I read from socket using recv
function. I have problem when no data available for reading. My programm just stops. I found that I can set timeout using se
Another way to set a timeout on recv()
itself without using select()
is to use setsockopt() to set the socket's SO_RCVTIMEO
option (on platforms that support it).
On Windows, the code would look like this:
DWORD timeout = SOCKET_READ_TIMEOUT_SEC * 1000;
setsockopt(s, SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVTIMEO, (char*)&timeout, sizeof(timeout));
//...
recv_size = recv(s, rx_tmp, bufSize, 0);
if (recv_size == SOCKET_ERROR)
{
if (WSAGetLastError() != WSAETIMEDOUT)
//...
}
On other platforms, the code would look like this instead:
struct timeval timeout;
timeout.tv_sec = SOCKET_READ_TIMEOUT_SEC;
timeout.tv_usec = 0;
setsockopt(s, SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVTIMEO, &timeout, sizeof(timeout));
//...
recv_size = recv(s, rx_tmp, bufSize, 0);
if (recv_size == -1)
{
if ((errno != EAGAIN) && (errno != EWOULDBLOCK))
//...
}
You should check return value of select
. select
will return 0
in case timeout expired, so you should check for error and call recv
only if select
returned positive value:
On success, select() and pselect() return the number of file descriptors contained in the three returned descriptor sets (that is, the total number of bits that are set in readfds, writefds, exceptfds) which may be zero if the timeout expires before anything interesting happens.
int rv = select(s + 1, &set, NULL, NULL, &timeout);
if (rv == SOCKET_ERROR)
{
// select error...
}
else if (rv == 0)
{
// timeout, socket does not have anything to read
}
else
{
// socket has something to read
recv_size = recv(s, rx_tmp, bufSize, 0);
if (recv_size == SOCKET_ERROR)
{
// read failed...
}
else if (recv_size == 0)
{
// peer disconnected...
}
else
{
// read successful...
}
}
use the FD_ISSET() macro to test whether there is data to read. If it returns false, don't do the read.
http://linux.die.net/man/3/fd_set