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Home/ Questions/Q 8067555
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 5, 20262026-06-05T12:19:55+00:00 2026-06-05T12:19:55+00:00

At work I have been tasked with implementing a TCP server as part of

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At work I have been tasked with implementing a TCP server as part of a Modbus slave device. I have done a lot of reading both here on stack exchange and on the internet in general (including the excellent http://beej.us/guide/bgnet/) but I am struggling with a design issue. In summary, my device can accept just 2 connections and on each connection will be incoming modbus requests which I must process in my main controller loop and then reply with success or failure status. I have the following ideas of how to implement this.

  1. Have a listener thread that creates, binds, listens and accepts connections, then spawns a new pthread to listen on the connection for incoming data and close connection after an idle timeout period. If the number of active threads is currently 2, new connections are instantly closed to ensure only 2 are allowed.

  2. Do not spawn new threads from the listener thread, instead use select() to detect incoming connection requests as well as incoming modbus connects on active connections (similar to the approach in Beejs guide).

  3. Create 2 listener threads each of which creates a socket (same IP and port number) which can block on accept() calls, then close the socket fd and deal with the connection. Here I am (perhaps naively) assuming that this will only allow max of 2 connections which I can deal with using blocking reads.

I have been using C++ for a long time but I am fairly new to Linux development. I would really welcome any suggestions as to which of the above approaches is best (if any) and if my inexperience with Linux means that any of them are really really bad ideas. I am keen to avoid fork() and stick to pthreads as incoming modbus requests are going to be queued and read off a main controller loop periodically. Thanks in advance for any advice.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-05T12:19:56+00:00Added an answer on June 5, 2026 at 12:19 pm

    The third alternative won’t work, you can only bind to the local address once.

    I would probably use your second alternative, unless you need to do a lot of processing in which case a combination of the first to alternatives might be useful.

    The combination of the two first alternative I’m thinking of is to have the main thread (the one you always have when a program starts) create two worker threads, then go a blocking accept call to wait for a new connection. When a new connection arrives, tell one of the threads to start working on the new connection and go back to block on accept. When the second connection is accepted you tell the other thread to work on that connection. If both connections are open already, either don’t accept until one connection is closed, or wait for new connections but close them immediately.

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