getsockname(2)getsockname(2)NAMEgetsockname - get socket address
SYNOPSIS
AF_CCITT Only
UNIX 03 Only (X/Open Sockets)
Obsolescent UNIX 95 Only (X/Open Sockets)
DESCRIPTION
returns the local address of the socket indicated by s, where s is a
socket descriptor. addr points to a socket address structure in which
this address is returned. addrlen points to a variable that should be
initialized to indicate the size of the address structure. On return
it contains the actual size of the address returned (in bytes). If
addr does not point to enough space to contain the whole address of the
socket, only the first addrlen bytes of the address are returned.
AF_CCITT Only
The field of the addr struct returns the X.25 addressing information of
the local socket s. The field of the addr struct contains the name of
the local X.25 interface through which the call arrived.
X/Open Sockets Compilation Environment
See xopen_networking(7).
RETURN VALUE
Upon successful completion, returns 0; otherwise, it returns −1 and
sets to indicate the error.
ERRORS
fails if any of the following conditions are encountered:
s is not a valid file descriptor.
s is a valid file descriptor, but it is not a
socket.
No buffer space is available to perform the operation.
addr or addrlen are not valid pointers.
The socket has been shut down.
Operation not supported for
AF_UNIX sockets.
The operation was interrupted by a signal.
Application needs to retry the operation to get
the local address.
Not all possible values are documented in this manpage due to dependen‐
cies from the underlying protocol modules.
OBSOLESCENCE
Currently, the and types are the same size. This is compatible with
the UNIX 95 and UNIX 03 profiles. However, in a future release, might
be a different size. In that case, passing a pointer will evoke com‐
pile-time warnings, which must be corrected in order for the applica‐
tion to behave correctly. Applications that use now, where appropri‐
ate, will avoid such migration problems. On the other hand, applica‐
tions that need to be portable to the UNIX 95 profile should follow the
X/Open specification (see xopen_networking(7)).
WARNINGS
Linking binary objects compiled to specification and binary objects
compiled to specification to the same executable may result in unex‐
pected behavior, including application abnormal termination and unex‐
pected socket errors. See xopen_networking(7) for details and remedy.
FUTURE DIRECTION
Currently, the default behavior is the however, it might be changed to
in a future release. At that time, any behavior that is incompatible
with might be obsoleted. Applications that conform to the X/Open spec‐
ification now will avoid migration problems (see xopen_networking(7)).
AUTHOR
was developed by HP and the University of California, Berkeley.
SEE ALSObind(2), socket(2), getpeername(2), thread_safety(5), inet(7F),
xopen_networking(7).
STANDARDS CONFORMANCEgetsockname(2)