this function, compared to the function socket_accept, got an extra argument "timeout".
To make this function wait indefinitelly to incoming connections, just as in socket_accept, set timeout to -1. It works for me with PHP 5.0.4.
(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
stream_socket_accept — Aceita uma conexão em um socket criado por stream_socket_server()
$socket
, ?float $timeout
= null
, string &$peer_name
= null
): resource|falseAceita uma conexão em um socket previamente criado por stream_socket_server().
socket
O socket do servidor de onde a conexão será aceita.
timeout
Substitui o limite de tempo padrão de aceitação do socket. O tempo deve ser informado em segundos. Por padrão, default_socket_timeout é usado.
peer_name
Será definido para o nome (endereço) do cliente que conectou, se incluído e disponível no transporte selecionado.
Nota:
Pode também ser determinado mais tarde usando stream_socket_get_name().
Retorna um fluxo para a conexão de socket aceita ou false
em caso de falha.
Versão | Descrição |
---|---|
8.0.0 |
timeout agora pode ser nulo.
|
Esta função não deve ser usada com sockets de servidor UDP. No lugar dela, use stream_socket_recvfrom() e stream_socket_sendto().
this function, compared to the function socket_accept, got an extra argument "timeout".
To make this function wait indefinitelly to incoming connections, just as in socket_accept, set timeout to -1. It works for me with PHP 5.0.4.
To check if there's a new connection waiting, without blocking, or (when using non-blocking mode) without notices), you can use stream_accept (as opposed to socket_select).
<?php
class GenericClass {
protected $resSocket=null;
function acceptConnections() {
# check that we still have a resource
if(is_resource($this->resSocket)) {
$arrRead=array($this->resSocket);
$arrWrite=array();
/** @warning Passing $arrRead,$arrWrite by reference */
if(stream_select($arrRead,$arrWrite,$arrWrite,0)) {
$resConnection=stream_socket_accept($this->resSocket,0);
# ... other stuff here
}
}
}
}
?>
This code could be very helpfull...
The following code is for the "server". It listen for a message until CTRL-C
<?php
while (true)
{
// disconnected every 5 seconds...
receive_message('127.0.0.1','85',5);
}
function receive_message($ipServer,$portNumber,$nbSecondsIdle)
{
// creating the socket...
$socket = stream_socket_server('tcp://'.$ipServer.':'.$portNumber, $errno, $errstr);
if (!$socket)
{
echo "$errstr ($errno)<br />\n";
}
else
{
// while there is connection, i'll receive it... if I didn't receive a message within $nbSecondsIdle seconds, the following function will stop.
while ($conn = @stream_socket_accept($socket,$nbSecondsIdle))
{
$message= fread($conn, 1024);
echo 'I have received that : '.$message;
fputs ($conn, "OK\n");
fclose ($conn);
}
fclose($socket);
}
}
?>
The following code is for the "client". It send a message, and read the respons...
<?php
send_message('127.0.0.1','85','Message to send...');
function send_message($ipServer,$portServer,$message)
{
$fp = stream_socket_client("tcp://$ipServer:$portServer", $errno, $errstr);
if (!$fp)
{
echo "ERREUR : $errno - $errstr<br />\n";
}
else
{
fwrite($fp,"$message\n");
$response = fread($fp, 4);
if ($response != "OK\n")
{echo 'The command couldn\'t be executed...\ncause :'.$response;}
else
{echo 'Execution successfull...';}
fclose($fp);
}
}
?>
Note that if you use 0 as timeout, the connection will timeout right away.
To whom it may concern, and it may concern you greatly, stream_set_blocking has no effect on stream_socket_accept.
If you want it to return right away, connection or not, use 0 for the timeout parameter.