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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T00:51:29+00:00 2026-05-20T00:51:29+00:00

I have a network application working on Linux. What I want to do is

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I have a network application working on Linux. What I want to do is to make my application able to announce it’s presence in LAN and then notify other applications about some changes. Because I don’t know how many instances of my application already works on other hosts in LAN I cannot use SCTP, multicast communication is the only way (or maybe you know other solution?).

Structure I want to send over multicast address has fixed size (320 bytes) and contains binary data, which are in fact structure of numbers and bit flags.

I’m wondering if there are any well-know programming techniques, which can make UDP communication a bit more reliable. I only figured out two things:

  1. I drop all packets received by recvmsg() which are smaller then 320 bytes.
  2. I surround every packet with with well-know header and footer, and then check them each time when I receive new message, however packet still can be damaged somewhere in the middle right?

Edit:
I found a PGN protocol, but the only Linux implementation is known to work on x86. It’s partial solution for me, because I want to run my program on ARM architecture too

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T00:51:29+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 12:51 am

    You can try porting PGM to ARM, there are not that many requirements in OpenPGM, it already runs fine on IBM s390 mainframes for example.

    Disclosure: I’m the author of OpenPGM \:D/

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