TCP Socket
does IO::Socket
IO::Socket::INET
provides TCP sockets, both the server and the client side.
For UDP support, please see IO::Socket::Async.
Here is an example of a very simplistic "echo" server that listens on localhost
, port 3333
:
my = IO::Socket::INET.new( :listen,:localhost<localhost>,:localport(3333) );loop
And a client that connects to it, and prints out what the server answers:
my = IO::Socket::INET.new( :host<localhost>,:port(3333) );.print: 'Hello, Raku';say .recv;.close;
Please bear in mind that this is a synchronous connection; an attempt by any of the nodes to write without the other reading will produce an Could not receive data from socket: Connection reset by peer
error.
multi method new(:,:,: = PF_INET,: = 'utf-8',: = "\r\n",--> IO::Socket::INET)multi method new(:,:,: = PF_INET,:,: = 'utf-8',: = "\r\n",--> IO::Socket::INET)
Creates a new socket.
If :$listen
is True, creates a new socket that listen on :$localhost
(which can be an IP address or a domain name) on port :$localport
; in other words the :$listen
flag determines the server mode of the socket. Otherwise (i.e., :$listen
is False
), the new socket opens immediately a connection to :$host
on port :$port
.
:$family
defaults to PF_INET
constant for IPv4, and can be set to PF_INET6
constant for IPv6.
For text operations (such as #method lines and #method get), :$encoding
specifies the encoding, and :$nl-in
determines the character(s) that separate lines.
method get()
Reads a line from the socket and returns it as of type Str. Return Nil on end-of-file (EOF).
method lines()
Returns a lazy list of lines read from the socket.
method accept()
In listen/server mode, waits for a new incoming connection. Once a new connection is established, an IO::Socket::INET
instance (or a subclass instance) for consuming the connection is returned.