Getsockname – Comtrol eCos User Manual

Page 561

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Chapter 38. TCP/IP Library Reference

BSD

July 17, 1999

BSD

getsockname

GETSOCKNAME(2)

System Calls Manual

GETSOCKNAME(2)

NAME

getsockname - get socket name

SYNOPSIS

#include

<

sys/types.h>

#include

<

sys/socket.h>

int

getsockname(int s, struct sockaddr *name, socklen_t *namelen);

DESCRIPTION

getsockname() returns the locally bound address information for a speci-

fied socket.

Common uses of this function are as follows:

o

When bind(2) is called with a port number of 0 (indicating the kernel

should pick an ephemeral port) getsockname() is used to retrieve the

kernel-assigned port number.

o

When a process calls bind(2) on a wildcard IP address, getsockname()

is used to retrieve the local IP address for the connection.

o

When a function wishes to know the address family of a socket,

getsockname() can be used.

getsockname() takes three parameters:

s, Contains the file desriptor for the socket to be looked up.

name points to a sockaddr structure which will hold the resulting address

information.

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 (such as newer protocol families) the new struc-

ture sockaddr_storage exists.

sockaddr_storage is large enough to hold

any of the other sockaddr_* variants.

On return, it should be cast to

the correct sockaddr type, according to the current protocol family.

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

Upon

return, namelen is set to the actual size of the returned address infor-

mation.

If the address of the destination socket for a given socket connection is

needed, the getpeername(2) function should be used instead.

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