getsockname(SSC)
getsockname --
get socket address
Synopsis
cc [options] file -lsocket -lnsl
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
int getsockname(int socket, struct sockaddr *name, size_t *namelen);
Description
getsockname
returns the current locally bound address,
name,
for socket s.
The
namelen
parameter should be initialized to indicate
the amount of space pointed to by
name.
On return it contains the actual size of the name
returned (in bytes).
If the socket has not been bound to a local name,
getsockname sets the value pointed to by
namelen to 0, and puts nothing in the
struct sockaddr pointed to by name.
Files
/usr/lib/locale/locale/LC_MESSAGES/uxnsl
Return values
0 is returned if the call succeeds; -1 if it fails.
Errors
The call succeeds unless:
EBADF-
socket
is not a valid descriptor.
ENOTSOCK-
socket
is a file, not a socket.
EOPNOTSUPP-
The operation is not supported for this socket's protocol.
ENOMEM-
There was insufficient user memory for the operation to complete.
ENOSR-
There were insufficient
STREAMS
resources available for the operation
to complete.
EINVAL-
The socket has been shut down.
ENOBUFS-
System resources were insufficient to complete the call.
References
bind(SSC),
getpeername(SSC),
socket(SSC)
RFC 2133
Notices
The type of address structure passed to getsockname
depends on the address family.
UNIX® domain sockets (address family AF_UNIX) require a
struct sockaddr_un structure as defined in sys/un.h;
Internet domain IPv4 sockets (address family AF_INET)
require a struct sockaddr_in structure as defined in
netinet/in.h;
Internet domain IPv6 sockets (address family AF_INET6)
require a struct sockaddr_in6 structure as defined in
netinet/in.h.
Other address families may require other structures.
Use the structure appropriate to the address family; cast the
structure address to a generic struct sockaddr * in the call to
getsockname
and pass the size of the structure in the namelen argument.
The sockaddr structure has been modified from previous releases
to support variable length sockets. The net result of this modification is that the
family
member has been shortened to 8 bits and a new 8-bit
member inserted before it called len
. For more information on the new
sockaddr structures, see:
unix(ADMP)
and
inet(ADMP).
© 2005 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 6.0.0 - 01 June 2005