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In making a connection, the client makes a connection while the server
waits for and accepts the connection. Here we discuss what the client
program must do with the connect
function, which is declared in
sys/socket.h.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The connect
function initiates a connection from the socket
with file descriptor socket to the socket whose address is
specified by the addr and length arguments. (This socket
is typically on another machine, and it must be already set up as a
server.) See Socket Addresses, for information about how these
arguments are interpreted.
Normally, connect
waits until the server responds to the request
before it returns. You can set nonblocking mode on the socket
socket to make connect
return immediately without waiting
for the response. See File Status Flags, for information about
nonblocking mode.
The normal return value from connect
is 0
. If an error
occurs, connect
returns -1
. The following errno
error conditions are defined for this function:
EBADF
The socket socket is not a valid file descriptor.
ENOTSOCK
File descriptor socket is not a socket.
EADDRNOTAVAIL
The specified address is not available on the remote machine.
EAFNOSUPPORT
The namespace of the addr is not supported by this socket.
EISCONN
The socket socket is already connected.
ETIMEDOUT
The attempt to establish the connection timed out.
ECONNREFUSED
The server has actively refused to establish the connection.
ENETUNREACH
The network of the given addr isn’t reachable from this host.
EADDRINUSE
The socket address of the given addr is already in use.
EINPROGRESS
The socket socket is non-blocking and the connection could not be
established immediately. You can determine when the connection is
completely established with select
; see Waiting for Input or Output.
Another connect
call on the same socket, before the connection is
completely established, will fail with EALREADY
.
EALREADY
The socket socket is non-blocking and already has a pending
connection in progress (see EINPROGRESS
above).
This function is defined as a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs, so one has to be prepared for this and make sure that allocated resources (like memory, file descriptors, semaphores or whatever) are freed even if the thread is canceled.
Next: Listening for Connections, Up: Using Sockets with Connections [Contents][Index]