getprotoent, getprotobyname, getprotobynumber, setprotoent, endprotoent — get protocol entry

Synopsis

#include <netdb.h>

struct protoent *getprotoent(void);

struct protoent *getprotobyname(const char *name);

struct protoent *getprotobynumber(int proto);

void setprotoent(int stayopen);

void endprotoent(void);

Description

The getprotoent() function reads the next entry from the protocols database (see protocols(5)) and returns a protoent structure containing the broken-out fields from the entry. A connection is opened to the database if necessary.

The getprotobyname() function returns a protoent structure for the entry from the database that matches the protocol name name. A connection is opened to the database if necessary.

The getprotobynumber() function returns a protoent structure for the entry from the database that matches the protocol number number. A connection is opened to the database if necessary.

The setprotoent() function opens a connection to the database, and sets the next entry to the first entry. If stayopen is nonzero, then the connection to the database will not be closed between calls to one of the getproto*() functions.

The endprotoent() function closes the connection to the database.

The protoent structure is defined in <netdb.h> as follows:

struct protoent {
    char  *p_name;       /* official protocol name */
    char **p_aliases;    /* alias list */
    int    p_proto;      /* protocol number */
}

The members of the protoent structure are:

p_name

The official name of the protocol.

p_aliases

A NULL-terminated list of alternative names for the protocol.

p_proto

The protocol number.

Return Value

The getprotoent(), getprotobyname() and getprotobynumber() functions return a pointer to a statically allocated protoent structure, or a null pointer if an error occurs or the end of the file is reached.

Files

/etc/protocols

protocol database file

Attributes

For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7).

Interface Attribute Value
getprotoent() Thread safety MT-Unsafe race:protoent
race:protoentbuf locale
getprotobyname() Thread safety MT-Unsafe race:protobyname
locale
getprotobynumber() Thread safety MT-Unsafe race:protobynumber
locale
setprotoent(),
endprotoent()
Thread safety MT-Unsafe race:protoent
locale

In the above table, protoent in race:protoent signifies that if any of the functions setprotoent(), getprotoent(), or endprotoent() are used in parallel in different threads of a program, then data races could occur.

Conforming to

POSIX.1-2001, POSIX.1-2008, 4.3BSD.

See Also

getnetent(3), getprotoent_r(3), getservent(3), protocols(5)

Colophon

This page is part of release 5.04 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

Referenced By

getent(1), getnetent(3), getprotoent_r(3), getservent(3), getsockopt(2), nsswitch.conf(5), protocols(5), raw(7), setnetgrent(3), socket(2).

The man pages endprotoent(3), getprotobyname(3), getprotobynumber(3) and setprotoent(3) are aliases of getprotoent(3).

2017-09-15 GNU Linux Programmer's Manual