19972013 Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved. The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License, Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/. Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the License. inet bjorn@erix.ericsson.se 1998-02-04 A
inet Access to TCP/IP Protocols

Provides access to TCP/IP protocols.

See also ERTS User's Guide, Inet configuration for more information on how to configure an Erlang runtime system for IP communication.

Two Kernel configuration parameters affect the behaviour of all sockets opened on an Erlang node: inet_default_connect_options can contain a list of default options used for all sockets returned when doing connect, and inet_default_listen_options can contain a list of default options used when issuing a listen call. When accept is issued, the values of the listensocket options are inherited, why no such application variable is needed for accept.

Using the Kernel configuration parameters mentioned above, one can set default options for all TCP sockets on a node. This should be used with care, but options like {delay_send,true} might be specified in this way. An example of starting an Erlang node with all sockets using delayed send could look like this:

$ erl -sname test -kernel \
inet_default_connect_options '[{delay_send,true}]' \
inet_default_listen_options '[{delay_send,true}]'

Note that the default option {active, true} currently cannot be changed, for internal reasons.

Addresses as inputs to functions can be either a string or a tuple. For instance, the IP address 150.236.20.73 can be passed to gethostbyaddr/1 either as the string "150.236.20.73" or as the tuple {150, 236, 20, 73}.

IPv4 address examples:

Address ip_address() ------- ------------ 127.0.0.1 {127,0,0,1} 192.168.42.2 {192,168,42,2}

IPv6 address examples:

Address ip_address() ------- ------------ ::1 {0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1} ::192.168.42.2 {0,0,0,0,0,0,(192 bsl 8) bor 168,(42 bsl 8) bor 2} FFFF::192.168.42.2 {16#FFFF,0,0,0,0,0,(192 bsl 8) bor 168,(42 bsl 8) bor 2} 3ffe:b80:1f8d:2:204:acff:fe17:bf38 {16#3ffe,16#b80,16#1f8d,16#2,16#204,16#acff,16#fe17,16#bf38} fe80::204:acff:fe17:bf38 {16#fe80,0,0,0,0,16#204,16#acff,16#fe17,16#bf38}

A function that may be useful is parse_address/1:

1> inet:parse_address("192.168.42.2").
{ok,{192,168,42,2}}
2> inet:parse_address("FFFF::192.168.42.2").
{ok,{65535,0,0,0,0,0,49320,10754}}

The record is defined in the Kernel include file "inet.hrl". Add the following directive to the module:

-include_lib("kernel/include/inet.hrl").

An atom which is named from the Posix error codes used in Unix, and in the runtime libraries of most C compilers. See POSIX Error Codes.

socket()

See gen_tcp(3) and gen_udp(3).

Close a socket of any type

Closes a socket of any type.

Return a list of IP configuration parameters

Returns the state of the Inet configuration database in form of a list of recorded configuration parameters. (See the ERTS User's Guide, Inet configuration, for more information). Only parameters with other than default values are returned.

Return a descriptive string for an error reason

Returns a diagnostic error string. See the section below for possible Posix values and the corresponding strings.

Return the IP-address for a host

Returns the IP-address for Host as a tuple of integers. Host can be an IP-address, a single hostname or a fully qualified hostname.

Return the IP-addresses for a host

Returns a list of all IP-addresses for Host. Host can be an IP-address, a single hostname or a fully qualified hostname.

Return a hostent record for the host with the given address

Returns a hostent record given an address.

Return a hostent record for the host with the given name

Returns a hostent record given a hostname.

Return a hostent record for the host with the given name

Returns a hostent record given a hostname, restricted to the given address family.

Return the local hostname

Returns the local hostname. Will never fail.

Return a list of interfaces and their addresses

Returns a list of 2-tuples containing interface names and the interface's addresses. Ifname is a Unicode string. Hwaddr is hardware dependent, e.g on Ethernet interfaces it is the 6-byte Ethernet address (MAC address (EUI-48 address)).

The {addr,Addr}, {netmask,_} and {broadaddr,_} tuples are repeated in the result list iff the interface has multiple addresses. If you come across an interface that has multiple {flag,_} or {hwaddr,_} tuples you have a really strange interface or possibly a bug in this function. The {flag,_} tuple is mandatory, all other optional.

Do not rely too much on the order of Flag atoms or Ifopt tuples. There are some rules, though: Immediately after {addr,_} follows {netmask,_} Immediately thereafter follows {broadaddr,_} if the broadcast flag is not set and the pointtopoint flag is set. Any {netmask,_}, {broadaddr,_} or {dstaddr,_} tuples that follow an {addr,_} tuple concerns that address.

The {hwaddr,_} tuple is not returned on Solaris since the hardware address historically belongs to the link layer and only the superuser can read such addresses.

On Windows, the data is fetched from quite different OS API functions, so the Netmask and Broadaddr values may be calculated, just as some Flag values. You have been warned. Report flagrant bugs.

Get one or more options for a socket

Gets one or more options for a socket. See setopts/2 for a list of available options.

The number of elements in the returned OptionValues list does not necessarily correspond to the number of options asked for. If the operating system fails to support an option, it is simply left out in the returned list. An error tuple is only returned when getting options for the socket is impossible (i.e. the socket is closed or the buffer size in a raw request is too large). This behavior is kept for backward compatibility reasons.

A raw option request RawOptReq = {raw, Protocol, OptionNum, ValueSpec} can be used to get information about socket options not (explicitly) supported by the emulator. The use of raw socket options makes the code non portable, but allows the Erlang programmer to take advantage of unusual features present on the current platform.

The RawOptReq consists of the tag raw followed by the protocol level, the option number and either a binary or the size, in bytes, of the buffer in which the option value is to be stored. A binary should be used when the underlying getsockopt requires input in the argument field, in which case the size of the binary should correspond to the required buffer size of the return value. The supplied values in a RawOptReq correspond to the second, third and fourth/fifth parameters to the getsockopt call in the C socket API. The value stored in the buffer is returned as a binary ValueBin where all values are coded in the native endianess.

Asking for and inspecting raw socket options require low level information about the current operating system and TCP stack.

As an example, consider a Linux machine where the TCP_INFO option could be used to collect TCP statistics for a socket. Lets say we're interested in the tcpi_sacked field of the struct tcp_info filled in when asking for TCP_INFO. To be able to access this information, we need to know both the numeric value of the protocol level IPPROTO_TCP, the numeric value of the option TCP_INFO, the size of the struct tcp_info and the size and offset of the specific field. By inspecting the headers or writing a small C program, we found IPPROTO_TCP to be 6, TCP_INFO to be 11, the structure size to be 92 (bytes), the offset of tcpi_sacked to be 28 bytes and the actual value to be a 32 bit integer. We could use the following code to retrieve the value:

{ok,[{raw,_,_,Info}]} = inet:getopts(Sock,[{raw,6,11,92}]), <<_:28/binary,TcpiSacked:32/native,_/binary>> = Info, TcpiSacked.]]>

Preferably, you would check the machine type, the OS and the kernel version prior to executing anything similar to the code above.

Get one or more statistic options for a socket

Gets one or more statistic options for a socket.

getstat(Socket) is equivalent to getstat(Socket, [recv_avg, recv_cnt, recv_dvi, recv_max, recv_oct, send_avg, send_cnt, send_dvi, send_max, send_oct]).

The following options are available:

recv_avg

Average size of packets in bytes received by the socket.

recv_cnt

Number of packets received by the socket.

recv_dvi

Average packet size deviation in bytes received by the socket.

recv_max

The size of the largest packet in bytes received by the socket.

recv_oct

Number of bytes received by the socket.

send_avg

Average size of packets in bytes sent from the socket.

send_cnt

Number of packets sent from the socket.

send_dvi

Average packet size deviation in bytes sent from the socket.

send_max

The size of the largest packet in bytes sent from the socket.

send_oct

Number of bytes sent from the socket.

Convert IPv6 / IPV4 adress to ascii

Parses an ip_address() and returns an IPv4 or IPv6 address string.

Parse an IPv4 address

Parses an IPv4 address string and returns an ip4_address(). Accepts a shortened IPv4 shortened address string.

Parse an IPv4 address strict.

Parses an IPv4 address string containing four fields, i.e not shortened, and returns an ip4_address().

Parse an IPv6 address

Parses an IPv6 address string and returns an ip6_address(). If an IPv4 address string is passed, an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address is returned.

Parse an IPv6 address strict.

Parses an IPv6 address string and returns an ip6_address(). Does not accept IPv4 adresses.

Parse an IPv4 or IPv6 address.

Parses an IPv4 or IPv6 address string and returns an ip4_address() or ip6_address(). Accepts a shortened IPv4 address string.

Parse an IPv4 or IPv6 address strict.

Parses an IPv4 or IPv6 address string and returns an ip4_address() or ip6_address(). Does not accept a shortened IPv4 address string.

Return the address and port for the other end of a connection

Returns the address and port for the other end of a connection.

Note that for SCTP sockets this function only returns one of the socket's peer addresses. The function peernames/1,2 returns all.

Return all address/port numbers for the other end of a connection

Equivalent to peernames(Socket, 0). Note that this function's behaviour for an SCTP one-to-many style socket is not defined by the SCTP Sockets API Extensions.

Return all address/port numbers for the other end of a connection

Returns a list of all address/port number pairs for the other end of a socket's association Assoc.

This function can return multiple addresses for multihomed sockets such as SCTP sockets. For other sockets it returns a one element list.

Note that the Assoc parameter is by the SCTP Sockets API Extensions defined to be ignored for one-to-one style sockets. What the special value 0 means hence its behaviour for one-to-many style sockets is unfortunately not defined.

Return the local port number for a socket

Returns the local port number for a socket.

Return the local address and port number for a socket

Returns the local address and port number for a socket.

Note that for SCTP sockets this function only returns one of the socket addresses. The function socknames/1,2 returns all.

Return all local address/port numbers for a socket

Equivalent to socknames(Socket, 0).

Return all local address/port numbers for a socket

Returns a list of all local address/port number pairs for a socket for the given association Assoc.

This function can return multiple addresses for multihomed sockets such as SCTP sockets. For other sockets it returns a one element list.

Note that the Assoc parameter is by the SCTP Sockets API Extensions defined to be ignored for one-to-one style sockets. For one-to-many style sockets the special value 0 is defined to mean that the returned addresses shall be without regard to any particular association. How different SCTP implementations interprets this varies somewhat.

Set one or more options for a socket

Sets one or more options for a socket. The following options are available:

{active, true | false | once | N}

If the value is true, which is the default, everything received from the socket will be sent as messages to the receiving process. If the value is false (passive mode), the process must explicitly receive incoming data by calling gen_tcp:recv/2,3, gen_udp:recv/2,3 or gen_sctp:recv/1,2 (depending on the type of socket).

If the value is once ({active, once}), one data message from the socket will be sent to the process. To receive one more message, setopts/2 must be called again with the {active, once} option.

If the value is an integer N in the range -32768 to 32767 (inclusive), the value is added to the socket's count of data messages sent to the controlling process. A socket's default message count is 0. If a negative value is specified and its magnitude is equal to or greater than the socket's current message count, the socket's message count is set to 0. Once the socket's message count reaches 0, either due to sending received data messages to the process or by being explicitly set, the process is then notified by a special message, specific to the type of socket, that the socket has entered passive mode. Once the socket enters passive mode, to receive more messages setopts/2 must be called again to set the socket back into an active mode.

When using {active, once} or {active, N}, the socket changes behaviour automatically when data is received. This can sometimes be confusing in combination with connection-oriented sockets (i.e. gen_tcp) as a socket with {active, false} behaviour reports closing differently than a socket with {active, true} behaviour. To make programming easier, a socket where the peer closed and this was detected while in {active, false} mode, will still generate the message {tcp_closed,Socket} when set to {active, once}, {active, true} or {active, N} mode. It is therefore safe to assume that the message {tcp_closed,Socket}, possibly followed by socket port termination (depending on the exit_on_close option) will eventually appear when a socket changes back and forth between {active, true} and {active, false} mode. However, when peer closing is detected is all up to the underlying TCP/IP stack and protocol.

Note that {active, true} mode provides no flow control; a fast sender could easily overflow the receiver with incoming messages. The same is true of {active, N} mode while the message count is greater than zero. Use active mode only if your high-level protocol provides its own flow control (for instance, acknowledging received messages) or the amount of data exchanged is small. {active, false} mode, use of the {active, once} mode or {active, N} mode with values of N appropriate for the application provides flow control; the other side will not be able send faster than the receiver can read.

{broadcast, Boolean}(UDP sockets)

Enable/disable permission to send broadcasts.

{buffer, Size}

The size of the user-level software buffer used by the driver. Not to be confused with sndbuf and recbuf options which correspond to the kernel socket buffers. It is recommended to have val(buffer) >= max(val(sndbuf),val(recbuf)) to avoid performance issues due to unnecessary copying. In fact, the val(buffer) is automatically set to the above maximum when sndbuf or recbuf values are set. However, since the actual sizes set for sndbuf and recbuf usually becomes larger, you are encouraged to use inet:getopts/2 to analyze the behavior of your operating system.

{delay_send, Boolean}

Normally, when an Erlang process sends to a socket, the driver will try to immediately send the data. If that fails, the driver will use any means available to queue up the message to be sent whenever the operating system says it can handle it. Setting {delay_send, true} will make all messages queue up. This makes the messages actually sent onto the network be larger but fewer. The option actually affects the scheduling of send requests versus Erlang processes instead of changing any real property of the socket. Needless to say it is an implementation specific option. Default is false.

{deliver, port | term}

When {active, true} delivers data on the forms port : {S, {data, [H1,..Hsz | Data]}} or term : {tcp, S, [H1..Hsz | Data]}.

{dontroute, Boolean}

Enable/disable routing bypass for outgoing messages.

{exit_on_close, Boolean}

By default this option is set to true.

The only reason to set it to false is if you want to continue sending data to the socket after a close has been detected, for instance if the peer has used gen_tcp:shutdown/2 to shutdown the write side.

{header, Size}

This option is only meaningful if the binary option was specified when the socket was created. If the header option is specified, the first Size number bytes of data received from the socket will be elements of a list, and the rest of the data will be a binary given as the tail of the same list. If for example Size == 2, the data received will match [Byte1,Byte2|Binary].

{high_msgq_watermark, Size}

The socket message queue will be set into a busy state when the amount of data queued on the message queue reaches this limit. Note that this limit only concerns data that have not yet reached the ERTS internal socket implementation. Default value used is 8 kB.

Senders of data to the socket will be suspended if either the socket message queue is busy, or the socket itself is busy.

For more information see the low_msgq_watermark, high_watermark, and low_watermark options.

Note that distribution sockets will disable the use of high_msgq_watermark and low_msgq_watermark, and will instead use the distribution buffer busy limit which is a similar feature.

{high_watermark, Size} (TCP/IP sockets)

The socket will be set into a busy state when the amount of data queued internally by the ERTS socket implementation reaches this limit. Default value used is 8 kB.

Senders of data to the socket will be suspended if either the socket message queue is busy, or the socket itself is busy.

For more information see the low_watermark, high_msgq_watermark, and low_msqg_watermark options.

{ipv6_v6only, Boolean}

Restricts the socket to only use IPv6, prohibiting any IPv4 connections. This is only applicable for IPv6 sockets (option inet6).

On most platforms this option has to be set on the socket before associating it to an address. Therefore it is only reasonable to give it when creating the socket and not to use it when calling the function (setopts/2) containing this description.

The behaviour of a socket with this socket option set to true is becoming the only portable one. The original idea when IPv6 was new of using IPv6 for all traffic is now not recommended by FreeBSD (you can use {ipv6_v6only,false} to override the recommended system default value), forbidden by OpenBSD (the supported GENERIC kernel) and impossible on Windows (that has separate IPv4 and IPv6 protocol stacks). Most Linux distros still have a system default value of false. This policy shift among operating systems towards separating IPv6 from IPv4 traffic has evolved since it gradually proved hard and complicated to get a dual stack implementation correct and secure.

On some platforms the only allowed value for this option is true, e.g. OpenBSD and Windows. Trying to set this option to false when creating the socket will in this case fail.

Setting this option on platforms where it does not exist is ignored and getting this option with getopts/2 returns no value i.e the returned list will not contain an {ipv6_v6only,_} tuple. On Windows the option acually does not exist, but it is emulated as being a read-only option with the value true.

So it boils down to that setting this option to true when creating a socket will never fail except possibly (at the time of this writing) on a platform where you have customized the kernel to only allow false, which might be doable (but weird) on e.g. OpenBSD.

If you read back the option value using getopts/2 and get no value the option does not exist in the host OS and all bets are off regarding the behaviour of both an IPv6 and an IPv4 socket listening on the same port as well as for an IPv6 socket getting IPv4 traffic.

{keepalive, Boolean}(TCP/IP sockets)

Enables/disables periodic transmission on a connected socket, when no other data is being exchanged. If the other end does not respond, the connection is considered broken and an error message will be sent to the controlling process. Default disabled.

{linger, {true|false, Seconds}}

Determines the timeout in seconds for flushing unsent data in the close/1 socket call. If the 1st component of the value tuple is false, the 2nd one is ignored, which means that close/1 returns immediately not waiting for data to be flushed. Otherwise, the 2nd component is the flushing time-out in seconds.

{low_msgq_watermark, Size}

If the socket message queue is in a busy state, the socket message queue will be set in a not busy state when the amount of data queued in the message queue falls below this limit. Note that this limit only concerns data that have not yet reached the ERTS internal socket implementation. Default value used is 4 kB.

Senders that have been suspended due to either a busy message queue or a busy socket, will be resumed when neither the socket message queue, nor the socket are busy.

For more information see the high_msgq_watermark, high_watermark, and low_watermark options.

Note that distribution sockets will disable the use of high_msgq_watermark and low_msgq_watermark, and will instead use the distribution buffer busy limit which is a similar feature.

{low_watermark, Size} (TCP/IP sockets)

If the socket is in a busy state, the socket will be set in a not busy state when the amount of data queued internally by the ERTS socket implementation falls below this limit. Default value used is 4 kB.

Senders that have been suspended due to either a busy message queue or a busy socket, will be resumed when neither the socket message queue, nor the socket are busy.

For more information see the high_watermark, high_msgq_watermark, and low_msgq_watermark options.

{mode, Mode :: binary | list}

Received Packet is delivered as defined by Mode.

{netns, Namespace :: file:filename_all()}

Set a network namespace for the socket. The Namespace parameter is a filename defining the namespace for example "/var/run/netns/example" typically created by the command ip netns add example. This option must be used in a function call that creates a socket i.e gen_tcp:connect/3,4, gen_tcp:listen/2, gen_udp:open/1,2 or gen_sctp:open/0-2.

This option uses the Linux specific syscall setns() such as in Linux kernel 3.0 or later and therefore only exists when the runtime system has been compiled for such an operating system.

The virtual machine also needs elevated privileges either running as superuser or (for Linux) having the capability CAP_SYS_ADMIN according to the documentation for setns(2). However, during testing also CAP_SYS_PTRACE and CAP_DAC_READ_SEARCH has proven to be necessary. Example: setcap cap_sys_admin,cap_sys_ptrace,cap_dac_read_search+epi beam.smp Note also that the filesystem containing the virtual machine executable (beam.smp in the example above) has to be local, mounted without the nosetuid flag, support extended attributes and that the kernel has to support file capabilities. All this runs out of the box on at least Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, except that SCTP sockets appears to not support network namespaces.

The Namespace is a file name and is encoded and decoded as discussed in file except that the emulator flag +fnu is ignored and getopts/2 for this option will return a binary for the filename if the stored filename can not be decoded, which should only happen if you set the option using a binary that can not be decoded with the emulator's filename encoding: file:native_name_encoding/0.

list

Received Packet is delivered as a list.

binary

Received Packet is delivered as a binary.

{nodelay, Boolean}(TCP/IP sockets)

If Boolean == true, the TCP_NODELAY option is turned on for the socket, which means that even small amounts of data will be sent immediately.

{packet, PacketType}(TCP/IP sockets)

Defines the type of packets to use for a socket. The following values are valid:

raw | 0

No packaging is done.

1 | 2 | 4

Packets consist of a header specifying the number of bytes in the packet, followed by that number of bytes. The length of header can be one, two, or four bytes; containing an unsigned integer in big-endian byte order. Each send operation will generate the header, and the header will be stripped off on each receive operation.

In current implementation the 4-byte header is limited to 2Gb.

asn1 | cdr | sunrm | fcgi | tpkt | line

These packet types only have effect on receiving. When sending a packet, it is the responsibility of the application to supply a correct header. On receiving, however, there will be one message sent to the controlling process for each complete packet received, and, similarly, each call to gen_tcp:recv/2,3 returns one complete packet. The header is not stripped off.

The meanings of the packet types are as follows:

asn1 - ASN.1 BER,

sunrm - Sun's RPC encoding,

cdr - CORBA (GIOP 1.1),

fcgi - Fast CGI,

tpkt - TPKT format [RFC1006],

line - Line mode, a packet is a line terminated with newline, lines longer than the receive buffer are truncated.

http | http_bin

The Hypertext Transfer Protocol. The packets are returned with the format according to HttpPacket described in erlang:decode_packet/3. A socket in passive mode will return {ok, HttpPacket} from gen_tcp:recv while an active socket will send messages like {http, Socket, HttpPacket}.

httph | httph_bin

These two types are often not needed as the socket will automatically switch from http/http_bin to httph/httph_bin internally after the first line has been read. There might be occasions however when they are useful, such as parsing trailers from chunked encoding.

{packet_size, Integer}(TCP/IP sockets)

Sets the max allowed length of the packet body. If the packet header indicates that the length of the packet is longer than the max allowed length, the packet is considered invalid. The same happens if the packet header is too big for the socket receive buffer.

For line oriented protocols (line,http*), option packet_size also guarantees that lines up to the indicated length are accepted and not considered invalid due to internal buffer limitations.

{priority, Priority}

Set the protocol-defined priority for all packets to be sent on this socket.

{raw, Protocol, OptionNum, ValueBin}

See below.

{read_packets, Integer}(UDP sockets)

Sets the max number of UDP packets to read without intervention from the socket when data is available. When this many packets have been read and delivered to the destination process, new packets are not read until a new notification of available data has arrived. The default is 5, and if this parameter is set too high the system can become unresponsive due to UDP packet flooding.

{recbuf, Size}

The minimum size of the receive buffer to use for the socket. You are encouraged to use inet:getopts/2, to retrieve the actual size set by your operating system.

{reuseaddr, Boolean}

Allows or disallows local reuse of port numbers. By default, reuse is disallowed.

{send_timeout, Integer}

Only allowed for connection oriented sockets.

Specifies a longest time to wait for a send operation to be accepted by the underlying TCP stack. When the limit is exceeded, the send operation will return {error,timeout}. How much of a packet that actually got sent is unknown, why the socket should be closed whenever a timeout has occurred (see send_timeout_close). Default is infinity.

{send_timeout_close, Boolean}

Only allowed for connection oriented sockets.

Used together with send_timeout to specify whether the socket will be automatically closed when the send operation returns {error,timeout}. The recommended setting is true which will automatically close the socket. Default is false due to backward compatibility.

{show_econnreset, Boolean}(TCP/IP sockets)

When this option is set to false, as it is by default, an RST that is received from the TCP peer is treated as a normal close (as though a FIN was sent). A caller to gen_tcp:recv/2 will get {error, closed}. In active mode the controlling process will receive a {tcp_close, Socket} message, indicating that the peer has closed the connection.

Setting this option to true will allow you to distinguish between a connection that was closed normally, and one which was aborted (intentionally or unintentionally) by the TCP peer. A call to gen_tcp:recv/2 will return {error, econnreset}. In active mode, the controlling process will receive a {tcp_error, Socket, econnreset} message before the usual {tcp_closed, Socket}, as is the case for any other socket error. Calls to gen_tcp:send/2 will also return {error, econnreset} when it is detected that a TCP peer has sent an RST.

A connected socket returned from gen_tcp:accept/1 will inherit the show_econnreset setting from the listening socket.

{sndbuf, Size}

The minimum size of the send buffer to use for the socket. You are encouraged to use inet:getopts/2, to retrieve the actual size set by your operating system.

{priority, Integer}

Sets the SO_PRIORITY socket level option on platforms where this is implemented. The behaviour and allowed range varies on different systems. The option is ignored on platforms where the option is not implemented. Use with caution.

{tos, Integer}

Sets IP_TOS IP level options on platforms where this is implemented. The behaviour and allowed range varies on different systems. The option is ignored on platforms where the option is not implemented. Use with caution.

In addition to the options mentioned above, raw option specifications can be used. The raw options are specified as a tuple of arity four, beginning with the tag raw, followed by the protocol level, the option number and the actual option value specified as a binary. This corresponds to the second, third and fourth argument to the setsockopt call in the C socket API. The option value needs to be coded in the native endianess of the platform and, if a structure is required, needs to follow the struct alignment conventions on the specific platform.

Using raw socket options require detailed knowledge about the current operating system and TCP stack.

As an example of the usage of raw options, consider a Linux system where you want to set the TCP_LINGER2 option on the IPPROTO_TCP protocol level in the stack. You know that on this particular system it defaults to 60 (seconds), but you would like to lower it to 30 for a particular socket. The TCP_LINGER2 option is not explicitly supported by inet, but you know that the protocol level translates to the number 6, the option number to the number 8 and the value is to be given as a 32 bit integer. You can use this line of code to set the option for the socket named Sock:

>}]),]]>

As many options are silently discarded by the stack if they are given out of range, it could be a good idea to check that a raw option really got accepted. This code places the value in the variable TcpLinger2:

>}]}=inet:getopts(Sock,[{raw,6,8,4}]),]]>

Code such as the examples above is inherently non portable, even different versions of the same OS on the same platform may respond differently to this kind of option manipulation. Use with care.

Note that the default options for TCP/IP sockets can be changed with the Kernel configuration parameters mentioned in the beginning of this document.

POSIX Error Codes e2big - argument list too long eacces - permission denied eaddrinuse - address already in use eaddrnotavail - cannot assign requested address eadv - advertise error eafnosupport - address family not supported by protocol family eagain - resource temporarily unavailable ealign - EALIGN ealready - operation already in progress ebade - bad exchange descriptor ebadf - bad file number ebadfd - file descriptor in bad state ebadmsg - not a data message ebadr - bad request descriptor ebadrpc - RPC structure is bad ebadrqc - bad request code ebadslt - invalid slot ebfont - bad font file format ebusy - file busy echild - no children echrng - channel number out of range ecomm - communication error on send econnaborted - software caused connection abort econnrefused - connection refused econnreset - connection reset by peer edeadlk - resource deadlock avoided edeadlock - resource deadlock avoided edestaddrreq - destination address required edirty - mounting a dirty fs w/o force edom - math argument out of range edotdot - cross mount point edquot - disk quota exceeded eduppkg - duplicate package name eexist - file already exists efault - bad address in system call argument efbig - file too large ehostdown - host is down ehostunreach - host is unreachable eidrm - identifier removed einit - initialization error einprogress - operation now in progress eintr - interrupted system call einval - invalid argument eio - I/O error eisconn - socket is already connected eisdir - illegal operation on a directory eisnam - is a named file el2hlt - level 2 halted el2nsync - level 2 not synchronized el3hlt - level 3 halted el3rst - level 3 reset elbin - ELBIN elibacc - cannot access a needed shared library elibbad - accessing a corrupted shared library elibexec - cannot exec a shared library directly elibmax - attempting to link in more shared libraries than system limit elibscn - .lib section in a.out corrupted elnrng - link number out of range eloop - too many levels of symbolic links emfile - too many open files emlink - too many links emsgsize - message too long emultihop - multihop attempted enametoolong - file name too long enavail - not available enet - ENET enetdown - network is down enetreset - network dropped connection on reset enetunreach - network is unreachable enfile - file table overflow enoano - anode table overflow enobufs - no buffer space available enocsi - no CSI structure available enodata - no data available enodev - no such device enoent - no such file or directory enoexec - exec format error enolck - no locks available enolink - link has be severed enomem - not enough memory enomsg - no message of desired type enonet - machine is not on the network enopkg - package not installed enoprotoopt - bad protocol option enospc - no space left on device enosr - out of stream resources or not a stream device enosym - unresolved symbol name enosys - function not implemented enotblk - block device required enotconn - socket is not connected enotdir - not a directory enotempty - directory not empty enotnam - not a named file enotsock - socket operation on non-socket enotsup - operation not supported enotty - inappropriate device for ioctl enotuniq - name not unique on network enxio - no such device or address eopnotsupp - operation not supported on socket eperm - not owner epfnosupport - protocol family not supported epipe - broken pipe eproclim - too many processes eprocunavail - bad procedure for program eprogmismatch - program version wrong eprogunavail - RPC program not available eproto - protocol error eprotonosupport - protocol not supported eprototype - protocol wrong type for socket erange - math result unrepresentable erefused - EREFUSED eremchg - remote address changed eremdev - remote device eremote - pathname hit remote file system eremoteio - remote i/o error eremoterelease - EREMOTERELEASE erofs - read-only file system erpcmismatch - RPC version is wrong erremote - object is remote eshutdown - cannot send after socket shutdown esocktnosupport - socket type not supported espipe - invalid seek esrch - no such process esrmnt - srmount error estale - stale remote file handle esuccess - Error 0 etime - timer expired etimedout - connection timed out etoomanyrefs - too many references etxtbsy - text file or pseudo-device busy euclean - structure needs cleaning eunatch - protocol driver not attached eusers - too many users eversion - version mismatch ewouldblock - operation would block exdev - cross-domain link exfull - message tables full nxdomain - the hostname or domain name could not be found