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NAME

       gen_tcp - Interface to TCP/IP sockets.

DESCRIPTION

       This module provides functions for communicating with sockets using the TCP/IP protocol.

       The  following  code  fragment  is  a  simple  example  of  a client connecting to a server at port 5678,
       transferring a binary, and closing the connection:

       client() ->
           SomeHostInNet = "localhost", % to make it runnable on one machine
           {ok, Sock} = gen_tcp:connect(SomeHostInNet, 5678,
                                        [binary, {packet, 0}]),
           ok = gen_tcp:send(Sock, "Some Data"),
           ok = gen_tcp:close(Sock).

       At the other end, a server is listening on port 5678, accepts the connection, and receives the binary:

       server() ->
           {ok, LSock} = gen_tcp:listen(5678, [binary, {packet, 0},
                                               {active, false}]),
           {ok, Sock} = gen_tcp:accept(LSock),
           {ok, Bin} = do_recv(Sock, []),
           ok = gen_tcp:close(Sock),
           ok = gen_tcp:close(LSock),
           Bin.

       do_recv(Sock, Bs) ->
           case gen_tcp:recv(Sock, 0) of
               {ok, B} ->
                   do_recv(Sock, [Bs, B]);
               {error, closed} ->
                   {ok, list_to_binary(Bs)}
           end.

       For more examples, see section Examples.

   Note:
       Functions that create sockets can take an optional option; {inet_backend, Backend}  that,  if  specified,
       has to be the first option. This selects the implementation backend towards the platform's socket API.

       This is a temporary option that will be ignored in a future release.

       The default is Backend = inet that selects the traditional inet_drv.c driver. The other choice is Backend
       = socket that selects the new socket module and its NIF implementation.

       The system default can be changed when the node is started with the  application  kernel's  configuration
       variable inet_backend.

       For  gen_tcp  with  inet_backend  =  socket  we  have  tried  to be as "compatible" as possible which has
       sometimes been impossible. Here is a list of cases when the behaviour of inet-backend inet (default)  and
       socket are different:

         * Non-blocking send

           If a user calling gen_tcp:send/2 with inet_backend = inet, tries to send more data than there is room
           for in the OS buffers, the "rest data" is buffered  by  the  inet  driver  (and  later  sent  in  the
           background). The effect for the user is that the call is non-blocking.

           This  is  not  the  effect  when inet_backend = socket, since there is no buffering. Instead the user
           hangs either until all data has been sent or the send_timeout timeout has been reached.

         * Remote close detected by background send.

           An background send will detect a 'remote close' and  (the  inet  driver  will)  mark  the  socket  as
           'closed'. No other action is taken. If the socket has active set to false (passive) at this point and
           no one is reading, this will not be noticed. But as soon as the socket is "activated" (active set  to
           not  false,  send/2  is called or recv/2,3 is called), an error message will be sent to the caller or
           (socket) owner: {tcp_error, Socket, econnreset}. Any data in the OS receive buffers will be lost!

           This behaviour is not replicated by the socket implementation. A send operation will detect a  remote
           close and immediately return this to the caller, but do nothing else. A reader will therefore be able
           to extract any data from the OS buffers. If the socket is set to active to not false, the  data  will
           be  received  as  expected  ({tcp, ...} and then a closed message ({tcp_closed, ...} will be received
           (not an error).

         * The option show_econnreset basically do not work as described when used with inet_backend  =  socket.
           The  "issue"  is that a remote close (as described above) do allow a reader to extract what is in the
           read buffers before a close is "delivered".

         * The option nodelay is a TCP specific option that is not compatible with domain = local.

           When using inet_backend = socket, trying to create a socket (via listen or  connect)  with  domain  =
           local (for example with option {ifaddr, {local,"/tmp/test"}}) will fail with {error, enotsup}.

           This  does  not  actually  work  for inet_backend = inet either, but in that case the error is simply
           ignored, which is a bad idea. We have chosen to not ignore this error for inet_backend = socket.

         * Async shutdown write

           Calling gen_tcp:shutdown(Socket, write | read_write) on a socket created with inet_backend  =  socket
           will take immediate effect, unlike for a socket created with inet_backend = inet.

           See async shutdown write for more info.

DATA TYPES

       option() =
           {active, true | false | once | -32768..32767} |
           {buffer, integer() >= 0} |
           {debug, boolean()} |
           {delay_send, boolean()} |
           {deliver, port | term} |
           {dontroute, boolean()} |
           {exit_on_close, boolean()} |
           {header, integer() >= 0} |
           {high_msgq_watermark, integer() >= 1} |
           {high_watermark, integer() >= 0} |
           {keepalive, boolean()} |
           {linger, {boolean(), integer() >= 0}} |
           {low_msgq_watermark, integer() >= 1} |
           {low_watermark, integer() >= 0} |
           {mode, list | binary} |
           list | binary |
           {nodelay, boolean()} |
           {packet,
            0 | 1 | 2 | 4 | raw | sunrm | asn1 | cdr | fcgi | line |
            tpkt | http | httph | http_bin | httph_bin} |
           {packet_size, integer() >= 0} |
           {priority, integer() >= 0} |
           {raw,
            Protocol :: integer() >= 0,
            OptionNum :: integer() >= 0,
            ValueBin :: binary()} |
           {recbuf, integer() >= 0} |
           {reuseaddr, boolean()} |
           {send_timeout, integer() >= 0 | infinity} |
           {send_timeout_close, boolean()} |
           {show_econnreset, boolean()} |
           {sndbuf, integer() >= 0} |
           {tos, integer() >= 0} |
           {tclass, integer() >= 0} |
           {ttl, integer() >= 0} |
           {recvtos, boolean()} |
           {recvtclass, boolean()} |
           {recvttl, boolean()} |
           {ipv6_v6only, boolean()}

       pktoptions_value() = {pktoptions, inet:ancillary_data()}

              If  the  platform  implements the IPv4 option IP_PKTOPTIONS, or the IPv6 option IPV6_PKTOPTIONS or
              IPV6_2292PKTOPTIONS for the socket this value is returned from inet:getopts/2 when called with the
              option name pktoptions.

          Note:
              This  option  appears to be VERY Linux specific, and its existence in future Linux kernel versions
              is also worrying since the option is part of RFC 2292 which is since long (2003) obsoleted by  RFC
              3542  that explicitly removes this possibility to get packet information from a stream socket. For
              comparison: it has existed in FreeBSD but is now removed, at least since FreeBSD 10.

       option_name() =
           active | buffer | debug | delay_send | deliver | dontroute |
           exit_on_close | header | high_msgq_watermark |
           high_watermark | keepalive | linger | low_msgq_watermark |
           low_watermark | mode | nodelay | packet | packet_size |
           priority |
           {raw,
            Protocol :: integer() >= 0,
            OptionNum :: integer() >= 0,
            ValueSpec ::
                (ValueSize :: integer() >= 0) | (ValueBin :: binary())} |
           recbuf | reuseaddr | send_timeout | send_timeout_close |
           show_econnreset | sndbuf | tos | tclass | ttl | recvtos |
           recvtclass | recvttl | pktoptions | ipv6_v6only

       connect_option() =
           {fd, Fd :: integer() >= 0} |
           inet:address_family() |
           {ifaddr,
            socket:sockaddr_in() |
            socket:sockaddr_in6() |
            inet:socket_address()} |
           {ip, inet:socket_address()} |
           {port, inet:port_number()} |
           {tcp_module, module()} |
           {netns, file:filename_all()} |
           {bind_to_device, binary()} |
           option()

       listen_option() =
           {fd, Fd :: integer() >= 0} |
           inet:address_family() |
           {ifaddr,
            socket:sockaddr_in() |
            socket:sockaddr_in6() |
            inet:socket_address()} |
           {ip, inet:socket_address()} |
           {port, inet:port_number()} |
           {backlog, B :: integer() >= 0} |
           {tcp_module, module()} |
           {netns, file:filename_all()} |
           {bind_to_device, binary()} |
           option()

       socket()

              As returned by accept/1,2 and connect/3,4.

EXPORTS

       accept(ListenSocket) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason}

       accept(ListenSocket, Timeout) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 ListenSocket = socket()
                   Returned by listen/2.
                 Timeout = timeout()
                 Socket = socket()
                 Reason = closed | timeout | system_limit | inet:posix()

              Accepts an incoming connection request on a listening socket. Socket must  be  a  socket  returned
              from listen/2. Timeout specifies a time-out value in milliseconds. Defaults to infinity.

              Returns:

                * {ok, Socket} if a connection is established

                * {error, closed} if ListenSocket is closed

                * {error, timeout} if no connection is established within the specified time

                * {error, system_limit} if all available ports in the Erlang emulator are in use

                * A POSIX error value if something else goes wrong, see inet(3erl) for possible error values

              Packets  can  be  sent  to the returned socket Socket using send/2. Packets sent from the peer are
              delivered as messages (unless {active, false} is specified in the option list  for  the  listening
              socket, in which case packets are retrieved by calling recv/2):

              {tcp, Socket, Data}

          Note:
              The  accept call does not have to be issued from the socket owner process. Using version 5.5.3 and
              higher of the emulator, multiple simultaneous accept calls can be issued from different processes,
              which allows for a pool of acceptor processes handling incoming connections.

       close(Socket) -> ok

              Types:

                 Socket = socket()

              Closes a TCP socket.

              Note  that  in most implementations of TCP, doing a close does not guarantee that any data sent is
              delivered to the recipient before the close is detected  at  the  remote  side.  If  you  want  to
              guarantee delivery of the data to the recipient there are two common ways to achieve this.

                * Use  gen_tcp:shutdown(Sock,  write) to signal that no more data is to be sent and wait for the
                  read side of the socket to be closed.

                * Use the socket option {packet, N} (or something similar) to make it possible for the  receiver
                  to close the connection when it knowns it has received all the data.

       connect(SockAddr, Opts) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason}

       connect(SockAddr, Opts, Timeout) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 SockAddr = socket:sockaddr_in() | socket:sockaddr_in6()
                 Opts = [inet:inet_backend() | connect_option()]
                 Timeout = timeout()
                 Socket = socket()
                 Reason = timeout | inet:posix()

              Connects  to  a  server  according  to  SockAddr.  This  is primarily intended for link local IPv6
              addresses (which require the scope-id),  socket:sockaddr_in6().  But  for  completeness,  we  also
              support IPv4, socket:sockaddr_in().

              The options available are the same as for connect/3,4.

          Note:
              Keep in mind that if the underlying OS connect() call returns a timeout, gen_tcp:connect will also
              return a timeout (i.e. {error, etimedout}), even if a larger Timeout was specified.

          Note:
              The default values for options specified to connect can be affected by  the  Kernel  configuration
              parameter inet_default_connect_options. For details, see inet(3erl).

       connect(Address, Port, Opts) -> {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason}

       connect(Address, Port, Opts, Timeout) ->
                  {ok, Socket} | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Address = inet:socket_address() | inet:hostname()
                 Port = inet:port_number()
                 Opts = [inet:inet_backend() | connect_option()]
                 Timeout = timeout()
                 Socket = socket()
                 Reason = timeout | inet:posix()

              Connects to a server on TCP port Port on the host with IP address Address. Argument Address can be
              a hostname or an IP address.

              The following options are available:

                {ip, Address}:
                  If the host has many network interfaces, this option specifies which one to use.

                {ifaddr, Address}:
                  Same as {ip, Address}. If the host has many network interfaces, this  option  specifies  which
                  one to use.

                  However,  if  this  instead  is  an  socket:sockaddr_in()  or socket:sockaddr_in6() this takes
                  precedence over any value previously set with the ip and port options. If  these  options  (ip
                  or/and  port)  however comes after this option, they may be used to update their corresponding
                  fields of this options (for ip, the addr field, and for port, the port field).

                {fd, integer() >= 0}:
                  If a socket has somehow been connected without using gen_tcp, use this option to pass the file
                  descriptor for it. If {ip, Address} and/or {port, port_number()} is combined with this option,
                  the fd is bound to the specified interface and port before connecting. If  these  options  are
                  not specified, it is assumed that the fd is already bound appropriately.

                inet:
                  Sets up the socket for IPv4.

                inet6:
                  Sets up the socket for IPv6.

                local:
                  Sets up a Unix Domain Socket. See inet:local_address()

                {port, Port}:
                  Specifies which local port number to use.

                {tcp_module, module()}:
                  Overrides which callback module is used. Defaults to inet_tcp for IPv4 and inet6_tcp for IPv6.

                Opt:
                  See inet:setopts/2.

              Packets  can  be  sent  to the returned socket Socket using send/2. Packets sent from the peer are
              delivered as messages:

              {tcp, Socket, Data}

              If the socket is in {active, N} mode (see inet:setopts/2 for  details)  and  its  message  counter
              drops  to  0,  the  following message is delivered to indicate that the socket has transitioned to
              passive ({active, false}) mode:

              {tcp_passive, Socket}

              If the socket is closed, the following message is delivered:

              {tcp_closed, Socket}

              If an error occurs on the socket, the following message is delivered (unless  {active,  false}  is
              specified  in  the  option  list  for  the  socket, in which case packets are retrieved by calling
              recv/2):

              {tcp_error, Socket, Reason}

              The optional Timeout parameter specifies a time-out in milliseconds. Defaults to infinity.

          Note:
              Keep in mind that if the underlying OS connect() call returns a timeout, gen_tcp:connect will also
              return a timeout (i.e. {error, etimedout}), even if a larger Timeout was specified.

          Note:
              The  default  values  for options specified to connect can be affected by the Kernel configuration
              parameter inet_default_connect_options. For details, see inet(3erl).

       controlling_process(Socket, Pid) -> ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Socket = socket()
                 Pid = pid()
                 Reason = closed | not_owner | badarg | inet:posix()

              Assigns a new controlling process Pid to Socket. The  controlling  process  is  the  process  that
              receives  messages  from  the  socket. If called by any other process than the current controlling
              process, {error, not_owner} is returned. If the process identified by Pid is not an existing local
              pid,  {error,  badarg} is returned. {error, badarg} may also be returned in some cases when Socket
              is closed during the execution of this function.

              If the socket is set in active mode, this function will transfer any messages in  the  mailbox  of
              the  caller  to  the  new controlling process. If any other process is interacting with the socket
              while the transfer is happening, the transfer may not work correctly and messages  may  remain  in
              the  caller's  mailbox.  For  instance  changing  the  sockets  active mode before the transfer is
              complete may cause this.

       listen(Port, Options) -> {ok, ListenSocket} | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Port = inet:port_number()
                 Options = [inet:inet_backend() | listen_option()]
                 ListenSocket = socket()
                 Reason = system_limit | inet:posix()

              Sets up a socket to listen on port Port on the local host.

              If Port == 0, the underlying OS assigns an available port number, use inet:port/1 to retrieve it.

              The following options are available:

                list:
                  Received Packet is delivered as a list.

                binary:
                  Received Packet is delivered as a binary.

                {backlog, B}:
                  B is an integer >= 0. The backlog value defines the maximum length that the queue  of  pending
                  connections can grow to. Defaults to 5.

                inet6:
                  Sets up the socket for IPv6.

                inet:
                  Sets up the socket for IPv4.

                {fd, Fd}:
                  If a socket has somehow been connected without using gen_tcp, use this option to pass the file
                  descriptor for it.

                {ip, Address}:
                  If the host has many network interfaces, this option specifies which one to listen on.

                {port, Port}:
                  Specifies which local port number to use.

                {ifaddr, Address}:
                  Same as {ip, Address}. If the host has many network interfaces, this  option  specifies  which
                  one to use.

                  However,  if  this  instead  is  an  socket:sockaddr_in()  or socket:sockaddr_in6() this takes
                  precedence over any value previously set with the ip and port options. If  these  options  (ip
                  or/and  port)  however comes after this option, they may be used to update their corresponding
                  fields of this options (for ip, the addr field, and for port, the port field).

                {tcp_module, module()}:
                  Overrides which callback module is used. Defaults to inet_tcp for IPv4 and inet6_tcp for IPv6.

                Opt:
                  See inet:setopts/2.

              The returned socket ListenSocket should  be  used  in  calls  to  accept/1,2  to  accept  incoming
              connection requests.

          Note:
              The  default  values  for  options specified to listen can be affected by the Kernel configuration
              parameter inet_default_listen_options. For details, see inet(3erl).

       recv(Socket, Length) -> {ok, Packet} | {error, Reason}

       recv(Socket, Length, Timeout) -> {ok, Packet} | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Socket = socket()
                 Length = integer() >= 0
                 Timeout = timeout()
                 Packet = string() | binary() | HttpPacket
                 Reason = closed | timeout | inet:posix()
                 HttpPacket = term()
                   See the description of HttpPacket in erlang:decode_packet/3 in ERTS.

              Receives a packet from a socket in passive mode. A closed socket  is  indicated  by  return  value
              {error, closed}.

              Argument  Length is only meaningful when the socket is in raw mode and denotes the number of bytes
              to read. If Length is 0, all available bytes are returned. If Length > 0, exactly Length bytes are
              returned,  or  an  error;  possibly  discarding  less than Length bytes of data when the socket is
              closed from the other side.

              The optional Timeout parameter specifies a time-out in milliseconds. Defaults to infinity.

       send(Socket, Packet) -> ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Socket = socket()
                 Packet = iodata()
                 Reason = closed | {timeout, RestData} | inet:posix()
                 RestData = binary()

              Sends a packet on a socket.

              There is no send call with a time-out option, use socket  option  send_timeout  if  time-outs  are
              desired. See section Examples.

              The return value {error, {timeout, RestData}} can only be returned when inet_backend = socket.

          Note:
              Non-blocking send.

              If the user tries to send more data than there is room for in the OS send buffers, the 'rest data'
              is put into (inet driver) internal  buffers  and  later  sent  in  the  background.  The  function
              immediately  returns ok (not informing the caller that not all of the data was actually sent). Any
              issue while sending the 'rest data' is maybe returned later.

              When using inet_backend = socket, the behaviour is different. There is no buffering done (like the
              inet-driver  does),  instead  the  caller  will "hang" until all of the data has been sent or send
              timeout (as specified by the send_timeout option) expires (the function can hang even  when  using
              'inet' backend if the internal buffers are full).

              If  this  happens  when  using  packet  =/=  raw, we have a partial package written. A new package
              therefore must not be written at this point, as there is no way for the peer to  distinguish  this
              from  the data portion of the current package. Instead, set package to raw, send the rest data (as
              raw data) and then set package to the wanted package type again.

       shutdown(Socket, How) -> ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Socket = socket()
                 How = read | write | read_write
                 Reason = inet:posix()

              Closes a socket in one or two directions.

              How == write means closing the socket for writing, reading from it is still possible.

              If How == read or there is no outgoing data buffered in the Socket port, the socket is  shut  down
              immediately and any error encountered is returned in Reason.

              If  there  is  data  buffered  in the socket port, the attempt to shutdown the socket is postponed
              until that data is written to the kernel socket send buffer. If any errors  are  encountered,  the
              socket is closed and {error, closed} is returned on the next recv/2 or send/2.

              Option {exit_on_close, false} is useful if the peer has done a shutdown on the write side.

          Note:
              Async shutdown write (write or read_write).

              If  the shutdown attempt is made while the inet-driver is sending buffered data in the background,
              the shutdown is postponed until all buffered data has been sent. The function immediately  returns
              ok and the caller is not informed (that the shutdown has not yet been performed).

              When  using  inet_backend  =  socket,  the  behaviour is different. A shutdown with How == write |
              read_write, the operation will take immediate effect  (unlike  the  inet-driver,  which  basically
              saves the operation for later).

EXAMPLES

       The  following  example  illustrates  use  of option {active,once} and multiple accepts by implementing a
       server as a number of worker processes doing accept on a single listening socket. Function start/2  takes
       the  number of worker processes and the port number on which to listen for incoming connections. If LPort
       is specified as 0, an ephemeral port number is used, which is why the start function returns  the  actual
       port number allocated:

       start(Num,LPort) ->
           case gen_tcp:listen(LPort,[{active, false},{packet,2}]) of
               {ok, ListenSock} ->
                   start_servers(Num,ListenSock),
                   {ok, Port} = inet:port(ListenSock),
                   Port;
               {error,Reason} ->
                   {error,Reason}
           end.

       start_servers(0,_) ->
           ok;
       start_servers(Num,LS) ->
           spawn(?MODULE,server,[LS]),
           start_servers(Num-1,LS).

       server(LS) ->
           case gen_tcp:accept(LS) of
               {ok,S} ->
                   loop(S),
                   server(LS);
               Other ->
                   io:format("accept returned ~w - goodbye!~n",[Other]),
                   ok
           end.

       loop(S) ->
           inet:setopts(S,[{active,once}]),
           receive
               {tcp,S,Data} ->
                   Answer = process(Data), % Not implemented in this example
                   gen_tcp:send(S,Answer),
                   loop(S);
               {tcp_closed,S} ->
                   io:format("Socket ~w closed [~w]~n",[S,self()]),
                   ok
           end.

       Example of a simple client:

       client(PortNo,Message) ->
           {ok,Sock} = gen_tcp:connect("localhost",PortNo,[{active,false},
                                                           {packet,2}]),
           gen_tcp:send(Sock,Message),
           A = gen_tcp:recv(Sock,0),
           gen_tcp:close(Sock),
           A.

       The  send  call  does  not  accept  a time-out option because time-outs on send is handled through socket
       option send_timeout. The behavior of a  send  operation  with  no  receiver  is  mainly  defined  by  the
       underlying  TCP  stack and the network infrastructure. To write code that handles a hanging receiver that
       can eventually cause the sender to hang on a send do like the following.

       Consider a process that receives data from a client process to be forwarded to a server on  the  network.
       The  process  is connected to the server through TCP/IP and does not get any acknowledge for each message
       it sends, but has to rely on the send time-out option to detect  that  the  other  end  is  unresponsive.
       Option send_timeout can be used when connecting:

       ...
       {ok,Sock} = gen_tcp:connect(HostAddress, Port,
                                   [{active,false},
                                    {send_timeout, 5000},
                                    {packet,2}]),
                       loop(Sock), % See below
       ...

       In the loop where requests are handled, send time-outs can now be detected:

       loop(Sock) ->
           receive
               {Client, send_data, Binary} ->
                   case gen_tcp:send(Sock,[Binary]) of
                       {error, timeout} ->
                           io:format("Send timeout, closing!~n",
                                     []),
                           handle_send_timeout(), % Not implemented here
                           Client ! {self(),{error_sending, timeout}},
                           %% Usually, it's a good idea to give up in case of a
                           %% send timeout, as you never know how much actually
                           %% reached the server, maybe only a packet header?!
                           gen_tcp:close(Sock);
                       {error, OtherSendError} ->
                           io:format("Some other error on socket (~p), closing",
                                     [OtherSendError]),
                           Client ! {self(),{error_sending, OtherSendError}},
                           gen_tcp:close(Sock);
                       ok ->
                           Client ! {self(), data_sent},
                           loop(Sock)
                   end
           end.

       Usually it suffices to detect time-outs on receive, as most protocols include some sort of acknowledgment
       from the server, but if the protocol is strictly one way, option send_timeout comes in handy.