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What are the use cases of SO_REUSEADDR?

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I have used SO_REUSEADDR to have my server which got terminated to restart without complaining that the socket is already in use. I was wondering: are there other uses of SO_REUSEADDR? Has anyone used the socket option for other than said purpose?

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Prabhu. S Avatar asked Feb 23 '09 14:02

Prabhu. S


2 Answers

For TCP, the primary purpose is to restart a closed/killed process on the same address.

The flag is needed because the port goes into a TIME_WAIT state to ensure all data is transferred.

If two sockets are bound to the same interface and port, and they are members of the same multicast group, data will be delivered to both sockets.

I guess an alternative use would be a security attack to try to intercept data.

(Source)


For UDP, SO_REUSEADDR is used for multicast.

More than one process may bind to the same SOCK_DGRAM UDP port if the bind() is preceded by:

int one = 1; setsockopt(sock, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, &one, sizeof(one)); 

In this case, every incoming multicast or broadcast UDP datagram destined to the shared port is delivered to all sockets bound to the port.

(Source)

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Brian R. Bondy Avatar answered Oct 07 '22 23:10

Brian R. Bondy


The other main use is to allow multiple sockets to bind() to the same port on UDP. You might not think that would come up, but sometimes multiple apps may want to listen on broadcast/multicast addresses with a given port number. It also allows one to bind to the wildcard address, while also binding to a specific address. For instance, Apache might bind to *:80 and 10.11.12.13:80

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dwc Avatar answered Oct 08 '22 00:10

dwc