I'm experimenting with Unix sockets using Python. I want to create a server that creates and binds to a socket, awaits for commands and sends a response.
The client would connect to the socket, send one command, print the response and close the connection.
This is what I'm doing server side:
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import socket
import os, os.path
import time
from collections import deque
if os.path.exists("/tmp/socket_test.s"):
os.remove("/tmp/socket_test.s")
server = socket.socket(socket.AF_UNIX, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
server.bind("/tmp/socket_test.s")
while True:
server.listen(1)
conn, addr = server.accept()
datagram = conn.recv(1024)
if datagram:
tokens = datagram.strip().split()
if tokens[0].lower() == "post":
flist.append(tokens[1])
conn.send(len(tokens) + "")
else if tokens[0].lower() == "get":
conn.send(tokens.popleft())
else:
conn.send("-1")
conn.close()
But I get socket.error: [Errno 95] Operation not supported
when trying to listen.
Do unix sockets support listening? Otherwise, what would be the right way for both reading and writing?
Any help appreciated :)
SOCK_DGRAM
sockets don't listen, they just bind. Change the socket type to SOCK_STREAM
and your listen()
will work.
Check out PyMOTW Unix Domain Sockets (SOCK_STREAM
) vs. PyMOTW User Datagram Client and Server (SOCK_DGRAM
)