| TCP(4) | Device Drivers Manual | TCP(4) |
tcp — Internet
Transmission Control Protocol
#include
<sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
int
socket(AF_INET,
SOCK_STREAM,
0);
The TCP protocol provides reliable, flow-controlled, two-way
transmission of data. It is a byte-stream protocol used to support the
SOCK_STREAM abstraction. TCP uses the standard
Internet address format and, in addition, provides a per-host collection of
“port addresses”. Thus, each address is composed of an
Internet address specifying the host and network, with a specific TCP port
on the host identifying the peer entity.
Sockets utilizing the TCP protocol are either “active” or “passive”. Active sockets initiate connections to passive sockets. By default, TCP sockets are created active; to create a passive socket, the listen(2) system call must be used after binding the socket with the bind(2) system call. Only passive sockets may use the accept(2) call to accept incoming connections. Only active sockets may use the connect(2) or connectx(2) call to initiate connections.
Passive sockets may “underspecify” their location to
match incoming connection requests from multiple networks. This technique,
termed “wildcard addressing”, allows a single server to
provide service to clients on multiple networks. To create a socket which
listens on all networks, the Internet address
INADDR_ANY must be bound. The TCP port may still be
specified at this time; if the port is not specified, the system will assign
one. Once a connection has been established, the socket's address is fixed
by the peer entity's location. The address assigned to the socket is the
address associated with the network interface through which packets are
being transmitted and received. Normally, this address corresponds to the
peer entity's network.
TCP supports a number of socket options which can be set with setsockopt(2) and tested with getsockopt(2):
TCP_NODELAYTCP_NODELAY defeats this algorithm.TCP_MAXSEGTCP_MAXSEG option
allows the user to determine the result of this negotiation, and to reduce
it if desired.TCP_NOOPTTCP_NOOPT is provided to disable
TCP option use on a per-connection basis.TCP_NOPUSHTCP_KEEPALIVETCP_KEEPALIVE options enable to specify the
amount of time, in seconds, that the connection must be idle before
keepalive probes (if enabled) are sent. The default value is specified by
the MIB variable net.inet.tcp.keepidle.TCP_CONNECTIONTIMEOUTTCP_CONNECTIONTIMEOUT option allows to specify
the timeout, in seconds, for new, non established TCP connections. This
option can be useful for both active and passive TCP connections. The
default value is specified by the MIB variable
net.inet.tcp.keepinit.TCP_KEEPINTVLTCP_KEEPCNTTCP_SENDMOREACKSTCP_ENABLE_ECNTCP_NOTSENT_LOWATTCP_FASTOPENTCP_CONNECTION_INFOThe option level for the setsockopt(2) call is
the protocol number for TCP, available from
getprotobyname(3), or IPPROTO_TCP.
All options are declared in
<netinet/tcp.h>.
Options at the IP transport level may be used with TCP; see ip(4). Incoming connection requests that are source-routed are noted, and the reverse source route is used in responding.
When a TCP socket is set non-blocking, and the connection cannot
be established immediately, connect(2) or
connectx(2) returns with the error
EINPROGRESS, and the connection is established
asynchronously.
When the asynchronous connection completes successfully,
select(2) or poll(2) or
kqueue(2) will indicate the file descriptor is ready for
writing. If the connection encounters an error, the file descriptor is
marked ready for both reading and writing, and the pending error can be
retrieved via the socket option SO_ERROR.
Note that even if the socket is non-blocking, it is possible for
the connection to be established immediately. In that case
connect(2) or connectx(2) does not
return with EINPROGRESS.
A socket operation may fail with one of the following errors returned:
EISCONN]ENOBUFS]ETIMEDOUT]ECONNRESET]ECONNREFUSED]EADDRINUSE]EADDRNOTAVAIL]EAFNOSUPPORT]EINPROGRESS]EALREADY]ENODATA]connect(2), connectx(2), getsockopt(2), kqueue(2), poll(2), select(2), socket(2), sysctl(3), inet(4), inet6(4), ip(4), ip6(4), netintro(4), setkey(8)
The TCP protocol appeared in 4.2BSD.
The socket option TCP_CONNECTIONTIMEOUT
first appeared in Mac OS X 10.6.
| March 18, 2015 | BSD 4.2 |