ncmv92 3 days ago

In my opinion, Linux network programming, especially socket programming, isn’t that difficult. However, learning this topic on your own can be challenging because many online resources are unclear, and sample codes often only cover the basics. You might find yourself unsure of what to do next. That's why I created this tutorial. It aims to give you clear guidelines and plenty of examples to help you understand better.

  • AnonC 3 days ago

    I skimmed through it and it looks good.

    Since I didn’t see this in the list of references, I have to ask — have you heard of the (famous) Beej’s Guide to Network Programming [1]? It’s a classic (in the sense that it’s been around for a long, long time and goes into many more details) on this topic.

    [1]: https://beej.us/guide/bgnet/

    • butterandguns 3 days ago

      Beej’s was great for me when I was doing some socket programming in C for my OS class in grad school. Classic and invaluable resource.

    • jcul 3 days ago

      Was just skimming the comments for a mention of Beej's guide, was about to post almost the same comment.

      What an amazing resource.

      I feel like the last time I looked at it, it has been updated too so was pretty current.

      Also agree the OP looks like a good guide.

    • ncmv92 3 days ago

      beej was also a great place to take the first steps in network programming :) I just updated my reference list. This is one of my missing piece. Thank you for the reminder.

  • f1shy 3 days ago

    Actually is extremely simple. I learned by looking the original papers[0]

    As you say, just lots of bad examples online. The only thing that made me a little bit crazy at the beginning, was the fact that TCP is a stream without delimiters, no packet concept. Other than that, is not more difficult than writing and reading a file.

    [0] https://docs-archive.freebsd.org/44doc/psd/20.ipctut/paper.p...

    Another useful resource: https://beej.us/guide/bgnet/

    Edit: beej seems already cited and beloved

    • nesarkvechnep 3 days ago

      Thank you for referring to a BSD document. Most people have no idea that the modern reference network stack implementation comes from BSD and not Linux.

  • linhns 3 days ago

    I just browsed through. Content looks concise to me. Might want to add syntax highlighting to the code to make it more visible.

Uptrenda 3 days ago

The guide looks well written and I can't see any major errors (just skimmed it.) But some of the diagrams are potentially misleading. E.g.

read <---- write

write ----> read

Implies that send/recv perfectly correlate to each other when they can be split up in stream sockets. Your code addresses that already with loops. So I know you know that. Just confusing diagrams I guess.

amelius 3 days ago

Is there a guide about Linux Cgroups programming?

cowboylowrez 2 days ago

very nicely done! smallest nitpick in the world but "comprehensive" and "linux" kinda sorta implies I could read at least a blurb about epoll and io_uwrong or whatever its called lol

infocollector 3 days ago

Does anyone know - Is there a guide like this that does this with Python instead of the C Socket API?