I'm trying to make a simple listener on port 8195. When I try the following code block in PHP CLI conditions, it only shows 'Test' once, then hangs. If I delete the file 'votifier.run', the file designed to be the on/off switch, it still continues to hang. It never shows 'Client connected'.
Furthermore, if I try to connect to the host via Telnet on port 8195 while the script is running, I simply get a connection failed message. It's like it's looking for one connection and just not giving up.
// Set the IP and port to listen to
$address = 'localhost';
$port = 8195;
// Create a TCP Stream socket
$sock = socket_create(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
// Bind the socket to an address/port
socket_bind($sock, $address, $port);
// Start listening for connections
socket_listen($sock);
// Loop continuously
while ( file_exists('votifier.run') ) {
echo 'Test';
$client = socket_accept($sock);
if( $client ) {
echo 'Client connected';
// Don't hang on slow connections
socket_set_timeout($client, 5);
// Send them our version
socket_write("VOTIFIER MCWEBLINK\n");
// Read the 256 byte block
$block = socket_read($client, 256);
...
The answer:
socket_accept() will usually hang until a connection is made. If a connection attempt was made, the script would continue, but because the socket was being created on localhost, it would only accept connections to it from localhost.
The fix is to use your external IP rather than 'localhost' or '127.0.0.1'. Then you can Telnet to it.
I'm just guessing here, but could it be that the address you are trying to bind to should not be a hostname?
If the socket is of the AF_INET family, the address is an IP in dotted-quad notation (e.g. 127.0.0.1).
EDIT
Ok, I've taken your script and tried to reproduce your error but couldn't. There are a couple of flaws in it but none that would cause a telnet client's connection attempt to fail.
Since none of the aforementioned applies, let's go thru the checklist one by one:
sockets module loaded/compiled
localhost does resolve to 127.0.0.1
the port isn't taken by any other application running
there's no rule of any sort of firewall that would prevent communication between the telnet client and your server
the machine which you connect from is allowed to connect to the server host (try the same host if it isn't)
the file that's being checked in the while-loop does exist
you are sure that there isn't another fatal error within your script that would prevent the snippet you posted from running
These are all the possible error sources I can think of, atm. Try fixing up the minor flaws first, then go thru the checklist.
if( $client ) {
echo 'Client connected';
// Don't hang on slow connections
socket_set_option(
$client,
SOL_SOCKET,
SO_RCVTIMEO | SO_SNDTIMEO,
array('sec' => 5, 'usec' => 0)
);
// Send them our version
socket_write($client, "VOTIFIER MCWEBLINK\n");
^^^^^^^
// Read the 256 byte block
$block = socket_read($client, 256);
You should be using threads. If the client never sends anything your code will block in the read() method. Each accepted socket should be completely handled in a new thread.
You may want to check this:
PHP Votifier example for Minecraft Topsites
It explains how the code works, it's the basic function that makes the encryption, fills up the 256 blank spaces and sends the packet too. You can work a little with it as you may want to improve it.
You can see a live demo of the running php for the plugin here: http://topg.org/test_votifier
Related
I have a function which creates a socket connection and listens on a port number for HL7 messages sent by a laboratory machine via TCP.
If the lab machine is not sending anything, my listen function keeps listening. Is there a way to specify that it should listen only for say 10 seconds and then if there are no messages, an error should be thrown?
$address = '0.0.0.0';
$port = 5600;
// Create a TCP Stream socket
$sock = socket_create(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
// Bind the socket to an address/port
$bind = socket_bind($sock, $address, $port);
// Start listening for connections
socket_listen($sock);
$client = socket_accept($sock);
// Read the input from the client
$input = socket_read($client, 2024);
// Strip all white spaces from input
$segs = explode("|",$input);
// Close the master sockets
$close = socket_close($sock);
This is the solution:
socket_set_option($sock,SOL_SOCKET,SO_RCVTIMEO,array("sec"=>10,"usec"=>0)); // after 10 seconds socket will destroy the connection. Also you can set and uses
This looks like the XY problem.
That the thing you want to measure acts as a client rather implies that you might want to do more than just detect an open TCP connection in your script, e.g. capture some data. Further, the underlying OS has a lot of complex, well tested, reliable and tunable mechanisms for tracking the state of connections.
While you could do as stefo91 suggests and try to manipulate receive timeout, I'm not sure if this is applied in the wait for an initial connection. A better solution would be to set the socket to non-blocking. Don't forget to either:
inject some calls to sleep()/usleep() or
use socket_select()
unless you want your script to be burning a lot of resource with nothing to do.
But depending on a lot of information you've not told us about, the right solution might be to run one script as a server, and a second as a monitor. The second could be polling/parsing the output of netstat to check the connection.
I've got a Python server which multiple clients connect to using sockets. At the moment one server isn't able to cope with the load so I'm looking at ways to split the clients up according to some criteria such as their username.
The intention is to put clients with usernames starting with A-G on server 1, H-P on server 2 and P-Z on server 3.
What I'm trying to do is to write a process that will listen for connections on port 45000 and will then forward those on to the appropriate server on 45001, 45002 and 45003.
At the moment, when a client connects to the original server they connect via a TCP port e.g. 45000. The server checks that they are authorised and responds on a random port with a handshake e.g. 59117, 60647 or 61573.
The response port is not specified when the client first connects so my question is, when is the value determined and how does the client know to listen on that port for the reply ?
So far I've written a PHP process which takes the data from the clients and forwards it to the appropriate server but I can't work out which port to listen on for the response back from the server. Is there some way that PHP sockets can negotiate the response port so that it can be stored in a variable in my script ?
Here's my basic connection code in PHP. I have no knowledge of Python so this is going to have to be done in PHP:
// Define remote Server
$socket=socket_create(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP);
// Open socket on remote server to send $buf data to
socket_connect($socket, 'X.X.X.X', 40149);
echo ("Forwarding data ($buf) to $socket ....\r\n");
$bytesWritten=socket_write($socket, $buf, strlen($buf));
echo ("Wrote: $bytesWritten bytes\r\n");
// Now listen for response but this will be on another socket
// How do we know what this is ?
if (false === ($response = socket_read($socket, 16384))) {
echo ("Response: $response\r\n");
}
This is way out of my comfort zone so I may have this completely wrong but an afternoon spent Googling has turned up any answers yet.
I've seen this question asked at least a dozen times. None of the responses helped me.
The code:
$host = "127.0.0.1";
$port = 80;
//no timeout
set_time_limit(0);
//create socket
$socket=socket_create(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0) or die("Could not create socket\n");
if (!socket_set_option($socket, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, 1)) {
echo socket_strerror(socket_last_error($socket));
exit;
}
$result = socket_bind($socket, $host, $port) or die("Could not bind socket\n");
The 'if' statement was added because one response suggested putting it in there. Didn't seem to do anything for me. I plan to take it out. Anyway, my error is:
Warning: socket_bind(): unable to bind address [10013]: An attempt was made to access a socket in a way forbidden by its access permissions.
And, yes, I get that its supposed to mean the port is in use by another process. I changed the port number about 30 times. I temporarily turned off my (Windows 8) firewall. I ran netstat and I see that these ports don't close so I have like 30 sockets with the same PID and name.
So, my question is: what am I doing wrong?
Thanks to those that responded, but I figured out the problem on my own. The tutorial I used said to navigate to the server.php file. Don't laugh, but I navigated there via the browser. So, that message was popping up on my browser.
I ran the same file in the command prompt and I was either getting that error or it looked like it was hanging there depending on the port I chose. It wasn't crashing... it just had nothing to output. I gave it something to output (yay echo statements!!).
Anyway, thanks again.
To bind to a port below 1024 the process needs privileged rights. Typical only root could do this.
For a more detailed discussion in this topic please read here: Is there a way for non-root processes to bind to "privileged" ports on Linux?
Most frequently the reason that you'll get this error is that the socket you're trying to use is already in use by another program. You're trying to open a socket to listen on port 80, what port is apache listening on? If it's also port 80, there's your problem.
I have some embedded devices which connect to their sever (supplied software for windows) running on port 6000.
I'm confused as to how this works as my understanding is that when a tcp connection is made on a port, that's it, the port is occupied an no other connections can be made.
But I guess this logic is wrong as multiple devices can connect to their server software just as a web server can accept multiple connections on port 80.
When I run netcat on an ubuntu server with the command nc -l -k 6000 it seems to do what I want, I can see the messages coming in one after another from multiple devices.
From the netcat manual:
-k Forces nc to stay listening for another connection after its cur-
rent connection is completed. It is an error to use this option
without the -l option.
I tried to achieve a similar scenario with php but I failed. Here's what I have so far:
<?php
$address = "0.0.0.0";
$port = 6000;
$mysock = socket_create(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP);
socket_bind($mysock, $address, $port) or die('Could not bind to address');
socket_listen($mysock, 5);
$client = socket_accept($mysock);
while (true) {
$input = socket_read($client, 1);
echo $input;
}
?>
I can see the first message from the first device that connects but after that nothing. Also this seems to be the wrong approach as the while loop causes high cpu usage.
Note I'm running the php script at the command line on an ubuntu server.
I realize that this code will only accept one client, but how can I change it so that it will behave like nc and accept multiple connections. Sorry if the question seems vague, I really don't know where to begin. Any help is appreciated
So Im trying to get my head wrapped around this....
I open the port
$remip = $_SERVER['SERVER_ADDR']; //Grab my server address
$fp = fsockopen($remip, 80, $errno, $errstr, 10);//Godaddy hosting only 80 and 443 ports work
//fsockopen(ip address , port, IDK, IDK, timeout delay)
so now the ports open or if not maybe some error checking to be sure
if (!$fp) { echo "$errstr ($errno)<br>\n"; exit; } //Not sure what this echos out but its clear how it stops errors
So now that the port is open any ip/client can connect on this port????
Ill assume I can now connect....
So on my client I open a socket to my server ip address port tcp connection.....
The php file includes something like
else {$out = "hello, 80\r\n"; //out specifies the string to be written , bytes to write
fwrite($fp, $out); //$fp is the handle
fclose($fp)}//close the connection
at this point ill assume that my client gets the hello written to it ..
finish up by closing the connection
Im entirely new to this so Im attempting to understand some sample code here...
So how long is this socket open for? If i want to keep this port open do i need to do a cron job to launch this file periodically.
Im 100% sure that I have got something wrong here so please set me straight.
I think you have a misconception of what fsockopen does. In your example your fsockopen does not actually open port 80 (as in opening a server socket), but it opens a client socket that connects to port 80 on the server itself. It actually does open a (client) port which gets a (not completely) random number.
After you connected using fsockopen you can send HTTP commands to the webserver such as GET /index.php
What you need to use is socket_listen() and socket_bind(). There are a few places in the docs that show you how to get PHP listening on a socket: http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.socket-listen.php
I suggest you read and try them out by simply testing then with a unix tool called netcat (nc <ip_address> <port> command normally)