{-# LINE 1 "Network/Socket/ByteString.hsc" #-} {-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-warnings-deprecations #-} {-# LANGUAGE CPP, ForeignFunctionInterface #-} {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-} -- | -- Module : Network.Socket.ByteString -- Copyright : (c) Johan Tibell 2007-2010 -- License : BSD-style -- -- Maintainer : johan.tibell@gmail.com -- Stability : stable -- Portability : portable -- -- This module provides access to the BSD /socket/ interface. This -- module is generally more efficient than the 'String' based network -- functions in 'Network.Socket'. For detailed documentation, consult -- your favorite POSIX socket reference. All functions communicate -- failures by converting the error number to 'System.IO.IOError'. -- -- This module is made to be imported with 'Network.Socket' like so: -- -- > import Network.Socket hiding (send, sendTo, recv, recvFrom) -- > import Network.Socket.ByteString -- module Network.Socket.ByteString ( -- * Send data to a socket send , sendAll , sendTo , sendAllTo -- ** Vectored I/O -- $vectored , sendMany , sendManyTo -- * Receive data from a socket , recv , recvFrom ) where import Control.Exception as E (catch, throwIO) import Control.Monad (when) import Data.ByteString (ByteString) import Data.ByteString.Internal (createAndTrim) import Data.ByteString.Unsafe (unsafeUseAsCStringLen) import Foreign.Marshal.Alloc (allocaBytes) import Foreign.Ptr (castPtr) import Network.Socket (sendBuf, sendBufTo, recvBuf, recvBufFrom) import System.IO.Error (isEOFError) import qualified Data.ByteString as B import Network.Socket.ByteString.Internal import Network.Socket.Internal import Network.Socket.Types {-# LINE 62 "Network/Socket/ByteString.hsc" #-} import Control.Monad (liftM, zipWithM_) import Foreign.Marshal.Array (allocaArray) import Foreign.Marshal.Utils (with) import Foreign.Ptr (Ptr, plusPtr) import Foreign.Storable (Storable(..)) import Network.Socket.ByteString.IOVec (IOVec(..)) import Network.Socket.ByteString.MsgHdr (MsgHdr(..)) {-# LINE 71 "Network/Socket/ByteString.hsc" #-} -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Sending -- | Send data to the socket. The socket must be connected to a -- remote socket. Returns the number of bytes sent. Applications are -- responsible for ensuring that all data has been sent. -- -- Sending data to closed socket may lead to undefined behaviour. send :: Socket -- ^ Connected socket -> ByteString -- ^ Data to send -> IO Int -- ^ Number of bytes sent send sock xs = unsafeUseAsCStringLen xs $ \(str, len) -> sendBuf sock (castPtr str) len -- | Send data to the socket. The socket must be connected to a -- remote socket. Unlike 'send', this function continues to send data -- until either all data has been sent or an error occurs. On error, -- an exception is raised, and there is no way to determine how much -- data, if any, was successfully sent. -- -- Sending data to closed socket may lead to undefined behaviour. sendAll :: Socket -- ^ Connected socket -> ByteString -- ^ Data to send -> IO () sendAll _ "" = return () sendAll sock bs = do sent <- send sock bs waitWhen0 sent sock when (sent >= 0) $ sendAll sock $ B.drop sent bs -- | Send data to the socket. The recipient can be specified -- explicitly, so the socket need not be in a connected state. -- Returns the number of bytes sent. Applications are responsible for -- ensuring that all data has been sent. -- -- Sending data to closed socket may lead to undefined behaviour. sendTo :: Socket -- ^ Socket -> ByteString -- ^ Data to send -> SockAddr -- ^ Recipient address -> IO Int -- ^ Number of bytes sent sendTo sock xs addr = unsafeUseAsCStringLen xs $ \(str, len) -> sendBufTo sock str len addr -- | Send data to the socket. The recipient can be specified -- explicitly, so the socket need not be in a connected state. Unlike -- 'sendTo', this function continues to send data until either all -- data has been sent or an error occurs. On error, an exception is -- raised, and there is no way to determine how much data, if any, was -- successfully sent. -- -- Sending data to closed socket may lead to undefined behaviour. sendAllTo :: Socket -- ^ Socket -> ByteString -- ^ Data to send -> SockAddr -- ^ Recipient address -> IO () sendAllTo _ "" _ = return () sendAllTo sock xs addr = do sent <- sendTo sock xs addr waitWhen0 sent sock when (sent >= 0) $ sendAllTo sock (B.drop sent xs) addr -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- ** Vectored I/O -- $vectored -- -- Vectored I\/O, also known as scatter\/gather I\/O, allows multiple -- data segments to be sent using a single system call, without first -- concatenating the segments. For example, given a list of -- @ByteString@s, @xs@, -- -- > sendMany sock xs -- -- is equivalent to -- -- > sendAll sock (concat xs) -- -- but potentially more efficient. -- -- Vectored I\/O are often useful when implementing network protocols -- that, for example, group data into segments consisting of one or -- more fixed-length headers followed by a variable-length body. -- | Send data to the socket. The socket must be in a connected -- state. The data is sent as if the parts have been concatenated. -- This function continues to send data until either all data has been -- sent or an error occurs. On error, an exception is raised, and -- there is no way to determine how much data, if any, was -- successfully sent. -- -- Sending data to closed socket may lead to undefined behaviour. sendMany :: Socket -- ^ Connected socket -> [ByteString] -- ^ Data to send -> IO () {-# LINE 167 "Network/Socket/ByteString.hsc" #-} sendMany _ [] = return () sendMany sock@(MkSocket fd _ _ _ _) cs = do sent <- sendManyInner waitWhen0 sent sock when (sent >= 0) $ sendMany sock (remainingChunks sent cs) where sendManyInner = liftM fromIntegral . withIOVec cs $ \(iovsPtr, iovsLen) -> throwSocketErrorWaitWrite sock "Network.Socket.ByteString.sendMany" $ c_writev (fromIntegral fd) iovsPtr (fromIntegral (min iovsLen (1024))) {-# LINE 178 "Network/Socket/ByteString.hsc" #-} {-# LINE 181 "Network/Socket/ByteString.hsc" #-} -- | Send data to the socket. The recipient can be specified -- explicitly, so the socket need not be in a connected state. The -- data is sent as if the parts have been concatenated. This function -- continues to send data until either all data has been sent or an -- error occurs. On error, an exception is raised, and there is no -- way to determine how much data, if any, was successfully sent. -- -- Sending data to closed socket may lead to undefined behaviour. sendManyTo :: Socket -- ^ Socket -> [ByteString] -- ^ Data to send -> SockAddr -- ^ Recipient address -> IO () {-# LINE 195 "Network/Socket/ByteString.hsc" #-} sendManyTo _ [] _ = return () sendManyTo sock@(MkSocket fd _ _ _ _) cs addr = do sent <- liftM fromIntegral sendManyToInner waitWhen0 sent sock when (sent >= 0) $ sendManyTo sock (remainingChunks sent cs) addr where sendManyToInner = withSockAddr addr $ \addrPtr addrSize -> withIOVec cs $ \(iovsPtr, iovsLen) -> do let msgHdr = MsgHdr addrPtr (fromIntegral addrSize) iovsPtr (fromIntegral iovsLen) with msgHdr $ \msgHdrPtr -> throwSocketErrorWaitWrite sock "Network.Socket.ByteString.sendManyTo" $ c_sendmsg (fromIntegral fd) msgHdrPtr 0 {-# LINE 213 "Network/Socket/ByteString.hsc" #-} -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Receiving -- | Receive data from the socket. The socket must be in a connected -- state. This function may return fewer bytes than specified. If -- the message is longer than the specified length, it may be -- discarded depending on the type of socket. This function may block -- until a message arrives. -- -- Considering hardware and network realities, the maximum number of bytes to -- receive should be a small power of 2, e.g., 4096. -- -- For TCP sockets, a zero length return value means the peer has -- closed its half side of the connection. -- -- Receiving data from closed socket may lead to undefined behaviour. recv :: Socket -- ^ Connected socket -> Int -- ^ Maximum number of bytes to receive -> IO ByteString -- ^ Data received recv sock nbytes | nbytes < 0 = ioError (mkInvalidRecvArgError "Network.Socket.ByteString.recv") | otherwise = createAndTrim nbytes $ \ptr -> E.catch (recvBuf sock ptr nbytes) (\e -> if isEOFError e then return 0 else throwIO e) -- | Receive data from the socket. The socket need not be in a -- connected state. Returns @(bytes, address)@ where @bytes@ is a -- 'ByteString' representing the data received and @address@ is a -- 'SockAddr' representing the address of the sending socket. -- -- Receiving data from closed socket may lead to undefined behaviour. recvFrom :: Socket -- ^ Socket -> Int -- ^ Maximum number of bytes to receive -> IO (ByteString, SockAddr) -- ^ Data received and sender address recvFrom sock nbytes = allocaBytes nbytes $ \ptr -> do (len, sockaddr) <- recvBufFrom sock ptr nbytes str <- B.packCStringLen (ptr, len) return (str, sockaddr) -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Not exported {-# LINE 259 "Network/Socket/ByteString.hsc" #-} -- | Suppose we try to transmit a list of chunks @cs@ via a gathering write -- operation and find that @n@ bytes were sent. Then @remainingChunks n cs@ is -- list of chunks remaining to be sent. remainingChunks :: Int -> [ByteString] -> [ByteString] remainingChunks _ [] = [] remainingChunks i (x:xs) | i < len = B.drop i x : xs | otherwise = let i' = i - len in i' `seq` remainingChunks i' xs where len = B.length x -- | @withIOVec cs f@ executes the computation @f@, passing as argument a pair -- consisting of a pointer to a temporarily allocated array of pointers to -- IOVec made from @cs@ and the number of pointers (@length cs@). -- /Unix only/. withIOVec :: [ByteString] -> ((Ptr IOVec, Int) -> IO a) -> IO a withIOVec cs f = allocaArray csLen $ \aPtr -> do zipWithM_ pokeIov (ptrs aPtr) cs f (aPtr, csLen) where csLen = length cs ptrs = iterate (`plusPtr` sizeOf (undefined :: IOVec)) pokeIov ptr s = unsafeUseAsCStringLen s $ \(sPtr, sLen) -> poke ptr $ IOVec sPtr (fromIntegral sLen) {-# LINE 286 "Network/Socket/ByteString.hsc" #-}