The primitive for creating a socket is the socket
function,
declared in sys/socket.h.
This function creates a socket and specifies communication style style, which should be one of the socket styles listed in Communication Styles. The namespace argument specifies the namespace; it must be
PF_LOCAL
(see Local Namespace) orPF_INET
(see Internet Namespace). protocol designates the specific protocol (see Socket Concepts); zero is usually right for protocol.The return value from
socket
is the file descriptor for the new socket, or-1
in case of error. The followingerrno
error conditions are defined for this function:
EPROTONOSUPPORT
- The protocol or style is not supported by the namespace specified.
EMFILE
- The process already has too many file descriptors open.
ENFILE
- The system already has too many file descriptors open.
EACCES
- The process does not have the privilege to create a socket of the specified style or protocol.
ENOBUFS
- The system ran out of internal buffer space.
The file descriptor returned by the
socket
function supports both read and write operations. However, like pipes, sockets do not support file positioning operations.
For examples of how to call the socket
function,
see Local Socket Example, or Inet Example.