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What is the point of having functions such as inet_ntop, WSAAddressToString, recvfrom also require either the size of the actual sockaddr structure or the address family to be provided?

The first two bytes of the sockaddr structure indicate the address family and therefore also indicate whether it's actually sockaddr_in or sockaddr_in6.

So what is the reason for the additional sizeof(sockaddr_in/sockaddr_in6) and AF_INET/AF_INET6?

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sockaddr is a legacy type. There are newer sockaddr_... types for specific address families, like sockaddr_in for IPv4 and sockaddr_in6 for IPv6, and they have different byte sizes. APIs operate on generic sockaddr* pointers partly for historic reasons and partly for flexibility. Socket APIs recognize multiple address types. You usually have to provide sizes so the APIs can validate your memory buffers are large enough to pass address data based on the specified families (AF_INET for IPv4, AF_INET6 for IPv6).

In inet_ntop(), in_addr and in6_addr do not contain an address family, that is why you have to pass it separately. You are responsible for making sure you specify the correct address family for the input type you are passing in.

In WSAAddressToString(), the sockaddr* pointer to an input buffer. You have to pass the allocated size of that buffer. For instance, since sockaddr_in is smaller than sockaddr_in6, if you allocate a sockaddr_in but set its family to AF_INET6 instead of AF_INET, the buffer is too small for the function to access all of the IPv6 fields, so it will fail with an WSAEFAULT error instead of crashing.

In recvfrom(), the sockaddr* is a pointer to an output buffer. You have to preallocate it and pass the allocated size. If you allocate a sockaddr_in but receive an IPv6 packet, the sender's address will not fit in your buffer and the function will fail with an WSAEFAULT error.

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