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Query regarding syntax used in a header file for socket programming

This is the piece of the code I copied from one of the header file for socket programming.

/* Structure describing an Internet socket address.  */
struct sockaddr_in
  {
    __SOCKADDR_COMMON (sin_);
    in_port_t sin_port;                 /* Port number.  */
    struct in_addr sin_addr;            /* Internet address.  */

    /* Pad to size of `struct sockaddr'.  */
    unsigned char sin_zero[sizeof (struct sockaddr) -
                           __SOCKADDR_COMMON_SIZE -
                           sizeof (in_port_t) -
                           sizeof (struct in_addr)];
  };

I can understand declaration of sin_port and sin_addr. but what is __SOCKADDR_COMMON in_) is here. I can't understand this syntax? Kindly explain.开发者_开发百科 Thanks in advance.


There exists the macro definition:

#define __SOCKADDR_COMMON(sa_prefix) \
  sa_family_t sa_prefix##family

so __SOCKADDR_COMMON (sin_); actually expands to sa_family_t sin_family;

The way this happens is that the macro takes the parameter sa_prefix and uses the ## operator to concatenate (join) them. The result is that you have a new variable sin_family which is declared with type sa_family_t in the struct.

Here's more info on macros and the C Preprocessor


It is a macro defined somwhere else. It might be defined as

#define __SOCKADDR_COMMON(sa_prefix) \
  sa_family_t sa_prefix##family

expanding that, the struct would look like

struct sockaddr_in
  {
    sa_family_t sin_family;
    in_port_t sin_port;      
 ... 

DO NOT copy this structure into your code. You are supposed to include the header file for your system that declares struct sockaddr_in.


__SOCKADDR_COMMON() will be a #define macro that expands a set of common fields to be used in all structures

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