I am trying to use netcat to simulate a NAT traversal protocol.
I have one instance that is listening for UDP packets on port 6666, as so:
nc -ul 6666
In another terminal window, I am trying to periodically send a UDP packet from port 6666 (to open the return path on my router. this would be in a script that repeats every 20 seconds to re-open the port)
nc -u -p6666 mypinghost.com 4444
The problem is netcat fails on this ping call with the message:
nc: bind failed: Address already in use
Which implies that the listener having bound to port 6666 is blocking another process from sending from that port, or possibly that netcat is trying to bind to 6666 to listen.
Is this just how netcat is written, or can I tickle it some way to let me send a packet without binding to the port to listen?
I do not believe you can use netcat in that way. I would recommend writing a simple Python script that does both the sending and receiving tasks in one process. That way you can hold that port exclusively and still accomplish both tasks.
Listen at UDP port 6666.
Using UDP port 6666 as the source port, send to mypinghost:4444.
That would be on the second
netcat
invocation, where 6666 is already in use by the first one.Correct.
And definitely that. You told it to do that, so it did it.
What you are trying to do is impossible between two processes in the same host. Only one process can use a specific local UDP port at a time, unless you use
SO_REUSEADDRESS
, whichnetcat
doesn't appear to implement.As the other poster has suggested, the solution lies in using a single process.