ACCEPT(2) | System Calls Manual | ACCEPT(2) |
accept
, accept4
— accept a connection on a socket
#include
<sys/socket.h>
int
accept
(int
s, struct sockaddr
*addr, socklen_t
*addrlen);
int
accept4
(int
s, struct sockaddr
*addr, socklen_t
*addrlen, int
flags);
The argument s is a socket that has been
created with socket(2), bound
to an address with bind(2), and
is listening for connections after a
listen(2). The
accept
()
call extracts the first connection request on the queue of pending
connections, creates a new socket with the same non-blocking I/O mode as
s, and allocates a new file descriptor for the socket
with the close-on-exec flag clear.
The
accept4
()
system call is similar, however the non-blocking I/O mode of the new socket
is determined by the SOCK_NONBLOCK
flag in the
flags argument and the close-on-exec flag on the new
file descriptor is determined by the SOCK_CLOEXEC
flag in the flags argument.
If no pending connections are present on the queue,
and the socket is not marked as non-blocking,
accept
()
blocks the caller until a connection is present. If the socket is marked
non-blocking and no pending connections are present on the queue,
accept
() returns an error as described below. The
accepted socket may not be used to accept more connections. The original
socket s remains open.
The argument addr is a result parameter that
is filled in with the address of the connecting entity as known to the
communications layer. The exact format of the addr
parameter is determined by the domain in which the communication is
occurring. The structure sockaddr_storage
exists for
greater portability. It is large enough to hold any of the types that may be
returned in the addr parameter.
The addrlen is a value-result parameter; it
should initially contain the amount of space pointed to by
addr; on return it will contain the actual length (in
bytes) of the address returned. If addrlen does not
point to enough space to hold the entire socket address, the result will be
truncated to the initial value of addrlen (in bytes).
This call is used with connection-based socket types, currently with
SOCK_STREAM
.
It is possible to
select(2) or
poll(2) a socket for the
purposes of doing an
accept
()
by selecting it for read.
If successful, accept
() and
accept4
() return a non-negative integer, the
accepted socket file descriptor. Otherwise, a value of -1 is returned and
errno is set to indicate the error.
The following code uses struct
sockaddr_storage
to allocate enough space for the
returned address:
#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/socket.h> struct sockaddr_storage addr; socklen_t len = sizeof(addr); int retcode; retcode = accept(s, (struct sockaddr *)&addr, &len); if (retcode == -1) err(1, "accept");
accept
() and
accept4
() will fail if:
EBADF
]ENOTSOCK
]EOPNOTSUPP
]SOCK_STREAM
.EINTR
]EINVAL
]EFAULT
]EWOULDBLOCK
]EMFILE
]ENFILE
]ECONNABORTED
]In addition, accept4
() will fail if
EINVAL
]bind(2), connect(2), listen(2), poll(2), select(2), socket(2)
The accept
() function conforms to
IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 (“POSIX.1”). The
accept4
() function is expected to conform to a
future revision of that standard.
The accept
() system call first appeared in
4.1cBSD and accept4
() in
OpenBSD 5.7.
When EMFILE
or
ENFILE
is returned, new connections are neither
dequeued nor discarded. Thus considerable care is required in
select(2) and
poll(2) loops.
May 26, 2019 | OpenBSD-7.0 |