From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: "Trenton D. Adams" To: "'Gary Thomas'" Cc: "'eCos mailing list'" Subject: RE: [ECOS] RE: Determining network ERROR codes Date: Thu, 19 Jul 2001 15:20:00 -0000 Message-id: <001601c110a0$ff274520$090110ac@TRENT> References: X-SW-Source: 2001-07/msg00606.html You must not have gotten my message about solving the problem. I solved it before your last reply! It was sent to the list. It seems the list is going slow today. Anyhow, I called "init_all_network_interfaces();" > -----Original Message----- > From: gary@chez-thomas.org [ mailto:gary@chez-thomas.org ] On Behalf Of > Gary Thomas > Sent: Thursday, July 19, 2001 4:17 PM > To: Trenton D. Adams > Cc: eCos mailing list > Subject: RE: [ECOS] RE: Determining network ERROR codes > > > On 19-Jul-2001 Trenton D. Adams wrote: > > > > > > Ok, how do I know what error corresponds to what? I got an error > of > > 331 > > > on a connect () call. Aren't these supposed to be standard > errors? > > > They don't seem to return the same errors as they do on Windows. > > Maybe > > > windows redefines them! > > > > > > Anyhow, where do I look for this information? > > > > > > > I have the following code. Connect keeps returning 331 EADDRNOTAVAIL. > > I have no idea why that might happen. This program would work with a > > few modifications on linux and windows as far as I recall. Inet_addr > () > > does return an IP address in network byte order so I can't see that > > being a problem. Any ideas? > > > > int s; > > int one = 1; > > struct sockaddr_in addr; > > > > diag_printf("Start socket test\n"); > > > > s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, IPPROTO_TCP); > > diag_printf("socket() = %d\n", s); > > > > addr.sin_addr.s_addr = inet_addr ("172.16.1.9"); > > addr.sin_family = AF_INET; > > addr.sin_port = htons (1024); > > addr.sin_len = sizeof (addr); > > if (connect (s, &addr, sizeof (addr)) != 0) > > { > > diag_printf ("Error connecting to socket! - %d\n", > > errno); > > cyg_test_exit(); > > } > > > > send (s, "Hello From eCos", strlen ("Hello From eCos"), 0); > > > > cyg_test_exit(); > > Have you run the eCos standard networking tests? > > I'd try leaving off the IPPROTO_TCP on the socket() call - use 0.