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SEND(2) FreeBSD System Calls Manual SEND(2)
NAME
send, sendto, sendmsg, sendmmsg - send message(s) from a socket
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/socket.h>
ssize_t
send(int s, const void *msg, size_t len, int flags);
ssize_t
sendto(int s, const void *msg, size_t len, int flags,
const struct sockaddr *to, socklen_t tolen);
ssize_t
sendmsg(int s, const struct msghdr *msg, int flags);
ssize_t
sendmmsg(int s, struct mmsghdr * restrict msgvec, size_t vlen,
int flags);
DESCRIPTION
The send() and sendmmsg() functions, and sendto() and sendmsg() system
calls are used to transmit one or more messages (with the sendmmsg()
call) to another socket. The send() function may be used only when the
socket is in a connected state. The functions sendto(), sendmsg() and
sendmmsg() may be used at any time if the socket is connectionless-mode.
If the socket is connection-mode, the protocol must support implied
connect (currently tcp(4) is the only protocol with support) or the
socket must be in a connected state before use.
The address of the target is given by to with tolen specifying its size,
or the equivalent msg_name and msg_namelen in struct msghdr. If the
socket is in a connected state, the target address passed to sendto(),
sendmsg() or sendmmsg() is ignored. The length of the message is given
by len. If the message is too long to pass atomically through the
underlying protocol, the error EMSGSIZE is returned, and the message is
not transmitted.
The sendmmsg() function sends multiple messages at a call. They are
given by the msgvec vector along with vlen specifying the vector size.
The number of octets sent per each message is placed in the msg_len field
of each processed element of the vector after transmission.
No indication of failure to deliver is implicit in a send(). Locally
detected errors are indicated by a return value of -1.
If no messages space is available at the socket to hold the message to be
transmitted, then send() normally blocks, unless the socket has been
placed in non-blocking I/O mode. The select(2) system call may be used
to determine when it is possible to send more data.
The flags argument may include one or more of the following:
#define MSG_OOB 0x00001 /* process out-of-band data */
support this notion (e.g. SOCK_STREAM); the underlying protocol must also
support "out-of-band" data. MSG_EOR is used to indicate a record mark
for protocols which support the concept. The MSG_DONTWAIT flag request
the call to return when it would block otherwise. MSG_EOF requests that
the sender side of a socket be shut down, and that an appropriate
indication be sent at the end of the specified data; this flag is only
implemented for SOCK_STREAM sockets in the PF_INET protocol family.
MSG_DONTROUTE is usually used only by diagnostic or routing programs.
MSG_NOSIGNAL is used to prevent SIGPIPE generation when writing a socket
that may be closed.
See recv(2) for a description of the msghdr structure and the mmsghdr
structure.
RETURN VALUES
The send(), sendto() and sendmsg() calls return the number of octets
sent. The sendmmsg() call returns the number of messages sent. If an
error occurred a value of -1 is returned.
ERRORS
The send() and sendmmsg() functions and sendto() and sendmsg() system
calls fail if:
[EBADF] An invalid descriptor was specified.
[EACCES] The destination address is a broadcast address, and
SO_BROADCAST has not been set on the socket.
[ENOTCONN] The socket is connection-mode but is not connected.
[ENOTSOCK] The argument s is not a socket.
[EFAULT] An invalid user space address was specified for an
argument.
[EMSGSIZE] The socket requires that message be sent atomically,
and the size of the message to be sent made this
impossible.
[EAGAIN] The socket is marked non-blocking, or MSG_DONTWAIT is
specified, and the requested operation would block.
[ENOBUFS] The system was unable to allocate an internal buffer.
The operation may succeed when buffers become
available.
[ENOBUFS] The output queue for a network interface was full.
This generally indicates that the interface has
stopped sending, but may be caused by transient
congestion.
[EHOSTUNREACH] The remote host was unreachable.
[EISCONN] A destination address was specified and the socket is
already connected.
[ECONNREFUSED] The socket received an ICMP destination unreachable
message from the last message sent. This typically
means that the receiver is not listening on the remote
source address specified in the IP header did not
match the IP address bound to the prison.
[EPIPE] The socket is unable to send anymore data
(SBS_CANTSENDMORE has been set on the socket). This
typically means that the socket is not connected.
SEE ALSO
connect(2), fcntl(2), getsockopt(2), recv(2), select(2), socket(2),
write(2), CMSG_DATA(3)
HISTORY
The send() function appeared in 4.2BSD. The sendmmsg() function appeared
in FreeBSD 11.0.
BUGS
Because sendmsg() does not necessarily block until the data has been
transferred, it is possible to transfer an open file descriptor across an
AF_UNIX domain socket (see recv(2)), then close() it before it has
actually been sent, the result being that the receiver gets a closed file
descriptor. It is left to the application to implement an acknowledgment
mechanism to prevent this from happening.
FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11 April 27, 2020 FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11