Comtrol eCos User Manual

Page 560

Advertising
background image

Chapter 38. TCP/IP Library Reference

getpeername() returns the address information of the peer connected to

socket s.

One common use occurs when a process inherits an open socket,

such as TCP servers forked from inetd(8).

In this scenario,

getpeername() is used to determine the connecting client’s IP address.

getpeername() takes three parameters:

s Contains the file descriptor of the socket whose peer should be looked

up.

name Points to a sockaddr structure that will hold the address informa-

tion for the connected peer.

Normal use requires one to use a structure

specific to the protocol family in use, such as sockaddr_in (IPv4) or

sockaddr_in6 (IPv6), cast to a (struct sockaddr *).

For greater portability, especially with the newer protocol families, the

new struct sockaddr_storage should be used.

sockaddr_storage is large

enough to hold any of the other sockaddr_* variants.

On return, it can

be cast to the correct sockaddr type, based the protocol family contained

in its ss_family field.

namelen Indicates the amount of space pointed to by name, in bytes.

If address information for the local end of the socket is required, the

getsockname(2) function should be used instead.

If name does not point to enough space to hold the entire socket address,

the result will be truncated to namelen bytes.

RETURN VALUES

If the call succeeds, a 0 is returned and namelen is set to the actual

size of the socket address returned in name.

Otherwise, errno is set and

a value of -1 is returned.

ERRORS

On failure, errno is set to one of the following:

[EBADF]

The argument s is not a valid descriptor.

[ENOTSOCK]

The argument s is a file, not a socket.

[ENOTCONN]

The socket is not connected.

[ENOBUFS]

Insufficient resources were available in the system to

perform the operation.

[EFAULT]

The name parameter points to memory not in a valid

part of the process address space.

SEE ALSO

accept(2), bind(2), getsockname(2), getpeereid(2), socket(2)

HISTORY

The getpeername() function call appeared in 4.2BSD.

456

Advertising