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UDP(4) | Device Drivers Manual | UDP(4) |
NAME¶
udp
—
Internet User Datagram Protocol
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<sys/types.h>
#include
<sys/socket.h>
#include
<netinet/in.h>
int
socket
(AF_INET,
SOCK_DGRAM,
0);
DESCRIPTION¶
UDP is a simple, unreliable datagram protocol which is used to support theSOCK_DGRAM
abstraction for the Internet
protocol family. UDP sockets are connectionless, and are normally used with
the sendto(2) and
recvfrom(2) calls, though the
connect(2) call may also be used to fix the
destination for future packets (in which case the
recv(2) or read(2)
and send(2) or
write(2) system calls may be used).
UDP address formats are identical to those used by TCP. In particular UDP
provides a port identifier in addition to the normal Internet address format.
Note that the UDP port space is separate from the TCP port space (i.e., a UDP
port may not be “connected” to a TCP port). In addition
broadcast packets may be sent (assuming the underlying network supports this)
by using a reserved “broadcast address”; this address is network
interface dependent.
Options at the IP transport level may be used with UDP; see
ip(4).
MIB VARIABLES¶
Theudp
protocol implements a number of
variables in the net.inet
branch of the
sysctl(3) MIB.
- UDPCTL_CHECKSUM
- (udp.checksum) Enable udp checksums (enabled by default).
- UDPCTL_MAXDGRAM
- (udp.maxdgram) Maximum outgoing UDP datagram size
- UDPCTL_RECVSPACE
- (udp.recvspace) Maximum space for incoming UDP datagrams
- udp.log_in_vain
- For all udp datagrams, to ports on which there is no socket listening, log the connection attempt (disabled by default).
- udp.blackhole
- When a datagram is received on a port where there is no socket listening, do not return an ICMP port unreachable message. (Disabled by default. See blackhole(4).)
ERRORS¶
A socket operation may fail with one of the following errors returned:- [
EISCONN
] - when trying to establish a connection on a socket which already has one, or when trying to send a datagram with the destination address specified and the socket is already connected;
- [
ENOTCONN
] - when trying to send a datagram, but no destination address is specified, and the socket has not been connected;
- [
ENOBUFS
] - when the system runs out of memory for an internal data structure;
- [
EADDRINUSE
] - when an attempt is made to create a socket with a port which has already been allocated;
- [
EADDRNOTAVAIL
] - when an attempt is made to create a socket with a network address for which no network interface exists.
SEE ALSO¶
getsockopt(2), recv(2), send(2), socket(2), blackhole(4), inet(4), intro(4), ip(4)HISTORY¶
Theudp
protocol appeared in
4.2BSD.June 5, 1993 | Debian |