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Full Discussion: Byte Padding
Top Forums Programming Byte Padding Post 302106966 by jim mcnamara on Tuesday 13th of February 2007 01:46:08 PM
Old 02-13-2007
Padding is implementation dependent. Basically it means the the objects inside the struct have their beginning addresses moved (padded with bytes) so the start of each object can be accessed by the hardware efficiently.

Misalignment of objects can result in a SIGBUS core dump, or very much slower access to the object. Some compilers have a pragma to turn off or alter padding. Others provide warnings about padding.
 

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INET(3) 						     Linux Programmer's Manual							   INET(3)

NAME
inet_aton, inet_addr, inet_network, inet_ntoa, inet_makeaddr, inet_lnaof, inet_netof - Internet address manipulation routines SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/socket.h> #include <netinet/in.h> #include <arpa/inet.h> int inet_aton(const char *cp, struct in_addr *inp); in_addr_t inet_addr(const char *cp); in_addr_t inet_network(const char *cp); char *inet_ntoa(struct in_addr in); struct in_addr inet_makeaddr(int net, int host); in_addr_t inet_lnaof(struct in_addr in); in_addr_t inet_netof(struct in_addr in); DESCRIPTION
inet_aton() converts the Internet host address cp from the standard numbers-and-dots notation into binary data and stores it in the struc- ture that inp points to. inet_aton returns nonzero if the address is valid, zero if not. The inet_addr() function converts the Internet host address cp from numbers-and-dots notation into binary data in network byte order. If the input is invalid, INADDR_NONE (usually -1) is returned. This is an obsolete interface to inet_aton, described immediately above; it is obsolete because -1 is a valid address (255.255.255.255), and inet_aton provides a cleaner way to indicate error return. The inet_network() function extracts the network number in host byte order from the address cp in numbers-and-dots notation. If the input is invalid, -1 is returned. The inet_ntoa() function converts the Internet host address in given in network byte order to a string in standard numbers-and-dots nota- tion. The string is returned in a statically allocated buffer, which subsequent calls will overwrite. The inet_makeaddr() function makes an Internet host address in network byte order by combining the network number net with the local address host in network net, both in local host byte order. The inet_lnaof() function returns the local host address part of the Internet address in. The local host address is returned in local host byte order. The inet_netof() function returns the network number part of the Internet Address in. The network number is returned in local host byte order. The structure in_addr as used in inet_ntoa(), inet_makeaddr(), inet_lnoaf() and inet_netof() is defined in netinet/in.h as: struct in_addr { unsigned long int s_addr; } Note that on the i80x86 the host byte order is Least Significant Byte first, whereas the network byte order, as used on the Internet, is Most Significant Byte first. CONFORMING TO
BSD 4.3 SEE ALSO
gethostbyname(3), getnetent(3), inet_ntop(3), inet_pton(3), hosts(5), networks(5) BSD
2001-07-25 INET(3)
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