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Full Discussion: help with data type sizes
Top Forums Programming help with data type sizes Post 302488046 by DGPickett on Friday 14th of January 2011 05:05:13 PM
Old 01-14-2011
Well, & is the address, and it goes up one for every char and usually 4 for every int. Addresses are guaranteed to be subtractable even if they are in odd formats internally. Also, adding integers is the same as offsetting an array, so for array "char c[] = "Hello" ;", c + 5 = &(c[5]) points c[5] = *(c+5) to the null of the "" string after the 'o' of hello.

For int arrays, adding one moves it 4 in char terms, but if you subtract int addresses, you get a result / 4 unless you cast them as (char*) first. So, for "int i[8];", &(i[5]) - &(i[2]) = 3, which turns out to be more useful than 12 unless you are doing i/o or malloc(), which are byte char operations.

If you are doing an array of struct, the struct size is multiplied for you into any increment or offset. You can discover the real size with sizeof() or by casting addresses of two adjacent struct to (char*) and subtracting, a popular interview question some places.

Last edited by DGPickett; 01-14-2011 at 06:12 PM..
 

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

NAME
getipnodebyname, getipnodebyaddr, freehostent - get network hostnames and addresses SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/socket.h> #include <netdb.h> struct hostent *getipnodebyname(const char *name, int af, int flags, int *error_num); struct hostent *getipnodebyaddr(const void *addr, size_t len, int af, int *error_num); void freehostent(struct hostent *ip); DESCRIPTION
These functions are deprecated (and unavailable in glibc). Use getaddrinfo(3) and getnameinfo(3) instead. The getipnodebyname() and getipnodebyaddr() functions return the names and addresses of a network host. These functions return a pointer to the following structure: struct hostent { char *h_name; char **h_aliases; int h_addrtype; int h_length; char **h_addr_list; }; These functions replace the gethostbyname(3) and gethostbyaddr(3) functions, which could only access the IPv4 network address family. The getipnodebyname() and getipnodebyaddr() functions can access multiple network address families. Unlike the gethostby functions, these functions return pointers to dynamically allocated memory. The freehostent() function is used to release the dynamically allocated memory after the caller no longer needs the hostent structure. getipnodebyname() arguments The getipnodebyname() function looks up network addresses for the host specified by the name argument. The af argument specifies one of the following values: AF_INET The name argument points to a dotted-quad IPv4 address or a name of an IPv4 network host. AF_INET6 The name argument points to a hexadecimal IPv6 address or a name of an IPv6 network host. The flags argument specifies additional options. More than one option can be specified by bitwise OR-ing them together. flags should be set to 0 if no options are desired. AI_V4MAPPED This flag is used with AF_INET6 to request a query for IPv4 addresses instead of IPv6 addresses; the IPv4 addresses will be mapped to IPv6 addresses. AI_ALL This flag is used with AI_V4MAPPED to request a query for both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. Any IPv4 address found will be mapped to an IPv6 address. AI_ADDRCONFIG This flag is used with AF_INET6 to further request that queries for IPv6 addresses should not be made unless the system has at least one IPv6 address assigned to a network interface, and that queries for IPv4 addresses should not be made unless the system has at least one IPv4 address assigned to a network interface. This flag may be used by itself or with the AI_V4MAPPED flag. AI_DEFAULT This flag is equivalent to (AI_ADDRCONFIG | AI_V4MAPPED). getipnodebyaddr() arguments The getipnodebyaddr() function looks up the name of the host whose network address is specified by the addr argument. The af argument specifies one of the following values: AF_INET The addr argument points to a struct in_addr and len must be set to sizeof(struct in_addr). AF_INET6 The addr argument points to a struct in6_addr and len must be set to sizeof(struct in6_addr). RETURN VALUE
A null pointer is returned if an error occurred, and error_num will contain an error code from the following list: HOST_NOT_FOUND The hostname or network address was not found. NO_ADDRESS The domain name server recognized the network address or name, but no answer was returned. This can happen if the network host has only IPv4 addresses and a request has been made for IPv6 information only, or vice versa. NO_RECOVERY The domain name server returned a permanent failure response. TRY_AGAIN The domain name server returned a temporary failure response. You might have better luck next time. A successful query returns a pointer to a hostent structure that contains the following fields: h_name This is the official name of this network host. h_aliases This is an array of pointers to unofficial aliases for the same host. The array is terminated by a null pointer. h_addrtype This is a copy of the af argument to getipnodebyname() or getipnodebyaddr(). h_addrtype will always be AF_INET if the af argument was AF_INET. h_addrtype will always be AF_INET6 if the af argument was AF_INET6. h_length This field will be set to sizeof(struct in_addr) if h_addrtype is AF_INET, and to sizeof(struct in6_addr) if h_addrtype is AF_INET6. h_addr_list This is an array of one or more pointers to network address structures for the network host. The array is terminated by a null pointer. CONFORMING TO
RFC 2553. NOTES
These functions were present in glibc 2.1.91-95, but were removed again. Several Unix-like systems support them, but all call them depre- cated. SEE ALSO
getaddrinfo(3), getnameinfo(3), inet_ntop(3), inet_pton(3) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.27 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2010-09-04 GETIPNODEBYNAME(3)
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