Socket Programming in Python

Python provides two levels of access to network services. At a low level, you can access the basic socket support in the underlying operating system, which allows you to implement clients and servers for both connection-oriented and connection less protocols.

Python also has libraries that provide higher-level access to specific application-level network protocols, such as FTP, HTTP, and so on.

What is Sockets?

Sockets are the endpoints of a bidirectional communications channel. Sockets may communicate within a process, between processes on the same machine, or between processes on different continents.

Sockets may be implemented over a number of different channel types: Unix domain sockets, TCP, UDP, and so on. The socket library provides specific classes for handling the common transports as well as a generic interface for handling the rest.

Sockets have their own vocabulary:

 

host A string, which can be a host name, a dotted-quad address, or an IPV6 address in colon (and possibly dot) notation

A string "<broadcast>", which specifies an INADDR_BROADCAST address.

A zero-length string, which specifies INADDR_ANY, or

An Integer, interpreted as a binary address in host byte order.

 

port Each server listens for clients calling on one or more ports. A port 

The socket Module

To create a socket, you must use the socket.socket() function available in socket module, which has the general syntax:

s = socket.socket (socket_family, socket_type, protocol=0)

Here is the description of the parameters:

  • socket_family: This is either AF_UNIX or AF_INET, as explained earlier.

  • socket_type: This is either SOCK_STREAM or SOCK_DGRAM.

  • protocol: This is usually left out, defaulting to 0.

Once you have socket object, then you can use required functions to create your client or server program. Following is the list of functions required:

Server Socket Methods

Method Description
s.bind() This method binds address (hostname, port number pair) to socket.
s.listen() This method sets up and start TCP listener.
s.accept() This passively accept TCP client connection, waiting until connection
arrives (blocking).

 

Client Socket Methods

Method Description
s.connect() This method actively initiates TCP server connection.

General Socket Methods

Method Description
s.recv() This method receives TCP message
s.send() This method transmits TCP message
s.recvfrom() This method receives UDP message
s.sendto() This method transmits UDP message
s.close() This method closes socket
socket.gethostname() Returns the hostname.

A Simple Server

To write Internet servers, we use the socket function available in socket module to create a socket object. A socket object is then used to call other functions to setup a socket server.

Now call bind(hostname, port) function to specify a port for your service on the given host.

Next, call the accept method of the returned object. This method waits until a client connects to the port you specified, and then returns a connection object that represents the connection to that client.

#!/usr/bin/python # This is server.py file

import socket # Import socket module

s = socket.socket() # Create a socket object

host = socket.gethostname() # Get local machine name

port = 12345 # Reserve a port for your service.

s.bind((host, port)) # Bind to the port

s.listen(5) # Now wait for client connection.

while True:

c, addr = s.accept() # Establish connection with client.

print 'Got connection from', addr c.send('Thank you for connecting')

c.close() # Close the connection

A Simple Client

Let us write a very simple client program which opens a connection to a given port 12345 and given host. This is very simple to create a socket client using Python's socketmodule function.

The socket.connect(hosname, port ) opens a TCP connection to hostname on the port. Once you have a socket open, you can read from it like any IO object. When done, remember to close it, as you would close a file.

The following code is a very simple client that connects to a given host and port, reads any available data from the socket, and then exits:

#!/usr/bin/python # This is client.py file

import socket # Import socket module

s = socket.socket() # Create a socket object

host = socket.gethostname() # Get local machine name

port = 12345 # Reserve a port for your service.

s.connect((host, port))

print s.recv(1024)

s.close # Close the socket when done

Now run this server.py in background and then run above client.py to see the result.

  • Following would start a server in background. $ python server.py &

  • Once server is started run client as follows:

$ python client.py

This would produce following result:

Got connection from ('127.0.0.1', 48437)

Thank you for connecting

Python Internet modules

A list of some important modules in Python Network/Internet programming:

Protocol Common function Port No Python module
HTTP Web pages 80 httplib, urllib, xmlrpclib
NNTP Usenet news 119 Nntplib
FTP File transfers 20 ftplib, urllib
SMTP Sending email 25 Smtplib
POP3 Fetching email 110 Poplib
IMAP4 Fetching email 143 Imaplib
Telnet Command lines 23 telnetlib
Gopher Document transfers 70 gopherlib, urllib

Please check all the libraries mentioned above to work with FTP, SMTP, POP, and IMAP protocols.

#################################

 

 

import socket # Import socket module

s = socket.socket() # Create a socket object
host = socket.gethostname() # Get local machine name
port = 12345 # Reserve a port for your service.

s.connect((host, port))
print (s.recv(1024).decode())
s.close # Close the socket when done

 

 

import socket # Import socket module

s = socket.socket() # Create a socket object
host = socket.gethostname() # Get local machine name
port = 12345 # Reserve a port for your service.
s.bind((host, port)) # Bind to the port

s.listen(5) # Now wait for client connection.
while True:
c, addr = s.accept() # Establish connection with client.
print ('Got connection from', addr)
r='Thank you for connecting'
c.send(r.encode())
#c.send('Thank you for connecting')
c.close() # Close the connection