pub trait SocketAddrExt: Sealed {
// Required methods
fn from_abstract_name<N>(name: N) -> Result<SocketAddr>
where N: AsRef<[u8]>;
fn as_abstract_name(&self) -> Option<&[u8]>;
}
Available on Linux and (Linux or Android) only.
Expand description
Platform-specific extensions to SocketAddr
.
Required Methods§
sourcefn from_abstract_name<N>(name: N) -> Result<SocketAddr>where
N: AsRef<[u8]>,
fn from_abstract_name<N>(name: N) -> Result<SocketAddr>where N: AsRef<[u8]>,
Creates a Unix socket address in the abstract namespace.
The abstract namespace is a Linux-specific extension that allows Unix sockets to be bound without creating an entry in the filesystem. Abstract sockets are unaffected by filesystem layout or permissions, and no cleanup is necessary when the socket is closed.
An abstract socket address name may contain any bytes, including zero.
Errors
Returns an error if the name is longer than SUN_LEN - 1
.
Examples
use std::os::unix::net::{UnixListener, SocketAddr};
use std::os::linux::net::SocketAddrExt;
fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
let addr = SocketAddr::from_abstract_name(b"hidden")?;
let listener = match UnixListener::bind_addr(&addr) {
Ok(sock) => sock,
Err(err) => {
println!("Couldn't bind: {err:?}");
return Err(err);
}
};
Ok(())
}
Runsourcefn as_abstract_name(&self) -> Option<&[u8]>
fn as_abstract_name(&self) -> Option<&[u8]>
Returns the contents of this address if it is in the abstract namespace.
Examples
use std::os::unix::net::{UnixListener, SocketAddr};
use std::os::linux::net::SocketAddrExt;
fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
let name = b"hidden";
let name_addr = SocketAddr::from_abstract_name(name)?;
let socket = UnixListener::bind_addr(&name_addr)?;
let local_addr = socket.local_addr().expect("Couldn't get local address");
assert_eq!(local_addr.as_abstract_name(), Some(&name[..]));
Ok(())
}
RunObject Safety§
This trait is not object safe.
Implementors§
impl SocketAddrExt for SocketAddr
Available on Unix and (Android or Linux) only.