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Network socket

A network socket is a software structure within a network node of a computer network that serves as an endpoint for sending and receiving data across the network. The structure and properties of a socket are defined by an application programming interface (API) for the networking architecture. Sockets are created only during the lifetime of a process of an application running in the node.

Because of the standardization of the TCP/IP protocols in the development of the Internet, the term network socket is most commonly used in the context of the Internet protocol suite, and is therefore often also referred to as Internet socket. In this context, a socket is externally identified to other hosts by its socket address, which is the triad of transport protocol, IP address, and port number.

The term socket is also used for the software endpoint of node-internal inter-process communication (IPC), which often uses the same API as a network socket.

Use

The use of the term socket in software is analogous to the function of an electrical female connector, a device in hardware for communication between nodes interconnected with an electrical cable. Similarly, the term port is used for external physical endpoints at a node or device.

The application programming interface (API) for the network protocol stack creates a handle for each socket created by an application, commonly referred to as a socket descriptor. In Unix-like operating systems, this descriptor is a type of file descriptor. It is stored by the application process for use with every read and write operation on the communication channel.

At the time of creation with the API, a network socket is bound to the combination of a type of network protocol to be used for transmissions, a network address of the host, and a port number. Ports are numbered resources that represent another type of software structure of the node. They are used as service types, and, once created by a process, serve as an externally (from the network) addressable location component, so that other hosts may establish connections.

Network sockets may be dedicated for persistent connections for communication between two nodes, or they may participate in connectionless and multicast communications.

In practice, due to the proliferation of the TCP/IP protocols in use on the Internet, the term network socket usually refers to use with the Internet Protocol (IP). It is therefore often also called Internet socket.

Socket addresses

An application can communicate with a remote process by exchanging data with TCP/IP by knowing the combination of protocol type, IP address, and port number. This combination is often known as a socket address. It is the network-facing access handle to the network socket. The remote process establishes a network socket in its own instance of the protocol stack, and uses the networking API to connect to the application, presenting its own socket address for use by the application.

Implementation

A protocol stack, usually provided by the operating system (rather than as a separate library, for instance), is a set of services that allow processes to communicate over a network using the protocols that the stack implements. The operating system forwards the payload of incoming IP packets to the corresponding application by extracting the socket address information from the IP and transport protocol headers and stripping the headers from the application data.

The application programming interface (API) that programs use to communicate with the protocol stack, using network sockets, is called a socket API. Development of application programs that utilize this API is called socket programming or network programming. Internet socket APIs are usually based on the Berkeley sockets standard. In the Berkeley sockets standard, sockets are a form of file descriptor, due to the Unix philosophy that "everything is a file", and the analogies between sockets and files. Both have functions to read, write, open, and close. In practice the differences strain the analogy, and different interfaces (send and receive) are used on a socket. In inter-process communication, each end generally has its own socket.

In the standard Internet protocols TCP and UDP, a socket address is the combination of an IP address and a port number, much like one end of a telephone connection is the combination of a phone number and a particular extension. Sockets need not have a source address, for example, for only sending data, but if a program binds a socket to a source address, the socket can be used to receive data sent to that address. Based on this address, Internet sockets deliver incoming data packets to the appropriate application process.

Socket often refers specifically to an internet socket or TCP socket. An internet socket is minimally characterized by the following:

  • local socket address, consisting of the local IP address and (for TCP and UDP, but not IP) a port number
  • protocol: A transport protocol, e.g., TCP, UDP, raw IP. This means that (local or remote) endpoints with TCP port 53 and UDP port 53 are distinct sockets, while IP does not have ports.
  • A socket that has been connected to another socket, e.g., during the establishment of a TCP connection, also has a remote socket address.

Definition

The distinctions between a socket (internal representation), socket descriptor (abstract identifier), and socket address (public address) are subtle, and these are not always distinguished in everyday usage. Further, specific definitions of a socket differ between authors. In IETF Request for Comments, Internet Standards, in many textbooks, as well as in this article, the term socket refers to an entity that is uniquely identified by the socket number. In other textbooks,[1] the term socket refers to a local socket address, i.e. a "combination of an IP address and a port number". In the original definition of socket given in RFC 147,[2] as it was related to the ARPA network in 1971, "the socket is specified as a 32 bit number with even sockets identifying receiving sockets and odd sockets identifying sending sockets." Today, however, socket communications are bidirectional.

Within the operating system and the application that created a socket, a socket is referred to by a unique integer value called a socket descriptor.

Tools

On Unix-like operating systems and Microsoft Windows, the command-line tools netstat or ss[3] are used to list established sockets and related information.

Example

This example, modeled according to the Berkeley socket interface, sends the string "Hello, world!" via TCP to port 80 of the host with address 1.2.3.4. It illustrates the creation of a socket (getSocket), connecting it to the remote host, sending the string, and finally closing the socket:

Socket mysocket = getSocket(type = "TCP") connect(mysocket, address = "1.2.3.4", port = "80") send(mysocket, "Hello, world!") close(mysocket) 

Types

Several types of Internet socket are available:

Datagram sockets
Connectionless sockets, which use User Datagram Protocol (UDP).[4] Each packet sent or received on a datagram socket is individually addressed and routed. Order and reliability are not guaranteed with datagram sockets, so multiple packets sent from one machine or process to another may arrive in any order or might not arrive at all. Special configuration may be required to send broadcasts on a datagram socket.[5] In order to receive broadcast packets, a datagram socket should not be bound to a specific address, though in some implementations, broadcast packets may also be received when a datagram socket is bound to a specific address.[6]
Stream sockets
Connection-oriented sockets, which use Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) or Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP). A stream socket provides a sequenced and unique flow of error-free data without record boundaries, with well-defined mechanisms for creating and destroying connections and reporting errors. A stream socket transmits data reliably, in order, and with out-of-band capabilities. On the Internet, stream sockets are typically implemented using TCP so that applications can run across any networks using TCP/IP protocol.
Raw sockets
Allow direct sending and receiving of IP packets without any protocol-specific transport layer formatting. With other types of sockets, the payload is automatically encapsulated according to the chosen transport layer protocol (e.g. TCP, UDP), and the socket user is unaware of the existence of protocol headers that are broadcast with the payload. When reading from a raw socket, the headers are usually included. When transmitting packets from a raw socket, the automatic addition of a header is optional.
Most socket application programming interfaces (APIs), for example, those based on Berkeley sockets, support raw sockets. Windows XP was released in 2001 with raw socket support implemented in the Winsock interface, but three years later, Microsoft limited Winsock's raw socket support because of security concerns.[7]
Raw sockets are used in security-related applications like Nmap. One use case for raw sockets is the implementation of new transport-layer protocols in user space.[8] Raw sockets are typically available in network equipment, and used for routing protocols such as the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and Open Shortest Path First (OSPF), and in the Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) used, among other things, by the ping utility.[9]

Other socket types are implemented over other transport protocols, such as Systems Network Architecture[10] and Unix domain sockets for internal inter-process communication.

Socket states in the client-server model

Computer processes that provide application services are referred to as servers, and create sockets on startup that are in the listening state. These sockets are waiting for initiatives from client programs.

A TCP server may serve several clients concurrently by creating a unique dedicated socket for each client connection in a new child process or processing thread for each client. These are in the established state when a socket-to-socket virtual connection or virtual circuit (VC), also known as a TCP session, is established with the remote socket, providing a duplex byte stream.

A server may create several concurrently established TCP sockets with the same local port number and local IP address, each mapped to its own server-child process, serving its own client process. They are treated as different sockets by the operating system since the remote socket address (the client IP address or port number) is different; i.e. since they have different socket pair tuples.

UDP sockets do not have an established state, because the protocol is connectionless. A UDP server process handles incoming datagrams from all remote clients sequentially through the same socket. UDP sockets are not identified by the remote address, but only by the local address, although each message has an associated remote address that can be retrieved from each datagram with the networking application programming interface (API).

Socket pairs

Communicating local and remote sockets are called socket pairs. Each socket pair is described by a unique 4-tuple consisting of source and destination IP addresses and port numbers, i.e. of local and remote socket addresses.[11][12] As discussed above, in the TCP case, a socket pair is associated on each end of the connection with a unique 4-tuple.

History

The term socket dates to the publication of RFC 147 in 1971, when it was used in the ARPANET. Most modern implementations of sockets are based on Berkeley sockets (1983), and other stacks such as Winsock (1991). The Berkeley sockets API in the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD), originated with the 4.2BSD Unix operating system 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.

In c. 1987, AT&T introduced the STREAMS-based Transport Layer Interface (TLI) in UNIX System V Release 3 (SVR3).[13] and continued into Release 4 (SVR4).[14]

Other early implementations were written for TOPS-20,[15] MVS,[15] VM,[15] IBM-DOS (PCIP).[15][16]

Sockets in network equipment

The socket is primarily a concept used in the transport layer of the Internet protocol suite or session layer of the OSI model. Networking equipment such as routers, which operate at the internet layer, and switches, which operate at the link layer, do not require implementations of the transport layer. However, stateful network firewalls, network address translators, and proxy servers keep track of active socket pairs. In multilayer switches and quality of service (QoS) support in routers, packet flows may be identified by extracting information about the socket pairs.

Raw sockets are typically available in network equipment and are used for routing protocols such as IGRP and OSPF, and for Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP).

See also

References

  1. ^ Cisco Networking Academy Program, CCNA 1 and 2 Companion Guide Revised Third Edition, P.480, ISBN 1-58713-150-1
  2. ^ RFC 147
  3. ^ Jack Wallen (2019-01-22). "An Introduction to the ss Command".
  4. ^ V. S. Bagad, I. A. Dhotre (2008), Computer Networks (5th revised edition, 2010 ed.), Technical Publications Pune, p. 52
  5. ^ SO_BROADCAST, Microsoft, retrieved 2019-12-12
  6. ^ Class DatagramSocket, Oracle, retrieved 2019-12-12
  7. ^ Ian Griffiths for IanG on Tap. 12 August 2004. Raw Sockets Gone in XP SP2
  8. ^ "raw(7): IPv4 raw sockets - Linux man page". die.net.
  9. ^ "Raw IP Networking FAQ". faqs.org.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-05-03. Retrieved 2006-09-07.
  11. ^ books.google.com - UNIX Network Programming: The sockets networking API
  12. ^ books.google.com - Designing BSD Rootkits: An Introduction to Kernel Hacking
  13. ^ (Goodheart 1994, p. 11)
  14. ^ (Goodheart 1994, p. 17)
  15. ^ a b c d historyofcomputercommunications.info - Book: 9.8 TCP/IP and XNS 1981 - 1983
  16. ^ The Desktop Computer as a Network Participant.pdf 1985

Further reading

  • Jones, Anthony; Ohlund, Jim (2002). Network Programming for Microsoft Windows. ISBN 0-7356-1579-9.

External links

  • How sockets work - IBM information center
  • [dead link]
  • Beej's Guide to Network Programming
  • Java Tutorials: Networking basics
  • Net::RawIP; module for Perl applications. Created by .
  • SOCK_RAW Demystified: article describing inner workings of Raw Sockets
  • C language examples of Linux raw sockets for IPv4 and IPv6 - David Buchan's C language examples of IPv4 and IPv6 raw sockets for Linux.

network, socket, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Network socket news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message A network socket is a software structure within a network node of a computer network that serves as an endpoint for sending and receiving data across the network The structure and properties of a socket are defined by an application programming interface API for the networking architecture Sockets are created only during the lifetime of a process of an application running in the node Because of the standardization of the TCP IP protocols in the development of the Internet the term network socket is most commonly used in the context of the Internet protocol suite and is therefore often also referred to as Internet socket In this context a socket is externally identified to other hosts by its socket address which is the triad of transport protocol IP address and port number The term socket is also used for the software endpoint of node internal inter process communication IPC which often uses the same API as a network socket Contents 1 Use 2 Socket addresses 3 Implementation 4 Definition 5 Tools 6 Example 7 Types 8 Socket states in the client server model 9 Socket pairs 10 History 11 Sockets in network equipment 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksUse EditThe use of the term socket in software is analogous to the function of an electrical female connector a device in hardware for communication between nodes interconnected with an electrical cable Similarly the term port is used for external physical endpoints at a node or device The application programming interface API for the network protocol stack creates a handle for each socket created by an application commonly referred to as a socket descriptor In Unix like operating systems this descriptor is a type of file descriptor It is stored by the application process for use with every read and write operation on the communication channel At the time of creation with the API a network socket is bound to the combination of a type of network protocol to be used for transmissions a network address of the host and a port number Ports are numbered resources that represent another type of software structure of the node They are used as service types and once created by a process serve as an externally from the network addressable location component so that other hosts may establish connections Network sockets may be dedicated for persistent connections for communication between two nodes or they may participate in connectionless and multicast communications In practice due to the proliferation of the TCP IP protocols in use on the Internet the term network socket usually refers to use with the Internet Protocol IP It is therefore often also called Internet socket Socket addresses EditAn application can communicate with a remote process by exchanging data with TCP IP by knowing the combination of protocol type IP address and port number This combination is often known as a socket address It is the network facing access handle to the network socket The remote process establishes a network socket in its own instance of the protocol stack and uses the networking API to connect to the application presenting its own socket address for use by the application Implementation EditA protocol stack usually provided by the operating system rather than as a separate library for instance is a set of services that allow processes to communicate over a network using the protocols that the stack implements The operating system forwards the payload of incoming IP packets to the corresponding application by extracting the socket address information from the IP and transport protocol headers and stripping the headers from the application data The application programming interface API that programs use to communicate with the protocol stack using network sockets is called a socket API Development of application programs that utilize this API is called socket programming or network programming Internet socket APIs are usually based on the Berkeley sockets standard In the Berkeley sockets standard sockets are a form of file descriptor due to the Unix philosophy that everything is a file and the analogies between sockets and files Both have functions to read write open and close In practice the differences strain the analogy and different interfaces send and receive are used on a socket In inter process communication each end generally has its own socket In the standard Internet protocols TCP and UDP a socket address is the combination of an IP address and a port number much like one end of a telephone connection is the combination of a phone number and a particular extension Sockets need not have a source address for example for only sending data but if a program binds a socket to a source address the socket can be used to receive data sent to that address Based on this address Internet sockets deliver incoming data packets to the appropriate application process Socket often refers specifically to an internet socket or TCP socket An internet socket is minimally characterized by the following local socket address consisting of the local IP address and for TCP and UDP but not IP a port number protocol A transport protocol e g TCP UDP raw IP This means that local or remote endpoints with TCP port 53 and UDP port 53 are distinct sockets while IP does not have ports A socket that has been connected to another socket e g during the establishment of a TCP connection also has a remote socket address Definition EditThe distinctions between a socket internal representation socket descriptor abstract identifier and socket address public address are subtle and these are not always distinguished in everyday usage Further specific definitions of a socket differ between authors In IETF Request for Comments Internet Standards in many textbooks as well as in this article the term socket refers to an entity that is uniquely identified by the socket number In other textbooks 1 the term socket refers to a local socket address i e a combination of an IP address and a port number In the original definition of socket given in RFC 147 2 as it was related to the ARPA network in 1971 the socket is specified as a 32 bit number with even sockets identifying receiving sockets and odd sockets identifying sending sockets Today however socket communications are bidirectional Within the operating system and the application that created a socket a socket is referred to by a unique integer value called a socket descriptor Tools EditOn Unix like operating systems and Microsoft Windows the command line tools netstat or ss 3 are used to list established sockets and related information Example EditThis example modeled according to the Berkeley socket interface sends the string Hello world via TCP to port 80 of the host with address 1 2 3 4 It illustrates the creation of a socket getSocket connecting it to the remote host sending the string and finally closing the socket Socket mysocket getSocket type TCP connect mysocket address 1 2 3 4 port 80 send mysocket Hello world close mysocket Types EditSeveral types of Internet socket are available Datagram sockets Connectionless sockets which use User Datagram Protocol UDP 4 Each packet sent or received on a datagram socket is individually addressed and routed Order and reliability are not guaranteed with datagram sockets so multiple packets sent from one machine or process to another may arrive in any order or might not arrive at all Special configuration may be required to send broadcasts on a datagram socket 5 In order to receive broadcast packets a datagram socket should not be bound to a specific address though in some implementations broadcast packets may also be received when a datagram socket is bound to a specific address 6 Stream sockets Connection oriented sockets which use Transmission Control Protocol TCP Stream Control Transmission Protocol SCTP or Datagram Congestion Control Protocol DCCP A stream socket provides a sequenced and unique flow of error free data without record boundaries with well defined mechanisms for creating and destroying connections and reporting errors A stream socket transmits data reliably in order and with out of band capabilities On the Internet stream sockets are typically implemented using TCP so that applications can run across any networks using TCP IP protocol Raw sockets Allow direct sending and receiving of IP packets without any protocol specific transport layer formatting With other types of sockets the payload is automatically encapsulated according to the chosen transport layer protocol e g TCP UDP and the socket user is unaware of the existence of protocol headers that are broadcast with the payload When reading from a raw socket the headers are usually included When transmitting packets from a raw socket the automatic addition of a header is optional Most socket application programming interfaces APIs for example those based on Berkeley sockets support raw sockets Windows XP was released in 2001 with raw socket support implemented in the Winsock interface but three years later Microsoft limited Winsock s raw socket support because of security concerns 7 Raw sockets are used in security related applications like Nmap One use case for raw sockets is the implementation of new transport layer protocols in user space 8 Raw sockets are typically available in network equipment and used for routing protocols such as the Internet Group Management Protocol IGMP and Open Shortest Path First OSPF and in the Internet Control Message Protocol ICMP used among other things by the ping utility 9 Other socket types are implemented over other transport protocols such as Systems Network Architecture 10 and Unix domain sockets for internal inter process communication Socket states in the client server model EditComputer processes that provide application services are referred to as servers and create sockets on startup that are in the listening state These sockets are waiting for initiatives from client programs A TCP server may serve several clients concurrently by creating a unique dedicated socket for each client connection in a new child process or processing thread for each client These are in the established state when a socket to socket virtual connection or virtual circuit VC also known as a TCP session is established with the remote socket providing a duplex byte stream A server may create several concurrently established TCP sockets with the same local port number and local IP address each mapped to its own server child process serving its own client process They are treated as different sockets by the operating system since the remote socket address the client IP address or port number is different i e since they have different socket pair tuples UDP sockets do not have an established state because the protocol is connectionless A UDP server process handles incoming datagrams from all remote clients sequentially through the same socket UDP sockets are not identified by the remote address but only by the local address although each message has an associated remote address that can be retrieved from each datagram with the networking application programming interface API Socket pairs EditCommunicating local and remote sockets are called socket pairs Each socket pair is described by a unique 4 tuple consisting of source and destination IP addresses and port numbers i e of local and remote socket addresses 11 12 As discussed above in the TCP case a socket pair is associated on each end of the connection with a unique 4 tuple History EditThe term socket dates to the publication of RFC 147 in 1971 when it was used in the ARPANET Most modern implementations of sockets are based on Berkeley sockets 1983 and other stacks such as Winsock 1991 The Berkeley sockets API in the Berkeley Software Distribution BSD originated with the 4 2BSD Unix operating system 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 amp T s copyright protected Unix In c 1987 AT amp T introduced the STREAMS based Transport Layer Interface TLI in UNIX System V Release 3 SVR3 13 and continued into Release 4 SVR4 14 Other early implementations were written for TOPS 20 15 MVS 15 VM 15 IBM DOS PCIP 15 16 Sockets in network equipment EditThe socket is primarily a concept used in the transport layer of the Internet protocol suite or session layer of the OSI model Networking equipment such as routers which operate at the internet layer and switches which operate at the link layer do not require implementations of the transport layer However stateful network firewalls network address translators and proxy servers keep track of active socket pairs In multilayer switches and quality of service QoS support in routers packet flows may be identified by extracting information about the socket pairs Raw sockets are typically available in network equipment and are used for routing protocols such as IGRP and OSPF and for Internet Control Message Protocol ICMP See also EditList of TCP and UDP port numbers Promiscuous traffic WebSocketReferences Edit Cisco Networking Academy Program CCNA 1 and 2 Companion Guide Revised Third Edition P 480 ISBN 1 58713 150 1 RFC 147 Jack Wallen 2019 01 22 An Introduction to the ss Command V S Bagad I A Dhotre 2008 Computer Networks 5th revised edition 2010 ed Technical Publications Pune p 52 SO BROADCAST Microsoft retrieved 2019 12 12 Class DatagramSocket Oracle retrieved 2019 12 12 Ian Griffiths for IanG on Tap 12 August 2004 Raw Sockets Gone in XP SP2 raw 7 IPv4 raw sockets Linux man page die net Raw IP Networking FAQ faqs org www 306 ibm com AnyNet Guide to Sockets over SNA Archived from the original on 2008 05 03 Retrieved 2006 09 07 books google com UNIX Network Programming The sockets networking API books google com Designing BSD Rootkits An Introduction to Kernel Hacking Goodheart 1994 p 11 harv error no target CITEREFGoodheart1994 help Goodheart 1994 p 17 harv error no target CITEREFGoodheart1994 help a b c d historyofcomputercommunications info Book 9 8 TCP IP and XNS 1981 1983 The Desktop Computer as a Network Participant pdf 1985Further reading EditJones Anthony Ohlund Jim 2002 Network Programming for Microsoft Windows ISBN 0 7356 1579 9 External links EditHow sockets work IBM information center Server Programming with TCP IP Sockets dead link Beej s Guide to Network Programming Java Tutorials Networking basics Net RawIP module for Perl applications Created by Sergey Kolychev SOCK RAW Demystified article describing inner workings of Raw Sockets C language examples of Linux raw sockets for IPv4 and IPv6 David Buchan s C language examples of IPv4 and IPv6 raw sockets for Linux Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Network socket amp oldid 1135909527, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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