When you have finished using a socket, you can simply close its
file descriptor with close
; see Opening and Closing Files.
If there is still data waiting to be transmitted over the connection,
normally close
tries to complete this transmission. You
can control this behavior using the SO_LINGER
socket option to
specify a timeout period; see Socket Options.
You can also shut down only reception or transmission on a
connection by calling shutdown
, which is declared in
sys/socket.h.
int
shutdown (int socket, int how)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The shutdown
function shuts down the connection of socket
socket. The argument how specifies what action to
perform:
0
Stop receiving data for this socket. If further data arrives, reject it.
1
Stop trying to transmit data from this socket. Discard any data waiting to be sent. Stop looking for acknowledgement of data already sent; don’t retransmit it if it is lost.
2
Stop both reception and transmission.
The return value is 0
on success and -1
on failure. The
following errno
error conditions are defined for this function:
EBADF
socket is not a valid file descriptor.
ENOTSOCK
socket is not a socket.
ENOTCONN
socket is not connected.