1package Socket; 2 3use v5.6.1; 4use strict; 5 6our $VERSION = '2.038'; 7 8=head1 NAME 9 10C<Socket> - networking constants and support functions 11 12=head1 SYNOPSIS 13 14C<Socket> a low-level module used by, among other things, the L<IO::Socket> 15family of modules. The following examples demonstrate some low-level uses but 16a practical program would likely use the higher-level API provided by 17C<IO::Socket> or similar instead. 18 19 use Socket qw(PF_INET SOCK_STREAM pack_sockaddr_in inet_aton); 20 21 socket(my $socket, PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0) 22 or die "socket: $!"; 23 24 my $port = getservbyname "echo", "tcp"; 25 connect($socket, pack_sockaddr_in($port, inet_aton("localhost"))) 26 or die "connect: $!"; 27 28 print $socket "Hello, world!\n"; 29 print <$socket>; 30 31See also the L</EXAMPLES> section. 32 33=head1 DESCRIPTION 34 35This module provides a variety of constants, structure manipulators and other 36functions related to socket-based networking. The values and functions 37provided are useful when used in conjunction with Perl core functions such as 38socket(), setsockopt() and bind(). It also provides several other support 39functions, mostly for dealing with conversions of network addresses between 40human-readable and native binary forms, and for hostname resolver operations. 41 42Some constants and functions are exported by default by this module; but for 43backward-compatibility any recently-added symbols are not exported by default 44and must be requested explicitly. When an import list is provided to the 45C<use Socket> line, the default exports are not automatically imported. It is 46therefore best practice to always to explicitly list all the symbols required. 47 48Also, some common socket "newline" constants are provided: the constants 49C<CR>, C<LF>, and C<CRLF>, as well as C<$CR>, C<$LF>, and C<$CRLF>, which map 50to C<\015>, C<\012>, and C<\015\012>. If you do not want to use the literal 51characters in your programs, then use the constants provided here. They are 52not exported by default, but can be imported individually, and with the 53C<:crlf> export tag: 54 55 use Socket qw(:DEFAULT :crlf); 56 57 $sock->print("GET / HTTP/1.0$CRLF"); 58 59The entire getaddrinfo() subsystem can be exported using the tag C<:addrinfo>; 60this exports the getaddrinfo() and getnameinfo() functions, and all the 61C<AI_*>, C<NI_*>, C<NIx_*> and C<EAI_*> constants. 62 63=cut 64 65=head1 CONSTANTS 66 67In each of the following groups, there may be many more constants provided 68than just the ones given as examples in the section heading. If the heading 69ends C<...> then this means there are likely more; the exact constants 70provided will depend on the OS and headers found at compile-time. 71 72=cut 73 74=head2 PF_INET, PF_INET6, PF_UNIX, ... 75 76Protocol family constants to use as the first argument to socket() or the 77value of the C<SO_DOMAIN> or C<SO_FAMILY> socket option. 78 79=head2 AF_INET, AF_INET6, AF_UNIX, ... 80 81Address family constants used by the socket address structures, to pass to 82such functions as inet_pton() or getaddrinfo(), or are returned by such 83functions as sockaddr_family(). 84 85=head2 SOCK_STREAM, SOCK_DGRAM, SOCK_RAW, ... 86 87Socket type constants to use as the second argument to socket(), or the value 88of the C<SO_TYPE> socket option. 89 90=head2 SOCK_NONBLOCK. SOCK_CLOEXEC 91 92Linux-specific shortcuts to specify the C<O_NONBLOCK> and C<FD_CLOEXEC> flags 93during a C<socket(2)> call. 94 95 socket( my $sockh, PF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM|SOCK_NONBLOCK, 0 ) 96 97=head2 SOL_SOCKET 98 99Socket option level constant for setsockopt() and getsockopt(). 100 101=head2 SO_ACCEPTCONN, SO_BROADCAST, SO_ERROR, ... 102 103Socket option name constants for setsockopt() and getsockopt() at the 104C<SOL_SOCKET> level. 105 106=head2 IP_OPTIONS, IP_TOS, IP_TTL, ... 107 108Socket option name constants for IPv4 socket options at the C<IPPROTO_IP> 109level. 110 111=head2 IP_PMTUDISC_WANT, IP_PMTUDISC_DONT, ... 112 113Socket option value constants for C<IP_MTU_DISCOVER> socket option. 114 115=head2 IPTOS_LOWDELAY, IPTOS_THROUGHPUT, IPTOS_RELIABILITY, ... 116 117Socket option value constants for C<IP_TOS> socket option. 118 119=head2 MSG_BCAST, MSG_OOB, MSG_TRUNC, ... 120 121Message flag constants for send() and recv(). 122 123=head2 SHUT_RD, SHUT_RDWR, SHUT_WR 124 125Direction constants for shutdown(). 126 127=head2 INADDR_ANY, INADDR_BROADCAST, INADDR_LOOPBACK, INADDR_NONE 128 129Constants giving the special C<AF_INET> addresses for wildcard, broadcast, 130local loopback, and invalid addresses. 131 132Normally equivalent to inet_aton('0.0.0.0'), inet_aton('255.255.255.255'), 133inet_aton('localhost') and inet_aton('255.255.255.255') respectively. 134 135=head2 IPPROTO_IP, IPPROTO_IPV6, IPPROTO_TCP, ... 136 137IP protocol constants to use as the third argument to socket(), the level 138argument to getsockopt() or setsockopt(), or the value of the C<SO_PROTOCOL> 139socket option. 140 141=head2 TCP_CORK, TCP_KEEPALIVE, TCP_NODELAY, ... 142 143Socket option name constants for TCP socket options at the C<IPPROTO_TCP> 144level. 145 146=head2 IN6ADDR_ANY, IN6ADDR_LOOPBACK 147 148Constants giving the special C<AF_INET6> addresses for wildcard and local 149loopback. 150 151Normally equivalent to inet_pton(AF_INET6, "::") and 152inet_pton(AF_INET6, "::1") respectively. 153 154=head2 IPV6_ADD_MEMBERSHIP, IPV6_MTU, IPV6_V6ONLY, ... 155 156Socket option name constants for IPv6 socket options at the C<IPPROTO_IPV6> 157level. 158 159=cut 160 161# Still undocumented: SCM_*, SOMAXCONN, IOV_MAX, UIO_MAXIOV 162 163=head1 STRUCTURE MANIPULATORS 164 165The following functions convert between lists of Perl values and packed binary 166strings representing structures. 167 168=cut 169 170=head2 $family = sockaddr_family $sockaddr 171 172Takes a packed socket address (as returned by pack_sockaddr_in(), 173pack_sockaddr_un() or the perl builtin functions getsockname() and 174getpeername()). Returns the address family tag. This will be one of the 175C<AF_*> constants, such as C<AF_INET> for a C<sockaddr_in> addresses or 176C<AF_UNIX> for a C<sockaddr_un>. It can be used to figure out what unpack to 177use for a sockaddr of unknown type. 178 179=head2 $sockaddr = pack_sockaddr_in $port, $ip_address 180 181Takes two arguments, a port number and an opaque string (as returned by 182inet_aton(), or a v-string). Returns the C<sockaddr_in> structure with those 183arguments packed in and C<AF_INET> filled in. For Internet domain sockets, 184this structure is normally what you need for the arguments in bind(), 185connect(), and send(). 186 187An undefined $port argument is taken as zero; an undefined $ip_address is 188considered a fatal error. 189 190=head2 ($port, $ip_address) = unpack_sockaddr_in $sockaddr 191 192Takes a C<sockaddr_in> structure (as returned by pack_sockaddr_in(), 193getpeername() or recv()). Returns a list of two elements: the port and an 194opaque string representing the IP address (you can use inet_ntoa() to convert 195the address to the four-dotted numeric format). Will croak if the structure 196does not represent an C<AF_INET> address. 197 198In scalar context will return just the IP address. 199 200=head2 $sockaddr = sockaddr_in $port, $ip_address 201 202=head2 ($port, $ip_address) = sockaddr_in $sockaddr 203 204A wrapper of pack_sockaddr_in() or unpack_sockaddr_in(). In list context, 205unpacks its argument and returns a list consisting of the port and IP address. 206In scalar context, packs its port and IP address arguments as a C<sockaddr_in> 207and returns it. 208 209Provided largely for legacy compatibility; it is better to use 210pack_sockaddr_in() or unpack_sockaddr_in() explicitly. 211 212=head2 $sockaddr = pack_sockaddr_in6 $port, $ip6_address, [$scope_id, [$flowinfo]] 213 214Takes two to four arguments, a port number, an opaque string (as returned by 215inet_pton()), optionally a scope ID number, and optionally a flow label 216number. Returns the C<sockaddr_in6> structure with those arguments packed in 217and C<AF_INET6> filled in. IPv6 equivalent of pack_sockaddr_in(). 218 219An undefined $port argument is taken as zero; an undefined $ip6_address is 220considered a fatal error. 221 222=head2 ($port, $ip6_address, $scope_id, $flowinfo) = unpack_sockaddr_in6 $sockaddr 223 224Takes a C<sockaddr_in6> structure. Returns a list of four elements: the port 225number, an opaque string representing the IPv6 address, the scope ID, and the 226flow label. (You can use inet_ntop() to convert the address to the usual 227string format). Will croak if the structure does not represent an C<AF_INET6> 228address. 229 230In scalar context will return just the IP address. 231 232=head2 $sockaddr = sockaddr_in6 $port, $ip6_address, [$scope_id, [$flowinfo]] 233 234=head2 ($port, $ip6_address, $scope_id, $flowinfo) = sockaddr_in6 $sockaddr 235 236A wrapper of pack_sockaddr_in6() or unpack_sockaddr_in6(). In list context, 237unpacks its argument according to unpack_sockaddr_in6(). In scalar context, 238packs its arguments according to pack_sockaddr_in6(). 239 240Provided largely for legacy compatibility; it is better to use 241pack_sockaddr_in6() or unpack_sockaddr_in6() explicitly. 242 243=head2 $sockaddr = pack_sockaddr_un $path 244 245Takes one argument, a pathname. Returns the C<sockaddr_un> structure with that 246path packed in with C<AF_UNIX> filled in. For C<PF_UNIX> sockets, this 247structure is normally what you need for the arguments in bind(), connect(), 248and send(). 249 250=head2 ($path) = unpack_sockaddr_un $sockaddr 251 252Takes a C<sockaddr_un> structure (as returned by pack_sockaddr_un(), 253getpeername() or recv()). Returns a list of one element: the pathname. Will 254croak if the structure does not represent an C<AF_UNIX> address. 255 256=head2 $sockaddr = sockaddr_un $path 257 258=head2 ($path) = sockaddr_un $sockaddr 259 260A wrapper of pack_sockaddr_un() or unpack_sockaddr_un(). In a list context, 261unpacks its argument and returns a list consisting of the pathname. In a 262scalar context, packs its pathname as a C<sockaddr_un> and returns it. 263 264Provided largely for legacy compatibility; it is better to use 265pack_sockaddr_un() or unpack_sockaddr_un() explicitly. 266 267These are only supported if your system has E<lt>F<sys/un.h>E<gt>. 268 269=head2 $ip_mreq = pack_ip_mreq $multiaddr, $interface 270 271Takes an IPv4 multicast address and optionally an interface address (or 272C<INADDR_ANY>). Returns the C<ip_mreq> structure with those arguments packed 273in. Suitable for use with the C<IP_ADD_MEMBERSHIP> and C<IP_DROP_MEMBERSHIP> 274sockopts. 275 276=head2 ($multiaddr, $interface) = unpack_ip_mreq $ip_mreq 277 278Takes an C<ip_mreq> structure. Returns a list of two elements; the IPv4 279multicast address and interface address. 280 281=head2 $ip_mreq_source = pack_ip_mreq_source $multiaddr, $source, $interface 282 283Takes an IPv4 multicast address, source address, and optionally an interface 284address (or C<INADDR_ANY>). Returns the C<ip_mreq_source> structure with those 285arguments packed in. Suitable for use with the C<IP_ADD_SOURCE_MEMBERSHIP> 286and C<IP_DROP_SOURCE_MEMBERSHIP> sockopts. 287 288=head2 ($multiaddr, $source, $interface) = unpack_ip_mreq_source $ip_mreq 289 290Takes an C<ip_mreq_source> structure. Returns a list of three elements; the 291IPv4 multicast address, source address and interface address. 292 293=head2 $ipv6_mreq = pack_ipv6_mreq $multiaddr6, $ifindex 294 295Takes an IPv6 multicast address and an interface number. Returns the 296C<ipv6_mreq> structure with those arguments packed in. Suitable for use with 297the C<IPV6_ADD_MEMBERSHIP> and C<IPV6_DROP_MEMBERSHIP> sockopts. 298 299=head2 ($multiaddr6, $ifindex) = unpack_ipv6_mreq $ipv6_mreq 300 301Takes an C<ipv6_mreq> structure. Returns a list of two elements; the IPv6 302address and an interface number. 303 304=cut 305 306=head1 FUNCTIONS 307 308=cut 309 310=head2 $ip_address = inet_aton $string 311 312Takes a string giving the name of a host, or a textual representation of an IP 313address and translates that to an packed binary address structure suitable to 314pass to pack_sockaddr_in(). If passed a hostname that cannot be resolved, 315returns C<undef>. For multi-homed hosts (hosts with more than one address), 316the first address found is returned. 317 318For portability do not assume that the result of inet_aton() is 32 bits wide, 319in other words, that it would contain only the IPv4 address in network order. 320 321This IPv4-only function is provided largely for legacy reasons. Newly-written 322code should use getaddrinfo() or inet_pton() instead for IPv6 support. 323 324=head2 $string = inet_ntoa $ip_address 325 326Takes a packed binary address structure such as returned by 327unpack_sockaddr_in() (or a v-string representing the four octets of the IPv4 328address in network order) and translates it into a string of the form 329C<d.d.d.d> where the C<d>s are numbers less than 256 (the normal 330human-readable four dotted number notation for Internet addresses). 331 332This IPv4-only function is provided largely for legacy reasons. Newly-written 333code should use getnameinfo() or inet_ntop() instead for IPv6 support. 334 335=head2 $address = inet_pton $family, $string 336 337Takes an address family (such as C<AF_INET> or C<AF_INET6>) and a string 338containing a textual representation of an address in that family and 339translates that to an packed binary address structure. 340 341See also getaddrinfo() for a more powerful and flexible function to look up 342socket addresses given hostnames or textual addresses. 343 344=head2 $string = inet_ntop $family, $address 345 346Takes an address family and a packed binary address structure and translates 347it into a human-readable textual representation of the address; typically in 348C<d.d.d.d> form for C<AF_INET> or C<hhhh:hhhh::hhhh> form for C<AF_INET6>. 349 350See also getnameinfo() for a more powerful and flexible function to turn 351socket addresses into human-readable textual representations. 352 353=head2 ($err, @result) = getaddrinfo $host, $service, [$hints] 354 355Given both a hostname and service name, this function attempts to resolve the 356host name into a list of network addresses, and the service name into a 357protocol and port number, and then returns a list of address structures 358suitable to connect() to it. 359 360Given just a host name, this function attempts to resolve it to a list of 361network addresses, and then returns a list of address structures giving these 362addresses. 363 364Given just a service name, this function attempts to resolve it to a protocol 365and port number, and then returns a list of address structures that represent 366it suitable to bind() to. This use should be combined with the C<AI_PASSIVE> 367flag; see below. 368 369Given neither name, it generates an error. 370 371If present, $hints should be a reference to a hash, where the following keys 372are recognised: 373 374=over 4 375 376=item flags => INT 377 378A bitfield containing C<AI_*> constants; see below. 379 380=item family => INT 381 382Restrict to only generating addresses in this address family 383 384=item socktype => INT 385 386Restrict to only generating addresses of this socket type 387 388=item protocol => INT 389 390Restrict to only generating addresses for this protocol 391 392=back 393 394The return value will be a list; the first value being an error indication, 395followed by a list of address structures (if no error occurred). 396 397The error value will be a dualvar; comparable to the C<EAI_*> error constants, 398or printable as a human-readable error message string. If no error occurred it 399will be zero numerically and an empty string. 400 401Each value in the results list will be a hash reference containing the following 402fields: 403 404=over 4 405 406=item family => INT 407 408The address family (e.g. C<AF_INET>) 409 410=item socktype => INT 411 412The socket type (e.g. C<SOCK_STREAM>) 413 414=item protocol => INT 415 416The protocol (e.g. C<IPPROTO_TCP>) 417 418=item addr => STRING 419 420The address in a packed string (such as would be returned by 421pack_sockaddr_in()) 422 423=item canonname => STRING 424 425The canonical name for the host if the C<AI_CANONNAME> flag was provided, or 426C<undef> otherwise. This field will only be present on the first returned 427address. 428 429=back 430 431The following flag constants are recognised in the $hints hash. Other flag 432constants may exist as provided by the OS. 433 434=over 4 435 436=item AI_PASSIVE 437 438Indicates that this resolution is for a local bind() for a passive (i.e. 439listening) socket, rather than an active (i.e. connecting) socket. 440 441=item AI_CANONNAME 442 443Indicates that the caller wishes the canonical hostname (C<canonname>) field 444of the result to be filled in. 445 446=item AI_NUMERICHOST 447 448Indicates that the caller will pass a numeric address, rather than a hostname, 449and that getaddrinfo() must not perform a resolve operation on this name. This 450flag will prevent a possibly-slow network lookup operation, and instead return 451an error if a hostname is passed. 452 453=back 454 455=head2 ($err, $hostname, $servicename) = getnameinfo $sockaddr, [$flags, [$xflags]] 456 457Given a packed socket address (such as from getsockname(), getpeername(), or 458returned by getaddrinfo() in a C<addr> field), returns the hostname and 459symbolic service name it represents. $flags may be a bitmask of C<NI_*> 460constants, or defaults to 0 if unspecified. 461 462The return value will be a list; the first value being an error condition, 463followed by the hostname and service name. 464 465The error value will be a dualvar; comparable to the C<EAI_*> error constants, 466or printable as a human-readable error message string. The host and service 467names will be plain strings. 468 469The following flag constants are recognised as $flags. Other flag constants may 470exist as provided by the OS. 471 472=over 4 473 474=item NI_NUMERICHOST 475 476Requests that a human-readable string representation of the numeric address be 477returned directly, rather than performing a name resolve operation that may 478convert it into a hostname. This will also avoid potentially-blocking network 479IO. 480 481=item NI_NUMERICSERV 482 483Requests that the port number be returned directly as a number representation 484rather than performing a name resolve operation that may convert it into a 485service name. 486 487=item NI_NAMEREQD 488 489If a name resolve operation fails to provide a name, then this flag will cause 490getnameinfo() to indicate an error, rather than returning the numeric 491representation as a human-readable string. 492 493=item NI_DGRAM 494 495Indicates that the socket address relates to a C<SOCK_DGRAM> socket, for the 496services whose name differs between TCP and UDP protocols. 497 498=back 499 500The following constants may be supplied as $xflags. 501 502=over 4 503 504=item NIx_NOHOST 505 506Indicates that the caller is not interested in the hostname of the result, so 507it does not have to be converted. C<undef> will be returned as the hostname. 508 509=item NIx_NOSERV 510 511Indicates that the caller is not interested in the service name of the result, 512so it does not have to be converted. C<undef> will be returned as the service 513name. 514 515=back 516 517=head1 getaddrinfo() / getnameinfo() ERROR CONSTANTS 518 519The following constants may be returned by getaddrinfo() or getnameinfo(). 520Others may be provided by the OS. 521 522=over 4 523 524=item EAI_AGAIN 525 526A temporary failure occurred during name resolution. The operation may be 527successful if it is retried later. 528 529=item EAI_BADFLAGS 530 531The value of the C<flags> hint to getaddrinfo(), or the $flags parameter to 532getnameinfo() contains unrecognised flags. 533 534=item EAI_FAMILY 535 536The C<family> hint to getaddrinfo(), or the family of the socket address 537passed to getnameinfo() is not supported. 538 539=item EAI_NODATA 540 541The host name supplied to getaddrinfo() did not provide any usable address 542data. 543 544=item EAI_NONAME 545 546The host name supplied to getaddrinfo() does not exist, or the address 547supplied to getnameinfo() is not associated with a host name and the 548C<NI_NAMEREQD> flag was supplied. 549 550=item EAI_SERVICE 551 552The service name supplied to getaddrinfo() is not available for the socket 553type given in the $hints. 554 555=back 556 557=cut 558 559=head1 EXAMPLES 560 561=head2 Lookup for connect() 562 563The getaddrinfo() function converts a hostname and a service name into a list 564of structures, each containing a potential way to connect() to the named 565service on the named host. 566 567 use IO::Socket; 568 use Socket qw(SOCK_STREAM getaddrinfo); 569 570 my %hints = (socktype => SOCK_STREAM); 571 my ($err, @res) = getaddrinfo("localhost", "echo", \%hints); 572 die "Cannot getaddrinfo - $err" if $err; 573 574 my $sock; 575 576 foreach my $ai (@res) { 577 my $candidate = IO::Socket->new(); 578 579 $candidate->socket($ai->{family}, $ai->{socktype}, $ai->{protocol}) 580 or next; 581 582 $candidate->connect($ai->{addr}) 583 or next; 584 585 $sock = $candidate; 586 last; 587 } 588 589 die "Cannot connect to localhost:echo" unless $sock; 590 591 $sock->print("Hello, world!\n"); 592 print <$sock>; 593 594Because a list of potential candidates is returned, the C<while> loop tries 595each in turn until it finds one that succeeds both the socket() and connect() 596calls. 597 598This function performs the work of the legacy functions gethostbyname(), 599getservbyname(), inet_aton() and pack_sockaddr_in(). 600 601In practice this logic is better performed by L<IO::Socket::IP>. 602 603=head2 Making a human-readable string out of an address 604 605The getnameinfo() function converts a socket address, such as returned by 606getsockname() or getpeername(), into a pair of human-readable strings 607representing the address and service name. 608 609 use IO::Socket::IP; 610 use Socket qw(getnameinfo); 611 612 my $server = IO::Socket::IP->new(LocalPort => 12345, Listen => 1) or 613 die "Cannot listen - $@"; 614 615 my $socket = $server->accept or die "accept: $!"; 616 617 my ($err, $hostname, $servicename) = getnameinfo($socket->peername); 618 die "Cannot getnameinfo - $err" if $err; 619 620 print "The peer is connected from $hostname\n"; 621 622Since in this example only the hostname was used, the redundant conversion of 623the port number into a service name may be omitted by passing the 624C<NIx_NOSERV> flag. 625 626 use Socket qw(getnameinfo NIx_NOSERV); 627 628 my ($err, $hostname) = getnameinfo($socket->peername, 0, NIx_NOSERV); 629 630This function performs the work of the legacy functions unpack_sockaddr_in(), 631inet_ntoa(), gethostbyaddr() and getservbyport(). 632 633In practice this logic is better performed by L<IO::Socket::IP>. 634 635=head2 Resolving hostnames into IP addresses 636 637To turn a hostname into a human-readable plain IP address use getaddrinfo() 638to turn the hostname into a list of socket structures, then getnameinfo() on 639each one to make it a readable IP address again. 640 641 use Socket qw(:addrinfo SOCK_RAW); 642 643 my ($err, @res) = getaddrinfo($hostname, "", {socktype => SOCK_RAW}); 644 die "Cannot getaddrinfo - $err" if $err; 645 646 while( my $ai = shift @res ) { 647 my ($err, $ipaddr) = getnameinfo($ai->{addr}, NI_NUMERICHOST, NIx_NOSERV); 648 die "Cannot getnameinfo - $err" if $err; 649 650 print "$ipaddr\n"; 651 } 652 653The C<socktype> hint to getaddrinfo() filters the results to only include one 654socket type and protocol. Without this most OSes return three combinations, 655for C<SOCK_STREAM>, C<SOCK_DGRAM> and C<SOCK_RAW>, resulting in triplicate 656output of addresses. The C<NI_NUMERICHOST> flag to getnameinfo() causes it to 657return a string-formatted plain IP address, rather than reverse resolving it 658back into a hostname. 659 660This combination performs the work of the legacy functions gethostbyname() 661and inet_ntoa(). 662 663=head2 Accessing socket options 664 665The many C<SO_*> and other constants provide the socket option names for 666getsockopt() and setsockopt(). 667 668 use IO::Socket::INET; 669 use Socket qw(SOL_SOCKET SO_RCVBUF IPPROTO_IP IP_TTL); 670 671 my $socket = IO::Socket::INET->new(LocalPort => 0, Proto => 'udp') 672 or die "Cannot create socket: $@"; 673 674 $socket->setsockopt(SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVBUF, 64*1024) or 675 die "setsockopt: $!"; 676 677 print "Receive buffer is ", $socket->getsockopt(SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVBUF), 678 " bytes\n"; 679 680 print "IP TTL is ", $socket->getsockopt(IPPROTO_IP, IP_TTL), "\n"; 681 682As a convenience, L<IO::Socket>'s setsockopt() method will convert a number 683into a packed byte buffer, and getsockopt() will unpack a byte buffer of the 684correct size back into a number. 685 686=cut 687 688=head1 AUTHOR 689 690This module was originally maintained in Perl core by the Perl 5 Porters. 691 692It was extracted to dual-life on CPAN at version 1.95 by 693Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk> 694 695=cut 696 697use Carp; 698use warnings::register; 699 700require Exporter; 701require XSLoader; 702our @ISA = qw(Exporter); 703 704# <@Nicholas> you can't change @EXPORT without breaking the implicit API 705# Please put any new constants in @EXPORT_OK! 706 707# List re-ordered to match documentation above. Try to keep the ordering 708# consistent so it's easier to see which ones are or aren't documented. 709our @EXPORT = qw( 710 PF_802 PF_AAL PF_APPLETALK PF_CCITT PF_CHAOS PF_CTF PF_DATAKIT 711 PF_DECnet PF_DLI PF_ECMA PF_GOSIP PF_HYLINK PF_IMPLINK PF_INET PF_INET6 712 PF_ISO PF_KEY PF_LAST PF_LAT PF_LINK PF_MAX PF_NBS PF_NIT PF_NS PF_OSI 713 PF_OSINET PF_PUP PF_ROUTE PF_SNA PF_UNIX PF_UNSPEC PF_USER PF_WAN 714 PF_X25 715 716 AF_802 AF_AAL AF_APPLETALK AF_CCITT AF_CHAOS AF_CTF AF_DATAKIT 717 AF_DECnet AF_DLI AF_ECMA AF_GOSIP AF_HYLINK AF_IMPLINK AF_INET AF_INET6 718 AF_ISO AF_KEY AF_LAST AF_LAT AF_LINK AF_MAX AF_NBS AF_NIT AF_NS AF_OSI 719 AF_OSINET AF_PUP AF_ROUTE AF_SNA AF_UNIX AF_UNSPEC AF_USER AF_WAN 720 AF_X25 721 722 SOCK_DGRAM SOCK_RAW SOCK_RDM SOCK_SEQPACKET SOCK_STREAM 723 724 SOL_SOCKET 725 726 SO_ACCEPTCONN SO_ATTACH_FILTER SO_BACKLOG SO_BROADCAST SO_CHAMELEON 727 SO_DEBUG SO_DETACH_FILTER SO_DGRAM_ERRIND SO_DOMAIN SO_DONTLINGER 728 SO_DONTROUTE SO_ERROR SO_FAMILY SO_KEEPALIVE SO_LINGER SO_OOBINLINE 729 SO_PASSCRED SO_PASSIFNAME SO_PEERCRED SO_PROTOCOL SO_PROTOTYPE 730 SO_RCVBUF SO_RCVLOWAT SO_RCVTIMEO SO_REUSEADDR SO_REUSEPORT 731 SO_SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION SO_SECURITY_ENCRYPTION_NETWORK 732 SO_SECURITY_ENCRYPTION_TRANSPORT SO_SNDBUF SO_SNDLOWAT SO_SNDTIMEO 733 SO_STATE SO_TYPE SO_USELOOPBACK SO_XOPEN SO_XSE 734 735 IP_HDRINCL IP_OPTIONS IP_RECVOPTS IP_RECVRETOPTS IP_RETOPTS IP_TOS 736 IP_TTL 737 738 MSG_BCAST MSG_BTAG MSG_CTLFLAGS MSG_CTLIGNORE MSG_CTRUNC MSG_DONTROUTE 739 MSG_DONTWAIT MSG_EOF MSG_EOR MSG_ERRQUEUE MSG_ETAG MSG_FASTOPEN MSG_FIN 740 MSG_MAXIOVLEN MSG_MCAST MSG_NOSIGNAL MSG_OOB MSG_PEEK MSG_PROXY MSG_RST 741 MSG_SYN MSG_TRUNC MSG_URG MSG_WAITALL MSG_WIRE 742 743 SHUT_RD SHUT_RDWR SHUT_WR 744 745 INADDR_ANY INADDR_BROADCAST INADDR_LOOPBACK INADDR_NONE 746 747 SCM_CONNECT SCM_CREDENTIALS SCM_CREDS SCM_RIGHTS SCM_TIMESTAMP 748 749 SOMAXCONN 750 751 IOV_MAX 752 UIO_MAXIOV 753 754 sockaddr_family 755 pack_sockaddr_in unpack_sockaddr_in sockaddr_in 756 pack_sockaddr_in6 unpack_sockaddr_in6 sockaddr_in6 757 pack_sockaddr_un unpack_sockaddr_un sockaddr_un 758 759 inet_aton inet_ntoa 760); 761 762# List re-ordered to match documentation above. Try to keep the ordering 763# consistent so it's easier to see which ones are or aren't documented. 764our @EXPORT_OK = qw( 765 CR LF CRLF $CR $LF $CRLF 766 767 SOCK_NONBLOCK SOCK_CLOEXEC 768 769 IP_ADD_MEMBERSHIP IP_ADD_SOURCE_MEMBERSHIP IP_BIND_ADDRESS_NO_PORT 770 IP_DROP_MEMBERSHIP IP_DROP_SOURCE_MEMBERSHIP IP_FREEBIND 771 IP_MULTICAST_ALL IP_MULTICAST_IF IP_MULTICAST_LOOP IP_MULTICAST_TTL 772 IP_MTU IP_MTU_DISCOVER IP_NODEFRAG IP_RECVERR IP_TRANSPARENT 773 774 IPPROTO_IP IPPROTO_IPV6 IPPROTO_RAW IPPROTO_ICMP IPPROTO_IGMP 775 IPPROTO_TCP IPPROTO_UDP IPPROTO_GRE IPPROTO_ESP IPPROTO_AH 776 IPPROTO_ICMPV6 IPPROTO_SCTP 777 778 IP_PMTUDISC_DO IP_PMTUDISC_DONT IP_PMTUDISC_PROBE IP_PMTUDISC_WANT 779 780 IPTOS_LOWDELAY IPTOS_THROUGHPUT IPTOS_RELIABILITY IPTOS_MINCOST 781 782 TCP_CC_INFO TCP_CONGESTION TCP_CONNECTIONTIMEOUT TCP_CORK TCP_DEFER_ACCEPT 783 TCP_FASTOPEN TCP_FASTOPEN_CONNECT TCP_FASTOPEN_KEY TCP_FASTOPEN_NO_COOKIE 784 TCP_INFO TCP_INIT_CWND TCP_KEEPALIVE TCP_KEEPCNT TCP_KEEPIDLE TCP_KEEPINTVL 785 TCP_LINGER2 TCP_MAXRT TCP_MAXSEG TCP_MD5SIG TCP_MD5SIG_EXT TCP_NODELAY 786 TCP_NOOPT TCP_NOPUSH TCP_NOTSENT_LOWAT TCP_QUICKACK TCP_SACK_ENABLE 787 TCP_STDURG TCP_SYNCNT TCP_TIMESTAMP TCP_TX_DELAY TCP_USER_TIMEOUT 788 TCP_WINDOW_CLAMP 789 790 IN6ADDR_ANY IN6ADDR_LOOPBACK 791 792 IPV6_ADDRFROM IPV6_ADD_MEMBERSHIP IPV6_DROP_MEMBERSHIP IPV6_JOIN_GROUP 793 IPV6_LEAVE_GROUP IPV6_MTU IPV6_MTU_DISCOVER IPV6_MULTICAST_HOPS 794 IPV6_MULTICAST_IF IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP IPV6_RECVERR IPV6_ROUTER_ALERT 795 IPV6_TCLASS IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS IPV6_V6ONLY 796 797 SO_INCOMING_CPU SO_INCOMING_NAPI_ID SO_LOCK_FILTER SO_RCVBUFFORCE 798 SO_SNDBUFFORCE 799 800 pack_ip_mreq unpack_ip_mreq pack_ip_mreq_source unpack_ip_mreq_source 801 802 pack_ipv6_mreq unpack_ipv6_mreq 803 804 inet_pton inet_ntop 805 806 getaddrinfo getnameinfo 807 808 AI_ADDRCONFIG AI_ALL AI_CANONIDN AI_CANONNAME AI_IDN 809 AI_IDN_ALLOW_UNASSIGNED AI_IDN_USE_STD3_ASCII_RULES AI_NUMERICHOST 810 AI_NUMERICSERV AI_PASSIVE AI_V4MAPPED 811 812 NI_DGRAM NI_IDN NI_IDN_ALLOW_UNASSIGNED NI_IDN_USE_STD3_ASCII_RULES 813 NI_NAMEREQD NI_NOFQDN NI_NUMERICHOST NI_NUMERICSERV 814 815 NIx_NOHOST NIx_NOSERV 816 817 EAI_ADDRFAMILY EAI_AGAIN EAI_BADFLAGS EAI_BADHINTS EAI_FAIL EAI_FAMILY 818 EAI_NODATA EAI_NONAME EAI_PROTOCOL EAI_SERVICE EAI_SOCKTYPE EAI_SYSTEM 819); 820 821our %EXPORT_TAGS = ( 822 crlf => [qw(CR LF CRLF $CR $LF $CRLF)], 823 addrinfo => [qw(getaddrinfo getnameinfo), grep m/^(?:AI|NI|NIx|EAI)_/, @EXPORT_OK], 824 all => [@EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK], 825); 826 827BEGIN { 828 sub CR () {"\015"} 829 sub LF () {"\012"} 830 sub CRLF () {"\015\012"} 831 832 # These are not gni() constants; they're extensions for the perl API 833 # The definitions in Socket.pm and Socket.xs must match 834 sub NIx_NOHOST() {1 << 0} 835 sub NIx_NOSERV() {1 << 1} 836} 837 838*CR = \CR(); 839*LF = \LF(); 840*CRLF = \CRLF(); 841 842# The four deprecated addrinfo constants 843foreach my $name (qw( AI_IDN_ALLOW_UNASSIGNED AI_IDN_USE_STD3_ASCII_RULES NI_IDN_ALLOW_UNASSIGNED NI_IDN_USE_STD3_ASCII_RULES )) { 844 no strict 'refs'; 845 *$name = sub { 846 croak "The addrinfo constant $name is deprecated"; 847 }; 848} 849 850sub sockaddr_in { 851 if (@_ == 6 && !wantarray) { # perl5.001m compat; use this && die 852 my($af, $port, @quad) = @_; 853 warnings::warn "6-ARG sockaddr_in call is deprecated" 854 if warnings::enabled(); 855 pack_sockaddr_in($port, inet_aton(join('.', @quad))); 856 } elsif (wantarray) { 857 croak "usage: (port,iaddr) = sockaddr_in(sin_sv)" unless @_ == 1; 858 unpack_sockaddr_in(@_); 859 } else { 860 croak "usage: sin_sv = sockaddr_in(port,iaddr))" unless @_ == 2; 861 pack_sockaddr_in(@_); 862 } 863} 864 865sub sockaddr_in6 { 866 if (wantarray) { 867 croak "usage: (port,in6addr,scope_id,flowinfo) = sockaddr_in6(sin6_sv)" unless @_ == 1; 868 unpack_sockaddr_in6(@_); 869 } 870 else { 871 croak "usage: sin6_sv = sockaddr_in6(port,in6addr,[scope_id,[flowinfo]])" unless @_ >= 2 and @_ <= 4; 872 pack_sockaddr_in6(@_); 873 } 874} 875 876sub sockaddr_un { 877 if (wantarray) { 878 croak "usage: (filename) = sockaddr_un(sun_sv)" unless @_ == 1; 879 unpack_sockaddr_un(@_); 880 } else { 881 croak "usage: sun_sv = sockaddr_un(filename)" unless @_ == 1; 882 pack_sockaddr_un(@_); 883 } 884} 885 886XSLoader::load(__PACKAGE__, $VERSION); 887 888my %errstr; 889 890if( defined &getaddrinfo ) { 891 # These are not part of the API, nothing uses them, and deleting them 892 # reduces the size of %Socket:: by about 12K 893 delete $Socket::{fake_getaddrinfo}; 894 delete $Socket::{fake_getnameinfo}; 895} else { 896 require Scalar::Util; 897 898 *getaddrinfo = \&fake_getaddrinfo; 899 *getnameinfo = \&fake_getnameinfo; 900 901 # These numbers borrowed from GNU libc's implementation, but since 902 # they're only used by our emulation, it doesn't matter if the real 903 # platform's values differ 904 my %constants = ( 905 AI_PASSIVE => 1, 906 AI_CANONNAME => 2, 907 AI_NUMERICHOST => 4, 908 AI_V4MAPPED => 8, 909 AI_ALL => 16, 910 AI_ADDRCONFIG => 32, 911 # RFC 2553 doesn't define this but Linux does - lets be nice and 912 # provide it since we can 913 AI_NUMERICSERV => 1024, 914 915 EAI_BADFLAGS => -1, 916 EAI_NONAME => -2, 917 EAI_NODATA => -5, 918 EAI_FAMILY => -6, 919 EAI_SERVICE => -8, 920 921 NI_NUMERICHOST => 1, 922 NI_NUMERICSERV => 2, 923 NI_NOFQDN => 4, 924 NI_NAMEREQD => 8, 925 NI_DGRAM => 16, 926 927 # Constants we don't support. Export them, but croak if anyone tries to 928 # use them 929 AI_IDN => 64, 930 AI_CANONIDN => 128, 931 NI_IDN => 32, 932 933 # Error constants we'll never return, so it doesn't matter what value 934 # these have, nor that we don't provide strings for them 935 EAI_SYSTEM => -11, 936 EAI_BADHINTS => -1000, 937 EAI_PROTOCOL => -1001 938 ); 939 940 foreach my $name ( keys %constants ) { 941 my $value = $constants{$name}; 942 943 no strict 'refs'; 944 defined &$name or *$name = sub () { $value }; 945 } 946 947 %errstr = ( 948 # These strings from RFC 2553 949 EAI_BADFLAGS() => "invalid value for ai_flags", 950 EAI_NONAME() => "nodename nor servname provided, or not known", 951 EAI_NODATA() => "no address associated with nodename", 952 EAI_FAMILY() => "ai_family not supported", 953 EAI_SERVICE() => "servname not supported for ai_socktype", 954 ); 955} 956 957# The following functions are used if the system does not have a 958# getaddrinfo(3) function in libc; and are used to emulate it for the AF_INET 959# family 960 961# Borrowed from Regexp::Common::net 962my $REGEXP_IPv4_DECIMAL = qr/25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[0-1]?[0-9]{1,2}/; 963my $REGEXP_IPv4_DOTTEDQUAD = qr/$REGEXP_IPv4_DECIMAL\.$REGEXP_IPv4_DECIMAL\.$REGEXP_IPv4_DECIMAL\.$REGEXP_IPv4_DECIMAL/; 964 965sub fake_makeerr 966{ 967 my ( $errno ) = @_; 968 my $errstr = $errno == 0 ? "" : ( $errstr{$errno} || $errno ); 969 return Scalar::Util::dualvar( $errno, $errstr ); 970} 971 972sub fake_getaddrinfo 973{ 974 my ( $node, $service, $hints ) = @_; 975 976 $node = "" unless defined $node; 977 978 $service = "" unless defined $service; 979 980 my ( $family, $socktype, $protocol, $flags ) = @$hints{qw( family socktype protocol flags )}; 981 982 $family ||= Socket::AF_INET(); # 0 == AF_UNSPEC, which we want too 983 $family == Socket::AF_INET() or return fake_makeerr( EAI_FAMILY() ); 984 985 $socktype ||= 0; 986 987 $protocol ||= 0; 988 989 $flags ||= 0; 990 991 my $flag_passive = $flags & AI_PASSIVE(); $flags &= ~AI_PASSIVE(); 992 my $flag_canonname = $flags & AI_CANONNAME(); $flags &= ~AI_CANONNAME(); 993 my $flag_numerichost = $flags & AI_NUMERICHOST(); $flags &= ~AI_NUMERICHOST(); 994 my $flag_numericserv = $flags & AI_NUMERICSERV(); $flags &= ~AI_NUMERICSERV(); 995 996 # These constants don't apply to AF_INET-only lookups, so we might as well 997 # just ignore them. For AI_ADDRCONFIG we just presume the host has ability 998 # to talk AF_INET. If not we'd have to return no addresses at all. :) 999 $flags &= ~(AI_V4MAPPED()|AI_ALL()|AI_ADDRCONFIG()); 1000 1001 $flags & (AI_IDN()|AI_CANONIDN()) and 1002 croak "Socket::getaddrinfo() does not support IDN"; 1003 1004 $flags == 0 or return fake_makeerr( EAI_BADFLAGS() ); 1005 1006 $node eq "" and $service eq "" and return fake_makeerr( EAI_NONAME() ); 1007 1008 my $canonname; 1009 my @addrs; 1010 if( $node ne "" ) { 1011 return fake_makeerr( EAI_NONAME() ) if( $flag_numerichost and $node !~ m/^$REGEXP_IPv4_DOTTEDQUAD$/ ); 1012 ( $canonname, undef, undef, undef, @addrs ) = gethostbyname( $node ); 1013 defined $canonname or return fake_makeerr( EAI_NONAME() ); 1014 1015 undef $canonname unless $flag_canonname; 1016 } 1017 else { 1018 $addrs[0] = $flag_passive ? Socket::inet_aton( "0.0.0.0" ) 1019 : Socket::inet_aton( "127.0.0.1" ); 1020 } 1021 1022 my @ports; # Actually ARRAYrefs of [ socktype, protocol, port ] 1023 my $protname = ""; 1024 if( $protocol ) { 1025 $protname = eval { getprotobynumber( $protocol ) }; 1026 } 1027 1028 if( $service ne "" and $service !~ m/^\d+$/ ) { 1029 return fake_makeerr( EAI_NONAME() ) if( $flag_numericserv ); 1030 getservbyname( $service, $protname ) or return fake_makeerr( EAI_SERVICE() ); 1031 } 1032 1033 foreach my $this_socktype ( Socket::SOCK_STREAM(), Socket::SOCK_DGRAM(), Socket::SOCK_RAW() ) { 1034 next if $socktype and $this_socktype != $socktype; 1035 1036 my $this_protname = "raw"; 1037 $this_socktype == Socket::SOCK_STREAM() and $this_protname = "tcp"; 1038 $this_socktype == Socket::SOCK_DGRAM() and $this_protname = "udp"; 1039 1040 next if $protname and $this_protname ne $protname; 1041 1042 my $port; 1043 if( $service ne "" ) { 1044 if( $service =~ m/^\d+$/ ) { 1045 $port = "$service"; 1046 } 1047 else { 1048 ( undef, undef, $port, $this_protname ) = getservbyname( $service, $this_protname ); 1049 next unless defined $port; 1050 } 1051 } 1052 else { 1053 $port = 0; 1054 } 1055 1056 push @ports, [ $this_socktype, eval { scalar getprotobyname( $this_protname ) } || 0, $port ]; 1057 } 1058 1059 my @ret; 1060 foreach my $addr ( @addrs ) { 1061 foreach my $portspec ( @ports ) { 1062 my ( $socktype, $protocol, $port ) = @$portspec; 1063 push @ret, { 1064 family => $family, 1065 socktype => $socktype, 1066 protocol => $protocol, 1067 addr => Socket::pack_sockaddr_in( $port, $addr ), 1068 canonname => undef, 1069 }; 1070 } 1071 } 1072 1073 # Only supply canonname for the first result 1074 if( defined $canonname ) { 1075 $ret[0]->{canonname} = $canonname; 1076 } 1077 1078 return ( fake_makeerr( 0 ), @ret ); 1079} 1080 1081sub fake_getnameinfo 1082{ 1083 my ( $addr, $flags, $xflags ) = @_; 1084 1085 my ( $port, $inetaddr ); 1086 eval { ( $port, $inetaddr ) = Socket::unpack_sockaddr_in( $addr ) } 1087 or return fake_makeerr( EAI_FAMILY() ); 1088 1089 my $family = Socket::AF_INET(); 1090 1091 $flags ||= 0; 1092 1093 my $flag_numerichost = $flags & NI_NUMERICHOST(); $flags &= ~NI_NUMERICHOST(); 1094 my $flag_numericserv = $flags & NI_NUMERICSERV(); $flags &= ~NI_NUMERICSERV(); 1095 my $flag_nofqdn = $flags & NI_NOFQDN(); $flags &= ~NI_NOFQDN(); 1096 my $flag_namereqd = $flags & NI_NAMEREQD(); $flags &= ~NI_NAMEREQD(); 1097 my $flag_dgram = $flags & NI_DGRAM() ; $flags &= ~NI_DGRAM(); 1098 1099 $flags & NI_IDN() and 1100 croak "Socket::getnameinfo() does not support IDN"; 1101 1102 $flags == 0 or return fake_makeerr( EAI_BADFLAGS() ); 1103 1104 $xflags ||= 0; 1105 1106 my $node; 1107 if( $xflags & NIx_NOHOST ) { 1108 $node = undef; 1109 } 1110 elsif( $flag_numerichost ) { 1111 $node = Socket::inet_ntoa( $inetaddr ); 1112 } 1113 else { 1114 $node = gethostbyaddr( $inetaddr, $family ); 1115 if( !defined $node ) { 1116 return fake_makeerr( EAI_NONAME() ) if $flag_namereqd; 1117 $node = Socket::inet_ntoa( $inetaddr ); 1118 } 1119 elsif( $flag_nofqdn ) { 1120 my ( $shortname ) = split m/\./, $node; 1121 my ( $fqdn ) = gethostbyname $shortname; 1122 $node = $shortname if defined $fqdn and $fqdn eq $node; 1123 } 1124 } 1125 1126 my $service; 1127 if( $xflags & NIx_NOSERV ) { 1128 $service = undef; 1129 } 1130 elsif( $flag_numericserv ) { 1131 $service = "$port"; 1132 } 1133 else { 1134 my $protname = $flag_dgram ? "udp" : ""; 1135 $service = getservbyport( $port, $protname ); 1136 if( !defined $service ) { 1137 $service = "$port"; 1138 } 1139 } 1140 1141 return ( fake_makeerr( 0 ), $node, $service ); 1142} 1143 11441; 1145