@LewsTherin the lower-level protocols are used simply to navigate the network and to provide a channel the application can use to send and receive data. They just ensure that sending data is possible. The HTTP protocol (or another application-level protocol) defines what data is sent, and is generally considered to be at the top of the stack
@jalf So the OS probably has some kind of map from handle to resource, I guess? And if the handle is a pointer, it doesn't even need a map, it just dereferences the pointer :) like in the case of FILE*.
Batteries should be included, IMO. Because then you have those silly people saying "oh we don't want Boost/X, because it's big/not included/whatever, so we're going to reinvent the whole thing".
@FredOverflow Could be both, yeah. The handle might be an array index, it might be a key into a map, or it might be a pointer to something (in your own or another address space)
Mmmn there is something I don't get. I assume Skype uses a socket or some other other abstraction. All I know is it is assigned port number 80. For some reason other applications like apache can't use port 80 when Skype is running. Why doesn't the tcp create ephemeral port numbers for Skype or apache? Then port 80 is free
I think it uses tcp because apache needs tcp to work
An ephemeral port is a short-lived transport protocol port for Internet Protocol (IP) communications allocated automatically from a predefined range by the TCP/IP software. It is used by the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), User Datagram Protocol (UDP), or the Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) as the port assignment for the client end of a client–server communication to a well known port on a server. On servers, ephemeral ports may also be used to continue communications with a client that initially connected to one of the server's well-known service listening ports to make th...
you can either say "give me a port", in which case the OS will find a free port for you, or you can say "give me port N", in which case it gives you port N or nothing
most (client) applications just say "give me a port", because they don't care which port they're using. But servers typically need to listen on a fixed well-known port
It's no good hosting a public web server on port 81. Every browser in the world is going to try to connect on port 80, so if the server can't get port 80, you want it to error out, rather than continue running on the wrong port
oh right I think I understand. so servers prefer to listen at a specific port and if it is already in use, it wouldn't work unless I specify another port
@jalf lol that's true but how they are written doesn't make sense to me
For example, we have a struct object I believe holds the IP address.. then a function is called to assign the strings to null characters. Except that the function takes a char* a pointer to a char
Yet they do `termin((char*)structVar,sizeof(structVar)) ` How does that work? (char*)structVar does it return a pointer to a member string in structVar?
The Berkeley sockets application programming interface (API) comprises a library for developing applications in the C programming language that perform inter-process communication, most commonly for communications across a computer network.
Berkeley sockets (also known as the BSD socket API) originated with the 4.2BSD Unix operating system (released in 1983) as an API. Only in 1989, however, could UC Berkeley release versions of its operating system and networking library free from the licensing constraints of AT&T's copyright-protected Unix.
The Berkeley socket API forms the de facto st...
has nice simple code examples of client and server
For Windows the function names are different (they're prefixed WSA, iirc), but it's basically the same api
and I guess that's one reason why it isn't "made pretty". It's one of the few apis that people have actually been able to agree on across practically all platforms ;)
@Als What I forgot to ask you the other day: What about that downvoting idiot? From how you suddenly reacted it seemed the thing was resolved. What happened? Did you get your rep back? Do you know what happened to him?
@Als Ah. Well, it's not that it really hurt your rep, is it? And it's good he had been slapped for misbehaving. I'd be very interested what happens when he comes back tomorrow.
@sbi: No it didn't hurt the rep as much, it was just a nuisance that had to be dealt with.Thanks to you it was done so.I wonder though,most of the mods(except @TimPost) seemed very disinterested about pursuing to resolve this.
Atleast one of the Mods tried to act as an defence lawyer instead of Police, which was kinda disappointing.
And I am sure this person would create some ruckus on Meta when he comes back,whenever.