Since it seems that I can't find a solution to my original problem, I tried to do a little workaround. I'm simply trying to set a timeout to the connect()
call of my TCP Socket.
- I want the
connect()
to be blocking but not until the usual 75 seconds timeout, I want to define my own. - I have already tried
select()
which worked for the timeout but I couldn't get a connection (that was my initial problem as described here ).
So now I found another way to deal with it: just do a blocking connect()
call but interrupt it with an alarm like this :
signal(SIGALRM, connect_alarm);
int secs = 5;
alarm(secs);
if (connect(m_Socket, (struct sockaddr *)&addr, sizeof(addr)) < 0 )
{
if ( errno == EINTR )
{
debug_printf("Timeout");
m_connectionStatus = STATUS_CLOSED;
return ERR_TIMEOUT;
}
else
{
debug_printf("Other Err");
m_connectionStatus = STATUS_CLOSED;
return ERR_NET_SOCKET;
}
}
with
static void connect_alarm(int signo)
{
debug_printf("SignalHandler");
return;
}
This is the solution I found on the Internet in a thread here on stackoverflow. If I use this code the program starts the timer and then goes into the connect()
call. After the 5 seconds the signal handler is fired (as seen on the console with the printf()
), but after that the program still remains within the connect()
function for 75 seconds. Actually every description says that the connect_alarm()
should interrupt the connect()
function but it seems it doesn't in my case. Is there any way to get the desired result for my problem?