This section describes the details of the protocols and socket naming conventions used in the Internet namespace.
Originally the Internet namespace used only IP version 4 (IPv4). With the growing number of hosts on the Internet, a new protocol with a larger address space was necessary: IP version 6 (IPv6). IPv6 introduces 128-bit addresses (IPv4 has 32-bit addresses) and other features, and will eventually replace IPv4.
To create a socket in the IPv4 Internet namespace, use the symbolic name
PF_INET
of this namespace as the namespace argument to
socket
or socketpair
. For IPv6 addresses you need the
macro PF_INET6
. These macros are defined in sys/socket.h.
This designates the IPv4 Internet namespace and associated family of protocols.
This designates the IPv6 Internet namespace and associated family of protocols.
A socket address for the Internet namespace includes the following components:
You must ensure that the address and port number are represented in a canonical format called network byte order. See Byte Order, for information about this.