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.\"- .\" Copyright (c) 2006 Robert N. M. Watson .\" All rights reserved. .\" .\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without .\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions .\" are met: .\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. .\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the .\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. .\" .\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND .\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE .\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE .\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE .\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL .\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS .\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) .\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT .\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY .\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF .\" SUCH DAMAGE. .\" .\" $FreeBSD: release/9.1.0/share/man/man9/socket.9 165282 2006-12-16 10:32:10Z rwatson $ .\" .Dd December 14, 2006 .Dt SOCKET 9 .Os .Sh NAME .Nm socket .Nd "kernel socket interface" .Sh SYNOPSIS .In sys/socket.h .In sys/socketvar.h .Ft int .Fn sobind "struct socket *so" "struct sockaddr *nam" "struct thread *td" .Ft void .Fn soclose "struct socket *so" .Ft int .Fn soconnect "struct socket *so" "struct sockaddr *nam" "struct thread *td" .Ft int .Fo socreate .Fa "int dom" "struct socket **aso" "int type" "int proto" .Fa "struct ucred *cred" "struct thread *td" .Fc .Ft int .Fn sogetopt "struct socket *so" "struct sockopt *sopt" .Ft int .Fo soreceive .Fa "struct socket *so" "struct sockaddr **psa" "struct uio *uio" .Fa "struct mbuf **mp0" "struct mbuf **controlp" "int *flagsp" .Fc .Ft int .Fn sosetopt "struct socket *so" "struct sockopt *sopt" .Ft int .Fo sosend .Fa "struct socket *so" "struct sockaddr *addr" "struct uio *uio" .Fa "struct mbuf *top" "struct mbuf *control" "int flags" "struct thread *td" .Fc .Ft int .Fn soshutdown "struct socket *so" "int how" .Sh DESCRIPTION The kernel .Nm programming interface permits in-kernel consumers to interact with local and network socket objects in a manner similar to that permitted using the .Xr socket 2 user API. These interfaces are appropriate for use by distributed file systems and other network-aware kernel services. While the user API operates on file descriptors, the kernel interfaces operate directly on .Vt "struct socket" pointers. .Pp Except where otherwise indicated, .Nm functions may sleep, and are not appropriate for use in an .Xr ithread 9 context or while holding non-sleepable kernel locks. .Ss Creating and Destroying Sockets A new socket may be created using .Fn socreate . As with .Xr socket 2 , arguments specify the requested domain, type, and protocol via .Fa dom , type , and .Fa proto . The socket is returned via .Fa aso on success. In addition, the credential used to authorize operations associated with the socket will be passed via .Fa cred (and will be cached for the lifetime of the socket), and the thread performing the operation via .Fa td . .Em Warning : authorization of the socket creation operation will be performed using the thread credential for some protocols (such as raw sockets). .Pp Sockets may be closed and freed using .Fn soclose , which has similar semantics to .Xr close 2 . .Ss Connections and Addresses The .Fn sobind function is equivalent to the .Xr bind 2 system call, and binds the socket .Fa so to the address .Fa nam . The operation would be authorized using the credential on thread .Fa td . .Pp The .Fn soconnect function is equivalent to the .Xr connect 2 system call, and initiates a connection on the socket .Fa so to the address .Fa nam . The operation will be authorized using the credential on thread .Fa td . Unlike the user system call, .Fn soconnect returns immediately; the caller may .Xr msleep 9 on .Fa so->so_timeo while holding the socket mutex and waiting for the .Dv SS_ISCONNECTING flag to clear or .Fa so->so_error to become non-zero. If .Fn soconnect fails, the caller must manually clear the .Dv SS_ISCONNECTING flag. .Pp The .Fn soshutdown function is equivalent to the .Xr shutdown 2 system call, and causes part or all of a connection on a socket to be closed down. .Ss Socket Options The .Fn sogetopt function is equivalent to the .Xr getsockopt 2 system call, and retrieves a socket option on socket .Fa so . The .Fn sosetopt function is equivalent to the .Xr setsockopt 2 system call, and sets a socket option on socket .Fa so . .Pp The second argument in both .Fn sogetopt and .Fn sosetopt is the .Fa sopt pointer to a .Vt "struct sopt" describing the socket option operation. The caller-allocated structure must be zeroed, and then have its fields initialized to specify socket option operation arguments: .Bl -tag -width ".Va sopt_valsize" .It Va sopt_dir Set to .Dv SOPT_SET or .Dv SOPT_GET depending on whether this is a get or set operation. .It Va sopt_level Specify the level in the network stack the operation is targeted at; for example, .Dv SOL_SOCKET . .It Va sopt_name Specify the name of the socket option to set. .It Va sopt_val Kernel space pointer to the argument value for the socket option. .It Va sopt_valsize Size of the argument value in bytes. .El .Ss Socket I/O The .Fn soreceive function is equivalent to the .Xr recvmsg 2 system call, and attempts to receive bytes of data from the socket .Fa so , optionally blocking awaiting for data if none is ready to read. Data may be retrieved directly to kernel or user memory via the .Fa uio argument, or as an mbuf chain returned to the caller via .Fa mp0 , avoiding a data copy. Only one of the .Fa uio or .Fa mp0 pointers may be .Pf non- Dv NULL . The caller may optionally retrieve a socket address on a protocol with the .Dv PR_ADDR capability by providing storage via .Pf non- Dv NULL .Fa psa argument. The caller may optionally retrieve control data mbufs via a .Pf non- Dv NULL .Fa controlp argument. Optional flags may be passed to .Fn soreceive via a .Pf non- Dv NULL .Fa flagsp argument, and use the same flag name space as the .Xr recvmsg 2 system call. .Pp The .Fn sosend function is equivalent to the .Xr sendmsg 2 system call, and attempts to send bytes of data via the socket .Fa so , optionally blocking if data cannot be immediately sent. Data may be sent directly from kernel or user memory via the .Fa uio argument, or as an mbuf chain via .Fa top , avoiding a data copy. Only one of the .Fa uio or .Fa top pointers may be .Pf non- Dv NULL . An optional destination address may be specified via a .Pf non- Dv NULL .Fa addr argument, which may result in an implicit connect if supported by the protocol. The caller may optionally send control data mbufs via a .Pf non- Dv NULL .Fa control argument. Flags may be passed to .Fn sosend using the .Fa flags argument, and use the same flag name space as the .Xr sendmsg 2 system call. .Pp Kernel callers running in .Xr ithread 9 context, or with a mutex held, will wish to use non-blocking sockets and pass the .Dv MSG_DONTWAIT flag in order to prevent these functions from sleeping. .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr bind 2 , .Xr close 2 , .Xr connect 2 , .Xr getsockopt 2 , .Xr recv 2 , .Xr send 2 , .Xr setsockopt 2 , .Xr shutdown 2 , .Xr socket 2 , .Xr ng_ksocket 4 , .Xr ithread 9 , .Xr msleep 9 , .Xr ucred 9 .Sh HISTORY The .Xr socket 2 system call appeared in .Bx 4.2 . This manual page was introduced in .Fx 7.0 . .Sh AUTHORS This manual page was written by .An Robert Watson . .Sh BUGS The use of explicitly passed credentials, credentials hung from explicitly passed threads, the credential on .Dv curthread , and the cached credential from socket creation time is inconsistent, and may lead to unexpected behaviour. It is possible that several of the .Fa td arguments should be .Fa cred arguments, or simply not be present at all. .Pp The caller may need to manually clear .Dv SS_ISCONNECTING if .Fn soconnect returns an error. .Pp The .Dv MSG_DONTWAIT flag is not implemented for .Fn sosend , and may not always work with .Fn soreceive when zero copy sockets are enabled. .Pp This manual page does not describe how to register socket upcalls or monitor a socket for readability/writability without using blocking I/O. .Pp The .Fn soref and .Fn sorele functions are not described, and in most cases should not be used, due to confusing and potentially incorrect interactions when .Fn sorele is last called after .Fn soclose .