Difference between revisions of "Example socket"

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Closing the socket
 
Closing the socket
 
Waiting for a connection
 
Waiting for a connection
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'''On MACHINE1 you will see something like this:'''
 
'''On MACHINE1 you will see something like this:'''
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Writing "Message from the socket server" to server
 
Writing "Message from the socket server" to server
 
Closing socket
 
Closing socket
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Revision as of 16:02, 2 January 2014

TODO: {{#todo:Review(12.31.13-14:56->JG+)|Jgreene|oe 4,oe 5,jg,md,Review}}

This is a guide to the socket C example project included in the EMAC OE SDK.

This application sets up host and client sockets (assumedly on two different machines) and tests the connection.

The socket project builds one executable: socket.

Opening, Building and Uploading the Project Files

1. Open the C/C++ editing perspective.

stub

2. Open the project files.

stub

3. Build the project.

stub

4. Upload the executables to the target system.

stub

Usage and Behavior

Hardware Requirements

The socket C example project will run just fine on any system for which it can be compiled.

Using socket

Get 2 machines. We're going to refer to our machines as MACHINE0 and MACHINE1.
Compile and upload the socket executable to each of them.
Connect them both to the same ethernet network.

On MACHINE0 run the socket program like this:

som9g45:/tmp# ./socket -s 9999

Note that we specified -s, thus configuring MACHINE0 as a server; and 9999 is just an arbitrarily chosen (and assumed to be free) port address on the host machine.

Now MACHINE0 is the server and it's waiting for a connection...

On MACHINE1 run the socket program like this:

som9g20:/tmp# ./socket -c 10.0.2.204 9999

Note that we specified -C, thus configuring MACHINE1 as a client. 10.0.2.204 is the host machine's address. 9999 is that port address on the host machine.

...MACHINE1 connects to MACHINE0. MACHINE0 sends a message to MACHINE1 "Message from the socket server". MACHINE1 receives the message and sends it right back again to check the accuracy of the transmission; and we see that the messages match so the transmission was successful.

On MACHINE0 you will see something like this:

som9g45:/tmp# ./socket -s 9999

Starting server
Making socket
Binding to port 9999opened socket as fd (3) on port (9999) for stream i/o
Server
                        sin_family        = 2
                        sin_addr.s_addr   = 0
                        sin_port          = 9999

Making a listen queue of 5 elements
Waiting for a connection

Got a connection
Sending "Message from the socket server" to client
The messages match
Closing the socket
Waiting for a connection

On MACHINE1 you will see something like this:

root@som9g20:/tmp# ./socket -c 10.0.2.204 9999

Making a socket
Connecting to 10.0.2.204 on port 9999
Received "Message from the socket server" from server

Writing "Message from the socket server" to server
Closing socket