PHP 7.0.6 Released

socket_create_listen

(PHP 4 >= 4.1.0, PHP 5, PHP 7)

socket_create_listenOpens a socket on port to accept connections

Description

resource socket_create_listen ( int $port [, int $backlog = 128 ] )

socket_create_listen() creates a new socket resource of type AF_INET listening on all local interfaces on the given port waiting for new connections.

This function is meant to ease the task of creating a new socket which only listens to accept new connections.

Parameters

port

The port on which to listen on all interfaces.

backlog

The backlog parameter defines the maximum length the queue of pending connections may grow to. SOMAXCONN may be passed as backlog parameter, see socket_listen() for more information.

Return Values

socket_create_listen() returns a new socket resource on success or FALSE on error. The error code can be retrieved with socket_last_error(). This code may be passed to socket_strerror() to get a textual explanation of the error.

Notes

Note:

If you want to create a socket which only listens on a certain interface you need to use socket_create(), socket_bind() and socket_listen().

See Also

User Contributed Notes

basim at baassiri dot com
12 years ago
Remember that ports are only valid from 1 - 65536
abryant at apple dot com
1 month ago
Not a big deal, but the maximum port is 65535, not 65536
jdittmer at ppp0 dot net
11 years ago
If you specify no port number, or 0, a random free port will be chosen.
To use ports for ipc between client/server on the same machine you can use (minus error checking)

server.php:
<?php
$sock
= socket_create_listen(0);
socket_getsockname($sock, $addr, $port);
print
"Server Listening on $addr:$port\n";
$fp = fopen($port_file, 'w');
fwrite($fp, $port);
fclose($fp);
while(
$c = socket_accept($sock)) {
  
/* do something useful */
  
socket_getpeername($c, $raddr, $rport);
   print
"Received Connection from $raddr:$rport\n";
}
socket_close($sock);
?>

client.php:
<?php
$fp
= fopen($port_file, 'r');
$port = fgets($fp, 1024);
fclose($fp);
$sock = socket_create(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP);
socket_connect($sock, '127.0.0.1', $port);
socket_close($sock);
?>
sysspoof at ng-lab dot org
8 years ago
Please note that port 1 to and with 1024 on linux and bsd system require root privileges. So it is recommended to choose a higher port for your own application.
aeolianmeson at ifacfchi dot blitzeclipse dot com
7 years ago
I believe that on some systems this may not bind to some or all public interfaces.

On my Windows system, I could not connect on the public interface using this, but could when I made the individual calls to create, bind, and listen.

Dustin Oprea
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