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⟩ What this function connect() does?

Specifying a Remote Socket - connect()

#include <sys/types.h>

#include <sys/socket.h>

int connect(int s, struct sockaddr *name, int namelen)

The bind() call only allows specification of a local address. To specify the remote side of an address connection the connect() call is used. In the call to connect, s is the file descriptor for the socket. name is a pointer to a structure of type sockaddr:

struct sockaddr {

u_short sa_family;

char sa_data[14];

};

As with the bind() system call, name.sa_family should be AF_UNIX. name.sa_data should contain up to 14 bytes of a file name which will be assigned to the socket. namelen gives the actual length of name. A return value of 0 indicates success, while a value of -1 indicates failure with errno describing the error.

A sample code fragment:

struct sockaddr name;

name.sa_family = AF_UNIX;

strcpy(name.sa_data, "/tmp/sock");

if (connect(s, &name, strlen

(name.sa_data) +

sizeof(name.sa_family)) < 0) {

printf("connect failure %dn", errno);

}

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