Restore strict checking of socket address values; addresses passed to

the bind(), connect(), and connect_ex() methods must be a single
parameter.

Originally part of 1.98, reverted in 1.100.
This commit is contained in:
Fred Drake 2000-07-01 03:40:12 +00:00
parent 54610f31cc
commit 728819af5d
1 changed files with 21 additions and 15 deletions

View File

@ -45,15 +45,12 @@ Module interface:
- a UNIX domain socket address is a string specifying the pathname
Socket methods:
(NB: an argument list of the form (sockaddr...) means that multiple
arguments are treated the same as a single tuple argument, for backwards
compatibility. This is deprecated, and will be removed in future versions.)
- s.accept() --> new socket object, sockaddr
- s.bind(sockaddr...) --> None
- s.bind(sockaddr) --> None
- s.close() --> None
- s.connect(sockaddr...) --> None
- s.connect_ex(sockaddr...) --> 0 or errno (handy for e.g. async connect)
- s.connect(sockaddr) --> None
- s.connect_ex(sockaddr) --> 0 or errno (handy for e.g. async connect)
- s.fileno() --> file descriptor
- s.dup() --> same as socket.fromfd(os.dup(s.fileno(), ...)
- s.getpeername() --> sockaddr
@ -856,7 +853,7 @@ If a nonzero buffersize argument is given, the return value is a\n\
string of that length; otherwise it is an integer.";
/* s.bind(sockaddr...) method */
/* s.bind(sockaddr) method */
static PyObject *
BUILD_FUNC_DEF_2(PySocketSock_bind,PySocketSockObject *,s, PyObject *,args)
@ -864,7 +861,10 @@ BUILD_FUNC_DEF_2(PySocketSock_bind,PySocketSockObject *,s, PyObject *,args)
struct sockaddr *addr;
int addrlen;
int res;
if (!getsockaddrarg(s, args, &addr, &addrlen))
PyObject *addro;
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O:bind", &addro))
return NULL;
if (!getsockaddrarg(s, addro, &addr, &addrlen))
return NULL;
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
res = bind(s->sock_fd, addr, addrlen);
@ -907,7 +907,7 @@ static char close_doc[] =
Close the socket. It cannot be used after this call.";
/* s.connect(sockaddr...) method */
/* s.connect(sockaddr) method */
static PyObject *
BUILD_FUNC_DEF_2(PySocketSock_connect,PySocketSockObject *,s, PyObject *,args)
@ -915,7 +915,10 @@ BUILD_FUNC_DEF_2(PySocketSock_connect,PySocketSockObject *,s, PyObject *,args)
struct sockaddr *addr;
int addrlen;
int res;
if (!getsockaddrarg(s, args, &addr, &addrlen))
PyObject *addro;
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O:connect", &addro))
return NULL;
if (!getsockaddrarg(s, addro, &addr, &addrlen))
return NULL;
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
res = connect(s->sock_fd, addr, addrlen);
@ -933,7 +936,7 @@ Connect the socket to a remote address. For IP sockets, the address\n\
is a pair (host, port).";
/* s.connect_ex(sockaddr...) method */
/* s.connect_ex(sockaddr) method */
static PyObject *
BUILD_FUNC_DEF_2(PySocketSock_connect_ex,PySocketSockObject *,s, PyObject *,args)
@ -941,7 +944,10 @@ BUILD_FUNC_DEF_2(PySocketSock_connect_ex,PySocketSockObject *,s, PyObject *,args
struct sockaddr *addr;
int addrlen;
int res;
if (!getsockaddrarg(s, args, &addr, &addrlen))
PyObject *addro;
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O:connect_ex", &addro))
return NULL;
if (!getsockaddrarg(s, addro, &addr, &addrlen))
return NULL;
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
res = connect(s->sock_fd, addr, addrlen);
@ -1321,13 +1327,13 @@ of the socket (flag == 1), or both ends (flag == 2).";
static PyMethodDef PySocketSock_methods[] = {
{"accept", (PyCFunction)PySocketSock_accept, 1,
accept_doc},
{"bind", (PyCFunction)PySocketSock_bind, 0,
{"bind", (PyCFunction)PySocketSock_bind, 1,
bind_doc},
{"close", (PyCFunction)PySocketSock_close, 1,
close_doc},
{"connect", (PyCFunction)PySocketSock_connect, 0,
{"connect", (PyCFunction)PySocketSock_connect, 1,
connect_doc},
{"connect_ex", (PyCFunction)PySocketSock_connect_ex, 0,
{"connect_ex", (PyCFunction)PySocketSock_connect_ex, 1,
connect_ex_doc},
#ifndef NO_DUP
{"dup", (PyCFunction)PySocketSock_dup, 1,