table of contents
LISTEN(2) | System Calls Manual | LISTEN(2) |
NAME¶
listen
— listen
for connections on a socket
LIBRARY¶
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<sys/socket.h>
int
listen
(int
s, int
backlog);
DESCRIPTION¶
To accept connections, a socket is first created with
socket(2), a willingness to accept incoming connections
and a queue limit for incoming connections are specified with
listen
(),
and then the connections are accepted with accept(2). The
listen
() system call applies only to sockets of type
SOCK_STREAM
or
SOCK_SEQPACKET
.
The backlog argument defines
the maximum length the queue of pending connections may grow to. The real
maximum queue length will be 1.5 times more than the value specified in the
backlog argument. A subsequent
listen
()
system call on the listening socket allows the caller to change the maximum
queue length using a new backlog argument. If a
connection request arrives with the queue full the client may receive an
error with an indication of ECONNREFUSED
, or, in the
case of TCP, the connection will be silently dropped.
Current queue lengths of listening sockets can be queried using netstat(1) command.
Note that before FreeBSD 4.5 and the introduction of the syncache, the backlog argument also determined the length of the incomplete connection queue, which held TCP sockets in the process of completing TCP's 3-way handshake. These incomplete connections are now held entirely in the syncache, which is unaffected by queue lengths. Inflated backlog values to help handle denial of service attacks are no longer necessary.
The sysctl(3) MIB variable kern.ipc.soacceptqueue specifies a hard limit on backlog; if a value greater than kern.ipc.soacceptqueue or less than zero is specified, backlog is silently forced to kern.ipc.soacceptqueue.
INTERACTION WITH ACCEPT FILTERS¶
When accept filtering is used on a socket, a second queue will be used to hold sockets that have connected, but have not yet met their accept filtering criteria. Once the criteria has been met, these sockets will be moved over into the completed connection queue to be accept(2)ed. If this secondary queue is full and a new connection comes in, the oldest socket which has not yet met its accept filter criteria will be terminated.
This secondary queue, like the primary listen queue, is sized according to the backlog argument.
RETURN VALUES¶
The listen
() function returns the
value 0 if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and
the global variable errno is set to indicate the
error.
ERRORS¶
The listen
() system call will fail if:
- [
EBADF
] - The argument s is not a valid descriptor.
- [
EDESTADDRREQ
] - The socket is not bound to a local address, and the protocol does not support listening on an unbound socket.
- [
EINVAL
] - The socket is already connected, or in the process of being connected.
- [
ENOTSOCK
] - The argument s is not a socket.
- [
EOPNOTSUPP
] - The socket is not of a type that supports the operation
listen
().
SEE ALSO¶
netstat(1), accept(2), connect(2), socket(2), sysctl(3), sysctl(8), accept_filter(9)
HISTORY¶
The listen
() system call appeared in
4.2BSD. The ability to configure the maximum
backlog at run-time, and to use a negative
backlog to request the maximum allowable value, was
introduced in FreeBSD 2.2. The
kern.ipc.somaxconn sysctl(3) has
been replaced with kern.ipc.soacceptqueue in
FreeBSD 10.0 to prevent confusion about its actual
functionality. The original sysctl(3)
kern.ipc.somaxconn is still available but hidden from
a sysctl(3) -a output so that existing applications and
scripts continue to work.
August 18, 2016 | Debian |