RECV(2) manual page
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recv, recvfrom, recvmsg - receive
a message from a socket
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
ssize_t recv(int sockfd, void *buf, size_t len, int flags);
ssize_t recvfrom(int sockfd, void *buf, size_t len, int flags,
struct sockaddr *src_addr, socklen_t *addrlen);
ssize_t recvmsg(int sockfd, struct msghdr *msg, int flags);
The
recv(), recvfrom(), and recvmsg() calls are used to receive messages from
a socket. They may be used to receive data on both connectionless and connection-oriented
sockets. This page first describes common features of all three system calls,
and then describes the differences between the calls.
All three calls return
the length of the message on successful completion. If a message is too
long to fit in the supplied buffer, excess bytes may be discarded depending
on the type of socket the message is received from.
If no messages are available
at the socket, the receive calls wait for a message to arrive, unless the
socket is nonblocking (see fcntl(2)
), in which case the value -1 is returned
and the external variable errno is set to EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK. The receive
calls normally return any data available, up to the requested amount, rather
than waiting for receipt of the full amount requested.
An application can
use select(2)
, poll(2)
, or epoll(7)
to determine when more data arrives
on a socket.
The flags argument is formed by ORing one
or more of the following values:
- MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC (recvmsg() only; since
Linux 2.6.23)
- Set the close-on-exec flag for the file descriptor received via
a UNIX domain file descriptor using the SCM_RIGHTS operation (described
in unix(7)
). This flag is useful for the same reasons as the O_CLOEXEC flag
of open(2)
.
- MSG_DONTWAIT (since Linux 2.2)
- Enables nonblocking operation;
if the operation would block, the call fails with the error EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK
(this can also be enabled using the O_NONBLOCK flag with the F_SETFL fcntl(2)
).
- MSG_ERRQUEUE (since Linux 2.2)
- This flag specifies that queued errors should
be received from the socket error queue. The error is passed in an ancillary
message with a type dependent on the protocol (for IPv4 IP_RECVERR). The
user should supply a buffer of sufficient size. See cmsg(3)
and ip(7)
for
more information. The payload of the original packet that caused the error
is passed as normal data via msg_iovec. The original destination address
of the datagram that caused the error is supplied via msg_name.
- For local
errors, no address is passed (this can be checked with the
- cmsg_len member
of the cmsghdr). For error receives, the MSG_ERRQUEUE is set in the msghdr.
After an error has been passed, the pending socket error is regenerated
based on the next queued error and will be passed on the next socket operation.
The error is supplied in a sock_extended_err structure:
#define SO_EE_ORIGIN_NONE 0
#define SO_EE_ORIGIN_LOCAL 1
#define SO_EE_ORIGIN_ICMP 2
#define SO_EE_ORIGIN_ICMP6 3
struct sock_extended_err
{
uint32_t ee_errno; /* error number */
uint8_t ee_origin; /* where the error originated */
uint8_t ee_type; /* type */
uint8_t ee_code; /* code */
uint8_t ee_pad; /* padding */
uint32_t ee_info; /* additional information */
uint32_t ee_data; /* other data */
/* More data may follow */
};
struct sockaddr *SO_EE_OFFENDER(struct sock_extended_err *);
- ee_errno
- contains the errno number of the queued error. ee_origin is the
origin code of where the error originated. The other fields are protocol-specific.
The macro SOCK_EE_OFFENDER returns a pointer to the address of the network
object where the error originated from given a pointer to the ancillary
message. If this address is not known, the sa_family member of the sockaddr
contains AF_UNSPEC and the other fields of the sockaddr are undefined. The
payload of the packet that caused the error is passed as normal data.
- For
local errors, no address is passed (this
- can be checked with the cmsg_len
member of the cmsghdr). For error receives, the MSG_ERRQUEUE is set in the
msghdr. After an error has been passed, the pending socket error is regenerated
based on the next queued error and will be passed on the next socket operation.
- MSG_OOB
- This flag requests receipt of out-of-band data that would not be
received in the normal data stream. Some protocols place expedited data
at the head of the normal data queue, and thus this flag cannot be used
with such protocols.
- MSG_PEEK
- This flag causes the receive operation to
return data from the beginning of the receive queue without removing that
data from the queue. Thus, a subsequent receive call will return the same
data.
- MSG_TRUNC (since Linux 2.2)
- For raw (AF_PACKET), Internet datagram
(since Linux 2.4.27/2.6.8), netlink (since Linux 2.6.22), and UNIX datagram (since
Linux 3.4) sockets: return the real length of the packet or datagram, even
when it was longer than the passed buffer.
For use with Internet stream
sockets, see tcp(7)
.
- MSG_WAITALL (since Linux 2.2)
- This flag requests that
the operation block until the full request is satisfied. However, the call
may still return less data than requested if a signal is caught, an error
or disconnect occurs, or the next data to be received is of a different
type than that returned.
recvfrom() places the received message
into the buffer buf. The caller must specify the size of the buffer in len.
If src_addr is not NULL, and the underlying protocol provides the source
address of the message, that source address is placed in the buffer pointed
to by src_addr. In this case, addrlen is a value-result argument.
Before the call, it should be initialized to the size of the buffer associated
with src_addr. Upon return, addrlen is updated to contain the actual size
of the source address. The returned address is truncated if the buffer provided
is too small; in this case, addrlen will return a value greater than was
supplied to the call.
If the caller is not interested in the source address,
src_addr and addrlen should be specified as NULL.
The recv() call
is normally used only on a connected socket (see connect(2)
). It is equivalent
to the call:
recvfrom(fd, buf, len, flags, NULL, 0));
The recvmsg() call uses a msghdr structure to minimize the number
of directly supplied arguments. This structure is defined as follows in
<sys/socket.h>:
struct iovec { /* Scatter/gather array items */
void *iov_base; /* Starting address */
size_t iov_len; /* Number of bytes to transfer */
};
struct msghdr {
void *msg_name; /* optional address */
socklen_t msg_namelen; /* size of address */
struct iovec *msg_iov; /* scatter/gather array */
size_t msg_iovlen; /* # elements in msg_iov */
void *msg_control; /* ancillary data, see below */
size_t msg_controllen; /* ancillary data buffer len */
int msg_flags; /* flags on received message */
};
The msg_name field points to a caller-allocated buffer that is used to
return the source address if the socket is unconnected. The caller should
set msg_namelen to the size of this buffer before this call; upon return
from a successful call, msg_namelen will contain the length of the returned
address. If the application does not need to know the source address, msg_name
can be specified as NULL.
The fields msg_iov and msg_iovlen describe scatter-gather
locations, as discussed in readv(2)
.
The field msg_control, which has length
msg_controllen, points to a buffer for other protocol control-related messages
or miscellaneous ancillary data. When recvmsg() is called, msg_controllen
should contain the length of the available buffer in msg_control; upon
return from a successful call it will contain the length of the control
message sequence.
The messages are of the form:
struct cmsghdr {
socklen_t cmsg_len; /* data byte count, including hdr */
int cmsg_level; /* originating protocol */
int cmsg_type; /* protocol-specific type */
/* followed by
unsigned char cmsg_data[]; */
};
Ancillary data should be accessed only by the macros defined in cmsg(3)
.
As an example, Linux uses this ancillary data mechanism to pass extended
errors, IP options, or file descriptors over UNIX domain sockets.
The msg_flags
field in the msghdr is set on return of recvmsg(). It can contain several
flags:
- MSG_EOR
- indicates end-of-record; the data returned completed a record
(generally used with sockets of type SOCK_SEQPACKET).
- MSG_TRUNC
- indicates
that the trailing portion of a datagram was discarded because the datagram
was larger than the buffer supplied.
- MSG_CTRUNC
- indicates that some control
data were discarded due to lack of space in the buffer for ancillary data.
- MSG_OOB
- is returned to indicate that expedited or out-of-band data were received.
- MSG_ERRQUEUE
- indicates that no data was received but an extended error
from the socket error queue.
These calls return the number of
bytes received, or -1 if an error occurred. In the event of an error, errno
is set to indicate the error.
When a stream socket peer has performed an
orderly shutdown, the return value will be 0 (the traditional "end-of-file"
return).
Datagram sockets in various domains (e.g., the UNIX and Internet
domains) permit zero-length datagrams. When such a datagram is received,
the return value is 0.
The value 0 may also be returned if the requested
number of bytes to receive from a stream socket was 0.
These are some
standard errors generated by the socket layer. Additional errors may be
generated and returned from the underlying protocol modules; see their
manual pages.
- EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK
- The socket is marked nonblocking and
the receive operation would block, or a receive timeout had been set and
the timeout expired before data was received. POSIX.1-2001 allows either error
to be returned for this case, and does not require these constants to have
the same value, so a portable application should check for both possibilities.
- EBADF
- The argument sockfd is an invalid descriptor.
- ECONNREFUSED
- A remote
host refused to allow the network connection (typically because it is not
running the requested service).
- EFAULT
- The receive buffer pointer(s) point
outside the process’s address space.
- EINTR
- The receive was interrupted by
delivery of a signal before any data were available; see signal(7)
.
- EINVAL
- Invalid argument passed.
- ENOMEM
- Could not allocate memory for recvmsg().
- ENOTCONN
- The socket is associated with a connection-oriented protocol and
has not been connected (see connect(2)
and accept(2)
).
- ENOTSOCK
- The argument
sockfd does not refer to a socket.
4.4BSD (these function calls
first appeared in 4.2BSD), POSIX.1-2001.
POSIX.1-2001 describes only the MSG_OOB,
MSG_PEEK, and MSG_WAITALL flags.
The socklen_t type was invented by
POSIX. See also accept(2)
.
According to POSIX.1-2001, the msg_controllen field
of the msghdr structure should be typed as socklen_t, but glibc currently
types it as size_t.
See recvmmsg(2)
for information about a Linux-specific
system call that can be used to receive multiple datagrams in a single
call.
An example of the use of recvfrom() is shown in getaddrinfo(3)
.
fcntl(2)
, getsockopt(2)
, read(2)
, recvmmsg(2)
, select(2)
, shutdown(2)
,
socket(2)
, cmsg(3)
, sockatmark(3)
, socket(7)
This page is part
of release 3.78 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project,
information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page,
can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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