I want to send a opened file descriptor between two different programs. So I am using ioctl with named pipes to do so. But there I am getting Invalid argument for ioctl.
#include <stropts.h>
#include "accesories.c"
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#define MSGSIZ 63
char *fifo = "fifo";
int send_err(int fd, int errcode, const char *msg)
{
int n;
if ((n = strlen(msg)) > 0)
if (write(fd, msg, n) != n) /* send the error message */
return(-1);
if (errcode >= 0)
errcode = -1; /* must be negative */
if (send_fd(fd, errcode) < 0)
return(-1);
return(0);
}
int send_fd(int fd, int fd_to_send)
{
char buf[2]; /* send_fd()/recv_fd() 2-byte protocol */
buf[0] = 0; /* null byte flag to recv_fd() */
if (fd_to_send < 0) {
buf[1] = -fd_to_send; /* nonzero status means error */
if (buf[1] == 0)
buf[1] = 1; /* -256, etc. would screw up protocol */
} else {
buf[1] = 0; /* zero status means OK */
}
//printf("From the write %d\n",buf[0]);
if (write(fd, buf, 2) != 2)
return(-1);
if (fd_to_send >= 0)
if (ioctl(fd, I_SENDFD, fd_to_send) < 0)
{
printf("Eroor ::: %s\n",strerror(errno));
return(-1);
}
return(0);
}
int main(int argc, char const *argv[])
{
int fd, j, nwrite;
char msgbuf[MSGSIZ+1];
int fd_to_send;
if((fd_to_send = open("vi",O_RDONLY)) < 0)
printf("vi open failed");
if(argc < 2)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Usage: sendmessage msg ... \n");
exit(1);
}
/* open fifo with O_NONBLOCK set */
if((fd = open(fifo, O_WRONLY | O_NONBLOCK)) < 0)
printf("fifo open failed");
/* send messages */
for (j = 1; j < argc; j++)
{
if(strlen(argv[j]) > MSGSIZ)
{
fprintf(stderr, "message too long %s\n", argv[j]);
continue;
}
strcpy(msgbuf, argv[j]);
if((nwrite = write(fd, msgbuf, 6)) == -1)
printf("message write failed");
}
printf("From send_fd %d \n",send_fd(fd,fd_to_send));
exit(0);
}
The file accessories .h only contain some common include files nothing else.
First I am sending a simple message and then calling send_fd which is first sending a 2 byte message and then have to send file descriptor using ioctl. But it is not.
sendmsg()syscall to send file descriptors over Unix domain sockets instead. Is there any reason you want to use I_SENDFD? – Andy Ross Jul 6 '12 at 4:07