getaddrinfo(3N)


getaddrinfo, freeaddrinfo, gai_strerror -- get socket address information related to a specified service location

Synopsis

cc [options] file -lsocket -lnsl
#include  <sys/socket.h>
#include  <netdb.h>

int getaddrinfo(const char *name, const char *service, const struct addrinfo *req, struct addrinfo **pai)

void freeaddrinfo(struct addrinfo *ai);

char *gai_strerror(int ecode);

Description

getaddrinfo translates the name of a service location (typically, a hostname) and/or a service name into a set of socket addresses and their related information. The addresses and related information can then be used to create a socket to the specified service.

Use the name argument to specify a pointer to a null terminated string containing the service location. The service location can be a descriptive name or an address in either IPv4 or IPv6 address notation. If you specify a NULL value for name, the requested service location is assumed to be local. If a specific protocol family is not specified in the addrinfo.ai_family (described later), and the service name is interpreted as valid within multiple supported families, address information may be returned for multiple families.

Use the service argument to specify a pointer to a null terminated string containing the service name. If you specify a NULL value for service, the network level address of the service location specified in name is returned.


NOTE: If you specify NULL values for both name and service, getaddrinfo will terminate and return EAI_NONAME.

Use the req argument to specify a pointer to an addrinfo structure that contains parameters to be used when translating name and/or service. The addrinfo structure is shown below:

   struct addrinfo {
      int      ai_flags;                 /* input flags */
      int      ai_family;                /* protocol family for socket */
      int      ai_socktype;              /* socket type */
      int      ai_protocol;              /* protocol for socket */
      int      ai_addrlen;               /* length of socket address */
      struct sockaddr *   ai_addr;    /* socket address for socket */
      char *              ai_canonname;  /* canonical name for service location */
      struct addrinfo *   ai_next;       /* pointer to next in list */
   };
You can specify values for the following structure members when using getaddrinfo.

ai_flags
The ai_flags member can be set to 0, AI_PASSIVE and/or AI_CANONNAME. Set AI_PASSIVE if the returned socket information is to be used for accepting incoming connections for the specified service. Do not set AI_PASSIVE if you want to use the returned socket information to create a connection to the specified service.

Set AI_CANONNAME if you want the canonical name corresponding to the name pointed to by name to be returned in ai_canonname. If the canonical name is not available, ai_canonname will point to the same location as name.


ai_family
Use ai_family to specify the protocol family related to the service specified by name and service. Possible values are:

PF_INET
Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4)

PF_INET6
Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6)

PF_UNSPEC
return all matching protocol families (the order is implementation dependent, and cannot be guaranteed to be the same on other systems)

ai_socktype
Use ai_socktype to specify the socket type you want returned. Possible socket types are:

SOCK_STREAM

SOCK_DGRAM

SOCK_RAW

If you specify 0 for ai_socktype all matching socket types are returned (the order is implementation dependent, and cannot be guaranteed to be the same on other systems).


ai_protocol
Use ai_protocol to specify the protocol to use in conjunction with the protocol family specified in ai_family. Valid protocols include:

IPPROTO_TCP
TCP

IPPROTO_UDP
UDP

IPPROTO_RAW
raw IP

If you specify 0 for ai_protocol, the default protocol is used for the family/socket type. See socket(3sock).

freeaddrinfo frees addrinfo structures referred to by ai along with any associated additional storage. If ai_next is not NULL, that is, there is a chain of addrinfo structures, freeaddrinfo frees the entire chain.

gai_strerror returns a pointer to a character string that describes the meaning of one of the EAI_* error codes (ecodes) returned by getaddrinfo. If the error code is not one of these, the string returned indicates an unknown error.

Return values

Upon successful return, getaddrinfo sets the pai pointer to point to a linked list of addrinfo structures, each of which specify a socket-address and related information that can be used to create the required sockets. The list always includes at least one addrinfo structure. The ai_next member of each structure contains either a pointer to the next structure in the list, or NULL if it is in the last structure in the list.

Each structure in the list includes values for use with a call to socket, and a socket address for use with connect or, if AI_PASSIVE is set, with bind. The ai_family, ai_socktype and ai_protocol fields are set to appropriate values to be used as arguments to socket to create a socket suitable for use with the returned address.

The ai_addr and ai_addrlen fields can be used as arguments to connect or bind depending on whether AI_PASSIVE was set in the original call.

References

bind(3sock), connect(3sock), gethostent(3N), getnameinfo(3N), inet(7tcp), socket(3sock)

RFC 2133

Notices

In UnixWare 7 the sockaddr structure has been modified to support variable length sockets. The net result of this modification is that the family member has been shortened to 8 bits and a new 8-bit member inserted before it (len). For more information on the new sockaddr structures, see inet(7tcp).
© 2004 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 25 April 2004