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- .\" $Id$
- .\"
- .TH curl_multi_assign 3 "9 Jul 2006" "libcurl 7.16.0" "libcurl Manual"
- .SH NAME
- curl_multi_assign \- set data to association with an internal socket
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- #include <curl/curl.h>
- CURLMcode curl_multi_assign(CURLM *multi_handle, curl_socket_t sockfd,
- void *sockptr);
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- This function assigns an association in the multi handle between the given
- socket and a private pointer of the application. This is (only) useful for
- \fIcurl_multi_socket(3)\fP uses.
- When set, the \fIsockptr\fP pointer will be passed to all future socket
- callbacks for the specific \fIsockfd\fP socket.
- If the given \fIsockfd\fP isn't already in use by libcurl, this function will
- return an error.
- libcurl only keeps one single pointer associated with a socket, so calling
- this function several times for the same socket will make the last set pointer
- get used.
- The idea here being that this association (socket to private pointer) is
- something that just about every application that uses this API will need and
- then libcurl can just as well do it since it already has an internal hash
- table lookup for this.
- .SH "RETURN VALUE"
- The standard CURLMcode for multi interface error codes.
- .SH "TYPICAL USAGE"
- In a typical application you allocate a struct or at least use some kind of
- semi-dynamic data for each socket that we must wait for action on when using
- the \fIcurl_multi_socket(3)\fP approach.
- When our socket-callback gets called by libcurl and we get to know about yet
- another socket to wait for, we can use \fIcurl_multi_assign(3)\fP to point out
- the particular data so that when we get updates about this same socket again,
- we don't have to find the struct associated with this socket by ourselves.
- .SH AVAILABILITY
- This function was added in libcurl 7.15.5, although not deemed stable yet.
- .SH "SEE ALSO"
- .BR curl_multi_setopt "(3), " curl_multi_socket "(3) "
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