I have been looking for a way to have an integer sent over a Windows Socket using Winsock2. I have looked at most, if not all, of the questions people have asked on stackoverflow already.
This is what I have for the client, that sends the integer:
struct struct_var
{
int Packet;
int Number;
};
struct_var *arraystruct;
arraystruct = (struct_var *) malloc(sizeof(struct_var));
(*arraystruct).Packet = 100;
(*arraystruct).Number = 150;
int bytes = send(client,(char*)arraystruct,sizeof(*arraystruct),0);`
I have also tried to send using:
int int_data = 4;
int bytes = send(server, (char*) &int_data, sizeof(int), 0);`
This was recommended on another stackoverflow question This is the receiving side, which was also recommended:
int int_data;
int bytes = recv(server, (char*) &int_data, sizeof(int), 0);
cout << int_data;`
When I run these the output I get from command line is: -858993460
Does anyone know why this is happening?
I would also like it to have the correct byte order as this will be sent over multiple kinds of computers. Thanks in advance who can help me out
Full Server Code:
int main() {
WSADATA wsaData;
WORD version;
int error;
version = MAKEWORD(2, 0);
error = WSAStartup(version, &wsaData);
if ( error != 0 )
{
return FALSE;
}
if ( LOBYTE( wsaData.wVersion ) != 2 ||
HIBYTE( wsaData.wVersion ) != 0 )
{
WSACleanup();
return FALSE;
}
SOCKET server;
server = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
sockaddr_in sin;
sin.sin_family = AF_INET;
sin.sin_addr.s_addr = INADDR_ANY;
sin.sin_port = htons(5555);
if (bind( server, (SOCKADDR*)&sin, sizeof(sin) ) == SOCKET_ERROR ){
DWORD ec=WSAGetLastError();
cerr << hex << "bind ERROR" << ec << endl;
return FALSE;
}
if ( listen( server, SOMAXCONN ) == SOCKET_ERROR ) {
DWORD ec=WSAGetLastError();
cerr << hex << "listen ERROR" << ec << endl;
return FALSE;
}
SOCKET client;
int length;
while(1) {
if ( listen( server, SOMAXCONN ) == SOCKET_ERROR ) {
DWORD ec=WSAGetLastError();
cerr << hex << "listen ERROR" << ec << endl;
return FALSE;
}
length = sizeof sin;
client = accept( server, (SOCKADDR*)&sin, &length );
cout << "Client connected" << endl;
cout << "Sending Instructions..." << endl;
int int_data;
int bytes;
bytes = recv(client, (char*) &int_data, sizeof(int), 0);
cout << int_data << endl;
}
}
}
Full Client Code:
int main() {
WSADATA wsaData;
WORD version;
int error;
version = MAKEWORD(2, 0);
error = WSAStartup(version, &wsaData);
if ( error != 0 )
{
return FALSE;
}
if ( LOBYTE( wsaData.wVersion ) != 2 ||
HIBYTE( wsaData.wVersion ) != 0 )
{
WSACleanup();
return FALSE;
}
SOCKET client;
client = socket( AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0 );
sockaddr_in sin;
memset( &sin, 0, sizeof sin );
sin.sin_family = AF_INET;
sin.sin_addr.s_addr = inet_addr("127.0.0.1");
sin.sin_port = htons(5555);
if ( connect(client, (SOCKADDR*)(&sin), sizeof sin ) == SOCKET_ERROR ){
return FALSE;
}
int int_data = 4;
int bytes = send(client, (char*) &int_data, sizeof(int), 0);
}
-858993460
is0xCCCCCCCC
, a value sometimes used to flag uninitialized integers in debug builds.cout << bytes
to make sure you received the data!connect()
or friends