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socket_select() accepts arrays of sockets and waits for them to change status. Those coming with BSD sockets background will recognize that those socket resource arrays are in fact the so-called file descriptor sets. Three independent arrays of socket resources are watched.
The sockets listed in the read array will be watched to see if characters become available for reading (more precisely, to see if a read will not block - in particular, a socket resource is also ready on end-of-file, in which case a socket_read() will return a zero length string).
The sockets listed in the write array will be watched to see if a write will not block.
The sockets listed in the except array will be watched for exceptions.
The tv_sec and tv_usec
together form the timeout parameter. The
timeout is an upper bound on the amount of time
elapsed before socket_select() return.
tv_sec may be zero , causing
socket_select() to return immediately. This is useful
for polling. If tv_sec is NULL
(no timeout),
socket_select() can block indefinitely.
On exit, the arrays are modified to indicate which socket resource actually changed status.
You do not need to pass every array to
socket_select(). You can leave it out and use an
empty array or NULL
instead. Also do not forget that those arrays are
passed by reference and will be modified after
socket_select() returns.
Due a limitation in the current Zend Engine it is not possible to pass a
constant modifier like NULL
directly as a parameter to a function
which expects this parameter to be passed by reference. Instead use a
temporary variable or an expression with the leftmost member being a
temporary variable:
On success socket_select() returns the number of
socket resources contained in the modified arrays, which may be zero if
the timeout expires before anything interesting happens. On error FALSE
is returned. The error code can be retrieved with
socket_last_error().
Be sure to use the ===
operator when checking for an
error. Since the socket_select() may return 0 the
comparison with ==
would evaluate to TRUE
:
<?php
$e = NULL;
if (false === socket_select($r, $w, $e, 0)) {
echo "socket_select() failed, reason: " .
socket_strerror(socket_last_error()) . "\n";
}
?>
<?php
/* Prepare the read array */
$read = array($socket1, $socket2);
$write = NULL;
$except = NULL;
$num_changed_sockets = socket_select($read, $write, $except, 0);
if ($num_changed_sockets === false) {
/* Error handling */
} else if ($num_changed_sockets > 0) {
/* At least at one of the sockets something interesting happened */
}
?>
Be aware that some socket implementations need to be handled very carefully. A few basic rules: