inet_addr - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


INET(3)                    Linux Programmer's Manual                   INET(3)



NAME
       inet_aton,   inet_addr,   inet_network,   inet_ntoa,   inet_makeaddr,   inet_lnaof,
       inet_netof - Internet address manipulation routines

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/socket.h>
       #include <netinet/in.h>
       #include <arpa/inet.h>

       int inet_aton(const char *cp, struct in_addr *inp);

       in_addr_t inet_addr(const char *cp);

       in_addr_t inet_network(const char *cp);

       char *inet_ntoa(struct in_addr in);

       struct in_addr inet_makeaddr(int net, int host);

       in_addr_t inet_lnaof(struct in_addr in);

       in_addr_t inet_netof(struct in_addr in);

DESCRIPTION
       inet_aton() converts the Internet host address cp from  the  standard  numbers-and-
       dots  notation  into binary data and stores it in the structure that inp points to.
       inet_aton() returns non-zero if the address is valid, zero if not.

       The inet_addr() function converts the Internet host address  cp  from  numbers-and-
       dots  notation  into  binary  data in network byte order.  If the input is invalid,
       INADDR_NONE  (usually  -1)  is  returned.   This  is  an  obsolete   interface   to
       inet_aton(),  described  immediately  above;  it  is obsolete because -1 is a valid
       address (255.255.255.255), and inet_aton() provides a cleaner way to indicate error
       return.

       The  inet_network()  function  extracts  a  number  suitable for use as an Internet
       address in host byte order from the address cp in  numbers-and-dots  notation.   If
       the input is invalid, -1 is returned.

       The  inet_ntoa()  function  converts  the Internet host address in given in network
       byte order to a string  in  standard  numbers-and-dots  notation.   The  string  is
       returned in a statically allocated buffer, which subsequent calls will overwrite.

       The  inet_makeaddr()  function makes an Internet host address in network byte order
       by combining the network number net with the local address  host  in  network  net,
       both in local host byte order.

       The  inet_lnaof()  function  returns  the  local  host address part of the Internet
       address in.  The local host address is returned in local host byte order.

       The inet_netof() function returns the network number part of the  Internet  Address
       in.  The network number is returned in local host byte order.

       The  structure  in_addr  as  used in inet_ntoa(), inet_makeaddr(), inet_lnoaf() and
       inet_netof() is defined in netinet/in.h as:

              struct in_addr {
                      unsigned long int s_addr;
              }

       Note that on the i80x86 the host byte order is Least Significant Byte first (little
       endian),  whereas  the  network  byte  order,  as  used  on  the  Internet, is Most
       Significant Byte first (big endian).

NOTE
       When you using numbers-and-dots notation for addresses, be aware that  each  number
       will  be  interpreted as octal if preceded by a 0 and as hexadecimal if preceded by
       0x.  For example, inet_aton("226.000.000.037", &t) will interpret  the  address  as
       226.0.0.31 and not 226.0.0.37.

GLIBC NOTES
       In  order  to expose the declaration of inet_aton(), one of the feature test macros
       _BSD_SOURCE, _SVID_SOURCE, or _GNU_SOURCE must be defined.

CONFORMING TO
       4.3BSD.  inet_addr(), inet_aton(), and inet_ntoa() are specified in POSIX.1-2001.

SEE ALSO
       gethostbyname(3), getnetent(3), inet_ntop(3), inet_pton(3), hosts(5), networks(5)



BSD                               2001-07-25                           INET(3)

Generated by $Id: phpMan.php,v 4.54 2007/08/21 09:05:22 chedong Exp $ Author: Che Dong
On Apache/2.2.3 (Red Hat)
Under GNU General Public License
2009-11-10 01:36 @127.0.0.1 CrawledBy CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html)
Valid XHTML 1.0!Valid CSS!