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Top Forums Programming C Prog to close a socket in established state Post 7912 by loadc on Wednesday 3rd of October 2001 11:42:17 AM
Old 10-03-2001
Here ya go

No point in replicating work,


unless you want to, go to www.monkey.org/~bugsong/dsniff.html

This is a suite of programs that are used for network troubleshooting, please respect them as such. There is a tool in the suite called tcpkill, you can download the source tar file, and tear it apart. He does some very cool stuff with networking here, I suggest a good read of the whole thing, very informative.

THis is also available from the BSD ports and packages collections.



You should be able to take the tcpkill code and work it into a script ( if you want to do that ) with lsof providing the input. Obviously you'll need to compile it, and I believe that it does depend on some of the other files for declarations and such, check the Makefile for exactly what you have for options.



HTH,



loadc
 

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TCP(4P) 																   TCP(4P)

NAME
tcp - Internet Transmission Control Protocol SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/socket.h> #include <netinet/in.h> s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0); DESCRIPTION
The TCP protocol provides reliable, flow-controlled, two-way transmission of data. It is a byte-stream protocol used to support the SOCK_STREAM abstraction. TCP uses the standard Internet address format and, in addition, provides a per-host collection of "port addresses". Thus, each address is composed of an Internet address specifying the host and network, with a specific TCP port on the host identifying the peer entity. Sockets utilizing the tcp protocol are either "active" or "passive". Active sockets initiate connections to passive sockets. By default TCP sockets are created active; to create a passive socket the listen(2) system call must be used after binding the socket with the bind(2) system call. Only passive sockets may use the accept(2) call to accept incoming connections. Only active sockets may use the connect(2) call to initiate connections. Passive sockets may "underspecify" their location to match incoming connection requests from multiple networks. This technique, termed "wildcard addressing", allows a single server to provide service to clients on multiple networks. To create a socket which listens on all networks, the Internet address INADDR_ANY must be bound. The TCP port may still be specified at this time; if the port is not specified the system will assign one. Once a connection has been established the socket's address is fixed by the peer entity's location. The address assigned the socket is the address associated with the network interface through which packets are being transmitted and received. Normally this address corresponds to the peer entity's network. TCP supports one socket option which is set with setsockopt(2) and tested with getsockopt(2). Under most circumstances, TCP sends data when it is presented; when outstanding data has not yet been acknowledged, it gathers small amounts of output to be sent in a single packet once an acknowledgement is received. For a small number of clients, such as window systems that send a stream of mouse events which receive no replies, this packetization may cause significant delays. Therefore, TCP provides a boolean option, TCP_NODELAY (from <netinet/tcp.h>, to defeat this algorithm. The option level for the setsockopt call is the protocol number for TCP, available from getpro- tobyname(3N). Options at the IP transport level may be used with TCP; see ip(4P). Incoming connection requests that are source-routed are noted, and the reverse source route is used in responding. DIAGNOSTICS
A socket operation may fail with one of the following errors returned: [EISCONN] when trying to establish a connection on a socket which already has one; [ENOBUFS] when the system runs out of memory for an internal data structure; [ETIMEDOUT] when a connection was dropped due to excessive retransmissions; [ECONNRESET] when the remote peer forces the connection to be closed; [ECONNREFUSED] when the remote peer actively refuses connection establishment (usually because no process is listening to the port); [EADDRINUSE] when an attempt is made to create a socket with a port which has already been allocated; [EADDRNOTAVAIL] when an attempt is made to create a socket with a network address for which no network interface exists. SEE ALSO
getsockopt(2), socket(2), intro(4N), inet(4F), ip(4P) 4.2 Berkeley Distribution May 16, 1986 TCP(4P)
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