On Tue, Apr 26, 2011 at 7:18 AM, Thomas Rachel <nutznetz-0c1b6768-bfa9-48d5-a470-7603bd3aa...@spamschutz.glglgl.de> wrote: > Am 25.04.2011 22:30, schrieb Chris Angelico: > >> If you don't care what port you use, you don't need to bind at all. >> That may be why it's not mentioned - the classic TCP socket server >> involves bind/listen/accept, and the classic TCP client has just >> connect; bind/connect is a lot less common. > > That is right, but I cannot see where he mentions the "direction" of the > socket. My fist thought was that he tries to have a server socket... > > (BTW: bind can be omitted on server sockets as well; listen() seems to > includes a bind(('', 0)) if not called explicitly before. In this case, the > port is assigned randomly. Can be useful in some cases, where the port > number is not fixed...)
Yes; for FTP data sockets, it doesn't matter what the port is, as long as you tell the other end. Same as you can bind/connect, you can not-bind and listen/accept. This is why I'm glad the socket subsystem allows unusual behaviours (I've used bind/connect in a few places). Give the programmer the tools and let him do what he chooses! Chris Angelico -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list