Manpages - socket.2

Table of Contents

NAME

socket - create an endpoint for communication

SYNOPSIS

  #include <sys/socket.h>

  int socket(int domain, int type, int protocol);

DESCRIPTION

*socket*() creates an endpoint for communication and returns a file descriptor that refers to that endpoint. The file descriptor returned by a successful call will be the lowest-numbered file descriptor not currently open for the process.

The domain argument specifies a communication domain; this selects the protocol family which will be used for communication. These families are defined in <sys/socket.h>. The formats currently understood by the Linux kernel include:

Name Purpose Man page
AF_UNIX Local communication *unix*(7)
AF_LOCAL Synonym for AF_UNIX  
AF_INET IPv4 Internet protocols *ip*(7)
AF_AX25 Amateur radio AX.25 protocol *ax25*(4)
AF_IPX IPX - Novell protocols  
AF_APPLETALK AppleTalk *ddp*(7)
AF_X25 ITU-T X.25 / ISO-8208 protocol *x25*(7)
AF_INET6 IPv6 Internet protocols *ipv6*(7)
AF_DECnet DECet protocol sockets  
AF_KEY Key management protocol, originally developed for usage with IPsec  
AF_NETLINK Kernel user interface device *netlink*(7)
AF_PACKET Low-level packet interface *packet*(7)
AF_RDS Reliable Datagram Sockets (RDS) protocol *rds*(7)\\
    *rds-rdma*(7)
AF_PPPOX Generic PPP transport layer, for setting up L2 tunnels (L2TP and PPPoE)  
AF_LLC Logical link control (IEEE 802.2 LLC) protocol  
AF_IB InfiniBand native addressing  
AF_MPLS Multiprotocol Label Switching  
AF_CAN Controller Area Network automotive bus protocol  
AF_TIPC TIPC, “cluster domain sockets” protocol  
AF_BLUETOOTH Bluetooth low-level socket protocol  
AF_ALG Interface to kernel crypto API  
AF_VSOCK VSOCK (originally “VMWare VSockets”) protocol for hypervisor-guest communication *vsock*(7)
AF_KCM KCM (kernel connection multiplexer) interface  
AF_XDP XDP (express data path) interface  

Further details of the above address families, as well as information on several other address families, can be found in *address_families*(7).

The socket has the indicated type, which specifies the communication semantics. Currently defined types are:

SOCK_STREAM
Provides sequenced, reliable, two-way, connection-based byte streams. An out-of-band data transmission mechanism may be supported.
SOCK_DGRAM
Supports datagrams (connectionless, unreliable messages of a fixed maximum length).
SOCK_SEQPACKET
Provides a sequenced, reliable, two-way connection-based data transmission path for datagrams of fixed maximum length; a consumer is required to read an entire packet with each input system call.
SOCK_RAW
Provides raw network protocol access.
SOCK_RDM
Provides a reliable datagram layer that does not guarantee ordering.
SOCK_PACKET
Obsolete and should not be used in new programs; see *packet*(7).

Some socket types may not be implemented by all protocol families.

Since Linux 2.6.27, the type argument serves a second purpose: in addition to specifying a socket type, it may include the bitwise OR of any of the following values, to modify the behavior of *socket*():

SOCK_NONBLOCK
Set the O_NONBLOCK file status flag on the open file description (see *open*(2)) referred to by the new file descriptor. Using this flag saves extra calls to *fcntl*(2) to achieve the same result.
SOCK_CLOEXEC
Set the close-on-exec (FD_CLOEXEC) flag on the new file descriptor. See the description of the O_CLOEXEC flag in *open*(2) for reasons why this may be useful.

The protocol specifies a particular protocol to be used with the socket. Normally only a single protocol exists to support a particular socket type within a given protocol family, in which case protocol can be specified as 0. However, it is possible that many protocols may exist, in which case a particular protocol must be specified in this manner. The protocol number to use is specific to the “communication domain” in which communication is to take place; see *protocols*(5). See *getprotoent*(3) on how to map protocol name strings to protocol numbers.

Sockets of type SOCK_STREAM are full-duplex byte streams. They do not preserve record boundaries. A stream socket must be in a connected state before any data may be sent or received on it. A connection to another socket is created with a *connect*(2) call. Once connected, data may be transferred using *read*(2) and *write*(2) calls or some variant of the *send*(2) and *recv*(2) calls. When a session has been completed a *close*(2) may be performed. Out-of-band data may also be transmitted as described in *send*(2) and received as described in *recv*(2).

The communications protocols which implement a SOCK_STREAM ensure that data is not lost or duplicated. If a piece of data for which the peer protocol has buffer space cannot be successfully transmitted within a reasonable length of time, then the connection is considered to be dead. When SO_KEEPALIVE is enabled on the socket the protocol checks in a protocol-specific manner if the other end is still alive. A SIGPIPE signal is raised if a process sends or receives on a broken stream; this causes naive processes, which do not handle the signal, to exit. SOCK_SEQPACKET sockets employ the same system calls as SOCK_STREAM sockets. The only difference is that *read*(2) calls will return only the amount of data requested, and any data remaining in the arriving packet will be discarded. Also all message boundaries in incoming datagrams are preserved.

SOCK_DGRAM and SOCK_RAW sockets allow sending of datagrams to correspondents named in *sendto*(2) calls. Datagrams are generally received with *recvfrom*(2), which returns the next datagram along with the address of its sender.

SOCK_PACKET is an obsolete socket type to receive raw packets directly from the device driver. Use *packet*(7) instead.

An fcntl*(2) *F_SETOWN operation can be used to specify a process or process group to receive a SIGURG signal when the out-of-band data arrives or SIGPIPE signal when a SOCK_STREAM connection breaks unexpectedly. This operation may also be used to set the process or process group that receives the I/O and asynchronous notification of I/O events via SIGIO. Using F_SETOWN is equivalent to an ioctl*(2) call with the *FIOSETOWN or SIOCSPGRP argument.

When the network signals an error condition to the protocol module (e.g., using an ICMP message for IP) the pending error flag is set for the socket. The next operation on this socket will return the error code of the pending error. For some protocols it is possible to enable a per-socket error queue to retrieve detailed information about the error; see IP_RECVERR in *ip*(7).

The operation of sockets is controlled by socket level options. These options are defined in <sys/socket.h>. The functions *setsockopt*(2) and *getsockopt*(2) are used to set and get options.

RETURN VALUE

On success, a file descriptor for the new socket is returned. On error, -1 is returned, and errno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS

EACCES
Permission to create a socket of the specified type and/or protocol is denied.
EAFNOSUPPORT
The implementation does not support the specified address family.
EINVAL
Unknown protocol, or protocol family not available.
EINVAL
Invalid flags in type.
EMFILE
The per-process limit on the number of open file descriptors has been reached.
ENFILE
The system-wide limit on the total number of open files has been reached.
ENOBUFS or ENOMEM
Insufficient memory is available. The socket cannot be created until sufficient resources are freed.
EPROTONOSUPPORT
The protocol type or the specified protocol is not supported within this domain.

Other errors may be generated by the underlying protocol modules.

CONFORMING TO

POSIX.1-2001, POSIX.1-2008, 4.4BSD.

The SOCK_NONBLOCK and SOCK_CLOEXEC flags are Linux-specific.

*socket*() appeared in 4.2BSD. It is generally portable to/from non-BSD systems supporting clones of the BSD socket layer (including System V variants).

NOTES

The manifest constants used under 4.x BSD for protocol families are PF_UNIX, PF_INET, and so on, while AF_UNIX, AF_INET, and so on are used for address families. However, already the BSD man page promises: “The protocol family generally is the same as the address family”, and subsequent standards use AF_* everywhere.

EXAMPLES

An example of the use of *socket*() is shown in *getaddrinfo*(3).

SEE ALSO

*accept*(2), *bind*(2), *close*(2), *connect*(2), *fcntl*(2), *getpeername*(2), *getsockname*(2), *getsockopt*(2), *ioctl*(2), *listen*(2), *read*(2), *recv*(2), *select*(2), *send*(2), *shutdown*(2), *socketpair*(2), *write*(2), *getprotoent*(3), *address_families*(7), *ip*(7), *socket*(7), *tcp*(7), *udp*(7), *unix*(7)

“An Introductory 4.3BSD Interprocess Communication Tutorial” and “BSD Interprocess Communication Tutorial”, reprinted in UNIX Programmer’s Supplementary Documents Volume 1.

COLOPHON

This page is part of release 5.13 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

Author: dt

Created: 2022-02-23 Wed 11:28