gtpc1m4a | Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol |
The send function sends packets on the socket with descriptor
s. The send function applies to all connected
sockets.
Format
#include <socket.h>
int send(int s,
char *msg,
int len
int flags);
- s
- The socket descriptor.
- msg
- Pointer to the buffer containing the message to transmit.
- len
- Length of the message pointed to by the msg parameter.
When using TCP/IP offload support:
- The maximum send buffer size is 32 767 bytes when the
SO_SNDBUF option of the setsockopt function is used to
increase the send buffer size.
- The default maximum size is 28 672 bytes.
- The maximum size for datagram sockets is 32 000 bytes when the
SO_SNDBUF option of the setsockopt function is used to
increase the send buffer size.
- The default maximum size for datagram sockets is 9216 bytes.
- The length cannot be larger than the maximum send buffer size for this
socket, which is defined by the SO_SNDBUF option of the
setsockopt function.
When using TCP/IP native stack support:
- The maximum send buffer size is 1 048 576
bytes.
- The default value of the SO_SNDBUF option is
32 767.
- For a TCP socket, the maximum length that you can specify is 1 GB.
- For a UDP or RAW socket, the maximum length that you can specify is the
smaller of the following values:
- 32 KB
- The send buffer size defined by the SO_SNDBUF option.
- flags
- Must be set to 0 or one or more of the following flags. If you
specify more than one flag, use the logical OR operator (|) to separate
them:
- MSG_OOB
- Sends out-of-band data on sockets that support it.
- MSG_DONTROUTE
- The SO_DONTROUTE option is turned on for the duration of the
operation.
Normal Return
No indication of failure to deliver is implicit in a send routine.
However, if it succeeds, the number of characters sent is returned.
Error Return
A return code equal to -1 indicates an error. You can get the
specific error code by calling sock_errno. See Appendix C, Socket Error Return Codes for more information about socket errors.
- Note:
- Unless otherwise stated in the description, the following error codes can be
returned for either TCP/IP offload support or TCP/IP native stack
support.
- Value
- Description
- SOCFAULT
- Using msg and len results in an attempt to access a
protected address space. This error code is returned only for TCP/IP
offload support.
- SOCINVAL
- The value of the len parameter is not valid, the MSG_OOB option
was specified for a socket that is not a stream socket, or the MSG_OOB option
was specified, but out-of-band data is queued inline for this socket.
This error code is returned only for TCP/IP native stack support.
- SOCNOBUFS
- Buffer space is not available to send the message.
- SOCNOTSOCK
- The s parameter is not a valid socket descriptor.
- SOCWOULDBLOCK
- The s parameter is in nonblocking mode and no buffer space is
available to hold the message to be sent.
- SOCMSGSIZE
- The message was too large to be sent. This error code is returned
only for TCP/IP native stack support.
- SOCNOTCONN
- The socket is not connected.
- EIBMIUCVERR
- An error occurred while the message was sent to the offload device.
This error code is returned only for TCP/IP offload support.
- E1052STATE
- The socket was closed because the system was in or cycling down to 1052
state.
- EINACT
- All offload devices associated with the socket descriptor have been
disconnected. The socket is closed. This error code is returned
only for TCP/IP offload support.
- EINACTWS
- An offload device associated with the socket descriptor has been
disconnected. The socket is still available. This error code is
returned only for TCP/IP offload support.
- ESYSTEMERROR
- A system error has occurred and closed the socket.
- SOCTIMEDOUT
- The operation timed out. The socket is still available. This
error code is returned only for TCP/IP native stack support.
Programming Considerations
- If buffer space is not available at the socket to hold the message to be
sent, the send function normally blocks, unless the socket is in
nonblocking mode. See ioctl -- Perform Special Operations on Socket for a description of how to set nonblocking mode.
- Use the select function to determine when to send more
data.
- For sockets using TCP/IP native stack support, the send timeout value (the
SO_SNDTIMEO setsockopt option) determines how long to wait for
space to become available in the send buffer before the send
function times out.
- For sockets using TCP/IP native stack support:
- For TCP sockets, if the value you specify for the len parameter
is less than or equal to the send buffer size of the socket, the send process
will be atomic; that is, either all of the data will be sent or none of
it will be sent. If all of the data is sent, the return code is set to
the value of the len parameter. If none of the data is sent,
the return code is set to -1.
- For TCP sockets, if the value you specify for the len parameter
is greater than the send buffer size of the socket, the TPF system will take
as much data as possible and return to the application indicating that only
part of the data was processed. The application must issue more send
calls for the remaining data and the application must serialize the send calls
if the socket is being shared by multiple ECBs. If the send call is
successful, the return code is set to a value from 1 to the value of the
len parameter, which indicates how much data was sent.
Examples
The following example sends 256 bytes. No flag is used.
#include <socket.h>
·
·
·
int bytes_sent;
int server_sock;
char data_sent[256];
·
·
·
bytes_sent = send(server_sock, data_sent, sizeof(data_sent), 0);
The following example sends 64 000 bytes. No flag is
used.
#include <socket.h>
·
·
·
#define MESSAGE_SIZE 64000
int bytes_sent;
int server_sock;
int send_left;
int send_rc;
char *message_ptr;
·
·
·
message_ptr = malloc (MESSAGE_SIZE);
send_left = MESSAGE_SIZE;
while (send_left > 0)
{
send_rc = send(server_sock, message_ptr, send_left, 0);
if send_rc == -1
break;
send_left -= send_rc;
message_ptr += send_rc;
} /* End While Loop */
Related Information