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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Sat. 27 June 2020: Movement of www.UNIX.com to new server Post 303046372 by Neo on Saturday 27th of June 2020 04:41:29 AM
Old 06-27-2020
Update:

This server switch was completed, tested for a few hours, and then reverted back because serving the PHP pages in a dockerized LAMP container significantly slows down the site.
 

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GETPEEREID(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					     GETPEEREID(3)

NAME
getpeereid -- get the effective credentials of a UNIX-domain peer LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <unistd.h> int getpeereid(int s, uid_t *euid, gid_t *egid); DESCRIPTION
The getpeereid() function returns the effective user and group IDs of the peer connected to a UNIX-domain socket. The argument s must be a UNIX-domain socket (unix(4)) of type SOCK_STREAM on which either connect(2) has been called, or one returned from accept(2) after bind(2) and listen(2) have been called. If non-NULL, the effective used ID is placed in euid, and the effective group ID in egid. The credentials returned to the accept(2) caller are those of its peer at the time it called connect(2); the credentials returned to the connect(2) caller are those of its peer at the time it called bind(2). This mechanism is reliable; there is no way for either side to influ- ence the credentials returned to its peer except by calling the appropriate system call (i.e., either connect(2) or bind(2)) under different effective credentials. One common use of this routine is for a UNIX-domain server to verify the credentials of its client. Likewise, the client can verify the cre- dentials of the server. IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
On NetBSD, getpeereid() is implemented in terms of the LOCAL_PEEREID unix(4) socket option. RETURN VALUES
The getpeereid() function returns the value 0 if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indi- cate the error. ERRORS
The getpeereid() function fails if: [EBADF] The argument s is not a valid descriptor. [ENOTSOCK] The argument s is a file, not a socket. [ENOTCONN] The argument s does not refer to a socket on which connect(2) have been called nor one returned from listen(2). [EINVAL] The argument s does not refer to a socket of type SOCK_STREAM, or the kernel returned invalid data. SEE ALSO
connect(2), getpeername(2), getsockname(2), getsockopt(2), listen(2), unix(4) HISTORY
The getpeereid() function appeared in NetBSD 5.0. BSD
August 8, 2007 BSD
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