recvmsg
Traits for receiving datagrams reliably, without truncation.
Problem
Unlike a byte stream interface, datagram sockets (most notably UDP) and other packet-based APIs preserve boundaries between different write calls, which is what "message boundary" essentially means. Extracting messages by partial reads is an error-prone task, which is why no such interface is exposed by any OS – instead, all messages received from message IPC channels are full messages rather than chunks of messages, which simplifies things to a great degree and is arguably the only proper way of implementing datagram support.
There is one pecularity related to this design: you can't just use a buffer with arbitrary length to successfully receive a message. With byte streams, that always works – there either is some data which can be written into that buffer or end of file has been reached, aside from the implied error case which is always a possibility for any kind of I/O. With datagrams, however, there might not always be enough space in a buffer to fetch a whole message. If the buffer is too small to fetch part of a message, it is truncated and the message ends up essentially malformed.
Solution
The [RecvMsg
] trait (together with its async counterpart, [AsyncRecvMsg
]) provides an
interface that completely prevents truncation.
With the help of [MsgBuf
], a borrowed buffer can be provided, which can also be subsequently
transitioned into an owned buffer as needed. Alternatively, [MsgBuf
] can start off with an
already-owned buffer. The inner Vec
will then be resized as necessary, with an optional quota
preventing a connection from exhausting all memory.
Implementation
There are three features a standard truncating message reception can provide to allow programs
to solve the truncation problem: peeking, truncation reporting and exact length querying. The
former two are represented by the [TruncatingRecvMsg
] trait, while the last one can be seen as
an extension of those and is thus available as [TruncatingRecvMsgWithFullSize
]. Both of those
have async counterparts.
[RecvMsg
] or [AsyncRecvMsg
] are then to be implemented in terms of either of those traits
using the appropriate helper function from the corresponding module.
Feature flags
std
–std::error::Error
on [QuotaExceeded
]. Precludes#![no_std]
.std_net
– implementations of traits on types fromstd::net
andstd::os::unix::net
(Unix domain sockets) on Unix.