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unix(7)

UNIX(7)                    Linux Programmer's Manual                   UNIX(7)



NAME
       unix - sockets for local interprocess communication

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/socket.h>
       #include <sys/un.h>

       unix_socket = socket(AF_UNIX, type, 0);
       error = socketpair(AF_UNIX, type, 0, int *sv);

DESCRIPTION
       The  AF_UNIX (also known as AF_LOCAL) socket family is used to communi‐
       cate between processes on the same machine efficiently.  Traditionally,
       UNIX  domain  sockets  can  be either unnamed, or bound to a filesystem
       pathname (marked as being of type  socket).   Linux  also  supports  an
       abstract namespace which is independent of the filesystem.

       Valid  socket  types in the UNIX domain are: SOCK_STREAM, for a stream-
       oriented socket; SOCK_DGRAM, for a datagram-oriented socket  that  pre‐
       serves message boundaries (as on most UNIX implementations, UNIX domain
       datagram sockets are always reliable and don't reorder datagrams);  and
       (since  Linux 2.6.4) SOCK_SEQPACKET, for a sequenced-packet socket that
       is connection-oriented, preserves message boundaries, and delivers mes‐
       sages in the order that they were sent.

       UNIX domain sockets support passing file descriptors or process creden‐
       tials to other processes using ancillary data.

   Address format
       A UNIX domain socket address is represented in the following structure:

           struct sockaddr_un {
               sa_family_t sun_family;               /* AF_UNIX */
               char        sun_path[108];            /* Pathname */
           };

       The sun_family field always contains AF_UNIX.  On  Linux,  sun_path  is
       108 bytes in size; see also NOTES, below.

       Various systems calls (for example, bind(2), connect(2), and sendto(2))
       take a sockaddr_un argument as input.  Some  other  system  calls  (for
       example,  getsockname(2),  getpeername(2),  recvfrom(2), and accept(2))
       return an argument of this type.

       Three types of address are distinguished in the sockaddr_un structure:

       *  pathname: a UNIX domain socket can be  bound  to  a  null-terminated
          filesystem  pathname  using bind(2).  When the address of a pathname
          socket is returned (by one of the system  calls  noted  above),  its
          length is

              offsetof(struct sockaddr_un, sun_path) + strlen(sun_path) + 1

          and  sun_path contains the null-terminated pathname.  (On Linux, the
          above  offsetof()  expression  equates  to   the   same   value   as
          sizeof(sa_family_t),  but  some  other implementations include other
          fields before sun_path, so the offsetof() expression  more  portably
          describes the size of the address structure.)

          For further details of pathname sockets, see below.

       *  unnamed: A stream socket that has not been bound to a pathname using
          bind(2) has no name.  Likewise, the two sockets created  by  socket‐
          pair(2)  are  unnamed.   When  the  address  of an unnamed socket is
          returned, its length is sizeof(sa_family_t), and sun_path should not
          be inspected.

       *  abstract:  an abstract socket address is distinguished (from a path‐
          name socket) by the fact that sun_path[0] is  a  null  byte  ('\0').
          The  socket's  address  in this namespace is given by the additional
          bytes in sun_path that are covered by the specified  length  of  the
          address structure.  (Null bytes in the name have no special signifi‐
          cance.)  The name has no connection with filesystem pathnames.  When
          the  address of an abstract socket is returned, the returned addrlen
          is greater than sizeof(sa_family_t) (i.e., greater than 2), and  the
          name   of   the   socket  is  contained  in  the  first  (addrlen  -
          sizeof(sa_family_t)) bytes of sun_path.

   Pathname sockets
       When binding a socket to a pathname, a few rules should be observed for
       maximum portability and ease of coding:

       *  The pathname in sun_path should be null-terminated.

       *  The  length  of  the  pathname, including the terminating null byte,
          should not exceed the size of sun_path.

       *  The addrlen argument that describes the enclosing sockaddr_un struc‐
          ture should have a value of at least:

              offsetof(struct sockaddr_un, sun_path)+strlen(addr.sun_path)+1

          or,  more  simply,  addrlen  can be specified as sizeof(struct sock‐
          addr_un).

       There is some variation  in  how  implementations  handle  UNIX  domain
       socket addresses that do not follow the above rules.  For example, some
       (but not all) implementations append  a  null  terminator  if  none  is
       present in the supplied sun_path.

       When  coding  portable applications, keep in mind that some implementa‐
       tions have sun_path as short as 92 bytes.

       Various system calls (accept(2), recvfrom(2), getsockname(2),  getpeer‐
       name(2)) return socket address structures.  When applied to UNIX domain
       sockets, the value-result addrlen argument supplied to the call  should
       be  initialized as above.  Upon return, the argument is set to indicate
       the actual size of the address structure.  The caller should check  the
       value  returned in this argument: if the output value exceeds the input
       value, then there is no guarantee that a null terminator is present  in
       sun_path.  (See BUGS.)

   Pathname socket ownership and permissions
       In  the Linux implementation, pathname sockets honor the permissions of
       the directory they are in.  Creation of  a  new  socket  fails  if  the
       process  does  not  have  write  and search (execute) permission on the
       directory in which the socket is created.

       On Linux, connecting to a stream socket object requires  write  permis‐
       sion  on  that socket; sending a datagram to a datagram socket likewise
       requires write permission on that socket.   POSIX  does  not  make  any
       statement  about the effect of the permissions on a socket file, and on
       some systems (e.g., older BSDs), the socket  permissions  are  ignored.
       Portable programs should not rely on this feature for security.

       When  creating a new socket, the owner and group of the socket file are
       set according to the usual rules.  The socket file has all  permissions
       enabled, other than those that are turned off by the process umask(2).

       The  owner,  group, and permissions of a pathname socket can be changed
       (using chown(2) and chmod(2)).

   Abstract sockets
       Socket permissions have no meaning for abstract  sockets:  the  process
       umask(2)  has  no  effect when binding an abstract socket, and changing
       the ownership and permissions of the object  (via  fchown(2)  and  fch‐
       mod(2)) has no effect on the accessibility of the socket.

       Abstract  sockets  automatically  disappear when all open references to
       the socket are closed.

       The abstract socket namespace is a nonportable Linux extension.

   Socket options
       For historical reasons, these  socket  options  are  specified  with  a
       SOL_SOCKET type even though they are AF_UNIX specific.  They can be set
       with setsockopt(2) and read with getsockopt(2) by specifying SOL_SOCKET
       as the socket family.

       SO_PASSCRED
              Enabling this socket option causes receipt of the credentials of
              the sending process in an SCM_CREDENTIALS ancillary  message  in
              each  subsequently  received  message.  The returned credentials
              are those specified by the sender using  SCM_CREDENTIALS,  or  a
              default  that  includes the sender's PID, real user ID, and real
              group ID, if the sender did not specify  SCM_CREDENTIALS  ancil‐
              lary data.

              When  this  option is set and the socket is not yet connected, a
              unique name in the abstract namespace will be generated automat‐
              ically.

              The  value given as an argument to setsockopt(2) and returned as
              the result of getsockopt(2) is an integer boolean flag.

       SO_PASSSEC
              Enables receiving of the SELinux  security  label  of  the  peer
              socket in an ancillary message of type SCM_SECURITY (see below).

              The  value given as an argument to setsockopt(2) and returned as
              the result of getsockopt(2) is an integer boolean flag.

              The SO_PASSSEC option is  supported  for  UNIX  domain  datagram
              sockets since Linux 2.6.18; support for UNIX domain stream sock‐
              ets was added in Linux 4.2.

       SO_PEEK_OFF
              See socket(7).

       SO_PEERCRED
              This read-only socket option returns the credentials of the peer
              process  connected to this socket.  The returned credentials are
              those that were in effect at the time of the call to  connect(2)
              or socketpair(2).

              The argument to getsockopt(2) is a pointer to a ucred structure;
              define the _GNU_SOURCE feature test macro to obtain the  defini‐
              tion of that structure from <sys/socket.h>.

              The  use  of  this option is possible only for connected AF_UNIX
              stream sockets and for AF_UNIX stream and datagram socket  pairs
              created using socketpair(2).

   Autobind feature
       If  a  bind(2)  call  specifies  addrlen as sizeof(sa_family_t), or the
       SO_PASSCRED socket option was specified  for  a  socket  that  was  not
       explicitly  bound  to  an  address,  then the socket is autobound to an
       abstract address.  The address consists of a null byte  followed  by  5
       bytes  in  the  character set [0-9a-f].  Thus, there is a limit of 2^20
       autobind addresses.  (From Linux 2.1.15, when the autobind feature  was
       added,  8  bytes  were  used,  and  the  limit  was  thus 2^32 autobind
       addresses.  The change to 5 bytes came in Linux 2.3.15.)

   Sockets API
       The following paragraphs describe domain-specific  details  and  unsup‐
       ported features of the sockets API for UNIX domain sockets on Linux.

       UNIX domain sockets do not support the transmission of out-of-band data
       (the MSG_OOB flag for send(2) and recv(2)).

       The send(2) MSG_MORE flag is not supported by UNIX domain sockets.

       Before Linux 3.4, the use of MSG_TRUNC in the flags argument of recv(2)
       was not supported by UNIX domain sockets.

       The  SO_SNDBUF  socket option does have an effect for UNIX domain sock‐
       ets, but the SO_RCVBUF option does  not.   For  datagram  sockets,  the
       SO_SNDBUF  value  imposes  an upper limit on the size of outgoing data‐
       grams.  This limit is calculated as the doubled (see socket(7))  option
       value less 32 bytes used for overhead.

   Ancillary messages
       Ancillary  data  is  sent and received using sendmsg(2) and recvmsg(2).
       For historical reasons, the ancillary message types  listed  below  are
       specified with a SOL_SOCKET type even though they are AF_UNIX specific.
       To send them, set  the  cmsg_level  field  of  the  struct  cmsghdr  to
       SOL_SOCKET  and the cmsg_type field to the type.  For more information,
       see cmsg(3).

       SCM_RIGHTS
              Send or receive a set of  open  file  descriptors  from  another
              process.  The data portion contains an integer array of the file
              descriptors.

              Commonly, this operation is  referred  to  as  "passing  a  file
              descriptor"  to another process.  However, more accurately, what
              is being passed is a reference to an open file description  (see
              open(2)),  and in the receiving process it is likely that a dif‐
              ferent file descriptor number will be used.  Semantically,  this
              operation  is equivalent to duplicating (dup(2)) a file descrip‐
              tor into the file descriptor table of another process.

              If the buffer used to receive the ancillary data containing file
              descriptors is too small (or is absent), then the ancillary data
              is truncated (or discarded) and the excess file descriptors  are
              automatically closed in the receiving process.

              If the number of file descriptors received in the ancillary data
              would cause the process to  exceed  its  RLIMIT_NOFILE  resource
              limit  (see getrlimit(2)), the excess file descriptors are auto‐
              matically closed in the receiving process.

              The kernel constant SCM_MAX_FD defines a limit on the number  of
              file  descriptors  in  the  array.   Attempting to send an array
              larger than this limit causes sendmsg(2) to fail with the  error
              EINVAL.   SCM_MAX_FD has the value 253 (or 255 in kernels before
              2.6.38).

       SCM_CREDENTIALS
              Send or receive UNIX credentials.  This can be used for  authen‐
              tication.   The  credentials are passed as a struct ucred ancil‐
              lary message.  Thus structure is defined  in  <sys/socket.h>  as
              follows:

                  struct ucred {
                      pid_t pid;    /* Process ID of the sending process */
                      uid_t uid;    /* User ID of the sending process */
                      gid_t gid;    /* Group ID of the sending process */
                  };

              Since  glibc  2.8,  the  _GNU_SOURCE  feature test macro must be
              defined (before including any header files) in order  to  obtain
              the definition of this structure.

              The  credentials  which  the sender specifies are checked by the
              kernel.  A privileged process is allowed to specify values  that
              do  not  match its own.  The sender must specify its own process
              ID (unless it has the capability CAP_SYS_ADMIN), its  real  user
              ID,  effective  user  ID,  or  saved  set-user-ID (unless it has
              CAP_SETUID), and its real group ID, effective group ID, or saved
              set-group-ID (unless it has CAP_SETGID).

              To  receive  a struct ucred message, the SO_PASSCRED option must
              be enabled on the socket.

       SCM_SECURITY
              Receive the SELinux security context (the security label) of the
              peer  socket.   The received ancillary data is a null-terminated
              string containing the security  context.   The  receiver  should
              allocate  at  least  NAME_MAX  bytes  in the data portion of the
              ancillary message for this data.

              To receive the security context, the SO_PASSSEC option  must  be
              enabled on the socket (see above).

       When  sending  ancillary data with sendmsg(2), only one item of each of
       the above types may be included in the sent message.

       At least one byte of real data should be sent  when  sending  ancillary
       data.   On  Linux, this is required to successfully send ancillary data
       over a UNIX domain stream socket.  When sending ancillary data  over  a
       UNIX  domain  datagram socket, it is not necessary on Linux to send any
       accompanying real data.  However,  portable  applications  should  also
       include at least one byte of real data when sending ancillary data over
       a datagram socket.

       When receiving from a stream socket, ancillary data  forms  a  kind  of
       barrier  for  the  received data.  For example, suppose that the sender
       transmits as follows:

              1. sendmsg(2) of four bytes, with no ancillary data.
              2. sendmsg(2) of one byte, with ancillary data.
              3. sendmsg(2) of four bytes, with no ancillary data.

       Suppose that the receiver now performs recvmsg(2)  calls  each  with  a
       buffer  size  of  20  bytes.  The first call will receive five bytes of
       data, along with the ancillary data sent by the second sendmsg(2) call.
       The next call will receive the remaining five bytes of data.

       If  the  space  allocated  for receiving incoming ancillary data is too
       small then the ancillary data is truncated to  the  number  of  headers
       that  will fit in the supplied buffer (or, in the case of an SCM_RIGHTS
       file descriptor list, the list of file descriptors may  be  truncated).
       If  no  buffer  is  provided  for  incoming  ancillary  data (i.e., the
       msg_control field of the msghdr structure  supplied  to  recvmsg(2)  is
       NULL), then the incoming ancillary data is discarded.  In both of these
       cases, the MSG_CTRUNC flag will  be  set  in  the  msg.msg_flags  value
       returned by recvmsg(2).

   Ioctls
       The  following ioctl(2) calls return information in value.  The correct
       syntax is:

              int value;
              error = ioctl(unix_socket, ioctl_type, &value);

       ioctl_type can be:

       SIOCINQ
              For SOCK_STREAM sockets, this call returns the number of  unread
              bytes  in  the receive buffer.  The socket must not be in LISTEN
              state, otherwise an error  (EINVAL)  is  returned.   SIOCINQ  is
              defined  in  <linux/sockios.h>.   Alternatively, you can use the
              synonymous FIONREAD, defined in <sys/ioctl.h>.   For  SOCK_DGRAM
              sockets,  the  returned value is the same as for Internet domain
              datagram sockets; see udp(7).

ERRORS
       EADDRINUSE
              The specified local address is already in use or the  filesystem
              socket object already exists.

       EBADF  This error can occur for sendmsg(2) when sending a file descrip‐
              tor as ancillary  data  over  a  UNIX  domain  socket  (see  the
              description  of  SCM_RIGHTS, above), and indicates that the file
              descriptor number that is being sent is not valid (e.g.,  it  is
              not an open file descriptor).

       ECONNREFUSED
              The  remote  address specified by connect(2) was not a listening
              socket.  This error can also occur if the target pathname is not
              a socket.

       ECONNRESET
              Remote socket was unexpectedly closed.

       EFAULT User memory address was not valid.

       EINVAL Invalid  argument  passed.   A  common  cause  is that the value
              AF_UNIX was not  specified  in  the  sun_type  field  of  passed
              addresses, or the socket was in an invalid state for the applied
              operation.

       EISCONN
              connect(2) called on an already connected  socket  or  a  target
              address was specified on a connected socket.

       ENOENT The  pathname  in the remote address specified to connect(2) did
              not exist.

       ENOMEM Out of memory.

       ENOTCONN
              Socket operation needs a target address, but the socket  is  not
              connected.

       EOPNOTSUPP
              Stream  operation  called on non-stream oriented socket or tried
              to use the out-of-band data option.

       EPERM  The sender passed invalid credentials in the struct ucred.

       EPIPE  Remote socket was closed on a stream socket.  If enabled, a SIG‐
              PIPE  is  sent  as  well.   This  can  be avoided by passing the
              MSG_NOSIGNAL flag to send(2) or sendmsg(2).

       EPROTONOSUPPORT
              Passed protocol is not AF_UNIX.

       EPROTOTYPE
              Remote socket does not match the local socket  type  (SOCK_DGRAM
              versus SOCK_STREAM).

       ESOCKTNOSUPPORT
              Unknown socket type.

       ETOOMANYREFS
              This error can occur for sendmsg(2) when sending a file descrip‐
              tor as ancillary  data  over  a  UNIX  domain  socket  (see  the
              description  of  SCM_RIGHTS, above).  It occurs if the number of
              "in-flight" file descriptors exceeds the RLIMIT_NOFILE  resource
              limit and the caller does not have the CAP_SYS_RESOURCE capabil‐
              ity.  An in-flight file descriptor is one  that  has  been  sent
              using  sendmsg(2) but has not yet been accepted in the recipient
              process using recvmsg(2).

              This error is diagnosed since mainline Linux 4.5  (and  in  some
              earlier  kernel versions where the fix has been backported).  In
              earlier kernel versions, it was possible to place  an  unlimited
              number  of  file  descriptors  in  flight,  by sending each file
              descriptor with sendmsg(2) and then closing the file  descriptor
              so  that it was not accounted against the RLIMIT_NOFILE resource
              limit.

       Other errors can be generated by the generic socket  layer  or  by  the
       filesystem while generating a filesystem socket object.  See the appro‐
       priate manual pages for more information.

VERSIONS
       SCM_CREDENTIALS and the abstract namespace were introduced  with  Linux
       2.2  and  should  not  be used in portable programs.  (Some BSD-derived
       systems also support credential passing, but the implementation details
       differ.)

NOTES
       Binding  to a socket with a filename creates a socket in the filesystem
       that must be deleted by the caller when it is no longer  needed  (using
       unlink(2)).   The  usual  UNIX close-behind semantics apply; the socket
       can be unlinked at any time  and  will  be  finally  removed  from  the
       filesystem when the last reference to it is closed.

       To  pass file descriptors or credentials over a SOCK_STREAM socket, you
       must to send or receive at least one byte of nonancillary data  in  the
       same sendmsg(2) or recvmsg(2) call.

       UNIX  domain  stream  sockets  do not support the notion of out-of-band
       data.

BUGS
       When binding a socket to an address, Linux is one  of  the  implementa‐
       tions  that  appends a null terminator if none is supplied in sun_path.
       In most cases  this  is  unproblematic:  when  the  socket  address  is
       retrieved,  it  will  be  one  byte  longer than that supplied when the
       socket was bound.  However, there is one case where confusing  behavior
       can  result: if 108 non-null bytes are supplied when a socket is bound,
       then the addition of the null terminator takes the length of the  path‐
       name beyond sizeof(sun_path).  Consequently, when retrieving the socket
       address (for example, via accept(2)), if the input addrlen argument for
       the  retrieving  call  is specified as sizeof(struct sockaddr_un), then
       the  returned  address  structure  won't  have  a  null  terminator  in
       sun_path.

       In  addition, some implementations don't require a null terminator when
       binding a socket (the addrlen argument is used to determine the  length
       of  sun_path)  and when the socket address is retrieved on these imple‐
       mentations, there is no null terminator in sun_path.

       Applications that retrieve socket addresses can (portably) code to han‐
       dle  the  possibility  that  there is no null terminator in sun_path by
       respecting the fact that the number of valid bytes in the pathname is:

           strnlen(addr.sun_path, addrlen - offsetof(sockaddr_un, sun_path))

       Alternatively, an application can retrieve the socket address by  allo‐
       cating a buffer of size sizeof(struct sockaddr_un)+1 that is zeroed out
       before the retrieval.  The  retrieving  call  can  specify  addrlen  as
       sizeof(struct  sockaddr_un), and the extra zero byte ensures that there
       will be a null terminator for the string returned in sun_path:

           void *addrp;

           addrlen = sizeof(struct sockaddr_un);
           addrp = malloc(addrlen + 1);
           if (addrp == NULL)
               /* Handle error */ ;
           memset(addrp, 0, addrlen + 1);

           if (getsockname(sfd, (struct sockaddr *) addrp, &addrlen)) == -1)
               /* handle error */ ;

           printf("sun_path = %s\n", ((struct sockaddr_un *) addrp)->sun_path);

       This sort of messiness can be avoided if  it  is  guaranteed  that  the
       applications  that  create  pathname  sockets follow the rules outlined
       above under Pathname sockets.

EXAMPLE
       The following code demonstrates the use of sequenced-packet sockets for
       local  interprocess  communication.   It consists of two programs.  The
       server program waits for a connection from  the  client  program.   The
       client  sends  each of its command-line arguments in separate messages.
       The server treats the incoming messages as integers and adds  them  up.
       The  client  sends  the  command string "END".  The server sends back a
       message containing the sum of the client's integers.  The client prints
       the  sum  and  exits.  The server waits for the next client to connect.
       To stop the server, the client is called with the command-line argument
       "DOWN".

       The following output was recorded while running the server in the back‐
       ground and repeatedly executing the client.  Execution  of  the  server
       program ends when it receives the "DOWN" command.

   Example output
           $ ./server &
           [1] 25887
           $ ./client 3 4
           Result = 7
           $ ./client 11 -5
           Result = 6
           $ ./client DOWN
           Result = 0
           [1]+  Done                    ./server
           $

   Program source

       /*
        * File connection.h
        */

       #define SOCKET_NAME "/tmp/9Lq7BNBnBycd6nxy.socket"
       #define BUFFER_SIZE 12

       /*
        * File server.c
        */

       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>
       #include <string.h>
       #include <sys/socket.h>
       #include <sys/un.h>
       #include <unistd.h>
       #include "connection.h"

       int
       main(int argc, char *argv[])
       {
           struct sockaddr_un name;
           int down_flag = 0;
           int ret;
           int connection_socket;
           int data_socket;
           int result;
           char buffer[BUFFER_SIZE];

           /*
            * In case the program exited inadvertently on the last run,
            * remove the socket.
            */

           unlink(SOCKET_NAME);

           /* Create local socket. */

           connection_socket = socket(AF_UNIX, SOCK_SEQPACKET, 0);
           if (connection_socket == -1) {
               perror("socket");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           /*
            * For portability clear the whole structure, since some
            * implementations have additional (nonstandard) fields in
            * the structure.
            */

           memset(&name, 0, sizeof(struct sockaddr_un));

           /* Bind socket to socket name. */

           name.sun_family = AF_UNIX;
           strncpy(name.sun_path, SOCKET_NAME, sizeof(name.sun_path) - 1);

           ret = bind(connection_socket, (const struct sockaddr *) &name,
                      sizeof(struct sockaddr_un));
           if (ret == -1) {
               perror("bind");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           /*
            * Prepare for accepting connections. The backlog size is set
            * to 20. So while one request is being processed other requests
            * can be waiting.
            */

           ret = listen(connection_socket, 20);
           if (ret == -1) {
               perror("listen");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           /* This is the main loop for handling connections. */

           for (;;) {

               /* Wait for incoming connection. */

               data_socket = accept(connection_socket, NULL, NULL);
               if (data_socket == -1) {
                   perror("accept");
                   exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
               }

               result = 0;
               for (;;) {

                   /* Wait for next data packet. */

                   ret = read(data_socket, buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
                   if (ret == -1) {
                       perror("read");
                       exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
                   }

                   /* Ensure buffer is 0-terminated. */

                   buffer[BUFFER_SIZE - 1] = 0;

                   /* Handle commands. */

                   if (!strncmp(buffer, "DOWN", BUFFER_SIZE)) {
                       down_flag = 1;
                       break;
                   }

                   if (!strncmp(buffer, "END", BUFFER_SIZE)) {
                       break;
                   }

                   /* Add received summand. */

                   result += atoi(buffer);
               }

               /* Send result. */

               sprintf(buffer, "%d", result);
               ret = write(data_socket, buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
               if (ret == -1) {
                   perror("write");
                   exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
               }

               /* Close socket. */

               close(data_socket);

               /* Quit on DOWN command. */

               if (down_flag) {
                   break;
               }
           }

           close(connection_socket);

           /* Unlink the socket. */

           unlink(SOCKET_NAME);

           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
       }

       /*
        * File client.c
        */

       #include <errno.h>
       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>
       #include <string.h>
       #include <sys/socket.h>
       #include <sys/un.h>
       #include <unistd.h>
       #include "connection.h"

       int
       main(int argc, char *argv[])
       {
           struct sockaddr_un addr;
           int i;
           int ret;
           int data_socket;
           char buffer[BUFFER_SIZE];

           /* Create local socket. */

           data_socket = socket(AF_UNIX, SOCK_SEQPACKET, 0);
           if (data_socket == -1) {
               perror("socket");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           /*
            * For portability clear the whole structure, since some
            * implementations have additional (nonstandard) fields in
            * the structure.
            */

           memset(&addr, 0, sizeof(struct sockaddr_un));

           /* Connect socket to socket address */

           addr.sun_family = AF_UNIX;
           strncpy(addr.sun_path, SOCKET_NAME, sizeof(addr.sun_path) - 1);

           ret = connect (data_socket, (const struct sockaddr *) &addr,
                          sizeof(struct sockaddr_un));
           if (ret == -1) {
               fprintf(stderr, "The server is down.\n");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           /* Send arguments. */

           for (i = 1; i < argc; ++i) {
               ret = write(data_socket, argv[i], strlen(argv[i]) + 1);
               if (ret == -1) {
                   perror("write");
                   break;
               }
           }

           /* Request result. */

           strcpy (buffer, "END");
           ret = write(data_socket, buffer, strlen(buffer) + 1);
           if (ret == -1) {
               perror("write");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           /* Receive result. */

           ret = read(data_socket, buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
           if (ret == -1) {
               perror("read");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           /* Ensure buffer is 0-terminated. */

           buffer[BUFFER_SIZE - 1] = 0;

           printf("Result = %s\n", buffer);

           /* Close socket. */

           close(data_socket);

           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
       }

       For an example of the use of SCM_RIGHTS see cmsg(3).

SEE ALSO
       recvmsg(2),  sendmsg(2),  socket(2),  socketpair(2), cmsg(3), capabili‐
       ties(7), credentials(7), socket(7), udp(7)

COLOPHON
       This page is part of release 5.02 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
       https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.



Linux                             2019-08-02                           UNIX(7)
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