WSARecvFrom
The Windows Sockets
WSARecvFrom function receives a datagram and stores the source address.
int WSARecvFrom (
SOCKET s,
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LPWSABUF lpBuffers,
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DWORD dwBufferCount,
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LPDWORD lpNumberOfBytesRecvd,
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LPDWORD lpFlags,
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struct sockaddr FAR * lpFrom,
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LPINT lpFromlen,
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LPWSAOVERLAPPED lpOverlapped,
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LPWSAOVERLAPPED_COMPLETION_ROUTINE lpCompletionROUTINE
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);
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Parameters
s
[in] A descriptor identifying a socket
lpBuffers
[in/out] A pointer to an array of
WSABUF structures. Each
WSABUF structure contains a pointer to a buffer and the length of the buffer.
dwBufferCount
[in] The number of
WSABUF structures in the
lpBuffers array.
lpNumberOfBytesRecvd
[out] A pointer to the number of bytes received by this call if the receive
operation completes immediately.
lpFlags
[in/out] A pointer to flags.
lpFrom
[out] An optional pointer to a buffer which will hold the source address upon
the completion of the overlapped operation.
lpFromlen
[in/out] A pointer to the size of the
from buffer, required only if
lpFrom is specified.
lpOverlapped
[in] A pointer to a WSAOVERLAPPED structure (ignored for nonoverlapped
sockets).
lpCompletionRoutine
[in] A pointer to the completion routine called when the receive operation has
been completed (ignored for nonoverlapped sockets).
Remarks
This function provides functionality over and above the standard
recvfrom function in three important areas:
- It can be used in conjunction with overlapped sockets to perform overlapped
receive operations.
- It allows multiple receive buffers to be specified making it applicable to the
scatter/gather type of I/O.
- The lpFlags parameter is both an INPUT and an OUTPUT parameter, allowing applications to
sense the output state of the MSG_PARTIAL flag bit. Note however, that the
MSG_PARTIAL flag bit is not supported by all protocols.
WSARecvFrom is used primarily on a connectionless socket specified by
s.
For overlapped sockets, this function is used to post one or more buffers into
which incoming data will be placed as it becomes available on a (possibly
connected) socket, after which the application-specified completion indication
(invocation of the completion routine or setting of an event object) occurs. If the
operation does not complete immediately, the final completion status is
retrieved through the completion routine or
WSAGetOverlappedResult. Also note that the values pointed to by
lpFrom and
lpFromlen are not updated until completion is indicated. Applications must not use or
disturb these values until they have been updated, therefore the application must
not use automatic (that is, stack-based) variables for these parameters.
If both
lpOverlapped and
lpCompletionRoutine are NULL, the socket in this function will be treated as a nonoverlapped
socket.
For nonoverlapped sockets, the blocking semantics are identical to that of the
standard
recvfrom function and the
lpOverlapped and
lpCompletionRoutine parameters are ignored. Any data which has already been received and buffered
by the transport will be copied into the supplied user buffers. For the case of
a blocking socket with no data currently having been received and buffered by
the transport, the call will block until data is received.
The supplied buffers are filled in the order in which they appear in the array
pointed to by
lpBuffers, and the buffers are packed so that no holes are created.
The array of
WSABUF structures pointed to by the
lpBuffers parameter is transient. If this operation completes in an overlapped manner,
it is the service provider's responsibility to capture these
WSABUF structures before returning from this call. This enables applications to
build stack-based
WSABUF arrays.
For connectionless socket types, the address from which the data originated is
copied to the buffer pointed by
lpFrom. The value pointed to by
lpFromlen is initialized to the size of this buffer, and is modified on completion to
indicate the actual size of the address stored there. As noted previously for
overlapped sockets, the
lpFrom and
lpFromlen parameters are not updated until after the overlapped I/O has completed. The
memory pointed to by these parameters must, therefore, remain available to the
service provider and cannot be allocated on the application's stack frame. The
lpFrom and
lpFromlen parameters are ignored for connection-oriented sockets.
For byte stream style sockets (for example, type SOCK_STREAM), incoming data
is placed into the buffers until the buffers are filled, the connection is
closed, or internally buffered data is exhausted. Regardless of whether or not the
incoming data fills all the buffers, the completion indication occurs for
overlapped sockets. For message-oriented sockets, an incoming message is placed into
the supplied buffers, up to the total size of the buffers supplied, and the
completion indication occurs for overlapped sockets. If the message is larger than
the buffers supplied, the buffers are filled with the first part of the
message. If the MSG_PARTIAL feature is supported by the underlying service provider,
the MSG_PARTIAL flag is set in
lpFlags and subsequent receive operation(s) will retrieve the rest of the message. If
MSG_PARTIAL is not supported but the protocol is reliable,
WSARecvFrom generates the error WSAEMSGSIZE and a subsequent receive operation with a
larger buffer can be used to retrieve the entire message. Otherwise, (that is, the
protocol is unreliable and does not support MSG_PARTIAL), the excess data is
lost, and
WSARecvFrom generates the error WSAEMSGSIZE.
For connection-oriented sockets,
WSARecvFrom can indicate the graceful termination of the virtual circuit in one of two
ways, depending on whether the socket is a byte stream or message oriented. For
byte streams, zero bytes read indicates graceful closure and that no more bytes
will ever be read. For message-oriented sockets, where a zero byte message is
often allowable, a return error code of WSAEDISCONN is used to indicate graceful
closure. In any case, a return error code of WSAECONNRESET indicates an
abortive close has occurred.
lpFlags may be used to influence the behavior of the function invocation beyond the
options specified for the associated socket. That is, the semantics of this
function are determined by the socket options and the
lpFlags parameter. The latter is constructed by or-ing any of the following values:
Value
| Meaning
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MSG_PEEK
| Peek at the incoming data. The data is copied into the buffer but is not
removed from the input queue. This flag is valid only for nonoverlapped sockets.
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MSG_OOB
| Process out-of-band data. (See section Out-Of-Band data for a discussion of this topic.)
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MSG_PARTIAL
| This flag is for message-oriented sockets only. On output, indicates that the
data supplied is a portion of the message transmitted by the sender. Remaining
portions of the message will be supplied in subsequent receive operations. A
subsequent receive operation with MSG_PARTIAL flag cleared indicates end of
sender's message.
As an input parameter indicates that the receive operation should complete
even if only part of a message has been received by the service provider.
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For message-oriented sockets, the MSG_PARTIAL bit is set in the
lpFlags parameter if a partial message is received. If a complete message is
received, MSG_PARTIAL is cleared in
lpFlags. In the case of delayed completion, the value pointed to by
lpFlags is not updated. When completion has been indicated the application should
call
WSAGetOverlappedResult and examine the flags pointed to by the
lpdwFlags parameter.
Overlapped socket I/O:
If an overlapped operation completes immediately,
WSARecv returns a value of zero and the
lpNumberOfBytesRecvd parameter is updated with the number of bytes received and the flag bits
pointed by the
lpFlags parameter are also updated. If the overlapped operation is successfully
initiated and will complete later,
WSARecv returns SOCKET_ERROR and indicates error code WSA_IO_PENDING. In this case,
lpNumberOfBytesRecvd and
lpFlags is not updated. When the overlapped operation completes the amount of data
transferred is indicated either through the
cbTransferred parameter in the completion routine (if specified), or through the
lpcbTransfer parameter in
WSAGetOverlappedResult. Flag values are obtained either through the
dwFlags parameter of the completion routine, or by examining the
lpdwFlags parameter of
WSAGetOverlappedResult.
This function may be called from within the completion routine of a previous
WSARecv,
WSARecvFrom,
WSASend or
WSASendTo function. For a given socket, I/O completion routines will not be nested.
This permits time-sensitive data transmissions to occur entirely within a
preemptive context.
The
lpOverlapped parameter must be valid for the duration of the overlapped operation. If
multiple I/O operations are simultaneously outstanding, each must reference a
separate overlapped structure. The WSAOVERLAPPED structure has the following form:
typedef struct _WSAOVERLAPPED {
DWORD Internal; // reserved
DWORD InternalHigh; // reserved
DWORD Offset; // reserved
DWORD OffsetHigh; // reserved
WSAEVENT hEvent;
} WSAOVERLAPPED, FAR * LPWSAOVERLAPPED;
If the
lpCompletionRoutine parameter is NULL, the
hEvent field of
lpOverlapped is signaled when the overlapped operation completes if it contains a valid
event object handle. An application can use
WSAWaitForMultipleEvents or
WSAGetOverlappedResult to wait or poll on the event object.
If
lpCompletionRoutine is not NULL, the
hEvent field is ignored and can be used by the application to pass context
information to the completion routine.
The completion routine follows the same rules as stipulated for Win32 file I/O
completion routines. The completion routine will not be invoked until the
thread is in an alertable wait state such as can occur when the function
WSAWaitForMultipleEvents with the
fAlertable parameter set to TRUE is invoked.
The transport providers allow an application to invoke send and receive
operations from within the context of the socket I/O completion routine, and
guarantee that, for a given socket, I/O completion routines will not be nested. This
permits time-sensitive data transmissions to occur entirely within a preemptive
context.
The prototype of the completion routine is as follows:
- oid CALLBACK CompletionROUTINE(
IN DWORD
dwError,
IN DWORD cbTransferred,
IN LPWSAOVERLAPPED lpOverlapped,
IN DWORD dwFlags
);
CompletionRoutine is a placeholder for an application-defined or library-defined function name.
dwError specifies the completion status for the overlapped operation as indicated by
lpOverlapped.
cbTransferred specifies the number of bytes received.
dwFlags contains information that would have appeared in
lpFlags if the receive operation had completed immediately. This function does not
return a value.
Returning from this function allows invocation of another pending completion
routine for this socket. When using
WSAWaitForMultipleEvents, all waiting completion routines are called before the alertable thread's
wait is satisfied with a return code of WSA_IO_COMPLETION. The completion routines
may be called in any order, not necessarily in the same order the overlapped
operations are completed. However, the posted buffers are guaranteed to be
filled in the same order they are supplied.
Return Values
If no error occurs and the receive operation has completed immediately,
WSARecvFrom returns zero. Note that in this case, the completion routine will have
already been scheduled, and to be called once the calling thread is in the alertable
state. Otherwise, a value of SOCKET_ERROR is returned, and a specific error
code may be retrieved by calling
WSAGetLastError. The error code WSA_IO_PENDING indicates that the overlapped operation has
been successfully initiated and that completion will be indicated at a later
time. Any other error code indicates that the overlapped operation was not
successfully initiated and no completion indication will occur.
Error Codes
WSANOTINITIALISED
| A successful WSAStartup must occur before using this function.
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WSAENETDOWN
| The network subsystem has failed.
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WSAEFAULT
| The lpFromlen argument was invalid: the lpFrom buffer was too small to accommodate the peer address, or the lpBuffers argument is not totally contained in a valid part of the user address space.
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WSAEINTR
| The (blocking) call was canceled through WSACancelBlockingCall.
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WSAEINPROGRESS
| A blocking Windows Sockets 1.1 call is in progress, or the service provider is
still processing a callback function.
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WSAEINVAL
| The socket has not been bound with bind, or the socket is not created with the overlapped flag.
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WSAENETRESET
| The connection has been broken due to the remote host resetting..
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WSAENOTCONN
| The socket is not connected (connection-oriented sockets only).
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WSAENOTSOCK
| The descriptor is not a socket.
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WSAEOPNOTSUPP
| MSG_OOB was specified, but the socket is not stream style such as type
SOCK_STREAM, out-of-band data is not supported in the communication domain associated
with this socket, or the socket is unidirectional and supports only send
operations.
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WSAESHUTDOWN
| The socket has been shut down; it is not possible to WSARecvFrom on a socket after shutdown has been invoked with how set to SD_RECEIVE or SD_BOTH.
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WSAEWOULDBLOCK
| Overlapped sockets: There are too many outstanding overlapped I/O requests.
Nonoverlapped sockets: The socket is marked as nonblocking and the receive
operation cannot be completed immediately.
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WSAEMSGSIZE
| The message was too large to fit into the specified buffer and (for unreliable
protocols only) any trailing portion of the message that did not fit into the
buffer has been discarded.
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WSAECONNABORTED
| The virtual circuit was terminated due to a time-out or other failure.
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WSAECONNRESET
| The virtual circuit was reset by the remote side.
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WSAEDISCON
| Socket s is message oriented and the virtual circuit was gracefully closed by the
remote side.
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WSA_IO_PENDING
| An overlapped operation was successfully initiated and completion will be
indicated at a later time.
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WSA_OPERATION_ABORTED
| The overlapped operation has been canceled due to the closure of the socket.
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See Also
WSACloseEvent,
WSACreateEvent,
WSAGetOverlappedResult,
WSASocket,
WSAWaitForMultipleEvents
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