1IO::Socket::IP(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation IO::Socket::IP(3)
2
3
4
6 "IO::Socket::IP" - Family-neutral IP socket supporting both IPv4 and
7 IPv6
8
10 use IO::Socket::IP;
11
12 my $sock = IO::Socket::IP->new(
13 PeerHost => "www.google.com",
14 PeerPort => "http",
15 Type => SOCK_STREAM,
16 ) or die "Cannot construct socket - $@";
17
18 my $familyname = ( $sock->sockdomain == PF_INET6 ) ? "IPv6" :
19 ( $sock->sockdomain == PF_INET ) ? "IPv4" :
20 "unknown";
21
22 printf "Connected to google via %s\n", $familyname;
23
25 This module provides a protocol-independent way to use IPv4 and IPv6
26 sockets, intended as a replacement for IO::Socket::INET. Most
27 constructor arguments and methods are provided in a backward-compatible
28 way. For a list of known differences, see the "IO::Socket::INET"
29 INCOMPATIBILITES section below.
30
31 It uses the getaddrinfo(3) function to convert hostnames and service
32 names or port numbers into sets of possible addresses to connect to or
33 listen on. This allows it to work for IPv6 where the system supports
34 it, while still falling back to IPv4-only on systems which don't.
35
37 By placing "-register" in the import list, IO::Socket uses
38 "IO::Socket::IP" rather than "IO::Socket::INET" as the class that
39 handles "PF_INET". "IO::Socket" will also use "IO::Socket::IP" rather
40 than "IO::Socket::INET6" to handle "PF_INET6", provided that the
41 "AF_INET6" constant is available.
42
43 Changing "IO::Socket"'s default behaviour means that calling the
44 "IO::Socket" constructor with either "PF_INET" or "PF_INET6" as the
45 "Domain" parameter will yield an "IO::Socket::IP" object.
46
47 use IO::Socket::IP -register;
48
49 my $sock = IO::Socket->new(
50 Domain => PF_INET6,
51 LocalHost => "::1",
52 Listen => 1,
53 ) or die "Cannot create socket - $@\n";
54
55 print "Created a socket of type " . ref($sock) . "\n";
56
57 Note that "-register" is a global setting that applies to the entire
58 program; it cannot be applied only for certain callers, removed, or
59 limited by lexical scope.
60
62 $sock = IO::Socket::IP->new( %args )
63 Creates a new "IO::Socket::IP" object, containing a newly created
64 socket handle according to the named arguments passed. The recognised
65 arguments are:
66
67 PeerHost => STRING
68 PeerService => STRING
69 Hostname and service name for the peer to "connect()" to. The
70 service name may be given as a port number, as a decimal
71 string.
72
73 PeerAddr => STRING
74 PeerPort => STRING
75 For symmetry with the accessor methods and compatibility with
76 "IO::Socket::INET", these are accepted as synonyms for
77 "PeerHost" and "PeerService" respectively.
78
79 PeerAddrInfo => ARRAY
80 Alternate form of specifying the peer to "connect()" to. This
81 should be an array of the form returned by
82 "Socket::getaddrinfo".
83
84 This parameter takes precedence over the "Peer*", "Family",
85 "Type" and "Proto" arguments.
86
87 LocalHost => STRING
88 LocalService => STRING
89 Hostname and service name for the local address to "bind()" to.
90
91 LocalAddr => STRING
92 LocalPort => STRING
93 For symmetry with the accessor methods and compatibility with
94 "IO::Socket::INET", these are accepted as synonyms for
95 "LocalHost" and "LocalService" respectively.
96
97 LocalAddrInfo => ARRAY
98 Alternate form of specifying the local address to "bind()" to.
99 This should be an array of the form returned by
100 "Socket::getaddrinfo".
101
102 This parameter takes precedence over the "Local*", "Family",
103 "Type" and "Proto" arguments.
104
105 Family => INT
106 The address family to pass to "getaddrinfo" (e.g. "AF_INET",
107 "AF_INET6"). Normally this will be left undefined, and
108 "getaddrinfo" will search using any address family supported by
109 the system.
110
111 Type => INT
112 The socket type to pass to "getaddrinfo" (e.g. "SOCK_STREAM",
113 "SOCK_DGRAM"). Normally defined by the caller; if left
114 undefined "getaddrinfo" may attempt to infer the type from the
115 service name.
116
117 Proto => STRING or INT
118 The IP protocol to use for the socket (e.g. 'tcp',
119 "IPPROTO_TCP", 'udp',"IPPROTO_UDP"). Normally this will be left
120 undefined, and either "getaddrinfo" or the kernel will choose
121 an appropriate value. May be given either in string name or
122 numeric form.
123
124 GetAddrInfoFlags => INT
125 More flags to pass to the "getaddrinfo()" function. If not
126 supplied, a default of "AI_ADDRCONFIG" will be used.
127
128 These flags will be combined with "AI_PASSIVE" if the "Listen"
129 argument is given. For more information see the documentation
130 about "getaddrinfo()" in the Socket module.
131
132 Listen => INT
133 If defined, puts the socket into listening mode where new
134 connections can be accepted using the "accept" method. The
135 value given is used as the listen(2) queue size.
136
137 ReuseAddr => BOOL
138 If true, set the "SO_REUSEADDR" sockopt
139
140 ReusePort => BOOL
141 If true, set the "SO_REUSEPORT" sockopt (not all OSes implement
142 this sockopt)
143
144 Broadcast => BOOL
145 If true, set the "SO_BROADCAST" sockopt
146
147 Sockopts => ARRAY
148 An optional array of other socket options to apply after the
149 three listed above. The value is an ARRAY containing 2- or
150 3-element ARRAYrefs. Each inner array relates to a single
151 option, giving the level and option name, and an optional
152 value. If the value element is missing, it will be given the
153 value of a platform-sized integer 1 constant (i.e. suitable to
154 enable most of the common boolean options).
155
156 For example, both options given below are equivalent to setting
157 "ReuseAddr".
158
159 Sockopts => [
160 [ SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR ],
161 [ SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, pack( "i", 1 ) ],
162 ]
163
164 V6Only => BOOL
165 If defined, set the "IPV6_V6ONLY" sockopt when creating
166 "PF_INET6" sockets to the given value. If true, a listening-
167 mode socket will only listen on the "AF_INET6" addresses; if
168 false it will also accept connections from "AF_INET" addresses.
169
170 If not defined, the socket option will not be changed, and
171 default value set by the operating system will apply. For
172 repeatable behaviour across platforms it is recommended this
173 value always be defined for listening-mode sockets.
174
175 Note that not all platforms support disabling this option.
176 Some, at least OpenBSD and MirBSD, will fail with "EINVAL" if
177 you attempt to disable it. To determine whether it is possible
178 to disable, you may use the class method
179
180 if( IO::Socket::IP->CAN_DISABLE_V6ONLY ) {
181 ...
182 }
183 else {
184 ...
185 }
186
187 If your platform does not support disabling this option but you
188 still want to listen for both "AF_INET" and "AF_INET6"
189 connections you will have to create two listening sockets, one
190 bound to each protocol.
191
192 MultiHomed
193 This "IO::Socket::INET"-style argument is ignored, except if it
194 is defined but false. See the "IO::Socket::INET"
195 INCOMPATIBILITES section below.
196
197 However, the behaviour it enables is always performed by
198 "IO::Socket::IP".
199
200 Blocking => BOOL
201 If defined but false, the socket will be set to non-blocking
202 mode. Otherwise it will default to blocking mode. See the NON-
203 BLOCKING section below for more detail.
204
205 Timeout => NUM
206 If defined, gives a maximum time in seconds to block per
207 "connect()" call when in blocking mode. If missing, no timeout
208 is applied other than that provided by the underlying operating
209 system. When in non-blocking mode this parameter is ignored.
210
211 Note that if the hostname resolves to multiple address
212 candidates, the same timeout will apply to each connection
213 attempt individually, rather than to the operation as a whole.
214 Further note that the timeout does not apply to the initial
215 hostname resolve operation, if connecting by hostname.
216
217 This behviour is copied inspired by "IO::Socket::INET"; for
218 more fine grained control over connection timeouts, consider
219 performing a nonblocking connect directly.
220
221 If neither "Type" nor "Proto" hints are provided, a default of
222 "SOCK_STREAM" and "IPPROTO_TCP" respectively will be set, to maintain
223 compatibility with "IO::Socket::INET". Other named arguments that are
224 not recognised are ignored.
225
226 If neither "Family" nor any hosts or addresses are passed, nor any
227 *AddrInfo, then the constructor has no information on which to decide a
228 socket family to create. In this case, it performs a "getaddinfo" call
229 with the "AI_ADDRCONFIG" flag, no host name, and a service name of "0",
230 and uses the family of the first returned result.
231
232 If the constructor fails, it will set $@ to an appropriate error
233 message; this may be from $! or it may be some other string; not every
234 failure necessarily has an associated "errno" value.
235
236 $sock = IO::Socket::IP->new( $peeraddr )
237 As a special case, if the constructor is passed a single argument (as
238 opposed to an even-sized list of key/value pairs), it is taken to be
239 the value of the "PeerAddr" parameter. This is parsed in the same way,
240 according to the behaviour given in the "PeerHost" AND "LocalHost"
241 PARSING section below.
242
244 As well as the following methods, this class inherits all the methods
245 in IO::Socket and IO::Handle.
246
247 ( $host, $service ) = $sock->sockhost_service( $numeric )
248 Returns the hostname and service name of the local address (that is,
249 the socket address given by the "sockname" method).
250
251 If $numeric is true, these will be given in numeric form rather than
252 being resolved into names.
253
254 The following four convenience wrappers may be used to obtain one of
255 the two values returned here. If both host and service names are
256 required, this method is preferable to the following wrappers, because
257 it will call getnameinfo(3) only once.
258
259 $addr = $sock->sockhost
260 Return the numeric form of the local address as a textual
261 representation
262
263 $port = $sock->sockport
264 Return the numeric form of the local port number
265
266 $host = $sock->sockhostname
267 Return the resolved name of the local address
268
269 $service = $sock->sockservice
270 Return the resolved name of the local port number
271
272 $addr = $sock->sockaddr
273 Return the local address as a binary octet string
274
275 ( $host, $service ) = $sock->peerhost_service( $numeric )
276 Returns the hostname and service name of the peer address (that is, the
277 socket address given by the "peername" method), similar to the
278 "sockhost_service" method.
279
280 The following four convenience wrappers may be used to obtain one of
281 the two values returned here. If both host and service names are
282 required, this method is preferable to the following wrappers, because
283 it will call getnameinfo(3) only once.
284
285 $addr = $sock->peerhost
286 Return the numeric form of the peer address as a textual representation
287
288 $port = $sock->peerport
289 Return the numeric form of the peer port number
290
291 $host = $sock->peerhostname
292 Return the resolved name of the peer address
293
294 $service = $sock->peerservice
295 Return the resolved name of the peer port number
296
297 $addr = $peer->peeraddr
298 Return the peer address as a binary octet string
299
300 $inet = $sock->as_inet
301 Returns a new IO::Socket::INET instance wrapping the same filehandle.
302 This may be useful in cases where it is required, for backward-
303 compatibility, to have a real object of "IO::Socket::INET" type instead
304 of "IO::Socket::IP". The new object will wrap the same underlying
305 socket filehandle as the original, so care should be taken not to
306 continue to use both objects concurrently. Ideally the original $sock
307 should be discarded after this method is called.
308
309 This method checks that the socket domain is "PF_INET" and will throw
310 an exception if it isn't.
311
313 If the constructor is passed a defined but false value for the
314 "Blocking" argument then the socket is put into non-blocking mode. When
315 in non-blocking mode, the socket will not be set up by the time the
316 constructor returns, because the underlying connect(2) syscall would
317 otherwise have to block.
318
319 The non-blocking behaviour is an extension of the "IO::Socket::INET"
320 API, unique to "IO::Socket::IP", because the former does not support
321 multi-homed non-blocking connect.
322
323 When using non-blocking mode, the caller must repeatedly check for
324 writeability on the filehandle (for instance using "select" or
325 "IO::Poll"). Each time the filehandle is ready to write, the "connect"
326 method must be called, with no arguments. Note that some operating
327 systems, most notably "MSWin32" do not report a "connect()" failure
328 using write-ready; so you must also "select()" for exceptional status.
329
330 While "connect" returns false, the value of $! indicates whether it
331 should be tried again (by being set to the value "EINPROGRESS", or
332 "EWOULDBLOCK" on MSWin32), or whether a permanent error has occurred
333 (e.g. "ECONNREFUSED").
334
335 Once the socket has been connected to the peer, "connect" will return
336 true and the socket will now be ready to use.
337
338 Note that calls to the platform's underlying getaddrinfo(3) function
339 may block. If "IO::Socket::IP" has to perform this lookup, the
340 constructor will block even when in non-blocking mode.
341
342 To avoid this blocking behaviour, the caller should pass in the result
343 of such a lookup using the "PeerAddrInfo" or "LocalAddrInfo" arguments.
344 This can be achieved by using Net::LibAsyncNS, or the getaddrinfo(3)
345 function can be called in a child process.
346
347 use IO::Socket::IP;
348 use Errno qw( EINPROGRESS EWOULDBLOCK );
349
350 my @peeraddrinfo = ... # Caller must obtain the getaddinfo result here
351
352 my $socket = IO::Socket::IP->new(
353 PeerAddrInfo => \@peeraddrinfo,
354 Blocking => 0,
355 ) or die "Cannot construct socket - $@";
356
357 while( !$socket->connect and ( $! == EINPROGRESS || $! == EWOULDBLOCK ) ) {
358 my $wvec = '';
359 vec( $wvec, fileno $socket, 1 ) = 1;
360 my $evec = '';
361 vec( $evec, fileno $socket, 1 ) = 1;
362
363 select( undef, $wvec, $evec, undef ) or die "Cannot select - $!";
364 }
365
366 die "Cannot connect - $!" if $!;
367
368 ...
369
370 The example above uses "select()", but any similar mechanism should
371 work analogously. "IO::Socket::IP" takes care when creating new socket
372 filehandles to preserve the actual file descriptor number, so such
373 techniques as "poll" or "epoll" should be transparent to its
374 reallocation of a different socket underneath, perhaps in order to
375 switch protocol family between "PF_INET" and "PF_INET6".
376
377 For another example using "IO::Poll" and "Net::LibAsyncNS", see the
378 examples/nonblocking_libasyncns.pl file in the module distribution.
379
381 To support the "IO::Socket::INET" API, the host and port information
382 may be passed in a single string rather than as two separate arguments.
383
384 If either "LocalHost" or "PeerHost" (or their "...Addr" synonyms) have
385 any of the following special forms then special parsing is applied.
386
387 The value of the "...Host" argument will be split to give both the
388 hostname and port (or service name):
389
390 hostname.example.org:http # Host name
391 192.0.2.1:80 # IPv4 address
392 [2001:db8::1]:80 # IPv6 address
393
394 In each case, the port or service name (e.g. 80) is passed as the
395 "LocalService" or "PeerService" argument.
396
397 Either of "LocalService" or "PeerService" (or their "...Port" synonyms)
398 can be either a service name, a decimal number, or a string containing
399 both a service name and number, in a form such as
400
401 http(80)
402
403 In this case, the name ("http") will be tried first, but if the
404 resolver does not understand it then the port number (80) will be used
405 instead.
406
407 If the "...Host" argument is in this special form and the corresponding
408 "...Service" or "...Port" argument is also defined, the one parsed from
409 the "...Host" argument will take precedence and the other will be
410 ignored.
411
412 ( $host, $port ) = IO::Socket::IP->split_addr( $addr )
413 Utility method that provides the parsing functionality described above.
414 Returns a 2-element list, containing either the split hostname and port
415 description if it could be parsed, or the given address and "undef" if
416 it was not recognised.
417
418 IO::Socket::IP->split_addr( "hostname:http" )
419 # ( "hostname", "http" )
420
421 IO::Socket::IP->split_addr( "192.0.2.1:80" )
422 # ( "192.0.2.1", "80" )
423
424 IO::Socket::IP->split_addr( "[2001:db8::1]:80" )
425 # ( "2001:db8::1", "80" )
426
427 IO::Socket::IP->split_addr( "something.else" )
428 # ( "something.else", undef )
429
430 $addr = IO::Socket::IP->join_addr( $host, $port )
431 Utility method that performs the reverse of "split_addr", returning a
432 string formed by joining the specified host address and port number.
433 The host address will be wrapped in "[]" brackets if required (because
434 it is a raw IPv6 numeric address).
435
436 This can be especially useful when combined with the "sockhost_service"
437 or "peerhost_service" methods.
438
439 say "Connected to ", IO::Socket::IP->join_addr( $sock->peerhost_service );
440
442 · The behaviour enabled by "MultiHomed" is in fact implemented by
443 "IO::Socket::IP" as it is required to correctly support searching
444 for a useable address from the results of the getaddrinfo(3) call.
445 The constructor will ignore the value of this argument, except if
446 it is defined but false. An exception is thrown in this case,
447 because that would request it disable the getaddrinfo(3) search
448 behaviour in the first place.
449
450 · "IO::Socket::IP" implements both the "Blocking" and "Timeout"
451 parameters, but it implements the interaction of both in a
452 different way.
453
454 In "::INET", supplying a timeout overrides the non-blocking
455 behaviour, meaning that the "connect()" operation will still block
456 despite that the caller asked for a non-blocking socket. This is
457 not explicitly specified in its documentation, nor does this author
458 believe that is a useful behaviour - it appears to come from a
459 quirk of implementation.
460
461 In "::IP" therefore, the "Blocking" parameter takes precedence - if
462 a non-blocking socket is requested, no operation will block. The
463 "Timeout" parameter here simply defines the maximum time that a
464 blocking "connect()" call will wait, if it blocks at all.
465
466 In order to specifically obtain the "blocking connect then non-
467 blocking send and receive" behaviour of specifying this combination
468 of options to "::INET" when using "::IP", perform first a blocking
469 connect, then afterwards turn the socket into nonblocking mode.
470
471 my $sock = IO::Socket::IP->new(
472 PeerHost => $peer,
473 Timeout => 20,
474 ) or die "Cannot connect - $@";
475
476 $sock->blocking( 0 );
477
478 This code will behave identically under both "IO::Socket::INET" and
479 "IO::Socket::IP".
480
482 · Investigate whether "POSIX::dup2" upsets BSD's "kqueue" watchers,
483 and if so, consider what possible workarounds might be applied.
484
486 Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>
487
488
489
490perl v5.28.1 2017-03-06 IO::Socket::IP(3)