23.13 Summary
In this chapter, we looked at the SCTP autoclose
facility, exploring how it can be used to limit idle associations
in a one-to-many socket. We built a simple utility that an
application can use to receive large messages with the partial
delivery API. We examined how an application can decode events that
occur on the transport with a simple utility that displays
notifications. We briefly looked at how a user can send unordered
data and bind a subset of addresses. We saw how to acquire the
addresses of both the peer end of an association as well as the
local end. We also examined a simple method an application can use
to translate an address into an association ID.
Heartbeats (termed keep-alives in TCP) are
exchanged by default on an SCTP association. We examined how to
control this feature through a small utility we built. We looked at
how to extract an association with the sctp_peeloff system
call, and illustrated an example server that was both iterative and
concurrent using this call. We also discussed considerations an
application needs to make before tuning the SCTP timing parameters.
We concluded with a look at when an application should consider
using SCTP.
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