Socket Functions
Table of Contents
- socket_accept — Accepts a connection on a socket
 - socket_bind — Binds a name to a socket
 - socket_clear_error — Clears the error on the socket or the last error code
 - socket_close — Closes a socket resource
 - socket_connect — Initiates a connection on a socket
 - socket_create_listen — Opens a socket on port to accept connections
 - socket_create_pair — Creates a pair of indistinguishable sockets and stores them in an array
 - socket_create — Create a socket (endpoint for communication)
 - socket_get_option — Gets socket options for the socket
 - socket_getpeername — Queries the remote side of the given socket which may either result in host/port or in a Unix filesystem path, dependent on its type
 - socket_getsockname — Queries the local side of the given socket which may either result in host/port or in a Unix filesystem path, dependent on its type
 - socket_last_error — Returns the last error on the socket
 - socket_listen — Listens for a connection on a socket
 - socket_read — Reads a maximum of length bytes from a socket
 - socket_recv — Receives data from a connected socket
 - socket_recvfrom — Receives data from a socket whether or not it is connection-oriented
 - socket_select — Runs the select() system call on the given arrays of sockets with a specified timeout
 - socket_send — Sends data to a connected socket
 - socket_sendto — Sends a message to a socket, whether it is connected or not
 - socket_set_block — Sets blocking mode on a socket resource
 - socket_set_nonblock — Sets nonblocking mode for file descriptor fd
 - socket_set_option — Sets socket options for the socket
 - socket_shutdown — Shuts down a socket for receiving, sending, or both
 - socket_strerror — Return a string describing a socket error
 - socket_write — Write to a socket