Next: Example of Local-Namespace Sockets, Previous: Local Namespace Concepts, Up: The Local Namespace [Contents][Index]
To create a socket in the local namespace, use the constant
PF_LOCAL
as the namespace argument to socket
or
socketpair
. This constant is defined in sys/socket.h.
This designates the local namespace, in which socket addresses are local
names, and its associated family of protocols. PF_LOCAL
is the
macro used by POSIX.1g.
This is a synonym for PF_LOCAL
, for compatibility’s sake.
This is a synonym for PF_LOCAL
, for compatibility’s sake.
The structure for specifying socket names in the local namespace is defined in the header file sys/un.h:
This structure is used to specify local namespace socket addresses. It has the following members:
short int sun_family
This identifies the address family or format of the socket address.
You should store the value AF_LOCAL
to designate the local
namespace. See Socket Addresses.
char sun_path[108]
This is the file name to use.
Incomplete: Why is 108 a magic number? RMS suggests making
this a zero-length array and tweaking the following example to use
alloca
to allocate an appropriate amount of storage based on
the length of the filename.
You should compute the length parameter for a socket address in
the local namespace as the sum of the size of the sun_family
component and the string length (not the allocation size!) of
the file name string. This can be done using the macro SUN_LEN
:
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This macro computes the length of the socket address in the local namespace.
Next: Example of Local-Namespace Sockets, Previous: Local Namespace Concepts, Up: The Local Namespace [Contents][Index]