Socket C Reference Documentation

Socket

Current Version: 10.0.0

TCP socket component with SSL capability. Supports both asynchronous connect, accept, send, and read operations in all programming languages. The ActiveX and .NET socket components also include heartbeat, completion, and other events when blocking methods are called. DNS is supported in both synchronous and asynchronous modes. Supports the ability to abort all operations: connect, accept, send, receive, DNS lookups, etc. prior to completion.

Create/Dispose

HCkSocket instance = CkSocket_Create();
// ...
CkSocket_Dispose(instance);
HCkSocket CkSocket_Create(void);

Creates an instance of the HCkSocket object and returns a handle ("void *" pointer). The handle is passed in the 1st argument for the functions listed on this page.

void CkSocket_Dispose(HCkSocket handle);

Objects created by calling CkSocket_Create must be freed by calling this method. A memory leak occurs if a handle is not disposed by calling this function. Also, any handle returned by a Chilkat "C" function must also be freed by the application by calling the appropriate Dispose method, such as CkSocket_Dispose.

Callback Functions

Callback Functions introduced in Chilkat v9.5.0.56
void CkSocket_setAbortCheck(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL (*fnAbortCheck)(void));

Provides the opportunity for a method call to be aborted. If TRUE is returned, the operation in progress is aborted. Return FALSE to allow the current method call to continue. This callback function is called periodically based on the value of the HeartbeatMs property. (If HeartbeatMs is 0, then no callbacks are made.) As an example, to make 5 AbortCheck callbacks per second, set the HeartbeatMs property equal to 200.

void CkSocket_setPercentDone(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL (*fnPercentDone)(int pctDone));

Provides the percentage completed for any method that involves network communications or time-consuming processing (assuming it is a method where a percentage completion can be measured). This callback is only called when it is possible to know a percentage completion, and when it makes sense to express the operation as a percentage completed. The pctDone argument will have a value from 1 to 100. For methods that complete very quickly, the number of PercentDone callbacks will vary, but the final callback should have a value of 100. For long running operations, no more than one callback per percentage point will occur (for example: 1, 2, 3, ... 98, 99, 100).

This callback counts as an AbortCheck callback, and takes the place of the AbortCheck event when it fires.

The return value indicates whether the method call should be aborted, or whether it should proceed. Return TRUE to abort, and FALSE to proceed.

void CkSocket_setProgressInfo(HCkSocket cHandle, void (*fnProgressInfo)(const char *name, const char *value));

This is a general callback that provides name/value information about what is happening at certain points during a method call. To see the information provided in ProgressInfo callbacks, if any, write code to handle this event and log the name/value pairs. Most are self-explanatory.

void CkSocket_setTaskCompleted(HCkSocket cHandle, void (*fnTaskCompleted)(HCkTask hTask));

Called in the background thread when an asynchronous task completes. (Note: When an async method is running, all callbacks are in the background thread.)

Properties

AbortCurrent
BOOL CkSocket_getAbortCurrent(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putAbortCurrent(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.58

When set to TRUE, causes the currently running method to abort. Methods that always finish quickly (i.e.have no length file operations or network communications) are not affected. If no method is running, then this property is automatically reset to FALSE when the next method is called. When the abort occurs, this property is reset to FALSE. Both synchronous and asynchronous method calls can be aborted. (A synchronous method call could be aborted by setting this property from a separate thread.)

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AcceptFailReason
int CkSocket_getAcceptFailReason(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

If a AcceptNextConnection method fails, this property can be checked to determine the reason for failure.

Note: If accepting a TLS connection, then this property can also have any of the values listed for the ReceiveFailReason and SendFailReason properties (because the TLS handshake involves sending/receiving on the initial TCP socket).

Possible values are:

0 = Success
1 = An async operation is  in progress.
3 = An unspecified internal failure, perhaps out-of-memory, caused the failure.
5 = Timeout.  No connections were accepted in the amount of time alotted.
6 = The receive was aborted by the application in an event callback.
9 = An unspecified fatal socket error occurred (less common).
20 = Must first bind and listen on a port.
99 = The component is not unlocked.

Errors Relating to the SSL/TLS Handshake:
100 = TLS internal error.
102 = Unexpected handshake message.
109 = Failed to read handshake messages.
114 = Failed to send change cipher spec handshake message.
115 = Failed to send finished handshake message.
116 = Client's Finished message is invalid.
117 = Unable to agree on TLS protocol version.
118 = Unable to agree on a cipher spec.
119 = Failed to read the client's hello message.
120 = Failed to send handshake messages.
121 = Failed to process client cert message.
122 = Failed to process client cert URL message.
123 = Failed to process client key exchange message.
124 = Failed to process certificate verify message.
125 = Received and rejected an SSL 2.0 connection attempt.

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AlpnProtocol
void CkSocket_getAlpnProtocol(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putAlpnProtocol(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_alpnProtocol(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.82

For TLS connections. Can be set to the name of an application layer protocol. This causes the ALPN extension to be added to the TLS ClientHello with the given ALPN protocol name.

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BandwidthThrottleDown
int CkSocket_getBandwidthThrottleDown(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putBandwidthThrottleDown(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.49

If non-zero, limits (throttles) the receiving bandwidth to approximately this maximum number of bytes per second. The default value of this property is 0.

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BandwidthThrottleUp
int CkSocket_getBandwidthThrottleUp(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putBandwidthThrottleUp(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.49

If non-zero, limits (throttles) the sending bandwidth to approximately this maximum number of bytes per second. The default value of this property is 0.

More Information and Examples
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BigEndian
BOOL CkSocket_getBigEndian(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putBigEndian(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

Applies to the SendCount and ReceiveCount methods. If BigEndian is set to TRUE (the default) then the 4-byte count is in big endian format. Otherwise it is little endian.

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ClientIpAddress
void CkSocket_getClientIpAddress(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putClientIpAddress(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_clientIpAddress(HCkSocket cHandle);

The IP address to use for computers with multiple network interfaces or IP addresses. For computers with a single network interface (i.e. most computers), this property should not be set. For multihoming computers, the default IP address is automatically used if this property is not set.

The IP address is a string such as in dotted notation using numbers, not domain names, such as "165.164.55.124".

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ClientPort
int CkSocket_getClientPort(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putClientPort(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

Normally left at the default value of 0, in which case a unique port is assigned with a value between 1024 and 5000. This property would only be changed if it is specifically required. For example, one customer's requirements are as follows:

"I have to connect to a Siemens PLC IP server on a technical network. This machine expects that I connect to its server from a specific IP address using a specific port otherwise the build in security disconnect the IP connection."

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ConnectFailReason
int CkSocket_getConnectFailReason(HCkSocket cHandle);

If the Connect method fails, this property can be checked to determine the reason for failure.

Possible values are:

0 = success

Normal (non-SSL) sockets:
1 = empty hostname
2 = DNS lookup failed
3 = DNS timeout
4 = Aborted by application.
5 = Internal failure.
6 = Connect Timed Out
7 = Connect Rejected (or failed for some other reason)

SSL/TLS:
100 = TLS internal error.
101 = Failed to send client hello.
102 = Unexpected handshake message.
103 = Failed to read server hello.
104 = No server certificate.
105 = Unexpected TLS protocol version.
106 = Server certificate verify failed (the server certificate is expired or the cert's signature verification failed).
107 = Unacceptable TLS protocol version.
108 = App-defined server certificate requirements failure.
109 = Failed to read handshake messages.
110 = Failed to send client certificate handshake message.
111 = Failed to send client key exchange handshake message.
112 = Client certificate's private key not accessible.
113 = Failed to send client cert verify handshake message.
114 = Failed to send change cipher spec handshake message.
115 = Failed to send finished handshake message.
116 = Server's Finished message is invalid.

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DebugLogFilePath
void CkSocket_getDebugLogFilePath(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putDebugLogFilePath(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_debugLogFilePath(HCkSocket cHandle);

If set to a file path, causes each Chilkat method or property call to automatically append it's LastErrorText to the specified log file. The information is appended such that if a hang or crash occurs, it is possible to see the context in which the problem occurred, as well as a history of all Chilkat calls up to the point of the problem. The VerboseLogging property can be set to provide more detailed information.

This property is typically used for debugging the rare cases where a Chilkat method call hangs or generates an exception that halts program execution (i.e. crashes). A hang or crash should generally never happen. The typical causes of a hang are:

  1. a timeout related property was set to 0 to explicitly indicate that an infinite timeout is desired,
  2. the hang is actually a hang within an event callback (i.e. it is a hang within the application code), or
  3. there is an internal problem (bug) in the Chilkat code that causes the hang.

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ElapsedSeconds
int CkSocket_getElapsedSeconds(HCkSocket cHandle);

Contains the number of seconds since the last call to StartTiming, otherwise contains 0. (The StartTiming method and ElapsedSeconds property is provided for convenience.)

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HeartbeatMs
int CkSocket_getHeartbeatMs(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putHeartbeatMs(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

The number of milliseconds between periodic heartbeat callbacks for blocking socket operations (connect, accept, dns query, send, receive). Set this to 0 to disable heartbeat events. The default value is 1000 (i.e. 1 heartbeat callback per second).

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HttpProxyAuthMethod
void CkSocket_getHttpProxyAuthMethod(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putHttpProxyAuthMethod(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_httpProxyAuthMethod(HCkSocket cHandle);

If an HTTP proxy requiring authentication is to be used, set this property to the HTTP proxy authentication method name. Valid choices are "Basic" or "NTLM".

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HttpProxyDomain
void CkSocket_getHttpProxyDomain(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putHttpProxyDomain(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_httpProxyDomain(HCkSocket cHandle);

The NTLM authentication domain (optional) if NTLM authentication is used.

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HttpProxyForHttp
BOOL CkSocket_getHttpProxyForHttp(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putHttpProxyForHttp(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.70

If this connection is effectively used to send HTTP requests, then set this property to TRUE when using an HTTP proxy. The default value of this property is FALSE.

This is because an HTTP proxy used for other protocols (IMAP, SMTP, SSH, FTP, etc.) can require some internal differences in behavior (i.e. how we do things).

For example, the Chilkat REST object can use this socket object's connection via the UseConnection method. This is a case where we know the proxied connection is for the HTTP protocol. Therefore we should set this property to TRUE. (See the example below.)

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HttpProxyHostname
void CkSocket_getHttpProxyHostname(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putHttpProxyHostname(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_httpProxyHostname(HCkSocket cHandle);

If an HTTP proxy is to be used, set this property to the HTTP proxy hostname or IPv4 address (in dotted decimal notation).

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HttpProxyPassword
void CkSocket_getHttpProxyPassword(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putHttpProxyPassword(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_httpProxyPassword(HCkSocket cHandle);

If an HTTP proxy requiring authentication is to be used, set this property to the HTTP proxy password.

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HttpProxyPort
int CkSocket_getHttpProxyPort(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putHttpProxyPort(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

If an HTTP proxy is to be used, set this property to the HTTP proxy port number. (Two commonly used HTTP proxy ports are 8080 and 3128.)

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HttpProxyUsername
void CkSocket_getHttpProxyUsername(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putHttpProxyUsername(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_httpProxyUsername(HCkSocket cHandle);

If an HTTP proxy requiring authentication is to be used, set this property to the HTTP proxy login name.

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IsConnected
BOOL CkSocket_getIsConnected(HCkSocket cHandle);

Returns TRUE if the socket is connected. Otherwise returns FALSE.

Note: In general, this property indicates the last known state of the socket. For example, if the socket is connected, and your application does not read or write the socket, then IsConnected will remain TRUE. This property is updated when your application tries to read or write and discovers that the socket is no longer connected. It is also updated if your application explicitly closes the socket.

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KeepAlive
BOOL CkSocket_getKeepAlive(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putKeepAlive(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.49

Controls whether the SO_KEEPALIVE socket option is used for the underlying TCP/IP socket. The default value is TRUE.

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KeepSessionLog
BOOL CkSocket_getKeepSessionLog(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putKeepSessionLog(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

Controls whether socket (or SSL) communications are logged to the SessionLog string property. To turn on session logging, set this property = TRUE, otherwise set to FALSE (which is the default value).

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LastErrorHtml
void CkSocket_getLastErrorHtml(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
const char *CkSocket_lastErrorHtml(HCkSocket cHandle);

Provides information in HTML format about the last method/property called. If a method call returns a value indicating failure, or behaves unexpectedly, examine this property to get more information.

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LastErrorText
void CkSocket_getLastErrorText(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
const char *CkSocket_lastErrorText(HCkSocket cHandle);

Provides information in plain-text format about the last method/property called. If a method call returns a value indicating failure, or behaves unexpectedly, examine this property to get more information.

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LastErrorXml
void CkSocket_getLastErrorXml(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
const char *CkSocket_lastErrorXml(HCkSocket cHandle);

Provides information in XML format about the last method/property called. If a method call returns a value indicating failure, or behaves unexpectedly, examine this property to get more information.

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LastMethodFailed
BOOL CkSocket_getLastMethodFailed(HCkSocket cHandle);

TRUE if the last method called on this object failed. This provides an easier (less confusing) way of determining whether a method such as ReceiveBytes succeeded or failed.

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LastMethodSuccess
BOOL CkSocket_getLastMethodSuccess(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putLastMethodSuccess(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

Indicate whether the last method call succeeded or failed. A value of TRUE indicates success, a value of FALSE indicates failure. This property is automatically set for method calls. It is not modified by property accesses. The property is automatically set to indicate success for the following types of method calls:

  • Any method that returns a string.
  • Any method returning a Chilkat object, binary bytes, or a date/time.
  • Any method returning a standard boolean status value where success = TRUE and failure = FALSE.
  • Any method returning an integer where failure is defined by a return value less than zero.

Note: Methods that do not fit the above requirements will always set this property equal to TRUE. For example, a method that returns no value (such as a "void" in C++) will technically always succeed.

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ListenIpv6
BOOL CkSocket_getListenIpv6(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putListenIpv6(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

If set to TRUE, then a socket that listens for incoming connections (via the BindAndList and AcceptNextConnection method calls) will use IPv6 and not IPv4. The default value is FALSE for IPv4.

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ListenPort
int CkSocket_getListenPort(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.59

The BindAndListen method will find a random unused port to listen on if you bind to port 0. This chosen listen port is available via this property.

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LocalIpAddress
void CkSocket_getLocalIpAddress(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
const char *CkSocket_localIpAddress(HCkSocket cHandle);

The local IP address for a bound or connected socket.

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LocalPort
int CkSocket_getLocalPort(HCkSocket cHandle);

The local port for a bound or connected socket.

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MaxReadIdleMs
int CkSocket_getMaxReadIdleMs(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putMaxReadIdleMs(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

The maximum number of milliseconds to wait on a socket read operation while no additional data is forthcoming. To wait indefinitely, set this property to 0. The default value is 0.

This applies to all methods that read from the socket, and also any other methods that read on the socket, such as SshOpenTunnel.

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MaxSendIdleMs
int CkSocket_getMaxSendIdleMs(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putMaxSendIdleMs(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

The maximum number of milliseconds to wait for the socket to become writeable on a socket write operation. To wait indefinitely, set this property to 0. The default value is 0.

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MyIpAddress
void CkSocket_getMyIpAddress(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
const char *CkSocket_myIpAddress(HCkSocket cHandle);

The local IP address of the local computer. For multi-homed computers (i.e. computers with multiple IP adapters) this property returns the default IP address.

Note: This will be the internal IP address, not an external IP address. (For example, if your computer is on a LAN, it is likely to be an IP address beginning with "192.168.".

Important: Use LocalIpAddress and LocalIpPort to get the local IP/port for a bound or connected socket.

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NumBytesAvailable
int CkSocket_getNumBytesAvailable(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.94

Returns the number of bytes that are immediately available for reading on a connected socket. For TLS connections, this includes the overhead for TLS protocol records.

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NumReceivedClientCerts
int CkSocket_getNumReceivedClientCerts(HCkSocket cHandle);

If the socket is the server-side of an SSL/TLS connection, the property represents the number of client-side certificates received during the SSL/TLS handshake (i.e. connection process). Each client-side cert may be retrieved by calling the GetReceivedClientCert method and passing an integer index value from 0 to N-1, where N is the number of client certs received.

Note: A client only sends a certificate if 2-way SSL/TLS is required. In other words, if the server demands a certificate from the client.

Important: This property should be examined on the socket object that is returned by AcceptNextConnection.

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NumSocketsInSet
int CkSocket_getNumSocketsInSet(HCkSocket cHandle);

If this socket is a "socket set", then NumSocketsInSet returns the number of sockets contained in the set. A socket object can become a "socket set" by calling the TakeSocket method on one or more connected sockets. This makes it possible to select for reading on the set (i.e. wait for data to arrive from any one of multiple sockets). See the following methods and properties for more information: TakeSocket, SelectorIndex, SelectorReadIndex, SelectorWriteIndex, SelectForReading, SelectForWriting.

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NumSslAcceptableClientCAs
int CkSocket_getNumSslAcceptableClientCAs(HCkSocket cHandle);

If connected as an SSL/TLS client to an SSL/TLS server where the server requires a client-side certificate for authentication, then this property contains the number of acceptable certificate authorities sent by the server during connection establishment handshake. The GetSslAcceptableClientCaDn method may be called to get the Distinguished Name (DN) of each acceptable CA.

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ObjectId
int CkSocket_getObjectId(HCkSocket cHandle);

Each socket object is assigned a unique object ID. This ID is passed in event callbacks to allow your application to associate the event with the socket object.

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PercentDoneScale
int CkSocket_getPercentDoneScale(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putPercentDoneScale(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.49

This property is only valid in programming environment and languages that allow for event callbacks.

Sets the value to be defined as 100% complete for the purpose of PercentDone event callbacks. The defaut value of 100 means that at most 100 event PercentDone callbacks will occur in a method that (1) is event enabled and (2) is such that it is possible to measure progress as a percentage completed. This property may be set to larger numbers to get more fine-grained PercentDone callbacks. For example, setting this property equal to 1000 will provide callbacks with .1 percent granularity. For example, a value of 453 would indicate 45.3% competed. This property is clamped to a minimum value of 10, and a maximum value of 100000.

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PreferIpv6
BOOL CkSocket_getPreferIpv6(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putPreferIpv6(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

If the socket is used for initiating connections, then this property behaves as follows: When connecting to a domain name, the automatic DNS lookup could result in both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. If this property is TRUE, then the IPv6 address is chosen, otherwise the IPv4 address is chosen. The default value of this property is FALSE, which will choose IPv4 over IPv6.

If the socket is used for listening and receiving connections, then this property controls whether to listen on IPv6 or IPv4. If this property is TRUE, then IPv6 connections can be accepted, otherwise only IPv4 connections can be accepted. (Note: Chilkat was updated in v9.5.0.97 to enable "dual-stack" support, where a server can handle both IPv6 and IPv4 traffic using a single socket. Prior to v9.5.0.97, setting this property to TRUE had the effect that only IPv6 connections could be accepted.)

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RcvBytesPerSec
int CkSocket_getRcvBytesPerSec(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.78

Returns the cumulative receive rate in bytes per second. The measurement includes the overhead bytes for protocols such as TLS or SSH tunneling. For example, if 1000 application bytes are received, the actual number of raw bytes received on a TLS connection is greater. This property measures the actual number of raw bytes received in a given time period. The ResetPerf method can be called to reset this property value and to begin the performance measurement afresh.

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ReceivedCount
int CkSocket_getReceivedCount(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putReceivedCount(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

Any method that receives data will increase the value of this property by the number of bytes received. The application may reset this property to 0 at any point. It is provided as a way to keep count of the total number of bytes received on a socket connection, regardless of which method calls are used to receive the data.

Note: The ReceivedCount may be larger than the number of bytes returned by some methods. For methods such as ReceiveUntilMatch, the excess received on the socket (beyond the match), is buffered by Chilkat for subsequent method calls. The ReceivedCount is updated based on the actual number of bytes received on the underlying socket in real-time. (The ReceivedCount does not include the overhead bytes associated with the TLS and/or SSH protocols.

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ReceivedInt
int CkSocket_getReceivedInt(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putReceivedInt(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Contains the last integer received via a call to ReceiveByte, ReceiveInt16, or ReceiveInt32.

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ReceiveFailReason
int CkSocket_getReceiveFailReason(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.49

If a Receive method fails, this property can be checked to determine the reason for failure.

Possible values are:

0 = Success
1 = An async receive operation is already in progress.
2 = The socket is not connected, such as if it was never connected, or if the connection was previously lost.
3 = An unspecified internal failure, perhaps out-of-memory, caused the failure.
4 = Invalid parameters were passed to the receive method call.
5 = Timeout.  Data stopped arriving for more than the amount of time specified by the MaxReadIdleMs property.
6 = The receive was aborted by the application in an event callback.
7 = The connection was lost -- the remote peer reset the connection. (The connection was forcibly closed by the peer.)
8 = An established connection was aborted by the software in your host machine. (See https://www.chilkatsoft.com/p/p_299.asp )
9 = An unspecified fatal socket error occurred (less common).
10 = The connection was closed by the peer.

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ReceivePacketSize
int CkSocket_getReceivePacketSize(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putReceivePacketSize(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

The number of bytes to receive at a time (internally). This setting has an effect on methods such as ReadBytes and ReadString where the number of bytes to read is not explicitly specified. The default value is 4096.

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RemoteIpAddress
void CkSocket_getRemoteIpAddress(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
const char *CkSocket_remoteIpAddress(HCkSocket cHandle);

When a socket is connected, the remote IP address of the connected peer is available in this property.

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RemotePort
int CkSocket_getRemotePort(HCkSocket cHandle);

When a socket is connected, the remote port of the connected peer is available in this property.

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RequireSslCertVerify
BOOL CkSocket_getRequireSslCertVerify(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putRequireSslCertVerify(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

If TRUE, then the SSL/TLS client will verify the server's SSL certificate. The certificate is expired, or if the cert's signature is invalid, the connection is not allowed. The default value of this property is FALSE.

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SelectorIndex
int CkSocket_getSelectorIndex(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putSelectorIndex(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

If this socket contains a collection of connected sockets (i.e. it is a "socket set") then method calls and property gets/sets are routed to the contained socket indicated by this property. Indexing begins at 0. See the TakeSocket method and SelectForReading method for more information.

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SelectorReadIndex
int CkSocket_getSelectorReadIndex(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putSelectorReadIndex(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

When SelectForReading returns a number greater than 0 indicating that 1 or more sockets are ready for reading, this property is used to select the socket in the "ready set" for reading. See the example below:

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SelectorWriteIndex
int CkSocket_getSelectorWriteIndex(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putSelectorWriteIndex(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

When SelectForWriting returns a number greater than 0 indicating that one or more sockets are ready for writing, this property is used to select the socket in the "ready set" for writing.

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SendBytesPerSec
int CkSocket_getSendBytesPerSec(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.78

Returns the cumulative send rate in bytes per second. The measurement includes the overhead bytes for protocols such as TLS or SSH tunneling. For example, if 1000 application bytes are sent, the actual number of raw bytes sent on a TLS connection is greater. This property measures the actual number of raw bytes sent in a given time period. The ResetPerf method can be called to reset this property value and to begin the performance measurement afresh.

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SendFailReason
int CkSocket_getSendFailReason(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.49

If a Send method fails, this property can be checked to determine the reason for failure.

Possible values are:

0 = Success
1 = An async receive operation is already in progress.
2 = The socket is not connected, such as if it was never connected, or if the connection was previously lost.
3 = An unspecified internal failure, perhaps out-of-memory, caused the failure.
4 = Invalid parameters were passed to the receive method call.
5 = Timeout.  Data stopped arriving for more than the amount of time specified by the MaxReadIdleMs property.
6 = The receive was aborted by the application in an event callback.
7 = The connection was lost -- the remote peer reset the connection. (The connection was forcibly closed by the peer.)
8 = An established connection was aborted by the software in your host machine. (See https://www.chilkatsoft.com/p/p_299.asp )
9 = An unspecified fatal socket error occurred (less common).
10 = The connection was closed by the peer.
11 = Decoding error (possible in SendString when coverting to the StringCharset, or in SendBytesENC).

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SendPacketSize
int CkSocket_getSendPacketSize(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putSendPacketSize(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

The number of bytes to send at a time (internally). This can also be though of as the "chunk size". If a large amount of data is to be sent, the data is sent in chunks equal to this size in bytes. The default value is 65535. (Note: This only applies to non-SSL/TLS connections. SSL and TLS have their own pre-defined packet sizes.)

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SessionLog
void CkSocket_getSessionLog(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
const char *CkSocket_sessionLog(HCkSocket cHandle);

Contains a log of the bytes sent and received on this socket. The KeepSessionLog property must be set to TRUE for logging to occur.

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SessionLogEncoding
void CkSocket_getSessionLogEncoding(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putSessionLogEncoding(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_sessionLogEncoding(HCkSocket cHandle);

Controls how the data is encoded in the SessionLog. Possible values are "esc" and "hex". The default value is "esc".

When set to "hex", the bytes are encoded as a hexidecimalized string. The "esc" encoding is a C-string like encoding, and is more compact than hex if most of the data to be logged is text. Printable us-ascii chars are unmodified. Common "C" control chars are represented as "\r", "\n", "\t", etc. Non-printable and byte values greater than 0x80 are escaped using a backslash and hex encoding: \xHH. Certain printable chars are backslashed: SPACE, double-quote, single-quote, etc.

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SniHostname
void CkSocket_getSniHostname(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putSniHostname(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_sniHostname(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.82

Specifies the SNI hostname to be used in the TLS ClientHello. This property is only needed when the domain is specified via a dotted IP address and an SNI hostname is desired. (Normally, Chilkat automatically uses the domain name in the SNI hostname TLS ClientHello extension.)

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SocksHostname
void CkSocket_getSocksHostname(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putSocksHostname(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_socksHostname(HCkSocket cHandle);

The SOCKS4/SOCKS5 hostname or IPv4 address (in dotted decimal notation). This property is only used if the SocksVersion property is set to 4 or 5).

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SocksPassword
void CkSocket_getSocksPassword(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putSocksPassword(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_socksPassword(HCkSocket cHandle);

The SOCKS5 password (if required). The SOCKS4 protocol does not include the use of a password, so this does not apply to SOCKS4.

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SocksPort
int CkSocket_getSocksPort(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putSocksPort(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

The SOCKS4/SOCKS5 proxy port. The default value is 1080. This property only applies if a SOCKS proxy is used (if the SocksVersion property is set to 4 or 5).

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SocksUsername
void CkSocket_getSocksUsername(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putSocksUsername(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_socksUsername(HCkSocket cHandle);

The SOCKS4/SOCKS5 proxy username. This property is only used if the SocksVersion property is set to 4 or 5).

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SocksVersion
int CkSocket_getSocksVersion(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putSocksVersion(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

SocksVersion May be set to one of the following integer values:

0 - No SOCKS proxy is used. This is the default.
4 - Connect via a SOCKS4 proxy.
5 - Connect via a SOCKS5 proxy.

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SoRcvBuf
int CkSocket_getSoRcvBuf(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putSoRcvBuf(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

Sets the receive buffer size socket option. Normally, this property should be left unchanged. The default value is 4194304.

This property can be increased if download performance seems slow. It is recommended to be a multiple of 4096.

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SoReuseAddr
BOOL CkSocket_getSoReuseAddr(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putSoReuseAddr(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

Sets the SO_REUSEADDR socket option for a socket that will bind to a port and listen for incoming connections. The default value is TRUE, meaning that the SO_REUSEADDR socket option is set. If the socket option must be unset, set this property equal to FALSE prior to calling BindAndListen or InitSslServer.

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SoSndBuf
int CkSocket_getSoSndBuf(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putSoSndBuf(HCkSocket cHandle, int newVal);

Sets the send buffer size socket option. Normally, this property should be left unchanged. The default value is 262144.

This property can be increased if upload performance seems slow. It is recommended to be a multiple of 4096. Testing with sizes such as 512K and 1MB is reasonable.

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Ssl
BOOL CkSocket_getSsl(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putSsl(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

Set this property to TRUE if SSL/TLS is required for accepted connections (AcceptNextConnection). The default value is FALSE.

Note: This property should have been more precisely named "RequireSslClient". It is a property that if set to TRUE, requires all accepted connections use SSL/TLS. If a client attempts to connect but cannot establish the TLS connection, then it is not accepted. This property is not meant to reflect the current state of the connection.

The TlsVersion property shows the current or last negotiated TLS version of the connection. The TlsVersion will be empty for a non-SSL/TLS connection.

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SslAllowedCiphers
void CkSocket_getSslAllowedCiphers(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putSslAllowedCiphers(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_sslAllowedCiphers(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.48

Provides a means for setting a list of ciphers that are allowed for SSL/TLS connections. The default (empty string) indicates that all implemented ciphers are possible. The TLS ciphers supported in Chilkat v9.5.0.55 and later are:

TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256
TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256
TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256
TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256
TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA
TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA384
TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA384
TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384
TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA
TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA256
TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384
TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA
TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA256
TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384
TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA
TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256
TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256
TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256
TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA
TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA
TLS_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA
TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA
TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA
TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_MD5
TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_DES_CBC_SHA
TLS_RSA_WITH_DES_CBC_SHA
To restrict SSL/TLS connections to one or more specific ciphers, set this property to a comma-separated list of ciphers such as "TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA384, TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384". The order should be in terms of preference, with the preferred algorithms listed first. (Note that the client cannot specifically choose the algorithm is picked because it is the server that chooses. The client simply provides the server with a list from which to choose.)

The property can also disallow connections with servers having certificates with RSA keys less than a certain size. By default, server certificates having RSA keys of 512 bits or greater are allowed. Add the keyword "rsa1024" to disallow connections with servers having keys smaller than 1024 bits. Add the keyword "rsa2048" to disallow connections with servers having keys smaller than 2048 bits.

Note: Prior to Chilkat v9.5.0.55, it was not possible to explicitly list allowed cipher suites. The deprecated means for indicating allowed ciphers was both incomplete and unprecise. For example, the following keywords could be listed to allow matching ciphers: "aes256-cbc", "aes128-cbc", "3des-cbc", and "rc4". These keywords will still be recognized, but programs should be updated to explicitly list the allowed ciphers.

secure-renegotiation: Starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.55, the keyword "secure-renegotiation" may be added to require that all renegotions be done securely (as per RFC 5746).

best-practices: Starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.55, this property may be set to the single keyword "best-practices". This will allow ciphers based on the current best practices. As new versions of Chilkat are released, the best practices may change. Changes will be noted here. The current best practices are:

  • If the server uses an RSA key, it must be 1024 bits or greater.
  • All renegotations must be secure renegotiations.
  • All ciphers using RC4, DES, or 3DES are disallowed.

Example: The following string would restrict to 2 specific cipher suites, require RSA keys to be 1024 bits or greater, and require secure renegotiations: "TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA256, TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA, rsa1024, secure-renegotiation"

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SslProtocol
void CkSocket_getSslProtocol(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putSslProtocol(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_sslProtocol(HCkSocket cHandle);

Selects the secure protocol to be used for secure (SSL/TLS) connections. Possible values are:

default
TLS 1.3
TLS 1.2
TLS 1.1
TLS 1.0
SSL 3.0
TLS 1.3 or higher
TLS 1.2 or higher
TLS 1.1 or higher
TLS 1.0 or higher
The default value is "default" which will choose the, which allows for the protocol to be selected dynamically at runtime based on the requirements of the server. Choosing an exact protocol will cause the connection to fail unless that exact protocol is negotiated. It is better to choose "X or higher" than an exact protocol. The "default" is effectively "SSL 3.0 or higher".

Note: Chilkat does not yet implement TLS 1.3 for the server-side of the TLS protocol. Chilkat can do TLS 1.3 on the client-side, such as when connecting to servers, but not when acting as a server and receiving/accepting TLS connections.

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StringCharset
void CkSocket_getStringCharset(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putStringCharset(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_stringCharset(HCkSocket cHandle);

A charset such as "utf-8", "windows-1252", "Shift_JIS", "iso-8859-1", etc. Methods for sending and receiving strings will use this charset as the encoding. Strings sent on the socket are first converted (if necessary) to this encoding. When reading, it is assumed that the bytes received are converted FROM this charset if necessary. This ONLY APPLIES TO THE SendString and ReceiveString methods. The default value is "ansi".

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TcpNoDelay
BOOL CkSocket_getTcpNoDelay(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putTcpNoDelay(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

Controls whether the TCP_NODELAY socket option is used for the underlying TCP/IP socket. The default value is FALSE. Setting the value to TRUE disables the Nagle algorithm and allows for better performance when small amounts of data are sent on the socket connection.

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TlsCipherSuite
void CkSocket_getTlsCipherSuite(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
const char *CkSocket_tlsCipherSuite(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.49

Contains the current or last negotiated TLS cipher suite. If no TLS connection has yet to be established, or if a connection as attempted and failed, then this will be empty. A sample cipher suite string looks like this: TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA256.

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TlsPinSet
void CkSocket_getTlsPinSet(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putTlsPinSet(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_tlsPinSet(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.55

Specifies a set of pins for Public Key Pinning for TLS connections. This property lists the expected SPKI fingerprints for the server certificates. If the server's certificate (sent during the TLS handshake) does not match any of the SPKI fingerprints, then the TLS handshake is aborted and the connection fails. The format of this string property is as follows:

hash_algorithm, encoding, SPKI_fingerprint_1, SPKI_fingerprint_2, ...
For example, the following string specifies a single sha256 base64-encoded SPKI fingerprint:
"sha256, base64, lKg1SIqyhPSK19tlPbjl8s02yChsVTDklQpkMCHvsTE="
This example specifies two SPKI fingerprints:
"sha256, base64, 4t37LpnGmrMEAG8HEz9yIrnvJV2euVRwCLb9EH5WZyI=, 68b0G5iqMvWVWvUCjMuhLEyekM5729PadtnU5tdXZKs="
Any of the following hash algorithms are allowed:.sha1, sha256, sha384, sha512, md2, md5, haval, ripemd128, ripemd160,ripemd256, or ripemd320.

The following encodings are allowed: base64, hex, and any of the encodings indicated in the link below.

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TlsVersion
void CkSocket_getTlsVersion(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
const char *CkSocket_tlsVersion(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.49

Contains the current or last negotiated TLS protocol version. If no TLS connection has yet to be established, or if a connection as attempted and failed, then this will be empty. Possible values are "SSL 3.0", "TLS 1.0", "TLS 1.1", "TLS 1.2", and "TLS 1.3".

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UncommonOptions
void CkSocket_getUncommonOptions(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putUncommonOptions(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_uncommonOptions(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.80

This is a catch-all property to be used for uncommon needs. This property defaults to the empty string and should typically remain empty. Can be set to a list of the following comma separated keywords:

  • "ProtectFromVpn" - Introduced in v9.5.0.80. On Android systems, will bypass any VPN that may be installed or active.
  • "EnableTls13" - Introduced in v9.5.0.82. Causes TLS 1.3 to be offered in the ClientHello of the TLS protocol, allowing the server to select TLS 1.3 for the session. Future versions of Chilkat will enable TLS 1.3 by default. This option is only necessary in v9.5.0.82 if TLS 1.3 is desired.

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UserData
void CkSocket_getUserData(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
void CkSocket_putUserData(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *newVal);
const char *CkSocket_userData(HCkSocket cHandle);

Provides a way to store text data with the socket object. The UserData is purely for convenience and is not involved in the socket communications in any way. An application might use this property to keep extra information associated with the socket.

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Utf8
BOOL CkSocket_getUtf8(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putUtf8(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

When set to TRUE, all "const char *" arguments are interpreted as utf-8 strings. If set to FALSE (the default), then "const char *" arguments are interpreted as ANSI strings. Also, when set to TRUE, and Chilkat method returning a "const char *" is returning the utf-8 representation. If set to FALSE, all "const char *" return values are ANSI strings.

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VerboseLogging
BOOL CkSocket_getVerboseLogging(HCkSocket cHandle);
void CkSocket_putVerboseLogging(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL newVal);

If set to TRUE, then the contents of LastErrorText (or LastErrorXml, or LastErrorHtml) may contain more verbose information. The default value is FALSE. Verbose logging should only be used for debugging. The potentially large quantity of logged information may adversely affect peformance.

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Version
void CkSocket_getVersion(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString retval);
const char *CkSocket_version(HCkSocket cHandle);

Version of the component/library, such as "9.5.0.94"

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Methods

AcceptNextConnection
HCkSocket CkSocket_AcceptNextConnection(HCkSocket cHandle, int maxWaitMs);

Blocking call to accept the next incoming connection on the socket. maxWaitMs specifies the maximum time to wait (in milliseconds). Set this to 0 to wait indefinitely. If successful, a new socket object is returned.

Important: If accepting an SSL/TLS connection, the SSL handshake is part of the connection establishment process. This involves a few back-and-forth messages between the client and server to establish algorithms and a shared key to create the secure channel. The sending and receiving of these messages are governed by the MaxReadIdleMs and MaxSendIdleMs properties. If these properties are set to 0 (and this is the default unless changed by your application), then the AcceptNextConnection can hang indefinitely during the SSL handshake process. Make sure these properties are set to appropriate values before calling this method.

Returns NULL on failure

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AcceptNextConnectionAsync (1) (2)
HCkTask CkSocket_AcceptNextConnectionAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int maxWaitMs);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the AcceptNextConnection method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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AddSslAcceptableClientCaDn
BOOL CkSocket_AddSslAcceptableClientCaDn(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *certAuthDN);

If this object is a server-side socket accepting SSL/TLS connections, and wishes to require a client-side certificate for authentication, then it should make one or more calls to this method to identify the CA's it will accept for client-side certificates.

If no CA DN's are added by this method, then client certificates from any root CA are accepted.

Important: If calling this method, it must be called before calling InitSslServer.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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BindAndListen
BOOL CkSocket_BindAndListen(HCkSocket cHandle, int port, int backLog);

Binds a TCP socket to a port and configures it to listen for incoming connections. The size of the backlog is passed in backLog. The backLog is necessary when multiple connections arrive at the same time, or close enough in time such that they cannot be serviced immediately. (A typical value to use for backLog is 5.) This method should be called once prior to receiving incoming connection requests via the AcceptNextConnection or AsyncAcceptStart methods.

Note:This method will find a random unused port to listen on if you bind to port 0. The chosen port is available via the read-only ListenPort property after this method returns successful.

To bind and listen using IPv6, set the ListenIpv6 property = TRUE prior to calling this method.

What is a reasonable value for backLog? The answer depends on how many simultaneous incoming connections could be expected, and how quickly your application can process an incoming connection and then return to accept the next connection.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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BindAndListenAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_BindAndListenAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int port, int backLog);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the BindAndListen method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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BindAndListenPortRange
int CkSocket_BindAndListenPortRange(HCkSocket cHandle, int beginPort, int endPort, int backLog);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.69

Binds a TCP socket to an unused port within a port range (beginPort to endPort) and configures it to listen for incoming connections. The size of the backlog is passed in backLog. The backLog is necessary when multiple connections arrive at the same time, or close enough in time such that they cannot be serviced immediately. (A typical value to use for backLog is 5.) This method should be called once prior to receiving incoming connection requests via the AcceptNextConnection method.

To bind and listen using IPv6, set the ListenIpv6 property = TRUE prior to calling this method.

Returns the port number that was bound, or -1 if no port was available or if it failed for some other reason.

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BindAndListenPortRangeAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_BindAndListenPortRangeAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int beginPort, int endPort, int backLog);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.69

Creates an asynchronous task to call the BindAndListenPortRange method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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BuildHttpGetRequest
BOOL CkSocket_BuildHttpGetRequest(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *url, HCkString outStr);
const char *CkSocket_buildHttpGetRequest(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *url);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.35

Convenience method for building a simple HTTP GET request from a URL.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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CheckWriteable
int CkSocket_CheckWriteable(HCkSocket cHandle, int maxWaitMs);

Determines if the socket is writeable. Returns one of the following integer values:

1: If the socket is connected and ready for writing.
0: If a timeout occurred or if the application aborted the method during an event callback.
-1: The socket is not connected.

A maxWaitMs value of 0 indicates a poll.

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CheckWriteableAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_CheckWriteableAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int maxWaitMs);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the CheckWriteable method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ClearSessionLog
void CkSocket_ClearSessionLog(HCkSocket cHandle);

Clears the contents of the SessionLog property.

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CloneSocket
HCkSocket CkSocket_CloneSocket(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.47

Creates a copy that shares the same underlying TCP (or SSL/TLS) connection. This allows for simultaneous reading/writing by different threads on the socket. When using asynchronous reading/writing, it is not necessary to clone the socket. However, if separate background threads are making synchronous calls to read/write, then one thread may use the original socket, and the other should use a clone.

Returns NULL on failure

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Close
BOOL CkSocket_Close(HCkSocket cHandle, int maxWaitMs);

Cleanly terminates and closes a TCP, TLS, or SSH channel connection.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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CloseAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_CloseAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int maxWaitMs);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the Close method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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Connect
BOOL CkSocket_Connect(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *hostname, int port, BOOL ssl, int maxWaitMs);

Establishes a secure SSL/TLS or a plain non-secure TCP connection with a remote host:port. This is a blocking call. The maximum wait time (in milliseconds) is passed in maxWaitMs. This is the amount of time the app is willing to wait for the TCP connection to be accepted (see additional notes below).

The hostname can be a domain name (i.e. example.com), an IPv4 dotted address string such as "3.101.18.47", or an IPv6 address string such as "2345:0425:2CA1:0000:0000:0567:5673:23b5", or "2345:0425:2CA1::0567:5673:23b5", etc.

To establish an SSL/TLS connection, set ssl = TRUE, otherwise set ssl = FALSE for a normal TCP connection. Note: The timeouts that apply to the internal SSL/TLS handshaking messages are the MaxReadIdleMs and MaxSendIdleMs properties.

Note: The maxWaitMs only applies to the actual TCP connect, i.e. the max time to wait for the TCP connect to be accepted. The MaxReadIdleMs property applies to DNS (if hostname is a domain name), to any SOCKS or HTTP proxy communications, and to SSL/TLS handshake communications.

Note: Connections do not automatically close because of inactivity. A connection will remain open indefinitely even if there is no activity.

Important: All TCP-based Internet communications, regardless of the protocol (such as HTTP, FTP, SSH, IMAP, POP3, SMTP, etc.), and regardless of SSL/TLS, begin with establishing a TCP connection to a remote host:port. External security-related infrastructure such as software firewalls (Windows Firewall), hardware firewalls, anti-virus, at either source or destination (or both) can block the connection. If the connection fails, make sure to check all potential external causes of blockage.

Question: How do I Choose the TLS version, such as 1.2? Answer: The client does not specifically choose the TLS version. In the TLS handshake (which is what occurs internally in this method), the client tells the server the version of the TLS protocol it wishes to use, which should be the highest version is supports. In this case, (at the time of this writing on 22-June-2017) it is TLS 1.2. The server then chooses the TLS version that will actually be used. In most cases it will be TLS 1.2. The client can then choose to accept or reject the connection based on the TLS version chosen by the server. By default, Chilkat will reject anything lower than SSL 3.0 (i.e. SSL 2.0 or lower is rejected). The SslProtocol property can be set to change what is accepted by Chilkat. For example, it can be set to "TLS 1.0 or higher".

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ConnectAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ConnectAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *hostname, int port, BOOL ssl, int maxWaitMs);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the Connect method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ConvertFromSsl
BOOL CkSocket_ConvertFromSsl(HCkSocket cHandle);

Closes the secure (TLS/SSL) channel leaving the socket in a connected state where data sent and received is unencrypted.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ConvertFromSslAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ConvertFromSslAsync(HCkSocket cHandle);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ConvertFromSsl method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ConvertToSsl
BOOL CkSocket_ConvertToSsl(HCkSocket cHandle);

Converts a non-SSL/TLS connected socket to a secure channel using TLS/SSL.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ConvertToSslAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ConvertToSslAsync(HCkSocket cHandle);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ConvertToSsl method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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DnsCacheClear
void CkSocket_DnsCacheClear(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.38

Clears the Chilkat-wide in-memory hostname-to-IP address DNS cache. Chilkat automatically maintains this in-memory cache to prevent redundant DNS lookups. If the TTL on the DNS A records being accessed are short and/or these DNS records change frequently, then this method can be called clear the internal cache. Note: The DNS cache is used/shared among all Chilkat objects in a program, and clearing the cache affects all Chilkat objects.

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DnsLookup
BOOL CkSocket_DnsLookup(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *hostname, int maxWaitMs, HCkString outStr);
const char *CkSocket_dnsLookup(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *hostname, int maxWaitMs);

Performs a DNS query to resolve a hostname to an IP address. The IP address is returned if successful. The maximum time to wait (in milliseconds) is passed in maxWaitMs. To wait indefinitely, set maxWaitMs = 0.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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DnsLookupAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_DnsLookupAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *hostname, int maxWaitMs);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the DnsLookup method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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GetMyCert
HCkCert CkSocket_GetMyCert(HCkSocket cHandle);

Returns the digital certificate to be used for SSL connections. This method would only be called by an SSL server application. The SSL certificate is initially specified by calling InitSslServer.

Returns NULL on failure

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GetReceivedClientCert
HCkCert CkSocket_GetReceivedClientCert(HCkSocket cHandle, int index);

Returns the Nth client certificate received during an SSL/TLS handshake. This method only applies to the server-side of an SSL/TLS connection. The 1st client certificate is at index 0. The NumReceivedClientCerts property indicates the number of client certificates received during the SSL/TLS connection establishment.

Client certificates are customarily only sent when the server demands client-side authentication, as in 2-way SSL/TLS. This method provides the ability for the server to access and examine the client-side certs immediately after a connection is established. (Of course, if the client-side certs are inadequate for authentication, then the application can choose to immediately disconnect.)

Important: This method should be called from the socket object that is returned by AcceptNextConnection.

Returns NULL on failure

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GetSslAcceptableClientCaDn
BOOL CkSocket_GetSslAcceptableClientCaDn(HCkSocket cHandle, int index, HCkString outStr);
const char *CkSocket_getSslAcceptableClientCaDn(HCkSocket cHandle, int index);

If connected as an SSL/TLS client to an SSL/TLS server where the server requires a client-side certificate for authentication, then the NumSslAcceptableClientCAs property contains the number of acceptable certificate authorities sent by the server during connection establishment handshake. This method may be called to get the Distinguished Name (DN) of each acceptable CA. The index should range from 0 to NumSslAcceptableClientCAs - 1.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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GetSslServerCert
HCkCert CkSocket_GetSslServerCert(HCkSocket cHandle);

Returns the SSL server's digital certificate. This method would only be called by the client-side of an SSL connection. It returns the certificate of the remote SSL server for the current SSL connection. If the socket is not connected, or is not connected via SSL, then a NULL reference is returned.

Returns NULL on failure

More Information and Examples
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InitSslServer
BOOL CkSocket_InitSslServer(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkCert cert);

SSL/TLS Server applications should call this method with the SSL server certificate to be used for SSL/TLS connections. It should be called prior to accepting connections. This method has an intended side-effect: If not already connected, then the Ssl property is set to TRUE.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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LastJsonData
HCkJsonObject CkSocket_LastJsonData(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.79

Provides information about what transpired in the last method called on this object instance. For many methods, there is no information. However, for some methods, details about what occurred can be obtained by getting the LastJsonData right after the method call returns.

Returns NULL on failure

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LoadTaskCaller
BOOL CkSocket_LoadTaskCaller(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkTask task);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.80

Loads the caller of the task's async method.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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LoadTaskResult
BOOL CkSocket_LoadTaskResult(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkTask task);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.52

Loads the socket object from a completed asynchronous task.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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PollDataAvailable
BOOL CkSocket_PollDataAvailable(HCkSocket cHandle);

Check to see if data is available for reading on the socket. Returns TRUE if data is waiting and FALSE if no data is waiting to be read.

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PollDataAvailableAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_PollDataAvailableAsync(HCkSocket cHandle);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the PollDataAvailable method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveBd
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveBd(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkBinData binData);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.65

Receives as much data as is immediately available on a connected TCP socket and appends the incoming data to binData. If no data is immediately available, it waits up to MaxReadIdleMs milliseconds for data to arrive.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveBdAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveBdAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkBinData binData);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.65

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveBd method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveBdN
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveBdN(HCkSocket cHandle, unsigned long numBytes, HCkBinData binData);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.65

Reads exactly numBytes bytes from the connection. This method blocks until numBytes bytes are read or the read times out. The timeout is specified by the MaxReadIdleMs property (in milliseconds).

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

More Information and Examples
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ReceiveBdNAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveBdNAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, unsigned long numBytes, HCkBinData binData);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.65

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveBdN method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveByte
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveByte(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL bUnsigned);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Receives a single byte. The received byte will be available in the ReceivedInt property. If bUnsigned is TRUE, then a value from 0 to 255 is returned in ReceivedInt. If bUnsigned is FALSE, then a value from -128 to +127 is returned.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveByteAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveByteAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL bUnsigned);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveByte method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveBytes
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveBytes(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkByteData outData);

Receives as much data as is immediately available on a connected TCP socket. If no data is immediately available, it waits up to MaxReadIdleMs milliseconds for data to arrive.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveBytesAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveBytesAsync(HCkSocket cHandle);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveBytes method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveBytesENC
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveBytesENC(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *encodingAlg, HCkString outStr);
const char *CkSocket_receiveBytesENC(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *encodingAlg);

The same as ReceiveBytes, except the bytes are returned in encoded string form according to encodingAlg. The encodingAlg can be "Base64", "modBase64", "Base32", "UU", "QP" (for quoted-printable), "URL" (for url-encoding), "Hex", "Q", "B", "url_oath", "url_rfc1738", "url_rfc2396", or "url_rfc3986".

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveBytesENCAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveBytesENCAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *encodingAlg);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveBytesENC method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveBytesN
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveBytesN(HCkSocket cHandle, unsigned long numBytes, HCkByteData outData);

Reads exactly numBytes bytes from a connected SSL or non-SSL socket. This method blocks until numBytes bytes are read or the read times out. The timeout is specified by the MaxReadIdleMs property (in milliseconds).

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveBytesNAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveBytesNAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, unsigned long numBytes);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveBytesN method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

More Information and Examples
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ReceiveBytesToFile
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveBytesToFile(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *appendFilename);

Receives as much data as is immediately available on a connected TCP socket. If no data is immediately available, it waits up to MaxReadIdleMs milliseconds for data to arrive.

The received data is appended to the file specified by appendFilename.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveBytesToFileAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveBytesToFileAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *appendFilename);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveBytesToFile method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveCount
int CkSocket_ReceiveCount(HCkSocket cHandle);

Receives a 4-byte signed integer and returns the value received. Returns -1 on error.

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ReceiveCountAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveCountAsync(HCkSocket cHandle);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveCount method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveInt16
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveInt16(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL bigEndian, BOOL bUnsigned);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Receives a 16-bit integer (2 bytes). The received integer will be available in the ReceivedInt property. Set bigEndian equal to TRUE if the incoming 16-bit integer is in big-endian byte order. Otherwise set bigEndian equal to FALSE for receving a little-endian integer. If bUnsigned is TRUE, the ReceivedInt will range from 0 to 65,535. If bUnsigned is FALSE, the ReceivedInt will range from -32,768 through 32,767.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveInt16Async (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveInt16Async(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL bigEndian, BOOL bUnsigned);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveInt16 method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveInt32
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveInt32(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL bigEndian);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Receives a 32-bit integer (4 bytes). The received integer will be available in the ReceivedInt property. Set bigEndian equal to TRUE if the incoming 32-bit integer is in big-endian byte order. Otherwise set bigEndian equal to FALSE for receving a little-endian integer.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveInt32Async (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveInt32Async(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL bigEndian);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveInt32 method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveNBytesENC
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveNBytesENC(HCkSocket cHandle, unsigned long numBytes, const char *encodingAlg, HCkString outStr);
const char *CkSocket_receiveNBytesENC(HCkSocket cHandle, unsigned long numBytes, const char *encodingAlg);

The same as ReceiveBytesN, except the bytes are returned in encoded string form using the encoding specified by numBytes. The numBytes can be "Base64", "modBase64", "Base32", "UU", "QP" (for quoted-printable), "URL" (for url-encoding), "Hex", "Q", "B", "url_oath", "url_rfc1738", "url_rfc2396", or "url_rfc3986".

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveNBytesENCAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveNBytesENCAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, unsigned long numBytes, const char *encodingAlg);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveNBytesENC method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveSb
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveSb(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkStringBuilder sb);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.65

Receives as much data as is immediately available on the connection. If no data is immediately available, it waits up to MaxReadIdleMs milliseconds for data to arrive. The incoming bytes are interpreted according to the StringCharset property and appended to sb.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveSbAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveSbAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkStringBuilder sb);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.65

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveSb method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveString
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveString(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString outStr);
const char *CkSocket_receiveString(HCkSocket cHandle);

Receives as much data as is immediately available on a TCP/IP or SSL socket. If no data is immediately available, it waits up to MaxReadIdleMs milliseconds for data to arrive. The incoming bytes are interpreted according to the StringCharset property and returned as a string.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveStringAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveStringAsync(HCkSocket cHandle);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveString method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveStringMaxN
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveStringMaxN(HCkSocket cHandle, int maxByteCount, HCkString outStr);
const char *CkSocket_receiveStringMaxN(HCkSocket cHandle, int maxByteCount);

Same as ReceiveString, but limits the amount of data returned to a maximum of maxByteCount bytes.

(Receives as much data as is immediately available on the TCP/IP or SSL socket. If no data is immediately available, it waits up to MaxReadIdleMs milliseconds for data to arrive. The incoming bytes are interpreted according to the StringCharset property and returned as a string.)

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveStringMaxNAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveStringMaxNAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int maxByteCount);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveStringMaxN method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveStringUntilByte
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveStringUntilByte(HCkSocket cHandle, int lookForByte, HCkString outStr);
const char *CkSocket_receiveStringUntilByte(HCkSocket cHandle, int lookForByte);

Receives bytes on a connected SSL or non-SSL socket until a specific 1-byte value is read. Returns a string containing all the bytes up to but excluding the lookForByte.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveStringUntilByteAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveStringUntilByteAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int lookForByte);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveStringUntilByte method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveToCRLF
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveToCRLF(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkString outStr);
const char *CkSocket_receiveToCRLF(HCkSocket cHandle);

Reads text from the connected TCP/IP or SSL socket until a CRLF is received. Returns the text up to and including the CRLF. The incoming bytes are interpreted according to the charset specified by the StringCharset property.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveToCRLFAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveToCRLFAsync(HCkSocket cHandle);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveToCRLF method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveUntilByte
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveUntilByte(HCkSocket cHandle, int lookForByte, HCkByteData outBytes);

Receives bytes on the TCP/IP or SSL socket until a specific 1-byte value is read. Returns all the bytes up to and including the lookForByte.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveUntilByteAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveUntilByteAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int lookForByte);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveUntilByte method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveUntilByteBd
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveUntilByteBd(HCkSocket cHandle, int lookForByte, HCkBinData bd);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.76

Receives bytes on the TCP/IP or SSL socket until a specific 1-byte value is read. Returns all the bytes up to and including the lookForByte. The received bytes are appended to bd.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveUntilByteBdAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveUntilByteBdAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int lookForByte, HCkBinData bd);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.76

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveUntilByteBd method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ReceiveUntilMatch
BOOL CkSocket_ReceiveUntilMatch(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *matchStr, HCkString outStr);
const char *CkSocket_receiveUntilMatch(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *matchStr);

Reads text from the connected TCP/IP or SSL socket until a matching string (matchStr) is received. Returns the text up to and including the matching string. As an example, to one might read the header of an HTTP request or a MIME message by reading up to the first double CRLF ("\r\n\r\n"). The incoming bytes are interpreted according to the charset specified by the StringCharset property.

Remember: All Receive* methods will stop trying to receive if incoming data stops arriving for more than the number of milliseconds indicated by the MaxReadIdleMs property. If this happens, the method return value indicates failure and the ReceiveFailReason property would have the value 5 (for Timeout).

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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ReceiveUntilMatchAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_ReceiveUntilMatchAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *matchStr);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the ReceiveUntilMatch method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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ResetPerf
void CkSocket_ResetPerf(HCkSocket cHandle, BOOL rcvPerf);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.78

Resets the performance measurements for either receiving or sending. If rcvPerf is TRUE, then the receive performance monitoring is reset. If rcvPerf is FALSE, then the sending performance monitoring is reset.

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SelectForReading
int CkSocket_SelectForReading(HCkSocket cHandle, int timeoutMs);

Wait for data to arrive on this socket, or any of the contained sockets if the caller is a "socket set". (If the socket is a listener socket, then waits for an incoming connect. Listener sockets can be added to the "socket set" just like connected sockets.)

(see the example at the link below for more detailed information)

Waits a maximum of timeoutMs milliseconds. If maxWaitMs = 0, then it is effectively a poll. Returns the number of sockets with data available for reading. If no sockets have data available for reading, then a value of 0 is returned. A value of -1 indicates an error condition. Note: when the remote peer (in this case the web server) disconnects, the socket will appear as if it has data available. A "ready" socket is one where either data is available for reading or the socket has become disconnected.

If the peer closed the connection, it will not be discovered until an attempt is made to read the socket. If the read fails, then the IsConnected property may be checked to see if the connection was closed.

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SelectForReadingAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SelectForReadingAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int timeoutMs);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SelectForReading method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SelectForWriting
int CkSocket_SelectForWriting(HCkSocket cHandle, int timeoutMs);

Waits until it is known that data can be written to one or more sockets without it blocking.

Socket writes are typically buffered by the operating system. When an application writes data to a socket, the operating system appends it to the socket's outgoing send buffers and returns immediately. However, if the OS send buffers become filled up (because the sender is sending data faster than the remote receiver can read it), then a socket write can block (until outgoing send buffer space becomes available).

Waits a maximum of timeoutMs milliseconds. If maxWaitMs = 0, then it is effectively a poll. Returns the number of sockets such that data can be written without blocking. A value of -1 indicates an error condition.

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SelectForWritingAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SelectForWritingAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int timeoutMs);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SelectForWriting method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SendBd
BOOL CkSocket_SendBd(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkBinData binData, unsigned long offset, unsigned long numBytes);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.65

Sends bytes from binData over a connected SSL or non-SSL socket. If transmission halts for more than MaxSendIdleMs milliseconds, the send is aborted. This is a blocking (synchronous) method. It returns only after the bytes have been sent.

Set offset and/or numBytes to non-zero values to send a portion of the binData. If offset and numBytes are both 0, then the entire binData is sent. If offset is non-zero and numBytes is zero, then the bytes starting at offset until the end are sent.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SendBdAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SendBdAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkBinData binData, unsigned long offset, unsigned long numBytes);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.65

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SendBd method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SendByte
BOOL CkSocket_SendByte(HCkSocket cHandle, int value);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Sends a single byte. The integer must have a value from 0 to 255.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

More Information and Examples
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SendByteAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SendByteAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int value);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SendByte method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SendBytes
BOOL CkSocket_SendBytes(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkByteData data);

Sends bytes over a connected SSL or non-SSL socket. If transmission halts for more than MaxSendIdleMs milliseconds, the send is aborted. This is a blocking (synchronous) method. It returns only after the bytes have been sent.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SendBytesAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SendBytesAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkByteData data);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SendBytes method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SendBytes2
BOOL CkSocket_SendBytes2(HCkSocket cHandle, const unsigned char *pByteData, unsigned long szByteData);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.82

Sames as SendBytes but data is passed via a pointer and length.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SendBytesENC
BOOL CkSocket_SendBytesENC(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *encodedBytes, const char *encodingAlg);

The same as SendBytes, except the bytes are provided in encoded string form as specified by encodingAlg. The encodingAlg can be "Base64", "modBase64", "Base32", "Base58", "UU", "QP" (for quoted-printable), "URL" (for url-encoding), "Hex", "Q", "B", "url_oauth", "url_rfc1738", "url_rfc2396", and "url_rfc3986".

For example, you can call this method with the following arguments: "00010203040506","hex" to send 7 binary bytes with values 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06.

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SendBytesENCAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SendBytesENCAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *encodedBytes, const char *encodingAlg);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SendBytesENC method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SendCount
BOOL CkSocket_SendCount(HCkSocket cHandle, int byteCount);

Sends a 4-byte signed integer on the connection. The receiver may call ReceiveCount to receive the integer. The SendCount and ReceiveCount methods are handy for sending byte counts prior to sending data. The sender would send a count followed by the data, and the receiver would receive the count first, and then knows how many data bytes it should expect to receive.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SendCountAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SendCountAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, int byteCount);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SendCount method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SendInt16
BOOL CkSocket_SendInt16(HCkSocket cHandle, int value, BOOL bigEndian);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Sends a 16-bit integer (2 bytes). Set bigEndian equal to TRUE to send the integer in big-endian byte order (this is the standard network byte order). Otherwise set bigEndian equal to FALSE to send in little-endian byte order.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

More Information and Examples
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SendInt16Async (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SendInt16Async(HCkSocket cHandle, int value, BOOL bigEndian);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SendInt16 method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SendInt32
BOOL CkSocket_SendInt32(HCkSocket cHandle, int value, BOOL bigEndian);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Sends a 32-bit integer (4 bytes). Set bigEndian equal to TRUE to send the integer in big-endian byte order (this is the standard network byte order). Otherwise set bigEndian equal to FALSE to send in little-endian byte order.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SendInt32Async (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SendInt32Async(HCkSocket cHandle, int value, BOOL bigEndian);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SendInt32 method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SendSb
BOOL CkSocket_SendSb(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkStringBuilder sb);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.65

Sends the contents of sb over the connection. If transmission halts for more than MaxSendIdleMs milliseconds, the send is aborted. The string is sent in the charset encoding specified by the StringCharset property.

This is a blocking (synchronous) method. It returns after the string has been sent.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SendSbAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SendSbAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkStringBuilder sb);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.65

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SendSb method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SendString
BOOL CkSocket_SendString(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *stringToSend);

Sends a string over a connected SSL or non-SSL (TCP/IP) socket. If transmission halts for more than MaxSendIdleMs milliseconds, the send is aborted. The string is sent in the charset encoding specified by the StringCharset property.

This is a blocking (synchronous) method. It returns after the string has been sent.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SendStringAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SendStringAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *stringToSend);

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SendString method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

More Information and Examples
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SendWakeOnLan
BOOL CkSocket_SendWakeOnLan(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *macAddress, int port, const char *ipBroadcastAddr);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.69

Sends a "Wake on Lan" magic packet to a computer. A Wake on Lan is a way to power on a computer remotely by sending a data packet known as a magic packet. For this to work, the network card must have enabled the feature: “Power on Lan” or “Power on PCI Device“, which is done by accessing the BIOS of the machine.

The macAddress is the MAC address (in hex) of the computer to wake. A MAC address should be 6 bytes in length. For example, "000102030405". The port is the port which should be 7 or 9. (Port number 9 is more commonly used.) The ipBroadcastAddr is the broadcast address of your network, which usually ends with *.255. For example: "192.168.1.255".

Your application does not call Connect prior to calling SendWakeOnLan. To use this method, it's just a matter of instantiating an instance of this socket object and then call SendWakeOnLan.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SendWakeOnLan2
BOOL CkSocket_SendWakeOnLan2(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *macAddress, int port, const char *ipBroadcastAddr, const char *password);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.77

The same as SendWakeOnLan, but includes an additional argument to specify a SecureOn password. The password should be a hexidecimal string representing 4 or 6 bytes. (See https://wiki.wireshark.org/WakeOnLAN) Sending a WakeOnLAN (WOL) to an IPv4 address would need a 4-byte SecureOn password, whereas an IPv6 address would need a 6-byte SecureOn password.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SetSslClientCert
BOOL CkSocket_SetSslClientCert(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkCert cert);

A client-side certificate for SSL/TLS connections is optional. It should be used only if the server demands it. This method allows the certificate to be specified using a certificate object.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SetSslClientCertPem
BOOL CkSocket_SetSslClientCertPem(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *pemDataOrFilename, const char *pemPassword);

A client-side certificate for SSL/TLS connections is optional. It should be used only if the server demands it. This method allows the certificate to be specified using a PEM file.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SetSslClientCertPfx
BOOL CkSocket_SetSslClientCertPfx(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *pfxFilename, const char *pfxPassword);

A client-side certificate for SSL/TLS connections is optional. It should be used only if the server demands it. This method allows the certificate to be specified using a PFX file.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SleepMs
void CkSocket_SleepMs(HCkSocket cHandle, int millisec);

Convenience method to force the calling thread to sleep for a number of milliseconds.

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SshAuthenticatePk
BOOL CkSocket_SshAuthenticatePk(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *sshLogin, HCkSshKey privateKey);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Authenticates with the SSH server using public-key authentication. The corresponding public key must have been installed on the SSH server for the sshLogin. Authentication will succeed if the matching privateKey is provided.

Important: When reporting problems, please send the full contents of the LastErrorText property to [email protected].

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SshAuthenticatePkAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SshAuthenticatePkAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *sshLogin, HCkSshKey privateKey);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SshAuthenticatePk method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SshAuthenticatePw
BOOL CkSocket_SshAuthenticatePw(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *sshLogin, const char *sshPassword);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Authenticates with the SSH server using a sshLogin and sshPassword. This method is only used for SSH tunneling. The tunnel is established by calling SshOpenTunnel, then (if necessary) authenticated by calling SshAuthenticatePw or SshAuthenticatePk.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SshAuthenticatePwAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SshAuthenticatePwAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *sshLogin, const char *sshPassword);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SshAuthenticatePw method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SshCloseTunnel
BOOL CkSocket_SshCloseTunnel(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Closes the SSH tunnel previously opened by SshOpenTunnel.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SshCloseTunnelAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SshCloseTunnelAsync(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SshCloseTunnel method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SshOpenChannel
HCkSocket CkSocket_SshOpenChannel(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *hostname, int port, BOOL ssl, int maxWaitMs);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Opens a new channel within an SSH tunnel. Returns the socket that is connected to the destination host:port through the SSH tunnel via port forwarding. If ssl is TRUE, the connection is TLS (i.e. TLS inside the SSH tunnel). Returns the socket object that is the port-forwarded tunneled connection. Any number of channels may be opened within a single SSH tunnel, and may be port-forwarded to different remote host:port endpoints.

Returns NULL on failure

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SshOpenChannelAsync (1) (2)
HCkTask CkSocket_SshOpenChannelAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *hostname, int port, BOOL ssl, int maxWaitMs);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SshOpenChannel method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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SshOpenTunnel
BOOL CkSocket_SshOpenTunnel(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *sshHostname, int sshPort);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Connects to an SSH server and creates a tunnel for port forwarding. The sshHostname is the hostname (or IP address) of the SSH server. The sshPort is typically 22, which is the standard SSH port number.

An SSH tunneling (port forwarding) session always begins by first calling SshOpenTunnel to connect to the SSH server, followed by calling either SshAuthenticatePw or SshAuthenticatePk to authenticate. A program would then call SshOpenChannel to connect to the destination server (via the SSH tunnel). Any number of channels can be opened over the same SSH tunnel.

The MaxReadIdleMs property applies to this method for controlling how long it takes before a timeout.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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SshOpenTunnelAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_SshOpenTunnelAsync(HCkSocket cHandle, const char *sshHostname, int sshPort);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.50

Creates an asynchronous task to call the SshOpenTunnel method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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StartTiming
void CkSocket_StartTiming(HCkSocket cHandle);

Used in combination with the ElapsedSeconds property, which will contain the number of seconds since the last call to this method. (The StartTiming method and ElapsedSeconds property is provided for convenience.)

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TakeConnection
BOOL CkSocket_TakeConnection(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkSocket sock);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.77

Takes the connection from sock. If the caller of this method had an open connection, then it will be closed. This method is different than the TakeSocket method because the caller does not become a "socket set".

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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TakeSocket
BOOL CkSocket_TakeSocket(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkSocket sock);

Takes ownership of the sock. sock is added to the internal set of connected sockets. The caller object is now effectively a "socket set", i.e. a collection of connected and/or listener sockets. Method calls are routed to the internal sockets based on the value of the SelectorIndex property. For example, if SelectorIndex equals 2, then a call to SendBytes is actually a call to SendBytes on the 3rd socket in the set. (Indexing begins at 0.) Likewise, getting and setting properties are also routed to the contained socket based on SelectorIndex. It is possible to wait on a set of sockets for data to arrive on any of them by calling SelectForReading. See the example link below.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

More Information and Examples
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TlsRenegotiate
BOOL CkSocket_TlsRenegotiate(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.55

Initiates a renegotiation of the TLS security parameters. This sends a ClientHello to re-do the TLS handshake to establish new TLS security params.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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TlsRenegotiateAsync (1)
HCkTask CkSocket_TlsRenegotiateAsync(HCkSocket cHandle);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.55

Creates an asynchronous task to call the TlsRenegotiate method with the arguments provided. (Async methods are available starting in Chilkat v9.5.0.52.)

Returns NULL on failure

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UseSsh
BOOL CkSocket_UseSsh(HCkSocket cHandle, HCkSsh ssh);
Introduced in version 9.5.0.55

Uses an existing SSH tunnel for the connection. This is an alternative way of establishing a socket connection through an SSH tunnel. There are four ways of running a TCP or SSL/TLS connection through an SSH tunnel:

  1. UseSsh
    1. Establish the SSH connection and authenticate using the Chilkat SSH object.
    2. Call UseSsh to indicate that the connections should be made through the SSH tunnel.
    3. Call the Connect method to establish the TCP or SSL/TLS connection with a destination host:port. The connection is not direct, but will instead be routed through the SSH tunnel and then port-forwarded (from the SSH server) to the destination host:port. (Had UseSsh not been called, the connection would be direct.)
  2. SshOpenTunnel
    1. Call the Socket object's SshOpenTunnel method to connect to an SSH server.
    2. Call SshAuthenticatePw to authenticate with the SSH server.
    3. Instead of calling Connect to connect with the destination host:port, the SshOpenChannel method is called to connect via port-forwarding through the SSH tunnel.
  3. SshTunnel object with dynamic port forwarding
    1. The Chilkat SSH Tunnel object is utilized to run in a background thread. It connects and authenticates with an SSH server, and then listens at a port chosen by the application, and behaves as a SOCKS5 proxy server.
    2. The Socket object sets the SOCKS5 proxy host:port to localhost:<port>,
    3. The Socket's Connect method is called to connect via the SSH Tunnel. The connection is routed through the SSH tunnel via dynamic port forwarding.
    4. Once the background SSH Tunnel thread is running, it can handle any number of incoming connections from the foreground thread, other threads, or even other programs that are local or remote. Each incoming connection is routed via dynamic port forwarding to it's chosen destnation host:port on it's own logical SSH channel.
  4. SshTunnel object with hard-coded port forwarding
    1. The Chilkat SSH Tunnel object is utilized to run in a background thread. It connects and authenticates with an SSH server, and then listens at a port chosen by the application. It does not behave as a SOCKS5 proxy server, but instead has a hard-coded destination host:port.
    2. The Socket's Connect method is called to connect to localhost:<port>. The connection is automatically port-forwarded through the SSH tunnel to the hard-coded destination host:port.
In all cases, the SSH tunnels can hold both unencrypted TCP connections and SSL/TLS connections.

Returns TRUE for success, FALSE for failure.

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