layer. See send/2,3,4
.
sendmsg(Socket, Msg, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
sendmsg(Socket, Msg, Flags, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Sends a message on a socket, waiting at most Timeout
milliseconds for it to be sent.
The same as infinite time-out sendmsg/2,3,4
but returns {error, timeout}
or {error, {timeout, RestData}}
after Timeout
milliseconds, if no data or only some of it was accepted by the platform's network layer.
sendmsg(Socket, Msg, Timeout :: nowait) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.1 |
sendmsg(Socket, Msg, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
sendmsg(Socket, Msg, Flags, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.1 |
sendmsg(Socket, Msg, Flags, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Sends a message on a socket, but returns a select continuation if the data could not be sent immediately.
The same as infinity time-out sendmsg/2,3
but if the data is not immediately accepted by the platform network layer, the function returns {select, SelectInfo}
, and the caller will then receive a select message, {'$socket', Socket, select, SelectHandle}
( with the SelectHandle
that was contained in the SelectInfo
) when there is room for more data. A subsequent call to sendmsg/2-4
will then send the data.
If SelectHandle
, is a select_handle()
, that term will be contained in a returned SelectInfo
and the corresponding select message. The SelectHandle
is presumed to be unique to this call.
If SelectHandle
is nowait
, and a SelectInfo
is returned, it will contain a select_handle()
generated by the call.
If some of the data was sent, the function will return {ok, {RestData, SelectInfo},
which can only happen for a socket of type stream
. If the caller does not want to wait to send the rest of the data, it should immediately cancel the operation with cancel/2
.
sendmsg(Socket, Data, Cont) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
sendmsg(Socket, Data, Cont, Timeout :: infinity) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
sendmsg(Socket, Data, Cont, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
sendmsg(Socket, Data, Cont, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
sendmsg(Socket, Data, Cont, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Continues sending a message data on a socket, where the send operation was initiated by sendmsg/3,4
that returned a SelectInfo
continuation. Otherwise like infinite time-out sendmsg/2,3,4
, limited time-out sendmsg/3,4
or nowait sendmsg/3,4
respectively.
Cont
is the SelectInfo
that was returned from the previous sendmsg()
call.
The return value indicates the result from the platform's network layer. See send/2,3,4
and nowait sendmsg/3,4
.
sendto(Socket, Data, Dest) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Dest, Flags) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Dest, Timeout :: infinity) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Dest, Flags, Timeout :: infinity) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Sends data on a socket, to the specified destination, waiting for it to be sent.
This call will not return until the data has been accepted by the platform's network layer, or it reports an error.
If this call is used on a connection mode socket or on a connected socket, the platforms's network layer may return an error or ignore the destination address.
The message Flags
may be symbolic msg_flag()
s and/or integer()
s, matching the platform's appropriate header files. The values of all symbolic flags and integers are or:ed together.
The return value indicates the result from the platform's network layer. See send/2,3,4
.
sendto(Socket, Data, Dest, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Dest, Flags, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, RestData}} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Sends data on a socket, waiting at most Timeout
milliseconds for it to be sent.
The same as infinite time-out sendto/3,4,5
but returns {error, timeout}
or {error, {timeout, RestData}}
after Timeout
milliseconds, if no Data
or only some of it was accepted by the platform's network layer.
sendto(Socket, Data, Dest, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Dest, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Dest, Flags, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.1 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Dest, Flags, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Sends data on a socket, but returns a select continuation if the data could not be sent immediately.
The same as infinity time-out sendto/3,4
but if the data is not immediately accepted by the platform network layer, the function returns {select, SelectInfo}
, and the caller will then receive a select message, {'$socket', Socket, select, SelectHandle}
( with the SelectHandle
that was contained in the SelectInfo
) when there is room for more data. A subsequent call to sendto/3-5
will then send the data.
If SelectHandle
is a select_handle()
, that term will be contained in a returned SelectInfo
and the corresponding select message. The SelectHandle
is presumed to be unique to this call.
If SelectHandle
is nowait
, and a SelectInfo
is returned, it will contain a select_handle()
generated by the call.
If some of the data was sent, the function will return {ok, {RestData, SelectInfo},
which can only happen for a socket of type stream
. If the caller does not want to wait to send the rest of the data, it should immediately cancel the operation with cancel/2
.
sendto(Socket, Data, Cont) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Cont, Timeout :: infinity) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Cont, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, RestData}} | OTP 24.0 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Cont, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
sendto(Socket, Data, Cont, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->ok | {ok, RestData} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, RestData}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Continues sending data on a socket, where the send operation was initiated by sendto/4,5
that returned a SelectInfo
continuation. Otherwise like infinite time-out sendto/3,4,5
, limited time-out sendto/4,5
or nowait sendto/4,5
respectively.
Cont
is the SelectInfo
that was returned from the previous sendto()
call.
If Data
is not a binary()
, it will be copied into one, again.
The return value indicates the result from the platform's network layer. See send/2,3,4
and nowait sendto/4,5
.
sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, Offset, Count, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, BytesSent} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, BytesSent}} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Sends file data on a socket, to the specified destination, waiting for it to be sent ("infinite" time-out).
The FileHandle
must refer to an open raw file as described in file:open/2
.
This call will not return until the data has been accepted by the platform's network layer, or it reports an error.
The Offset
argument is the file offset to start reading from. The default value is 0
.
The Count
argument is the number of bytes to transfer from FileHandle
to Socket
. If Count =:= 0
(the default) the transfer stops at the end of file.
The return value indicates the result from the platform's network layer:
{ok, BytesSent}
-
The transfer completed succesfully after
BytesSent
bytes of data. {error, Reason}
-
An error has been reported and no data has been transferred. The
posix()
Reasons
are from the platform's network layer.closed
means that this socket library knows that the socket is closed, andinvalid()
means that something about an argument is invalid. -
{error, {Reason, BytesSent}}
-
An error has been reported but before that some data was transferred. See
{error, Reason}
and{ok, BytesSent}
above.
sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, Offset, Count, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, BytesSent} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, BytesSent}} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Sends file data on a socket, waiting at most Timeout
milliseconds for it to be sent (limited time-out).
The same as "infinite" time-out sendfile/5
but returns {error, timeout}
or {error, {timeout, BytesSent}}
after Timeout
milliseconds, if not all file data was transferred by the platform's network layer.
sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, Offset, Count, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> {ok, BytesSent} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, BytesSent}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, Offset, Count, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, BytesSent} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, BytesSent}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Sends file data on a socket, but returns a select continuation if the data could not be sent immediately (nowait).
The same as "infinite" time-out sendfile/5
but if the data is not immediately accepted by the platform network layer, the function returns {select, SelectInfo}
, and the caller will then receive a select message, {'$socket', Socket, select, SelectHandle}
( with the SelectHandle
that was contained in the SelectInfo
) when there is room for more data. Then a call to sendfile/3
with SelectInfo
as the second argument will continue the data transfer.
If SelectHandle
is a select_handle()
, that term will be contained in a returned SelectInfo
and the corresponding select message. The SelectHandle
is presumed to be unique to this call.
If SelectHandle
is nowait
, and a SelectInfo
is returned, it will contain a select_handle()
generated by the call.
If some file data was sent, the function will return {ok, {BytesSent, SelectInfo}.
If the caller does not want to wait to send the rest of the data, it should immediately cancel the operation with cancel/2
.
sendfile(Socket, Cont, Offset, Count, Timeout :: infinity) -> {ok, BytesSent} | {error, Reason} | {error, {Reason, BytesSent}} | OTP 24.0 |
sendfile(Socket, Cont, Offset, Count, Timeout :: integer() >= 0) -> {ok, BytesSent} | {error, Reason | timeout} | {error, {Reason | timeout, BytesSent}} | OTP 24.0 |
sendfile(Socket, Cont, Offset, Count, SelectHandle :: nowait) -> {ok, BytesSent} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, BytesSent}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
sendfile(Socket, Cont, Offset, Count, SelectHandle :: select_handle() ) ->{ok, BytesSent} | {select, SelectInfo} | {select, {SelectInfo, BytesSent}} | {error, Reason} | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Continues sending file data on a socket, where the send operation was initiated by sendfile/3,5
that returned a SelectInfo
continuation. Otherwise like "infinite" time-out sendfile/5
, limited time-out sendfile/5
or nowait sendfile/5
respectively.
Cont
is the SelectInfo
that was returned from the previous sendfile()
call.
The return value indicates the result from the platform's network layer. See "infinite" time-out sendfile/5.
sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, Offset, Count) -> Result | OTP 24.0 |
Types
The same as sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, Offset, Count, infinity),
that is: send the file data at Offset
and Count
to the socket, without time-out other than from the platform's network stack.
sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, Timeout) -> Result | OTP 24.0 |
Types
Depending on the Timeout
argument; the same as sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, 0, 0, infinity),
sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, 0, 0, Timeout),
or sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, 0, 0, SelectHandle),
that is: send all data in the file to the socket, with the given Timeout
.
sendfile(Socket, FileHandle) -> Result | OTP 24.0 |
Types
The same as sendfile(Socket, FileHandle, 0, 0, infinity),
that is: send all data in the file to the socket, without time-out other than from the platform's network stack.
setopt(Socket :: socket() ,SocketOption :: {Level :: otp, Opt :: otp_socket_option() },Value :: term()) -> ok | {error, invalid() | closed} | OTP 24.0 |
Sets a socket option in the protocol level otp
, which is this implementation's level above the OS protocol layers.
See the type otp_socket_option()
for a description of the options on this level.
setopt(Socket :: socket() ,SocketOption :: socket_option() ,Value :: term()) -> ok | {error, posix() | invalid() | closed} | OTP 24.0 |
Set a socket option in one of the OS's protocol levels. See the type socket_option()
for which options that this implementation knows about, how they are related to option names in the OS, and if there are known pecularities with any of them.
What options are valid depends on what kind of socket it is (domain()
, type()
and protocol()
).
See the socket options
chapter of the users guide for more info.
Not all options are valid, nor possible to set, on all platforms. That is, even if "we" support an option; it does not mean that the underlying OS does.
setopt(Socket, Level, Opt, Value) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
setopt_native(Socket :: socket() ,SocketOption :: socket_option() |{Level :: level() | (NativeLevel :: integer()),NativeOpt :: integer()}, Value :: native_value() ) ->ok | {error, posix() | invalid() | closed} | OTP 24.0 |
Sets a socket option that may be unknown to our implementation, or that has a type not compatible with our implementation, that is; in "native mode".
If Value
is an integer()
it will be used as a C
type (int)
, if it is a boolean()
it will be used as a C
type (int)
with the C
implementations values for false
or true
, and if it is a binary()
its content and size will be used as the option value.
The socket option may be specified with an ordinary socket_option()
tuple, with a known Level = level()
and an integer NativeOpt
, or with both an integer NativeLevel
and NativeOpt
.
What options are valid depends on what kind of socket it is (domain()
, type()
and protocol()
).
The integer values for NativeLevel
and NativeOpt
as well as the encoding of Value
has to be deduced from the header files for the running system.
shutdown(Socket, How) -> ok | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Shut down all or part of a full-duplex connection.
sockname(Socket) -> {ok, SockAddr} | {error, Reason} | OTP 22.0 |
Types
Returns the current address to which the socket is bound.
supports() -> [{Key1 :: term(), boolean() | [{Key2 :: term(), boolean() | [{Key3 :: term(), boolean()}]}]}] | OTP 22.0 |
supports(Key1 :: term()) -> [{Key2 :: term(), boolean() | [{Key3 :: term(), boolean()}]}] | OTP 22.0 |
supports(Key1 :: term(), Key2 :: term()) -> [{Key3 :: term(), boolean()}] | OTP 22.0 |
These functions function retreives information about what the platform supports, such which platform features or which socket options, are supported.
For keys other than the known the empty list is returned, Note that in a future version or on a different platform there might be more supported items.
supports()
-
Returns a list of
{Key1, supports(Key1)}
tuples for everyKey1
described insupports/1
and{Key1, boolean()}
tuples for each of the following keys:sctp
- SCTP support
ipv6
- IPv6 support
local
- Unix Domain sockets support (
AF_UNIX | AF_LOCAL
) netns
- Network Namespaces support (Linux,
setns(2)
) sendfile
- Sendfile support (
sendfile(2)
)
supports(msg_flags = Key1)
-
Returns a list of
{Flag, boolean()}
tuples for everyFlag
inmsg_flag()
with theboolean()
indicating if the flag is supported on this platform. supports(protocols = Key1)
-
Returns a list of
{Name :: atom(), boolean()}
tuples for everyName
inprotocol()
with theboolean()
indicating if the protocol is supported on this platform. supports(options = Key1)
-
Returns a list of
{SocketOption, boolean()}
tuples for everySocketOption
insocket_option()
with theboolean()
indicating if the socket option is supported on this platform. -
supports(options = Key1, Key2)
-
For a
Key2
inlevel()
returns a list of{Opt, boolean()}
tuples for all knownsocket options Opt on that Level =:= Key2,
and theboolean()
indicating if the socket option is supported on this platform. Seesetopt/3
andgetopt/2
.
use_registry(D :: boolean()) -> ok | OTP 23.1 |
Globally change if the socket registry is to be used or not. Note that its still possible to override this explicitly when creating an individual sockets, see open/2
or open/4
for more info (use the Extra argument).
which_sockets() -> [ socket() ] | OTP 22.3 |
which_sockets(FilterRule) -> [ socket() ] | OTP 22.3 |
Types
Returns a list of all sockets, according to the filter rule.
There are several pre-made filter rule(s) and one general:
inet | inet6
-
Selection based on the domain of the socket.
Only a subset is valid. stream | dgram | seqpacket
-
Selection based on the type of the socket.
Only a subset is valid. sctp | tcp | udp
-
Selection based on the protocol of the socket.
Only a subset is valid. pid()
-
Selection base on which sockets has this pid as Controlling Process.
fun((socket_info()) -> boolean())
-
The general filter rule.
A fun that takes the socket info and returns aboolean()
(true
if the socket sould be included andfalse
if should not).
Examples
client(SAddr, SPort) -> {ok, Sock} = socket:open(inet, stream, tcp), ok = socket:connect(Sock, #{family => inet, addr => SAddr, port => SPort}), Msg = <<"hello">>, ok = socket:send(Sock, Msg), ok = socket:shutdown(Sock, write), {ok, Msg} = socket:recv(Sock), ok = socket:close(Sock). server(Addr, Port) -> {ok, LSock} = socket:open(inet, stream, tcp), ok = socket:bind(LSock, #{family => inet, port => Port, addr => Addr}), ok = socket:listen(LSock), {ok, Sock} = socket:accept(LSock), {ok, Msg} = socket:recv(Sock), ok = socket:send(Sock, Msg), ok = socket:close(Sock), ok = socket:close(LSock).
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.