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svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/branches/p3yk ................ r55837 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-08 16:04:42 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 2 lines PEP 3119 -- the abc module. ................ r55838 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-08 17:38:55 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Implement part of PEP 3119 -- One Trick Ponies. ................ r55847 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-09 08:28:06 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Different way to do one trick ponies, allowing registration (per PEP strawman). ................ r55849 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-09 18:06:38 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Make sure that the magic looking for __hash__ (etc.) doesn't apply to real subclasses of Hashable. ................ r55852 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-10 08:29:51 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Add some more examples, e.g. generators and dict views. ................ r55853 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-10 08:31:59 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines keys() and items() *are* containers -- just values() isn't. ................ r55864 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-10 15:29:40 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines PEP 3127: new octal literals, binary literals. ................ r55865 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-10 15:31:37 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Some octal literal fixes in Tools. ................ r55866 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-10 15:37:43 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Tokenizer changes for PEP 3127. ................ r55867 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-10 15:37:55 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Some docs for PEP 3127. ................ r55868 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-10 15:44:39 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Missed a place in intobject.c. Is that used anymore anyway? ................ r55871 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 18:31:49 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 182 lines Merged revisions 55729-55868 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r55731 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-01 00:29:12 -0700 (Fri, 01 Jun 2007) | 7 lines SF 1668596/1720897: distutils now copies data files even if package_dir is empty. This needs to be backported. I'm too tired tonight. It would be great if someone backports this if the buildbots are ok with it. Otherwise, I will try to get to it tomorrow. ........ r55732 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-01 04:33:33 -0700 (Fri, 01 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Bug #1722484: remove docstrings again when running with -OO. ........ r55735 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-01 12:20:27 -0700 (Fri, 01 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Fix wrong issue number. ........ r55739 | brett.cannon | 2007-06-01 20:02:29 -0700 (Fri, 01 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Have configure raise an error when building on AtheOS. Code specific to AtheOS will be removed in Python 2.7. ........ r55746 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-02 11:33:53 -0700 (Sat, 02 Jun 2007) | 1 line Update expected birthday of 2.6 ........ r55751 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-03 13:32:50 -0700 (Sun, 03 Jun 2007) | 10 lines Backout the original 'fix' to 1721309 which had no effect. Different versions of Berkeley DB handle this differently. The comments and bug report should have the details. Memory is allocated in 4.4 (and presumably earlier), but not in 4.5. Thus 4.5 has the free error, but not earlier versions. Mostly update comments, plus make the free conditional. This fix was already applied to the 2.5 branch. ........ r55752 | brett.cannon | 2007-06-03 16:13:41 -0700 (Sun, 03 Jun 2007) | 6 lines Make _strptime.TimeRE().pattern() use ``\s+`` for matching whitespace instead of ``\s*``. This prevents patterns from "stealing" bits from other patterns in order to make a match work. Closes bug #1730389. Will be backported. ........ r55766 | hyeshik.chang | 2007-06-05 11:16:52 -0700 (Tue, 05 Jun 2007) | 4 lines Fix build on FreeBSD. Bluetooth HCI API in FreeBSD is quite different from Linux's. Just fix the build for now but the code doesn't support the complete capability of HCI on FreeBSD yet. ........ r55770 | hyeshik.chang | 2007-06-05 11:58:51 -0700 (Tue, 05 Jun 2007) | 4 lines Bug #1728403: Fix a bug that CJKCodecs StreamReader hangs when it reads a file that ends with incomplete sequence and sizehint argument for .read() is specified. ........ r55775 | hyeshik.chang | 2007-06-05 12:28:15 -0700 (Tue, 05 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Fix for Windows: close a temporary file before trying to delete it. ........ r55783 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-05 14:24:47 -0700 (Tue, 05 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Patch by Tim Delany (missing DECREF). SF #1731330. ........ r55785 | collin.winter | 2007-06-05 17:17:35 -0700 (Tue, 05 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Patch #1731049: make threading.py use a proper "raise" when checking internal state, rather than assert statements (which get stripped out by -O). ........ r55786 | facundo.batista | 2007-06-06 08:13:37 -0700 (Wed, 06 Jun 2007) | 4 lines FTP.ntransfercmd method now uses create_connection when passive, using the timeout received in connection time. ........ r55792 | facundo.batista | 2007-06-06 10:15:23 -0700 (Wed, 06 Jun 2007) | 7 lines Added an optional timeout parameter to function urllib2.urlopen, with tests in test_urllib2net.py (must have network resource enabled to execute them). Also modified test_urllib2.py because testing mock classes must take it into acount. Docs are also updated. ........ r55793 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-06 13:19:19 -0700 (Wed, 06 Jun 2007) | 1 line Build _ctypes and _ctypes_test in the ReleaseAMD64 configuration. ........ r55802 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-07 06:23:24 -0700 (Thu, 07 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Disallow function calls like foo(None=1). Backport from py3k rev. 55708 by Guido. ........ r55804 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-07 06:30:24 -0700 (Thu, 07 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Make reindent.py executable. ........ r55805 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-07 06:34:10 -0700 (Thu, 07 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Patch #1667860: Fix UnboundLocalError in urllib2. ........ r55821 | kristjan.jonsson | 2007-06-07 16:53:49 -0700 (Thu, 07 Jun 2007) | 1 line Fixing changes to getbuildinfo.c that broke linux builds ........ r55828 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-08 09:10:27 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 1 line Make this test work with older Python releases where struct has no 't' format character. ........ r55829 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-06-08 10:29:20 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Bug #1733488: Fix compilation of bufferobject.c on AIX. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r55831 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-08 11:20:09 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 2 lines [ 1715718 ] x64 clean compile patch for _ctypes, by Kristj?n Valur with small modifications. ........ r55832 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-08 12:01:06 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 1 line Fix gcc warnings intruduced by passing Py_ssize_t to PyErr_Format calls. ........ r55833 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-08 12:08:31 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Fix wrong documentation, and correct the punktuation. Closes [1700455]. ........ r55834 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-08 12:14:23 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 1 line Fix warnings by using proper function prototype. ........ r55839 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-08 20:36:34 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 7 lines Prevent expandtabs() on string and unicode objects from causing a segfault when a large width is passed on 32-bit platforms. Found by Google. It would be good for people to review this especially carefully and verify I don't have an off by one error and there is no other way to cause overflow. ........ r55841 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-08 21:48:22 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 1 line Use macro version of GET_SIZE to avoid Coverity warning (#150) about a possible error. ........ r55842 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-06-09 00:42:52 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Patch #1733960: Allow T_LONGLONG to accept ints. Will backport to 2.5. ........ r55843 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-06-09 00:58:05 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Fix Windows build. ........ r55845 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-06-09 03:10:26 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Provide LLONG_MAX for S390. ........ r55854 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-10 08:59:17 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 4 lines First version of build scripts for Windows/AMD64 (no external components are built yet, and 'kill_python' is disabled). ........ r55855 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-10 10:55:51 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 3 lines For now, disable the _bsddb, _sqlite3, _ssl, _testcapi, _tkinter modules in the ReleaseAMD64 configuration because they do not compile. ........ r55856 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-10 11:27:54 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line Need to set the environment variables, otherwise devenv.com is not found. ........ r55860 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-10 14:01:17 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line Revert commit 55855. ........ ................ r55880 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 22:07:36 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 5 lines Fix the refleak counter on test_collections. The ABC metaclass creates a registry which must be cleared on each run. Otherwise, there *seem* to be refleaks when there really aren't any. (The class is held within the registry even though it's no longer needed.) ................ r55884 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 22:46:33 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line These tests have been removed, so they are no longer needed here ................ r55886 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-11 00:26:37 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Optimize access to True and False in the compiler (if True) and the peepholer (LOAD_NAME True). ................ r55905 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-11 10:02:26 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 5 lines Remove __oct__ and __hex__ and use __index__ for converting non-ints before formatting in a base. Add a bin() builtin. ................ r55906 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-11 10:04:44 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 2 lines int(x, 0) does not "guess". ................ r55907 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-11 10:05:47 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Add a comment to explain that nb_oct and nb_hex are nonfunctional. ................ r55908 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 10:49:18 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Get rid of unused imports and comment. ................ r55910 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 13:05:17 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 2 lines _Abstract.__new__ now requires either no arguments or __init__ overridden. ................ r55911 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 13:07:49 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 7 lines Move the collections ABCs to a separate file, _abcoll.py, in order to avoid needing to import _collections.so during the bootstrap (this will become apparent in the next submit of os.py). Add (plain and mutable) ABCs for Set, Mapping, Sequence. ................ r55912 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 13:09:31 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Rewrite the _Environ class to use the new collections ABCs. ................ r55913 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 13:59:45 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 72 lines Merged revisions 55869-55912 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r55869 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 17:42:11 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line Add Atul Varma for patch # 1667860 ........ r55870 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 18:22:03 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line Ignore valgrind problems on Ubuntu from ld ........ r55872 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 18:48:46 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Ignore config.status.lineno which seems new (new autoconf?) ........ r55873 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 19:14:39 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line Prevent these tests from running on Win64 since they don\'t apply there either ........ r55874 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 19:16:10 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 5 lines Fix a bug when there was a newline in the string expandtabs was called on. This also catches another condition that can overflow. Will backport. ........ r55879 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 21:52:37 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line Prevent hang if the port cannot be opened. ........ r55881 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 22:28:45 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 4 lines Add all of the distuils modules that don't seem to have explicit tests. :-( Move an import in mworkscompiler so that this module can be imported on any platform. Hopefully this works on all platforms. ........ r55882 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 22:35:10 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 4 lines SF #1734732, lower case the module names per PEP 8. Will backport. ........ r55885 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 23:16:48 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 4 lines Not sure why this only fails sometimes on Unix machines. Better to disable it and only import msvccompiler on Windows since that's the only place it can work anyways. ........ r55887 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-11 00:29:43 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 4 lines Bug #1734723: Fix repr.Repr() so it doesn't ignore the maxtuple attribute. Will backport ........ r55889 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-11 00:36:24 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 1 line Reflow long line ........ r55896 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-11 08:58:33 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Use "O&" in calls to PyArg_Parse when we need a 'void*' instead of "k" or "K" codes. ........ r55901 | facundo.batista | 2007-06-11 09:27:08 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 5 lines Added versionchanged flag to all the methods which received a new optional timeout parameter, and a versionadded flag to the socket.create_connection function. ........ ................ r55914 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 14:19:50 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 3 lines New super() implementation, for PEP 3135 (though the PEP is not yet updated to this design, and small tweaks may still be made later). ................ r55923 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 21:15:24 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 4 lines I'm guessing this module broke when Neal ripped out the types module -- it used 'list' both as a local variable and as the built-in list type. Renamed the local variable since that was easier. ................ r55924 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 21:20:05 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 5 lines Change all occurrences of super(<thisclass>, <firstarg>) to super(). Seems to have worked, all the tests still pass. Exception: test_descr and test_descrtut, which have tons of these and are there to test the various usages. ................ r55939 | collin.winter | 2007-06-12 13:57:33 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 1 line Patch #1735485: remove StandardError from the exception hierarchy. ................ r55954 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-12 21:56:32 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 51 lines Merged revisions 55913-55950 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r55926 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2007-06-12 02:09:58 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Apply patch #1734945 to support TurboLinux as distribution. ........ r55927 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2007-06-12 02:26:49 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Add patch #1726668: Windows Vista support. ........ r55929 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 08:36:22 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 1 line Checkout, but do not yet try to build, exernal sources. ........ r55930 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 09:08:27 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 6 lines Add bufferoverflowU.lib to the libraries needed by _ssl (is this the right thing to do?). Set the /XP64 /RETAIL build enviroment in the makefile when building ReleaseAMD64. ........ r55931 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 09:23:19 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 5 lines Revert this change, since it breaks the win32 build: Add bufferoverflowU.lib to the libraries needed by _ssl (is this the right thing to do?). ........ r55934 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 10:28:31 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Specify the bufferoverflowU.lib to the makefile on the command line (for ReleaseAMD64 builds). ........ r55937 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 12:02:59 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Add bufferoverflowU.lib to PCBuild\_bsddb.vcproj. Build sqlite3.dll and bsddb. ........ r55938 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 12:56:12 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Don't rebuild Berkeley DB if not needed (this was committed by accident). ........ r55948 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-06-12 20:42:19 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 3 lines Provide PY_LLONG_MAX on all systems having long long. Will backport to 2.5. ........ ................ r55959 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-13 09:22:41 -0700 (Wed, 13 Jun 2007) | 2 lines Fix a compilation warning. ................
921 lines
37 KiB
TeX
921 lines
37 KiB
TeX
\section{\module{socket} ---
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Low-level networking interface}
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\declaremodule{builtin}{socket}
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\modulesynopsis{Low-level networking interface.}
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This module provides access to the BSD \emph{socket} interface.
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It is available on all modern \UNIX{} systems, Windows, MacOS, BeOS,
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OS/2, and probably additional platforms. \note{Some behavior may be
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platform dependent, since calls are made to the operating system socket APIs.}
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For an introduction to socket programming (in C), see the following
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papers: \citetitle{An Introductory 4.3BSD Interprocess Communication
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Tutorial}, by Stuart Sechrest and \citetitle{An Advanced 4.3BSD
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Interprocess Communication Tutorial}, by Samuel J. Leffler et al,
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both in the \citetitle{UNIX Programmer's Manual, Supplementary Documents 1}
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(sections PS1:7 and PS1:8). The platform-specific reference material
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for the various socket-related system calls are also a valuable source
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of information on the details of socket semantics. For \UNIX, refer
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to the manual pages; for Windows, see the WinSock (or Winsock 2)
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specification.
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For IPv6-ready APIs, readers may want to refer to \rfc{2553} titled
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\citetitle{Basic Socket Interface Extensions for IPv6}.
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The Python interface is a straightforward transliteration of the
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\UNIX{} system call and library interface for sockets to Python's
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object-oriented style: the \function{socket()} function returns a
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\dfn{socket object}\obindex{socket} whose methods implement the
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various socket system calls. Parameter types are somewhat
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higher-level than in the C interface: as with \method{read()} and
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\method{write()} operations on Python files, buffer allocation on
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receive operations is automatic, and buffer length is implicit on send
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operations.
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Socket addresses are represented as follows:
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A single string is used for the \constant{AF_UNIX} address family.
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A pair \code{(\var{host}, \var{port})} is used for the
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\constant{AF_INET} address family, where \var{host} is a string
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representing either a hostname in Internet domain notation like
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\code{'daring.cwi.nl'} or an IPv4 address like \code{'100.50.200.5'},
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and \var{port} is an integral port number.
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For \constant{AF_INET6} address family, a four-tuple
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\code{(\var{host}, \var{port}, \var{flowinfo}, \var{scopeid})} is
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used, where \var{flowinfo} and \var{scopeid} represents
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\code{sin6_flowinfo} and \code{sin6_scope_id} member in
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\constant{struct sockaddr_in6} in C.
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For \module{socket} module methods, \var{flowinfo} and \var{scopeid}
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can be omitted just for backward compatibility. Note, however,
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omission of \var{scopeid} can cause problems in manipulating scoped
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IPv6 addresses. Other address families are currently not supported.
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The address format required by a particular socket object is
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automatically selected based on the address family specified when the
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socket object was created.
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For IPv4 addresses, two special forms are accepted instead of a host
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address: the empty string represents \constant{INADDR_ANY}, and the string
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\code{'<broadcast>'} represents \constant{INADDR_BROADCAST}.
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The behavior is not available for IPv6 for backward compatibility,
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therefore, you may want to avoid these if you intend to support IPv6 with
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your Python programs.
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If you use a hostname in the \var{host} portion of IPv4/v6 socket
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address, the program may show a nondeterministic behavior, as Python
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uses the first address returned from the DNS resolution. The socket
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address will be resolved differently into an actual IPv4/v6 address,
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depending on the results from DNS resolution and/or the host
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configuration. For deterministic behavior use a numeric address in
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\var{host} portion.
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\versionadded[AF_NETLINK sockets are represented as
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pairs \code{\var{pid}, \var{groups}}]{2.5}
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All errors raise exceptions. The normal exceptions for invalid
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argument types and out-of-memory conditions can be raised; errors
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related to socket or address semantics raise the error
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\exception{socket.error}.
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Non-blocking mode is supported through
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\method{setblocking()}. A generalization of this based on timeouts
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is supported through \method{settimeout()}.
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The module \module{socket} exports the following constants and functions:
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\begin{excdesc}{error}
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This exception is raised for socket-related errors.
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The accompanying value is either a string telling what went wrong or a
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pair \code{(\var{errno}, \var{string})}
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representing an error returned by a system
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call, similar to the value accompanying \exception{os.error}.
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See the module \refmodule{errno}\refbimodindex{errno}, which contains
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names for the error codes defined by the underlying operating system.
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\end{excdesc}
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\begin{excdesc}{herror}
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This exception is raised for address-related errors, i.e. for
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functions that use \var{h_errno} in the C API, including
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\function{gethostbyname_ex()} and \function{gethostbyaddr()}.
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The accompanying value is a pair \code{(\var{h_errno}, \var{string})}
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representing an error returned by a library call. \var{string}
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represents the description of \var{h_errno}, as returned by
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the \cfunction{hstrerror()} C function.
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\end{excdesc}
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\begin{excdesc}{gaierror}
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This exception is raised for address-related errors, for
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\function{getaddrinfo()} and \function{getnameinfo()}.
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The accompanying value is a pair \code{(\var{error}, \var{string})}
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representing an error returned by a library call.
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\var{string} represents the description of \var{error}, as returned
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by the \cfunction{gai_strerror()} C function.
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The \var{error} value will match one of the \constant{EAI_*} constants
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defined in this module.
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\end{excdesc}
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\begin{excdesc}{timeout}
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This exception is raised when a timeout occurs on a socket which has
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had timeouts enabled via a prior call to \method{settimeout()}. The
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accompanying value is a string whose value is currently always ``timed
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out''.
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\versionadded{2.3}
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\end{excdesc}
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\begin{datadesc}{AF_UNIX}
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\dataline{AF_INET}
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\dataline{AF_INET6}
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These constants represent the address (and protocol) families,
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used for the first argument to \function{socket()}. If the
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\constant{AF_UNIX} constant is not defined then this protocol is
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unsupported.
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\end{datadesc}
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\begin{datadesc}{SOCK_STREAM}
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\dataline{SOCK_DGRAM}
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\dataline{SOCK_RAW}
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\dataline{SOCK_RDM}
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\dataline{SOCK_SEQPACKET}
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These constants represent the socket types,
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used for the second argument to \function{socket()}.
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(Only \constant{SOCK_STREAM} and
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\constant{SOCK_DGRAM} appear to be generally useful.)
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\end{datadesc}
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\begin{datadesc}{SO_*}
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\dataline{SOMAXCONN}
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\dataline{MSG_*}
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\dataline{SOL_*}
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\dataline{IPPROTO_*}
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\dataline{IPPORT_*}
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\dataline{INADDR_*}
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\dataline{IP_*}
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\dataline{IPV6_*}
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\dataline{EAI_*}
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\dataline{AI_*}
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\dataline{NI_*}
|
|
\dataline{TCP_*}
|
|
Many constants of these forms, documented in the \UNIX{} documentation on
|
|
sockets and/or the IP protocol, are also defined in the socket module.
|
|
They are generally used in arguments to the \method{setsockopt()} and
|
|
\method{getsockopt()} methods of socket objects. In most cases, only
|
|
those symbols that are defined in the \UNIX{} header files are defined;
|
|
for a few symbols, default values are provided.
|
|
\end{datadesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{datadesc}{has_ipv6}
|
|
This constant contains a boolean value which indicates if IPv6 is
|
|
supported on this platform.
|
|
\versionadded{2.3}
|
|
\end{datadesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{create_connection}{address\optional{, timeout}}
|
|
Connects to the \var{address} received (as usual, a \code{(host, port)}
|
|
pair), with an optional timeout for the connection. Specially useful for
|
|
higher-level protocols, it is not normally used directly from
|
|
application-level code. Passing the optional \var{timeout} parameter
|
|
will set the timeout on the socket instance (if it is not given or
|
|
\code{None}, the global default timeout setting is used).
|
|
\versionadded{2.6}
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{getaddrinfo}{host, port\optional{, family\optional{,
|
|
socktype\optional{, proto\optional{,
|
|
flags}}}}}
|
|
Resolves the \var{host}/\var{port} argument, into a sequence of
|
|
5-tuples that contain all the necessary argument for the sockets
|
|
manipulation. \var{host} is a domain name, a string representation of
|
|
IPv4/v6 address or \code{None}.
|
|
\var{port} is a string service name (like \code{'http'}), a numeric
|
|
port number or \code{None}.
|
|
|
|
The rest of the arguments are optional and must be numeric if
|
|
specified. For \var{host} and \var{port}, by passing either an empty
|
|
string or \code{None}, you can pass \code{NULL} to the C API. The
|
|
\function{getaddrinfo()} function returns a list of 5-tuples with
|
|
the following structure:
|
|
|
|
\code{(\var{family}, \var{socktype}, \var{proto}, \var{canonname},
|
|
\var{sockaddr})}
|
|
|
|
\var{family}, \var{socktype}, \var{proto} are all integer and are meant to
|
|
be passed to the \function{socket()} function.
|
|
\var{canonname} is a string representing the canonical name of the \var{host}.
|
|
It can be a numeric IPv4/v6 address when \constant{AI_CANONNAME} is specified
|
|
for a numeric \var{host}.
|
|
\var{sockaddr} is a tuple describing a socket address, as described above.
|
|
See the source for the \refmodule{httplib} and other library modules
|
|
for a typical usage of the function.
|
|
\versionadded{2.2}
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{getfqdn}{\optional{name}}
|
|
Return a fully qualified domain name for \var{name}.
|
|
If \var{name} is omitted or empty, it is interpreted as the local
|
|
host. To find the fully qualified name, the hostname returned by
|
|
\function{gethostbyaddr()} is checked, then aliases for the host, if
|
|
available. The first name which includes a period is selected. In
|
|
case no fully qualified domain name is available, the hostname as
|
|
returned by \function{gethostname()} is returned.
|
|
\versionadded{2.0}
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{gethostbyname}{hostname}
|
|
Translate a host name to IPv4 address format. The IPv4 address is
|
|
returned as a string, such as \code{'100.50.200.5'}. If the host name
|
|
is an IPv4 address itself it is returned unchanged. See
|
|
\function{gethostbyname_ex()} for a more complete interface.
|
|
\function{gethostbyname()} does not support IPv6 name resolution, and
|
|
\function{getaddrinfo()} should be used instead for IPv4/v6 dual stack support.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{gethostbyname_ex}{hostname}
|
|
Translate a host name to IPv4 address format, extended interface.
|
|
Return a triple \code{(\var{hostname}, \var{aliaslist},
|
|
\var{ipaddrlist})} where
|
|
\var{hostname} is the primary host name responding to the given
|
|
\var{ip_address}, \var{aliaslist} is a (possibly empty) list of
|
|
alternative host names for the same address, and \var{ipaddrlist} is
|
|
a list of IPv4 addresses for the same interface on the same
|
|
host (often but not always a single address).
|
|
\function{gethostbyname_ex()} does not support IPv6 name resolution, and
|
|
\function{getaddrinfo()} should be used instead for IPv4/v6 dual stack support.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{gethostname}{}
|
|
Return a string containing the hostname of the machine where
|
|
the Python interpreter is currently executing.
|
|
If you want to know the current machine's IP address, you may want to use
|
|
\code{gethostbyname(gethostname())}.
|
|
This operation assumes that there is a valid address-to-host mapping for
|
|
the host, and the assumption does not always hold.
|
|
Note: \function{gethostname()} doesn't always return the fully qualified
|
|
domain name; use \code{getfqdn()}
|
|
(see above).
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{gethostbyaddr}{ip_address}
|
|
Return a triple \code{(\var{hostname}, \var{aliaslist},
|
|
\var{ipaddrlist})} where \var{hostname} is the primary host name
|
|
responding to the given \var{ip_address}, \var{aliaslist} is a
|
|
(possibly empty) list of alternative host names for the same address,
|
|
and \var{ipaddrlist} is a list of IPv4/v6 addresses for the same interface
|
|
on the same host (most likely containing only a single address).
|
|
To find the fully qualified domain name, use the function
|
|
\function{getfqdn()}.
|
|
\function{gethostbyaddr} supports both IPv4 and IPv6.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{getnameinfo}{sockaddr, flags}
|
|
Translate a socket address \var{sockaddr} into a 2-tuple
|
|
\code{(\var{host}, \var{port})}.
|
|
Depending on the settings of \var{flags}, the result can contain a
|
|
fully-qualified domain name or numeric address representation in
|
|
\var{host}. Similarly, \var{port} can contain a string port name or a
|
|
numeric port number.
|
|
\versionadded{2.2}
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{getprotobyname}{protocolname}
|
|
Translate an Internet protocol name (for example, \code{'icmp'}) to a constant
|
|
suitable for passing as the (optional) third argument to the
|
|
\function{socket()} function. This is usually only needed for sockets
|
|
opened in ``raw'' mode (\constant{SOCK_RAW}); for the normal socket
|
|
modes, the correct protocol is chosen automatically if the protocol is
|
|
omitted or zero.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{getservbyname}{servicename\optional{, protocolname}}
|
|
Translate an Internet service name and protocol name to a port number
|
|
for that service. The optional protocol name, if given, should be
|
|
\code{'tcp'} or \code{'udp'}, otherwise any protocol will match.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{getservbyport}{port\optional{, protocolname}}
|
|
Translate an Internet port number and protocol name to a service name
|
|
for that service. The optional protocol name, if given, should be
|
|
\code{'tcp'} or \code{'udp'}, otherwise any protocol will match.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{socket}{\optional{family\optional{,
|
|
type\optional{, proto}}}}
|
|
Create a new socket using the given address family, socket type and
|
|
protocol number. The address family should be \constant{AF_INET} (the
|
|
default), \constant{AF_INET6} or \constant{AF_UNIX}. The socket type
|
|
should be \constant{SOCK_STREAM} (the default), \constant{SOCK_DGRAM}
|
|
or perhaps one of the other \samp{SOCK_} constants. The protocol
|
|
number is usually zero and may be omitted in that case.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{ssl}{sock\optional{, keyfile, certfile}}
|
|
Initiate a SSL connection over the socket \var{sock}. \var{keyfile} is
|
|
the name of a PEM formatted file that contains your private
|
|
key. \var{certfile} is a PEM formatted certificate chain file. On
|
|
success, a new \class{SSLObject} is returned.
|
|
|
|
\warning{This does not do any certificate verification!}
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{socketpair}{\optional{family\optional{, type\optional{, proto}}}}
|
|
Build a pair of connected socket objects using the given address
|
|
family, socket type, and protocol number. Address family, socket type,
|
|
and protocol number are as for the \function{socket()} function above.
|
|
The default family is \constant{AF_UNIX} if defined on the platform;
|
|
otherwise, the default is \constant{AF_INET}.
|
|
Availability: \UNIX. \versionadded{2.4}
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{fromfd}{fd, family, type\optional{, proto}}
|
|
Duplicate the file descriptor \var{fd} (an integer as returned by a file
|
|
object's \method{fileno()} method) and build a socket object from the
|
|
result. Address family, socket type and protocol number are as for the
|
|
\function{socket()} function above.
|
|
The file descriptor should refer to a socket, but this is not
|
|
checked --- subsequent operations on the object may fail if the file
|
|
descriptor is invalid. This function is rarely needed, but can be
|
|
used to get or set socket options on a socket passed to a program as
|
|
standard input or output (such as a server started by the \UNIX{} inet
|
|
daemon). The socket is assumed to be in blocking mode.
|
|
Availability: \UNIX.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{ntohl}{x}
|
|
Convert 32-bit positive integers from network to host byte order. On machines
|
|
where the host byte order is the same as network byte order, this is a
|
|
no-op; otherwise, it performs a 4-byte swap operation.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{ntohs}{x}
|
|
Convert 16-bit positive integers from network to host byte order. On machines
|
|
where the host byte order is the same as network byte order, this is a
|
|
no-op; otherwise, it performs a 2-byte swap operation.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{htonl}{x}
|
|
Convert 32-bit positive integers from host to network byte order. On machines
|
|
where the host byte order is the same as network byte order, this is a
|
|
no-op; otherwise, it performs a 4-byte swap operation.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{htons}{x}
|
|
Convert 16-bit positive integers from host to network byte order. On machines
|
|
where the host byte order is the same as network byte order, this is a
|
|
no-op; otherwise, it performs a 2-byte swap operation.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{inet_aton}{ip_string}
|
|
Convert an IPv4 address from dotted-quad string format (for example,
|
|
'123.45.67.89') to 32-bit packed binary format, as a string four
|
|
characters in length. This is useful when conversing with a program
|
|
that uses the standard C library and needs objects of type
|
|
\ctype{struct in_addr}, which is the C type for the 32-bit packed
|
|
binary this function returns.
|
|
|
|
If the IPv4 address string passed to this function is invalid,
|
|
\exception{socket.error} will be raised. Note that exactly what is
|
|
valid depends on the underlying C implementation of
|
|
\cfunction{inet_aton()}.
|
|
|
|
\function{inet_aton()} does not support IPv6, and
|
|
\function{getnameinfo()} should be used instead for IPv4/v6 dual stack
|
|
support.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{inet_ntoa}{packed_ip}
|
|
Convert a 32-bit packed IPv4 address (a string four characters in
|
|
length) to its standard dotted-quad string representation (for
|
|
example, '123.45.67.89'). This is useful when conversing with a
|
|
program that uses the standard C library and needs objects of type
|
|
\ctype{struct in_addr}, which is the C type for the 32-bit packed
|
|
binary data this function takes as an argument.
|
|
|
|
If the string passed to this function is not exactly 4 bytes in
|
|
length, \exception{socket.error} will be raised.
|
|
\function{inet_ntoa()} does not support IPv6, and
|
|
\function{getnameinfo()} should be used instead for IPv4/v6 dual stack
|
|
support.
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{inet_pton}{address_family, ip_string}
|
|
Convert an IP address from its family-specific string format to a packed,
|
|
binary format.
|
|
\function{inet_pton()} is useful when a library or network protocol calls for
|
|
an object of type \ctype{struct in_addr} (similar to \function{inet_aton()})
|
|
or \ctype{struct in6_addr}.
|
|
|
|
Supported values for \var{address_family} are currently
|
|
\constant{AF_INET} and \constant{AF_INET6}.
|
|
If the IP address string \var{ip_string} is invalid,
|
|
\exception{socket.error} will be raised. Note that exactly what is valid
|
|
depends on both the value of \var{address_family} and the underlying
|
|
implementation of \cfunction{inet_pton()}.
|
|
|
|
Availability: \UNIX{} (maybe not all platforms).
|
|
\versionadded{2.3}
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{inet_ntop}{address_family, packed_ip}
|
|
Convert a packed IP address (a string of some number of characters) to
|
|
its standard, family-specific string representation (for example,
|
|
\code{'7.10.0.5'} or \code{'5aef:2b::8'})
|
|
\function{inet_ntop()} is useful when a library or network protocol returns
|
|
an object of type \ctype{struct in_addr} (similar to \function{inet_ntoa()})
|
|
or \ctype{struct in6_addr}.
|
|
|
|
Supported values for \var{address_family} are currently
|
|
\constant{AF_INET} and \constant{AF_INET6}.
|
|
If the string \var{packed_ip} is not the correct length for the
|
|
specified address family, \exception{ValueError} will be raised. A
|
|
\exception{socket.error} is raised for errors from the call to
|
|
\function{inet_ntop()}.
|
|
|
|
Availability: \UNIX{} (maybe not all platforms).
|
|
\versionadded{2.3}
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{getdefaulttimeout}{}
|
|
Return the default timeout in floating seconds for new socket objects.
|
|
A value of \code{None} indicates that new socket objects have no timeout.
|
|
When the socket module is first imported, the default is \code{None}.
|
|
\versionadded{2.3}
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{setdefaulttimeout}{timeout}
|
|
Set the default timeout in floating seconds for new socket objects.
|
|
A value of \code{None} indicates that new socket objects have no timeout.
|
|
When the socket module is first imported, the default is \code{None}.
|
|
\versionadded{2.3}
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{datadesc}{SocketType}
|
|
This is a Python type object that represents the socket object type.
|
|
It is the same as \code{type(socket(...))}.
|
|
\end{datadesc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\begin{seealso}
|
|
\seemodule{SocketServer}{Classes that simplify writing network servers.}
|
|
\end{seealso}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Socket Objects \label{socket-objects}}
|
|
|
|
Socket objects have the following methods. Except for
|
|
\method{makefile()} these correspond to \UNIX{} system calls
|
|
applicable to sockets.
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{accept}{}
|
|
Accept a connection.
|
|
The socket must be bound to an address and listening for connections.
|
|
The return value is a pair \code{(\var{conn}, \var{address})}
|
|
where \var{conn} is a \emph{new} socket object usable to send and
|
|
receive data on the connection, and \var{address} is the address bound
|
|
to the socket on the other end of the connection.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{bind}{address}
|
|
Bind the socket to \var{address}. The socket must not already be bound.
|
|
(The format of \var{address} depends on the address family --- see
|
|
above.) \note{This method has historically accepted a pair
|
|
of parameters for \constant{AF_INET} addresses instead of only a
|
|
tuple. This was never intentional and is no longer available in
|
|
Python 2.0 and later.}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{close}{}
|
|
Close the socket. All future operations on the socket object will fail.
|
|
The remote end will receive no more data (after queued data is flushed).
|
|
Sockets are automatically closed when they are garbage-collected.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{connect}{address}
|
|
Connect to a remote socket at \var{address}.
|
|
(The format of \var{address} depends on the address family --- see
|
|
above.) \note{This method has historically accepted a pair
|
|
of parameters for \constant{AF_INET} addresses instead of only a
|
|
tuple. This was never intentional and is no longer available in
|
|
Python 2.0 and later.}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{connect_ex}{address}
|
|
Like \code{connect(\var{address})}, but return an error indicator
|
|
instead of raising an exception for errors returned by the C-level
|
|
\cfunction{connect()} call (other problems, such as ``host not found,''
|
|
can still raise exceptions). The error indicator is \code{0} if the
|
|
operation succeeded, otherwise the value of the \cdata{errno}
|
|
variable. This is useful to support, for example, asynchronous connects.
|
|
\note{This method has historically accepted a pair of
|
|
parameters for \constant{AF_INET} addresses instead of only a tuple.
|
|
This was never intentional and is no longer available in Python
|
|
2.0 and later.}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{fileno}{}
|
|
Return the socket's file descriptor (a small integer). This is useful
|
|
with \function{select.select()}.
|
|
|
|
Under Windows the small integer returned by this method cannot be used where
|
|
a file descriptor can be used (such as \function{os.fdopen()}). \UNIX{} does
|
|
not have this limitation.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{getpeername}{}
|
|
Return the remote address to which the socket is connected. This is
|
|
useful to find out the port number of a remote IPv4/v6 socket, for instance.
|
|
(The format of the address returned depends on the address family ---
|
|
see above.) On some systems this function is not supported.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{getsockname}{}
|
|
Return the socket's own address. This is useful to find out the port
|
|
number of an IPv4/v6 socket, for instance.
|
|
(The format of the address returned depends on the address family ---
|
|
see above.)
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{getsockopt}{level, optname\optional{, buflen}}
|
|
Return the value of the given socket option (see the \UNIX{} man page
|
|
\manpage{getsockopt}{2}). The needed symbolic constants
|
|
(\constant{SO_*} etc.) are defined in this module. If \var{buflen}
|
|
is absent, an integer option is assumed and its integer value
|
|
is returned by the function. If \var{buflen} is present, it specifies
|
|
the maximum length of the buffer used to receive the option in, and
|
|
this buffer is returned as a string. It is up to the caller to decode
|
|
the contents of the buffer (see the optional built-in module
|
|
\refmodule{struct} for a way to decode C structures encoded as strings).
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{listen}{backlog}
|
|
Listen for connections made to the socket. The \var{backlog} argument
|
|
specifies the maximum number of queued connections and should be at
|
|
least 1; the maximum value is system-dependent (usually 5).
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{makefile}{\optional{mode\optional{, bufsize}}}
|
|
Return a \dfn{file object} associated with the socket. (File objects
|
|
are described in \ref{bltin-file-objects}, ``File Objects.'')
|
|
The file object references a \cfunction{dup()}ped version of the
|
|
socket file descriptor, so the file object and socket object may be
|
|
closed or garbage-collected independently.
|
|
The socket must be in blocking mode (it can not have a timeout).
|
|
\index{I/O control!buffering}The optional \var{mode}
|
|
and \var{bufsize} arguments are interpreted the same way as by the
|
|
built-in \function{file()} function; see ``Built-in Functions''
|
|
(section \ref{built-in-funcs}) for more information.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{recv}{bufsize\optional{, flags}}
|
|
Receive data from the socket. The return value is a string representing
|
|
the data received. The maximum amount of data to be received
|
|
at once is specified by \var{bufsize}. See the \UNIX{} manual page
|
|
\manpage{recv}{2} for the meaning of the optional argument
|
|
\var{flags}; it defaults to zero.
|
|
\note{For best match with hardware and network realities, the value of
|
|
\var{bufsize} should be a relatively small power of 2, for example, 4096.}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{recvfrom}{bufsize\optional{, flags}}
|
|
Receive data from the socket. The return value is a pair
|
|
\code{(\var{string}, \var{address})} where \var{string} is a string
|
|
representing the data received and \var{address} is the address of the
|
|
socket sending the data. See the \UNIX{} manual page
|
|
\manpage{recv}{2} for the meaning of the optional argument
|
|
\var{flags}; it defaults to zero.
|
|
(The format of \var{address} depends on the address family --- see above.)
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{recvfrom_into}{buffer\optional{, nbytes\optional{, flags}}}
|
|
Receive data from the socket, writing it into \var{buffer} instead of
|
|
creating a new string. The return value is a pair
|
|
\code{(\var{nbytes}, \var{address})} where \var{nbytes} is the number
|
|
of bytes received and \var{address} is the address of the socket
|
|
sending the data. See the \UNIX{} manual page
|
|
\manpage{recv}{2} for the meaning of the optional argument
|
|
\var{flags}; it defaults to zero. (The format of \var{address}
|
|
depends on the address family --- see above.)
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{recv_into}{buffer\optional{, nbytes\optional{, flags}}}
|
|
Receive up to \var{nbytes} bytes from the socket,
|
|
storing the data into a buffer rather than creating a new string.
|
|
If \var{nbytes} is not specified (or 0),
|
|
receive up to the size available in the given buffer.
|
|
See the \UNIX{} manual page \manpage{recv}{2} for the meaning of the
|
|
optional argument \var{flags}; it defaults to zero.
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{send}{string\optional{, flags}}
|
|
Send data to the socket. The socket must be connected to a remote
|
|
socket. The optional \var{flags} argument has the same meaning as for
|
|
\method{recv()} above. Returns the number of bytes sent.
|
|
Applications are responsible for checking that all data has been sent;
|
|
if only some of the data was transmitted, the application needs to
|
|
attempt delivery of the remaining data.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{sendall}{string\optional{, flags}}
|
|
Send data to the socket. The socket must be connected to a remote
|
|
socket. The optional \var{flags} argument has the same meaning as for
|
|
\method{recv()} above. Unlike \method{send()}, this method continues
|
|
to send data from \var{string} until either all data has been sent or
|
|
an error occurs. \code{None} is returned on success. On error, an
|
|
exception is raised, and there is no way to determine how much data,
|
|
if any, was successfully sent.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{sendto}{string\optional{, flags}, address}
|
|
Send data to the socket. The socket should not be connected to a
|
|
remote socket, since the destination socket is specified by
|
|
\var{address}. The optional \var{flags} argument has the same
|
|
meaning as for \method{recv()} above. Return the number of bytes sent.
|
|
(The format of \var{address} depends on the address family --- see above.)
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{setblocking}{flag}
|
|
Set blocking or non-blocking mode of the socket: if \var{flag} is 0,
|
|
the socket is set to non-blocking, else to blocking mode. Initially
|
|
all sockets are in blocking mode. In non-blocking mode, if a
|
|
\method{recv()} call doesn't find any data, or if a
|
|
\method{send()} call can't immediately dispose of the data, a
|
|
\exception{error} exception is raised; in blocking mode, the calls
|
|
block until they can proceed.
|
|
\code{s.setblocking(0)} is equivalent to \code{s.settimeout(0)};
|
|
\code{s.setblocking(1)} is equivalent to \code{s.settimeout(None)}.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{settimeout}{value}
|
|
Set a timeout on blocking socket operations. The \var{value} argument
|
|
can be a nonnegative float expressing seconds, or \code{None}.
|
|
If a float is
|
|
given, subsequent socket operations will raise an \exception{timeout}
|
|
exception if the timeout period \var{value} has elapsed before the
|
|
operation has completed. Setting a timeout of \code{None} disables
|
|
timeouts on socket operations.
|
|
\code{s.settimeout(0.0)} is equivalent to \code{s.setblocking(0)};
|
|
\code{s.settimeout(None)} is equivalent to \code{s.setblocking(1)}.
|
|
\versionadded{2.3}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{gettimeout}{}
|
|
Return the timeout in floating seconds associated with socket
|
|
operations, or \code{None} if no timeout is set. This reflects
|
|
the last call to \method{setblocking()} or \method{settimeout()}.
|
|
\versionadded{2.3}
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
Some notes on socket blocking and timeouts: A socket object can be in
|
|
one of three modes: blocking, non-blocking, or timeout. Sockets are
|
|
always created in blocking mode. In blocking mode, operations block
|
|
until complete. In non-blocking mode, operations fail (with an error
|
|
that is unfortunately system-dependent) if they cannot be completed
|
|
immediately. In timeout mode, operations fail if they cannot be
|
|
completed within the timeout specified for the socket. The
|
|
\method{setblocking()} method is simply a shorthand for certain
|
|
\method{settimeout()} calls.
|
|
|
|
Timeout mode internally sets the socket in non-blocking mode. The
|
|
blocking and timeout modes are shared between file descriptors and
|
|
socket objects that refer to the same network endpoint. A consequence
|
|
of this is that file objects returned by the \method{makefile()}
|
|
method must only be used when the socket is in blocking mode; in
|
|
timeout or non-blocking mode file operations that cannot be completed
|
|
immediately will fail.
|
|
|
|
Note that the \method{connect()} operation is subject to the timeout
|
|
setting, and in general it is recommended to call
|
|
\method{settimeout()} before calling \method{connect()}.
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{setsockopt}{level, optname, value}
|
|
Set the value of the given socket option (see the \UNIX{} manual page
|
|
\manpage{setsockopt}{2}). The needed symbolic constants are defined in
|
|
the \module{socket} module (\constant{SO_*} etc.). The value can be an
|
|
integer or a string representing a buffer. In the latter case it is
|
|
up to the caller to ensure that the string contains the proper bits
|
|
(see the optional built-in module
|
|
\refmodule{struct}\refbimodindex{struct} for a way to encode C
|
|
structures as strings).
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[socket]{shutdown}{how}
|
|
Shut down one or both halves of the connection. If \var{how} is
|
|
\constant{SHUT_RD}, further receives are disallowed. If \var{how} is \constant{SHUT_WR},
|
|
further sends are disallowed. If \var{how} is \constant{SHUT_RDWR}, further sends
|
|
and receives are disallowed.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
Note that there are no methods \method{read()} or \method{write()};
|
|
use \method{recv()} and \method{send()} without \var{flags} argument
|
|
instead.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Socket objects also have these (read-only) attributes that correspond
|
|
to the values given to the \class{socket} constructor.
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[socket]{family}
|
|
The socket family.
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[socket]{type}
|
|
The socket type.
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{memberdesc}[socket]{proto}
|
|
The socket protocol.
|
|
\versionadded{2.5}
|
|
\end{memberdesc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{SSL Objects \label{ssl-objects}}
|
|
|
|
SSL objects have the following methods.
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[SSL]{write}{s}
|
|
Writes the string \var{s} to the on the object's SSL connection.
|
|
The return value is the number of bytes written.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[SSL]{read}{\optional{n}}
|
|
If \var{n} is provided, read \var{n} bytes from the SSL connection, otherwise
|
|
read until EOF. The return value is a string of the bytes read.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[SSL]{server}{}
|
|
Returns a string describing the server's certificate.
|
|
Useful for debugging purposes; do not parse the content of this string
|
|
because its format can't be parsed unambiguously.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\begin{methoddesc}[SSL]{issuer}{}
|
|
Returns a string describing the issuer of the server's certificate.
|
|
Useful for debugging purposes; do not parse the content of this string
|
|
because its format can't be parsed unambiguously.
|
|
\end{methoddesc}
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Example \label{socket-example}}
|
|
|
|
Here are four minimal example programs using the TCP/IP protocol:\ a
|
|
server that echoes all data that it receives back (servicing only one
|
|
client), and a client using it. Note that a server must perform the
|
|
sequence \function{socket()}, \method{bind()}, \method{listen()},
|
|
\method{accept()} (possibly repeating the \method{accept()} to service
|
|
more than one client), while a client only needs the sequence
|
|
\function{socket()}, \method{connect()}. Also note that the server
|
|
does not \method{send()}/\method{recv()} on the
|
|
socket it is listening on but on the new socket returned by
|
|
\method{accept()}.
|
|
|
|
The first two examples support IPv4 only.
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
# Echo server program
|
|
import socket
|
|
|
|
HOST = '' # Symbolic name meaning the local host
|
|
PORT = 50007 # Arbitrary non-privileged port
|
|
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
|
|
s.bind((HOST, PORT))
|
|
s.listen(1)
|
|
conn, addr = s.accept()
|
|
print 'Connected by', addr
|
|
while 1:
|
|
data = conn.recv(1024)
|
|
if not data: break
|
|
conn.send(data)
|
|
conn.close()
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
# Echo client program
|
|
import socket
|
|
|
|
HOST = 'daring.cwi.nl' # The remote host
|
|
PORT = 50007 # The same port as used by the server
|
|
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
|
|
s.connect((HOST, PORT))
|
|
s.send('Hello, world')
|
|
data = s.recv(1024)
|
|
s.close()
|
|
print 'Received', repr(data)
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
The next two examples are identical to the above two, but support both
|
|
IPv4 and IPv6.
|
|
The server side will listen to the first address family available
|
|
(it should listen to both instead).
|
|
On most of IPv6-ready systems, IPv6 will take precedence
|
|
and the server may not accept IPv4 traffic.
|
|
The client side will try to connect to the all addresses returned as a result
|
|
of the name resolution, and sends traffic to the first one connected
|
|
successfully.
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
# Echo server program
|
|
import socket
|
|
import sys
|
|
|
|
HOST = '' # Symbolic name meaning the local host
|
|
PORT = 50007 # Arbitrary non-privileged port
|
|
s = None
|
|
for res in socket.getaddrinfo(HOST, PORT, socket.AF_UNSPEC, socket.SOCK_STREAM, 0, socket.AI_PASSIVE):
|
|
af, socktype, proto, canonname, sa = res
|
|
try:
|
|
s = socket.socket(af, socktype, proto)
|
|
except socket.error as msg:
|
|
s = None
|
|
continue
|
|
try:
|
|
s.bind(sa)
|
|
s.listen(1)
|
|
except socket.error as msg:
|
|
s.close()
|
|
s = None
|
|
continue
|
|
break
|
|
if s is None:
|
|
print 'could not open socket'
|
|
sys.exit(1)
|
|
conn, addr = s.accept()
|
|
print 'Connected by', addr
|
|
while 1:
|
|
data = conn.recv(1024)
|
|
if not data: break
|
|
conn.send(data)
|
|
conn.close()
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
# Echo client program
|
|
import socket
|
|
import sys
|
|
|
|
HOST = 'daring.cwi.nl' # The remote host
|
|
PORT = 50007 # The same port as used by the server
|
|
s = None
|
|
for res in socket.getaddrinfo(HOST, PORT, socket.AF_UNSPEC, socket.SOCK_STREAM):
|
|
af, socktype, proto, canonname, sa = res
|
|
try:
|
|
s = socket.socket(af, socktype, proto)
|
|
except socket.error as msg:
|
|
s = None
|
|
continue
|
|
try:
|
|
s.connect(sa)
|
|
except socket.error as msg:
|
|
s.close()
|
|
s = None
|
|
continue
|
|
break
|
|
if s is None:
|
|
print 'could not open socket'
|
|
sys.exit(1)
|
|
s.send('Hello, world')
|
|
data = s.recv(1024)
|
|
s.close()
|
|
print 'Received', repr(data)
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
This example connects to an SSL server, prints the
|
|
server and issuer's distinguished names, sends some bytes,
|
|
and reads part of the response:
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
import socket
|
|
|
|
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
|
|
s.connect(('www.verisign.com', 443))
|
|
|
|
ssl_sock = socket.ssl(s)
|
|
|
|
print repr(ssl_sock.server())
|
|
print repr(ssl_sock.issuer())
|
|
|
|
# Set a simple HTTP request -- use httplib in actual code.
|
|
ssl_sock.write("""GET / HTTP/1.0\r
|
|
Host: www.verisign.com\r\n\r\n""")
|
|
|
|
# Read a chunk of data. Will not necessarily
|
|
# read all the data returned by the server.
|
|
data = ssl_sock.read()
|
|
|
|
# Note that you need to close the underlying socket, not the SSL object.
|
|
del ssl_sock
|
|
s.close()
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
At this writing, this SSL example prints the following output (line
|
|
breaks inserted for readability):
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
'/C=US/ST=California/L=Mountain View/
|
|
O=VeriSign, Inc./OU=Production Services/
|
|
OU=Terms of use at www.verisign.com/rpa (c)00/
|
|
CN=www.verisign.com'
|
|
'/O=VeriSign Trust Network/OU=VeriSign, Inc./
|
|
OU=VeriSign International Server CA - Class 3/
|
|
OU=www.verisign.com/CPS Incorp.by Ref. LIABILITY LTD.(c)97 VeriSign'
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|