stream_socket_server
(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
stream_socket_server — Create an Internet or Unix domain server socket
Description
string
$address
,int
&$error_code
= null
,string
&$error_message
= null
,int
$flags
= STREAM_SERVER_BIND | STREAM_SERVER_LISTEN,?resource
$context
= null
): resource|false
Creates a stream or datagram socket on the specified
address
.
This function only creates a socket, to begin accepting connections use stream_socket_accept().
Parameters
-
address
-
The type of socket created is determined by the transport specified using standard URL formatting:
transport://target
.For Internet Domain sockets (
AF_INET
) such as TCP and UDP, thetarget
portion of theremote_socket
parameter should consist of a hostname or IP address followed by a colon and a port number. For Unix domain sockets, thetarget
portion should point to the socket file on the filesystem.Depending on the environment, Unix domain sockets may not be available. A list of available transports can be retrieved using stream_get_transports(). See List of Supported Socket Transports for a list of bulitin transports.
-
error_code
-
If the optional
error_code
anderror_message
arguments are present they will be set to indicate the actual system level error that occurred in the system-levelsocket()
,bind()
, andlisten()
calls. If the value returned inerror_code
is0
and the function returnedfalse
, it is an indication that the error occurred before thebind()
call. This is most likely due to a problem initializing the socket. Note that theerror_code
anderror_message
arguments will always be passed by reference. -
error_message
-
See
error_code
description. -
flags
-
A bitmask field which may be set to any combination of socket creation flags.
Note:
For UDP sockets, you must use
STREAM_SERVER_BIND
as theflags
parameter. -
context
-
Return Values
Returns the created stream, or false
on error.
Changelog
Version | Description |
---|---|
8.0.0 |
context is nullable now.
|
Examples
Example #1 Using TCP server sockets
<?php
$socket = stream_socket_server("tcp://0.0.0.0:8000", $errno, $errstr);
if (!$socket) {
echo "$errstr ($errno)<br />\n";
} else {
while ($conn = stream_socket_accept($socket)) {
fwrite($conn, 'The local time is ' . date('n/j/Y g:i a') . "\n");
fclose($conn);
}
fclose($socket);
}
?>
The example below shows how to act as a time server which can respond to time queries as shown in an example on stream_socket_client().
Note: Most systems require root access to create a server socket on a port below 1024.
Example #2 Using UDP server sockets
<?php
$socket = stream_socket_server("udp://127.0.0.1:1113", $errno, $errstr, STREAM_SERVER_BIND);
if (!$socket) {
die("$errstr ($errno)");
}
do {
$pkt = stream_socket_recvfrom($socket, 1, 0, $peer);
echo "$peer\n";
stream_socket_sendto($socket, date("D M j H:i:s Y\r\n"), 0, $peer);
} while ($pkt !== false);
?>
Notes
Note: When specifying a numerical IPv6 address (e.g.
fe80::1
), you must enclose the IP in square brackets—for example,tcp://[fe80::1]:80
.
See Also
- stream_socket_client() - Open Internet or Unix domain socket connection
- stream_set_blocking() - Set blocking/non-blocking mode on a stream
- stream_set_timeout() - Set timeout period on a stream
- fgets() - Gets line from file pointer
- fgetss() - Gets line from file pointer and strip HTML tags
- fwrite() - Binary-safe file write
- fclose() - Closes an open file pointer
- feof() - Tests for end-of-file on a file pointer
- Curl extension