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  r81621 | antoine.pitrou | 2010-05-31 19:01:01 +0200 (lun., 31 mai 2010) | 4 lines

  Improve documentation for getaddrinfo() (part of #8857)
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Antoine Pitrou 2010-05-31 17:04:40 +00:00
parent 32eb864d31
commit 9103597ee7
1 changed files with 32 additions and 15 deletions

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@ -211,27 +211,44 @@ The module :mod:`socket` exports the following constants and functions:
*source_address* was added.
.. function:: getaddrinfo(host, port[, family[, socktype[, proto[, flags]]]])
.. function:: getaddrinfo(host, port, family=0, socktype=0, proto=0, flags=0)
Resolves the *host*/*port* argument, into a sequence of 5-tuples that contain
all the necessary arguments for creating the corresponding socket. *host* is a domain
name, a string representation of an IPv4/v6 address or ``None``. *port* is a string
service name such as ``'http'``, a numeric port number or ``None``.
The rest of the arguments are optional and must be numeric if specified.
By passing ``None`` as the value of *host* and *port*, , you can pass ``NULL`` to the C API.
Translate the *host*/*port* argument into a sequence of 5-tuples that contain
all the necessary arguments for creating a socket connected to that service.
*host* is a domain name, a string representation of an IPv4/v6 address
or ``None``. *port* is a string service name such as ``'http'``, a numeric
port number or ``None``. By passing ``None`` as the value of *host*
and *port*, you can pass ``NULL`` to the underlying C API.
The :func:`getaddrinfo` function returns a list of 5-tuples with the following
structure:
The *family*, *socktype* and *proto* arguments can be optionally specified
in order to narrow the list of addresses returned. Passing zero as a
value for each of these arguments selects the full range of results.
The *flags* argument can be one or several of the ``AI_*`` constants,
and will influence how results are computed and returned.
For example, :const:`AI_NUMERICHOST` will disable domain name resolution
and will raise an error if *host* is a domain name.
The function returns a list of 5-tuples with the following structure:
``(family, socktype, proto, canonname, sockaddr)``
*family*, *socktype*, *proto* are all integers and are meant to be passed to the
:func:`socket` function. *canonname* is a string representing the canonical name
of the *host*. It can be a numeric IPv4/v6 address when :const:`AI_CANONNAME` is
specified for a numeric *host*. *sockaddr* is a tuple describing a socket
address, as described above. See the source for :mod:`socket` and other
library modules for a typical usage of the function.
In these tuples, *family*, *socktype*, *proto* are all integers and are
meant to be passed to the :func:`socket` function. *canonname* will be
a string representing the canonical name of the *host* if
:const:`AI_CANONNAME` is part of the *flags* argument; else *canonname*
will be empty. *sockaddr* is a tuple describing a socket address, whose
format depends on the returned *family* (a ``(address, port)`` 2-tuple for
:const:`AF_INET`, a ``(address, port, flow info, scope id)`` 4-tuple for
:const:`AF_INET6`), and is meant to be passed to the :meth:`socket.connect`
method.
The following example fetches address information for a hypothetical TCP
connection to ``www.python.org`` on port 80 (results may differ on your
system if IPv6 isn't enabled)::
>>> socket.getaddrinfo("www.python.org", 80, 0, 0, socket.SOL_TCP)
[(2, 1, 6, '', ('82.94.164.162', 80)),
(10, 1, 6, '', ('2001:888:2000:d::a2', 80, 0, 0))]
.. function:: getfqdn([name])