Provided by: libxs-dev_1.2.0-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       xs_bind - accept connections on a socket

SYNOPSIS

       int xs_bind (void *socket, const char *endpoint);

DESCRIPTION

       The xs_bind() function shall create an endpoint for accepting connections and bind it to the socket
       referenced by the socket argument.

       The endpoint argument is a string consisting of two parts as follows: transport://address. The transport
       part specifies the underlying transport protocol to use. The meaning of the address part is specific to
       the underlying transport protocol selected.

       The following transports are defined:

       inproc
           local in-process (inter-thread) communication transport, see xs_inproc(7)

       ipc
           local inter-process communication transport, see xs_ipc(7)

       tcp
           unicast transport using TCP, see xs_tcp(7)

       pgm, epgm
           reliable multicast transport using PGM, see xs_pgm(7)

       With the exception of XS_PAIR sockets, a single socket may be connected to multiple endpoints using
       xs_connect(), while simultaneously accepting incoming connections from multiple endpoints bound to the
       socket using xs_bind(). Refer to xs_socket(3) for a description of the exact semantics involved when
       connecting or binding a socket to multiple endpoints.

RETURN VALUE

       The xs_bind() function shall return endpoint ID if successful. Otherwise it shall return -1 and set errno
       to one of the values defined below.

ERRORS

       EINVAL
           The endpoint supplied is invalid.

       ENAMETOOLONG
           The supplied name was too long.

       EPROTONOSUPPORT
           The requested transport protocol is not supported.

       ENOCOMPATPROTO
           The requested transport protocol is not compatible with the socket type.

       EADDRINUSE
           The requested address is already in use.

       EADDRNOTAVAIL
           The requested address was not local.

       ENODEV
           The requested address specifies a nonexistent interface.

       ETERM
           The context associated with the specified socket was terminated.

       ENOTSOCK
           The provided socket was invalid.

EXAMPLE

       Binding a publisher socket to an in-process and a TCP transport.

           /* Create a XS_PUB socket */
           void *socket = xs_socket (context, XS_PUB);
           assert (socket);
           /* Bind it to a in-process transport with the address 'my_publisher' */
           int rc = xs_bind (socket, "inproc://my_publisher");
           assert (rc != -1);
           /* Bind it to a TCP transport on port 5555 of the 'eth0' interface */
           rc = xs_bind (socket, "tcp://eth0:5555");
           assert (rc != -1);

SEE ALSO

       xs_connect(3) xs_socket(3) xs(7)

AUTHORS

       The Crossroads documentation was written by Martin Sustrik <sustrik@250bpm.com[1]> and Martin Lucina
       <martin@lucina.net[2]>.

NOTES

        1. sustrik@250bpm.com
           mailto:sustrik@250bpm.com

        2. martin@lucina.net
           mailto:martin@lucina.net