Book Image

Hands-On Network Programming with C

By : Lewis Van Winkle
Book Image

Hands-On Network Programming with C

By: Lewis Van Winkle

Overview of this book

Network programming enables processes to communicate with each other over a computer network, but it is a complex task that requires programming with multiple libraries and protocols. With its support for third-party libraries and structured documentation, C is an ideal language to write network programs. Complete with step-by-step explanations of essential concepts and practical examples, this C network programming book begins with the fundamentals of Internet Protocol, TCP, and UDP. You’ll explore client-server and peer-to-peer models for information sharing and connectivity with remote computers. The book will also cover HTTP and HTTPS for communicating between your browser and website, and delve into hostname resolution with DNS, which is crucial to the functioning of the modern web. As you advance, you’ll gain insights into asynchronous socket programming and streams, and explore debugging and error handling. Finally, you’ll study network monitoring and implement security best practices. By the end of this book, you’ll have experience of working with client-server applications and be able to implement new network programs in C. The code in this book is compatible with the older C99 version as well as the latest C18 and C++17 standards. You’ll work with robust, reliable, and secure code that is portable across operating systems, including Winsock sockets for Windows and POSIX sockets for Linux and macOS.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
Title Page
Dedication
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Summary


In this chapter, we looked at how email is delivered over the internet. SMTP, the protocol responsible for email delivery, was studied in some depth. We then constructed a simple program to send short emails using SMTP.

We looked at the email format too. We saw how MIME could be used to send multipart emails with file attachments.

We also saw how sending emails over the modern internet is full of pitfalls. Many of these stems from attempts to block spam. Techniques used by providers, such as blocking residential IP addresses, SPF, DKIM, DMARC, and IP address reputation monitoring, may make it difficult for our simple program to deliver email reliably.

In the next chapter, Chapter 9Loading Secure Web Pages with HTTPS and OpenSSL, we look at secure web connections using HTTPS.