ipc_listener_fromfd_mem - wraps an existing OS-level file descriptor
#include <libdill.h>
int ipc_listener_fromfd_mem(
int fd,
struct ipc_listener_storage* mem);
IPC protocol is a bytestream protocol for transporting data among processes on the same machine. It is an equivalent to POSIX AF_LOCAL sockets.
This function wraps an existing OS-level file descriptor.
This function allows to avoid one dynamic memory allocation by storing the object in user-supplied memory. Unless you are hyper-optimizing use ipc_listener_fromfd instead.
fd: File descriptor of a listening UNIX domain socket to wrap.
mem: The structure to store the newly created object in. It must not be deallocated before the object is closed.
The socket can be cleanly shut down using ipc_close function which will also close the underlying file descriptor.
There's no way to unwrap the file descriptor.
This function is not available if libdill is compiled with --disable-sockets option.
In case of success the function returns newly created socket handle. In case of error it returns -1 and sets errno to one of the values below.
int fd = socket(AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
bind(fd, addr, sizeof(addr));
listen(fd, 10);
int s = ipc_listener_fromfd(fd);
brecv(3) brecvl(3) bsend(3) bsendl(3) hclose(3) ipc_accept(3) ipc_accept_mem(3) ipc_close(3) ipc_connect(3) ipc_connect_mem(3) ipc_done(3) ipc_fromfd(3) ipc_fromfd_mem(3) ipc_listen(3) ipc_listen_mem(3) ipc_listener_fromfd(3) ipc_pair(3) ipc_pair_mem(3)