The ON SOCKLISTEN event triggers when a connection is made on a listening TCP socket created with /socklisten
Synopsis
ON <level>:SOCKLISTEN:<matchtext>:<commands>
Parameters
<level> - The corresponding access levels for the event to trigger.
<matchtext>The name of the socket you want event to trigger on.
<commands>The commands to be performed when the event listener's criteria is met.
Accepting a connection
Note: By design, you cannot prevent a socket from being accepted, as in, Windows accepts the connection even before mIRC.
You can use /sockaccept <newsocket> to accept a socket, mIRC create the new socket.
Note: If a new connection occurs on a listening socket but there is no on socklisten event matching that socket, the connection is rejected.
You should be checking for $sockerr before accepting the connection to see if an error occured, here is a list of the possible value for $sockerr in the on SOCKLISTEN event:
- 0 - New socket successfuly accepted.
- 1 - Error occurred on listening socket, $sock().wsmsg will contain a more specific error message. Note that getting this error is considered rare.
- 2 - Error accepting new socket, $sock().wsmsg will contain a more specific error message.
- 4 - Not enough memory for new socket. Note that getting this error is considered rare.
Examples
on *:socklisten:name:{ if (!$sockerr) sockaccept myprefix $+ $ticks else { echo -s An error occured while trying to accept a connection: $sock($sockname).wsmsg } }
Compatibility
Added: mIRC v3.5
Added on: 07 Aug 1995
Note: Unless otherwise stated, this was the date of original functionality.
Further enhancements may have been made in later versions.