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Full Discussion: sockets question
Top Forums Programming sockets question Post 57467 by jalburger on Thursday 28th of October 2004 04:33:38 PM
Old 10-28-2004
sockets question

I'm new to sockets programming and I have a few questions:

Is the a maximum limit that you can use for the send and receive buffers via a call to setsockopt()? Does it differ on different OSs? If it does, how do I find out the max limit?

What is the advantage to setting the buffers to be larger? Is there any disadvantages?

Thanks in advance!!
 

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SOCKETCALL(2)						     Linux Programmer's Manual						     SOCKETCALL(2)

NAME
socketcall - socket system calls SYNOPSIS
#include <linux/net.h> int socketcall(int call, unsigned long *args); DESCRIPTION
socketcall() is a common kernel entry point for the socket system calls. call determines which socket function to invoke. args points to a block containing the actual arguments, which are passed through to the appropriate call. User programs should call the appropriate functions by their usual names. Only standard library implementors and kernel hackers need to know about socketcall(). call Man page SYS_SOCKET socket(2) SYS_BIND bind(2) SYS_CONNECT connect(2) SYS_LISTEN listen(2) SYS_ACCEPT accept(2) SYS_GETSOCKNAME getsockname(2) SYS_GETPEERNAME getpeername(2) SYS_SOCKETPAIR socketpair(2) SYS_SEND send(2) SYS_RECV recv(2) SYS_SENDTO sendto(2) SYS_RECVFROM recvfrom(2) SYS_SHUTDOWN shutdown(2) SYS_SETSOCKOPT setsockopt(2) SYS_GETSOCKOPT getsockopt(2) SYS_SENDMSG sendmsg(2) SYS_RECVMSG recvmsg(2) SYS_ACCEPT4 accept4(2) SYS_RECVMMSG recvmmsg(2) SYS_SENDMMSG sendmmsg(2) CONFORMING TO
This call is specific to Linux, and should not be used in programs intended to be portable. NOTES
On a some architectures--for example, x86-64 and ARM--there is no socketcall() system call; instead socket(2), accept(2), bind(2), and so on really are implemented as separate system calls. On x86-32, socketcall() was historically the only entry point for the sockets API. However, starting in Linux 4.3, direct system calls are provided on x86-32 for the sockets API. This facilitates the creation of seccomp(2) filters that filter sockets system calls (for new user-space binaries that are compiled to use the new entry points) and also provides a (very) small performance improvement. SEE ALSO
accept(2), bind(2), connect(2), getpeername(2), getsockname(2), getsockopt(2), listen(2), recv(2), recvfrom(2), recvmsg(2), send(2), sendmsg(2), sendto(2), setsockopt(2), shutdown(2), socket(2), socketpair(2) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2017-09-15 SOCKETCALL(2)
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