Purpose
 Gets service
entry by name.
Library
 Standard C
Library (libc.a)
Syntax
 #include <netdb.h>
int getservbyname_r(name, proto, servent, serv_data)
const char *Name, proto;
struct servent *servent;
struct servent_data *serv_data;
Description
 Requirement: Use the getservbyname subroutine
instead of the getservbyname_r subroutine. The getservbyname_r subroutine
is compatible only with earlier versions of AIX®.
 An application
program can use the getservbyname_r subroutine to access a
service, service aliases, the protocol for the service, and a protocol
port number for the service.
 The 
getservbyname_r subroutine
searches the 
/etc/services file sequentially from the start
of the file until it finds one of the following: 
- Matching name and protocol number.
- Matching name when the Protocol parameter is set to 0. 
- End of the file.
Upon locating a matching name and protocol, the 
getservbyname_r subroutine
stores the values to the servent structure. The 
getservbyname subroutine
overwrites the static data it returns in subsequent calls. The 
getservbyname_r subroutine
does not.
Use the endservent_r subroutine to close the /etc/hosts file.
 You
must fill the servent_data structure with zeros before its
first access by either the setservent_r or the getservbyname_r subroutine.
Parameters
  | Item | Description | 
|---|
| name | Specifies the name of a service. | 
| proto | Specifies a protocol for use with the specified service. | 
| servent | Points to the servent structure. | 
| serv_data | Points to the serv_data structure. | 
 
Return Values
 The
function returns a 0 if successful and a -1 if unsuccessful. The 
getservbyname subroutine
returns a pointer to a servent structure when a successful match occurs.
Entries in this structure are in network byte order. 
Note: If an error
occurs or the end of the file is reached, the getservbyname_r returns
a -1.
Files
 | Item | Description | 
|---|
| /etc/services | Contains service names. |