/* * Copyright (C) 2016 Alexander Aring * Freie Universität Berlin * HAW Hamburg * Kaspar Schleiser * * This file is subject to the terms and conditions of the GNU Lesser * General Public License v2.1. See the file LICENSE in the top level * directory for more details. */ /** * @defgroup net_sock_udp UDP sock API * @ingroup net_sock * @brief Sock submodule for UDP * * How To Use * ---------- * First you need to @ref including-modules "include" a module that implements * this API in your application's Makefile. For example the implementation for * @ref net_gnrc "GNRC" is called `gnrc_sock_udp`. * * ### A Simple UDP Echo Server * * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {.c} * #include * * #include "net/sock/udp.h" * * uint8_t buf[128]; * * int main(void) * { * sock_udp_ep_t local = SOCK_IPV6_EP_ANY; * sock_udp_t sock; * * local.port = 12345; * * if (sock_udp_create(&sock, &local, NULL, 0) < 0) { * puts("Error creating UDP sock"); * return 1; * } * * while (1) { * sock_udp_ep_t remote; * ssize_t res; * * if ((res = sock_udp_recv(&sock, buf, sizeof(buf), SOCK_NO_TIMEOUT, * &remote)) >= 0) { * puts("Received a message"); * if (sock_udp_send(&sock, buf, res, &remote) < 0) { * puts("Error sending reply"); * } * } * } * * return 0; * } * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * Above you see a simple UDP echo server. Don't forget to also * @ref including-modules "include" the IPv6 module of your networking * implementation (e.g. `gnrc_ipv6_default` for @ref net_gnrc GNRC) and at least * one network device. * * After including the header file for @ref net_sock_udp "UDP sock", we create some * buffer space `buf` to store the data received by the server: * * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {.c} * #include "net/sock/udp.h" * * uint8_t buf[128]; * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * To be able to listen for incoming packets we bind the `sock` by setting a * local end point with a port (`12345` in this case). * * We then proceed to create the `sock`. It is bound to `local` and thus listens * for UDP packets with @ref udp_hdr_t::dst_port "destination port" `12345`. * Since we don't need any further configuration we set the flags to 0. * In case of an error we stop the program: * * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {.c} * sock_udp_ep_t local = SOCK_IPV6_EP_ANY; * sock_udp_t sock; * * local.port = 12345; * * if (sock_udp_create(&sock, &local, NULL, 0) < 0) { * puts("Error creating UDP sock"); * return 1; * } * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * The application then waits indefinitely for an incoming message in `buf` * from `remote`. If we want to timeout this wait period we could alternatively * set the `timeout` parameter of @ref sock_udp_recv() to a value != @ref * SOCK_NO_TIMEOUT. If an error occurs on receive we just ignore it and * continue looping. * * If we receive a message we use its `remote` to reply. In case of an error on * send we print an according message: * * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {.c} * while (1) { * sock_udp_ep_t remote; * ssize_t res; * * if ((res = sock_udp_recv(&sock, buf, sizeof(buf), SOCK_NO_TIMEOUT, * &remote)) >= 0) { * puts("Received a message"); * if (sock_udp_send(&sock, buf, res, &remote) < 0) { * puts("Error sending reply"); * } * } * } * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * ### A Simple UDP Echo Client * There are two kinds of clients. Those that do expect a reply and those who * don't. A client that does not require a reply is very simple to implement in * one line: * * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {.c} * res = sock_udp_send(NULL, data, data_len, &remote); * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * With `data` being the data sent, `data_len` the length of `data` and `remote` * the remote end point the packet that is is to be sent. * * To see some other capabilities we look at a more complex example in form of * the counter of the echo server above: * * * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {.c} * #include * * #include "net/af.h" * #include "net/protnum.h" * #include "net/ipv6/addr.h" * #include "net/sock/udp.h" * #include "xtimer.h" * * uint8_t buf[7]; * * int main(void) * { * sock_udp_ep_t local = SOCK_IPV6_EP_ANY; * sock_udp_t sock; * * local.port = 0xabcd; * * if (sock_udp_create(&sock, &local, NULL, 0) < 0) { * puts("Error creating UDP sock"); * return 1; * } * * * while (1) { * sock_udp_ep_t remote = { .family = AF_INET6 }; * ssize_t res; * * remote.port = 12345; * ipv6_addr_set_all_nodes_multicast((ipv6_addr_t *)&remote.addr.ipv6, * IPV6_ADDR_MCAST_SCP_LINK_LOCAL); * if (sock_udp_send(&sock, "Hello!", sizeof("Hello!"), &remote) < 0) { * puts("Error sending message"); * sock_udp_close(&sock); * return 1; * } * if ((res = sock_udp_recv(&sock, buf, sizeof(buf), 1 * SEC_IN_USEC, * NULL)) < 0) { * if (res == -ETIMEDOUT) { * puts("Timed out"); * } * else { * puts("Error receiving message"); * } * } * else { * printf("Received message: \""); * for (int i = 0; i < res; i++) { * printf("%c", buf[i]); * } * printf("\"\n"); * } * xtimer_sleep(1); * } * * return 0; * } * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * Again: Don't forget to also @ref including-modules "include" the IPv6 module * of your networking implementation (e.g. `gnrc_ipv6_default` for * @ref net_gnrc "GNRC") and at least one network device. * * We first create again a `sock` with a local end point bound to any IPv6 * address and some port. Note that we also could specify the remote here and * not use it with @ref sock_udp_send(). * * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {.c} * sock_udp_ep_t local = SOCK_IPV6_EP_ANY; * sock_udp_t sock; * * local.port = 0xabcd; * * if (sock_udp_create(&sock, &local, NULL, 0) < 0) { * puts("Error creating UDP sock"); * return 1; * } * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * We then create a remote end point with the [link-local all nodes multicast * address](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4291#page-16) (`ff02::1`) and port * `12345` and send a "Hello!" message to that end point. * * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {.c} * sock_udp_ep_t remote = { .family = AF_INET6 }; * ssize_t res; * * remote.port = 12345; * ipv6_addr_set_all_nodes_multicast((ipv6_addr_t *)&remote.addr.ipv6, * IPV6_ADDR_MCAST_SCP_LINK_LOCAL); * if (sock_udp_send(&sock, "Hello!", sizeof("Hello!"), &remote) < 0) { * puts("Error sending message"); * sock_udp_close(); * return 1; * } * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * We then wait a second for a reply and print it when it is received. * * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ {.c} * if ((res = sock_udp_recv(&sock, buf, sizeof(buf), 1 * SEC_IN_USEC, * NULL)) < 0) { * if (res == -ETIMEDOUT) { * puts("Timed out"); * } * else { * puts("Error receiving message"); * } * } * else { * printf("Received message: \""); * for (int i = 0; i < res; i++) { * printf("%c", buf[i]); * } * printf("\"\n"); * } * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * Finally, we wait a second before sending out the next "Hello!" with * `xtimer_sleep(1)`. * * @{ * * @file * @brief UDP sock definitions * * @author Alexander Aring * @author Simon Brummer * @author Cenk Gündoğan * @author Peter Kietzmann * @author Martine Lenders * @author Kaspar Schleiser */ #ifndef NET_SOCK_UDP_H_ #define NET_SOCK_UDP_H_ #include #include #include #include #include "net/sock.h" #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif typedef struct _sock_tl_ep sock_udp_ep_t; /**< An end point for a UDP sock object */ /** * @brief Type for a UDP sock object * * @note API implementors: `struct sock_udp` needs to be defined by * implementation-specific `sock_types.h`. */ typedef struct sock_udp sock_udp_t; /** * @brief Creates a new UDP sock object * * @pre `(sock != NULL)` * @pre `(local == NULL) || (local->port != 0)` * @pre `(remote == NULL) || (remote->port != 0)` * * @param[out] sock The resulting sock object. * @param[in] local Local end point for the sock object. * May be NULL. * sock_udp_ep_t::port may not be 0 if `local != NULL`. * sock_udp_ep_t::netif must either be * @ref SOCK_ADDR_ANY_NETIF or equal to * sock_udp_ep_t::netif of @p remote if `remote != NULL`. * If NULL @ref sock_udp_send() may bind implicitly. * @param[in] remote Remote end point for the sock object. * May be `NULL` but then the `remote` parameter of * @ref sock_udp_send() may not be `NULL` and or it will * always error with return value -ENOTCONN. * sock_udp_ep_t::port may not be 0 if `remote != NULL`. * sock_udp_ep_t::netif must either be * @ref SOCK_ADDR_ANY_NETIF or equal to sock_udp_ep_t::netif * of @p local if `local != NULL`. * @param[in] flags Flags for the sock object. See also * [sock flags](net_sock_flags). * May be 0. * * @return 0 on success. * @return -EADDRINUSE, if `local != NULL` and @p local is already used * elsewhere * @return -EAFNOSUPPORT, if `local != NULL` or `remote != NULL` and * sock_udp_ep_t::family of @p local or @p remote is not supported. * @return -EINVAL, if sock_udp_ep_t::addr of @p remote is an invalid address. * @return -EINVAL, if sock_udp_ep_t::netif of @p local or @p remote are not a * valid interfaces or contradict each other (i.e. * `(local->netif != remote->netif) && * ((local->netif != SOCK_ADDR_ANY_NETIF) || * (remote->netif != SOCK_ADDR_ANY_NETIF))` if neither is `NULL`). * @return -ENOMEM, if not enough resources can be provided for `sock` to be * created. */ int sock_udp_create(sock_udp_t *sock, const sock_udp_ep_t *local, const sock_udp_ep_t *remote, uint16_t flags); /** * @brief Closes a UDP sock object * * @pre `(sock != NULL)` * * @param[in] sock A UDP sock object. */ void sock_udp_close(sock_udp_t *sock); /** * @brief Gets the local end point of a UDP sock object * * @pre `(sock != NULL) && (ep != NULL)` * * @param[in] sock A UDP sock object. * @param[out] ep The local end point. * * @return 0 on success. * @return -EADDRNOTAVAIL, when @p sock has no local end point. */ int sock_udp_get_local(sock_udp_t *sock, sock_udp_ep_t *ep); /** * @brief Gets the remote end point of a UDP sock object * @pre `(sock != NULL) && (ep != NULL)` * * @param[in] sock A UDP sock object. * @param[out] ep The remote end point. * * @return 0 on success. * @return -ENOTCONN, when @p sock has no remote end point bound to it. */ int sock_udp_get_remote(sock_udp_t *sock, sock_udp_ep_t *ep); /** * @brief Receives a UDP message from a remote end point * * @pre `(sock != NULL) && (data != NULL) && (max_len > 0)` * * @param[in] sock A raw IPv4/IPv6 sock object. * @param[out] data Pointer where the received data should be stored. * @param[in] max_len Maximum space available at @p data. * @param[in] timeout Timeout for receive in microseconds. * If 0 and no data is available, the function returns * immediately. * May be @ref SOCK_NO_TIMEOUT for no timeout (wait until * data is available). * @param[out] remote Remote end point of the received data. * May be `NULL`, if it is not required by the application. * * @note Function blocks if no packet is currently waiting. * * @return The number of bytes received on success. * @return 0, if no received data is available, but everything is in order. * @return -EADDRNOTAVAIL, if local of @p sock is not given. * @return -EAGAIN, if @p timeout is `0` and no data is available. * @return -ENOBUFS, if buffer space is not large enough to store received * data. * @return -ENOMEM, if no memory was available to receive @p data. * @return -EPROTO, if source address of received packet did not equal * the remote of @p sock. * @return -ETIMEDOUT, if @p timeout expired. */ ssize_t sock_udp_recv(sock_udp_t *sock, void *data, size_t max_len, uint32_t timeout, sock_udp_ep_t *remote); /** * @brief Sends a UDP message to remote end point * * @pre `((sock != NULL || remote != NULL)) && (if (len != 0): (data != NULL))` * * @param[in] sock A raw IPv4/IPv6 sock object. May be `NULL`. * A sensible local end point should be selected by the * implementation in that case. * @param[in] data Pointer where the received data should be stored. * May be `NULL` if `len == 0`. * @param[in] len Maximum space available at @p data. * @param[in] remote Remote end point for the sent data. * May be `NULL`, if @p sock has a remote end point. * sock_udp_ep_t::family may be AF_UNSPEC, if local * end point of @p sock provides this information. * sock_udp_ep_t::port may not be 0. * * @return The number of bytes sent on success. * @return -EAFNOSUPPORT, if `remote != NULL` and sock_udp_ep_t::family of * @p remote is != AF_UNSPEC and not supported. * @return -EHOSTUNREACH, if @p remote or remote end point of @p sock is not * reachable. * @return -EINVAL, if sock_udp_ep_t::addr of @p remote is an invalid address. * @return -EINVAL, if sock_udp_ep_t::netif of @p remote is not a valid * interface or contradicts the given local interface (i.e. * neither the local end point of `sock` nor remote are assigned to * `SOCK_ADDR_ANY_NETIF` but are nevertheless different. * @return -EINVAL, if sock_udp_ep_t::port of @p remote is 0. * @return -ENOMEM, if no memory was available to send @p data. * @return -ENOTCONN, if `remote == NULL`, but @p sock has no remote end point. */ ssize_t sock_udp_send(sock_udp_t *sock, const void *data, size_t len, const sock_udp_ep_t *remote); #include "sock_types.h" #ifdef __cplusplus } #endif #endif /* NET_SOCK_UDP_H_ */ /** @} */