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NAME

       CMSG_ALIGN, CMSG_SPACE, CMSG_NXTHDR, CMSG_FIRSTHDR - access ancillary data

LIBRARY

       Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS

       #include <sys/socket.h>

       struct cmsghdr *CMSG_FIRSTHDR(struct msghdr *msgh);
       struct cmsghdr *CMSG_NXTHDR(struct msghdr *msgh,
                                   struct cmsghdr *cmsg);
       size_t CMSG_ALIGN(size_t length);
       size_t CMSG_SPACE(size_t length);
       size_t CMSG_LEN(size_t length);
       unsigned char *CMSG_DATA(struct cmsghdr *cmsg);

DESCRIPTION

       These  macros  are used to create and access control messages (also called ancillary data) that are not a
       part of the socket payload.  This control information may include the interface the packet  was  received
       on,  various rarely used header fields, an extended error description, a set of file descriptors, or UNIX
       credentials.  For instance, control messages can be used to send additional  header  fields  such  as  IP
       options.   Ancillary  data  is  sent by calling sendmsg(2) and received by calling recvmsg(2).  See their
       manual pages for more information.

       Ancillary data is a sequence of cmsghdr structures with appended data.  See  the  specific  protocol  man
       pages  for the available control message types.  The maximum ancillary buffer size allowed per socket can
       be set using /proc/sys/net/core/optmem_max; see socket(7).

       The cmsghdr structure is defined as follows:

           struct cmsghdr {
               size_t cmsg_len;    /* Data byte count, including header
                                      (type is socklen_t in POSIX) */
               int    cmsg_level;  /* Originating protocol */
               int    cmsg_type;   /* Protocol-specific type */
           /* followed by
              unsigned char cmsg_data[]; */
           };

       The sequence of cmsghdr structures should never be accessed directly.  Instead, use  only  the  following
       macros:

       CMSG_FIRSTHDR()
              returns  a  pointer  to  the first cmsghdr in the ancillary data buffer associated with the passed
              msghdr.  It returns NULL if there isn't enough space for a cmsghdr in the buffer.

       CMSG_NXTHDR()
              returns the next valid cmsghdr after the passed cmsghdr.  It returns NULL when there isn't  enough
              space left in the buffer.

              When initializing a buffer that will contain a series of cmsghdr structures (e.g., to be sent with
              sendmsg(2)), that buffer should first be zero-initialized  to  ensure  the  correct  operation  of
              CMSG_NXTHDR().

       CMSG_ALIGN(),
              given a length, returns it including the required alignment.  This is a constant expression.

       CMSG_SPACE()
              returns  the number of bytes an ancillary element with payload of the passed data length occupies.
              This is a constant expression.

       CMSG_DATA()
              returns a pointer to the data portion of a cmsghdr.  The pointer returned cannot be assumed to  be
              suitably aligned for accessing arbitrary payload data types.  Applications should not cast it to a
              pointer type matching the payload, but should instead use memcpy(3) to copy  data  to  or  from  a
              suitably declared object.

       CMSG_LEN()
              returns  the  value  to store in the cmsg_len member of the cmsghdr structure, taking into account
              any necessary alignment.  It takes the data length as an argument.  This is a constant expression.

       To create ancillary data, first initialize the msg_controllen member of the msghdr with the length of the
       control  message  buffer.   Use  CMSG_FIRSTHDR()  on  the  msghdr  to  get  the first control message and
       CMSG_NXTHDR()  to  get  all  subsequent  ones.   In  each  control  message,  initialize  cmsg_len  (with
       CMSG_LEN()),  the  other  cmsghdr  header  fields,  and the data portion using CMSG_DATA().  Finally, the
       msg_controllen field of the msghdr should be set to the sum of the CMSG_SPACE()  of  the  length  of  all
       control messages in the buffer.  For more information on the msghdr, see recvmsg(2).

VERSIONS

       For portability, ancillary data should be accessed using only the macros described here.

       In  Linux, CMSG_LEN(), CMSG_DATA(), and CMSG_ALIGN() are constant expressions (assuming their argument is
       constant), meaning that these values can be used to declare the size of global variables.  This  may  not
       be portable, however.

STANDARDS

       CMSG_FIRSTHDR()
       CMSG_NXTHDR()
       CMSG_DATA()
              POSIX.1-2008.

       CMSG_SPACE()
       CMSG_LEN()
       CMSG_ALIGN()
              Linux.

HISTORY

       This ancillary data model conforms to the POSIX.1g draft, 4.4BSD-Lite, the IPv6 advanced API described in
       RFC 2292 and SUSv2.

       CMSG_SPACE() and CMSG_LEN() will be included in the next POSIX release (Issue 8).

EXAMPLES

       This code looks for the IP_TTL option in a received ancillary buffer:

           struct msghdr msgh;
           struct cmsghdr *cmsg;
           int received_ttl;

           /* Receive auxiliary data in msgh */

           for (cmsg = CMSG_FIRSTHDR(&msgh); cmsg != NULL;
                   cmsg = CMSG_NXTHDR(&msgh, cmsg)) {
               if (cmsg->cmsg_level == IPPROTO_IP
                       && cmsg->cmsg_type == IP_TTL) {
                   memcpy(&receive_ttl, CMSG_DATA(cmsg), sizeof(received_ttl));
                   break;
               }
           }

           if (cmsg == NULL) {
               /* Error: IP_TTL not enabled or small buffer or I/O error */
           }

       The code below passes an array of file descriptors over a UNIX domain socket using SCM_RIGHTS:

           struct msghdr msg = { 0 };
           struct cmsghdr *cmsg;
           int myfds[NUM_FD];  /* Contains the file descriptors to pass */
           char iobuf[1];
           struct iovec io = {
               .iov_base = iobuf,
               .iov_len = sizeof(iobuf)
           };
           union {         /* Ancillary data buffer, wrapped in a union
                              in order to ensure it is suitably aligned */
               char buf[CMSG_SPACE(sizeof(myfds))];
               struct cmsghdr align;
           } u;

           msg.msg_iov = &io;
           msg.msg_iovlen = 1;
           msg.msg_control = u.buf;
           msg.msg_controllen = sizeof(u.buf);
           cmsg = CMSG_FIRSTHDR(&msg);
           cmsg->cmsg_level = SOL_SOCKET;
           cmsg->cmsg_type = SCM_RIGHTS;
           cmsg->cmsg_len = CMSG_LEN(sizeof(myfds));
           memcpy(CMSG_DATA(cmsg), myfds, sizeof(myfds));

       For a complete code example that shows passing of  file  descriptors  over  a  UNIX  domain  socket,  see
       seccomp_unotify(2).

SEE ALSO

       recvmsg(2), sendmsg(2)

       RFC 2292