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Upon receiving a UDP packet, I need to respond to the sender with the address he used to send the packet to which I'm replying.

The recvfrom call lets me get the address of the sender, but how do I get the destination address of the received packet, which should match the address of one of the local host's interfaces?

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    @sarnold: getsockname on a listening socket bound to 0.0.0.0:0 (or [::]:0) isn't that useful. With TCP you have a local address after accept, but with UDP… I'm not sure how to answer OP's question.
    – ephemient
    Mar 12, 2011 at 8:16
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    @ephemient, when Matt first asked this question, I suggested connecting his UDP sockets so he could use getsockname(2). It sounded like it was going to work :) and now I've got a personal stake in finding him a solution. :)
    – sarnold
    Mar 12, 2011 at 8:34
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    By the way, an alternate method is to create a separate UDP socket per interface, bound to each interface. Then the socket you receive data on is directly associated with the interface the data was received by.
    – Jason C
    Oct 26, 2013 at 18:18
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    possible duplicate of How to tell which interface the socket received the message from?
    – Jason C
    Oct 26, 2013 at 18:20
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    @JasonC This is not a duplicate. Destination address and destination interface are two distinct things. An interface can have and often has multiple addresses. And one address can be assigned to two interfaces at least on Linux, even though I don't know about a good use case for that. Feb 28, 2017 at 10:30

2 Answers 2

25

I've constructed an example that extracts the source, destination and interface addresses. For brevity, no error checking is provided.

// sock is bound AF_INET socket, usually SOCK_DGRAM
// include struct in_pktinfo in the message "ancilliary" control data
setsockopt(sock, IPPROTO_IP, IP_PKTINFO, &opt, sizeof(opt));
// the control data is dumped here
char cmbuf[0x100];
// the remote/source sockaddr is put here
struct sockaddr_in peeraddr;
// if you want access to the data you need to init the msg_iovec fields
struct msghdr mh = {
    .msg_name = &peeraddr,
    .msg_namelen = sizeof(peeraddr),
    .msg_control = cmbuf,
    .msg_controllen = sizeof(cmbuf),
};
recvmsg(sock, &mh, 0);
for ( // iterate through all the control headers
    struct cmsghdr *cmsg = CMSG_FIRSTHDR(&mh);
    cmsg != NULL;
    cmsg = CMSG_NXTHDR(&mh, cmsg))
{
    // ignore the control headers that don't match what we want
    if (cmsg->cmsg_level != IPPROTO_IP ||
        cmsg->cmsg_type != IP_PKTINFO)
    {
        continue;
    }
    struct in_pktinfo *pi = CMSG_DATA(cmsg);
    // at this point, peeraddr is the source sockaddr
    // pi->ipi_spec_dst is the destination in_addr
    // pi->ipi_addr is the receiving interface in_addr
}
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    I am curious whether there is a way to get the destination address without the for-loop...looking for O(1) operation.
    – Hei
    Sep 12, 2013 at 0:47
  • Curious to name the destination address as 'peer address'. The peer address is really the source address.
    – user207421
    Sep 13, 2013 at 23:46
  • @EJP: It's only the source when receiving packets. Sep 17, 2013 at 12:35
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    @Hei: No. In order to provide O(1) lookup, you'd need to pack the ancillary control structures into a data container providing O(1) lookup. Populating that structure is at least O(n) the number of ancillary control messages. You should not worry about the complexity of the lookup for the control message you want: There are always only a few, and only those ones you've requested. There is also zero memory management required on your behalf. It's negligible overhead. Sep 17, 2013 at 12:37
  • Receiving packets is the topic of this question.
    – user207421
    Sep 18, 2013 at 7:17
17

You set the IP_PKTINFO option using setsockopt and then use recvmsg and get a in_pktinfo structure in the msg_control member of struct msghdr. the in_pktinfo has a field with the destination address of the packet.

See: http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/programming-9/how-to-get-destination-address-of-udp-packet-600103/ where I found the answer for more details.

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