ICMP Control
Properties Methods Events Config Settings Errors
The ICMP control is used to facilitate ICMP communications. It can act both as a client and a server and can communicate with any number of hosts simultaneously. It also can generate and receive broadcast packets.
Syntax
ICMP
Remarks
The interface of the control is similar to the interface of TCPClient, only it is much simpler. The control is activated/deactivated by using the Active property. This property enables or disables the sending or receiving of data. Data can be sent in the same way as TCPClient, using the Send method and Text parameter or the DataToSend property. The destination is specified using the RemoteHost property. The control automatically creates an ICMP header containing MessageType, MessageSubType, and a checksum for the message.
If the UseConnection configuration setting is set to True, then a local association is created with the remote host. Otherwise, the control can receive datagrams (packets) from any host and can send datagrams to any host. Packets can be broadcast on the local net by setting the destination to 255.255.255.255.
Inbound data is received through the DataIn event.
The operation of the control is almost completely asynchronous. All the calls, except the ones that deal with domain name resolution, operate through Windows messages (no blocking calls). The gain in performance is considerable when compared with using blocking calls.
Property List
The following is the full list of the properties of the control with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
AcceptData | This property enables or disables data reception (the DataIn event). |
Active | This property indicates whether the control is active. |
DataToSend | This write-only property includes a string of data to be sent to the remote host. |
DontRoute | If this property is set to True, it forces the socket to send data directly to the interface (no routing). |
LocalHost | The name of the local host or user-assigned IP interface through which connections are initiated or accepted. |
MessageSubType | This property is the subtype of the ICMP message (part of the ICMP header). |
MessageType | This property includes the type of the ICMP message (part of the ICMP header). |
RemoteHost | This property includes the address of the RemoteHost. Domain names are resolved to IP addresses. |
Timeout | A timeout for the control. |
TimeToLive | This property includes the time-to-live (TTL) value for the ICMP packets sent by the control. |
Method List
The following is the full list of the methods of the control with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
Activate | This method enables sending and receiving of data. |
Config | Sets or retrieves a configuration setting. |
Deactivate | This method disables sending and receiving of data. |
DoEvents | Processes events from the internal message queue. |
PauseData | This method pauses data reception. |
ProcessData | This method reenables data reception after a call to PauseData . |
Reset | Reset the control. |
ResolveRemoteHost | Resolves the hostname in RemoteHost to an IP address. |
Send | This method sends data to the remote host. |
SendBytes | This method sends data to the remote host. |
SendText | This method sends data to the remote host. |
Event List
The following is the full list of the events fired by the control with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
DataIn | This event is fired when a new ICMP messages come in. |
Error | Fired when information is available about errors during data delivery. |
ReadyToSend | Fired when the control is ready to send data. |
Config Settings
The following is a list of config settings for the control with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
DelayHostResolution | Whether the hostname is resolved when RemoteHost is set. |
DontFragment | Whether the DontFragment control flag is set. |
IcmpDllTimeout | The timeout for the control when using the icmp.dll. |
MaxMessageSize | The maximum length of the messages that can be received. |
MulticastTTL | The time to live (TTL) value for multicast ICMP packets sent by the control. |
ReceiveAllMode | Enables a socket to receive all IPv4 or IPv6 packets on the network. |
TimeoutInMilliseconds | The timeout is treated as milliseconds. |
UseConnection | Determines whether to use a connected socket. |
UseICMPDLL | Use the icmp.dll included on Windows Systems. |
UseIPHLPDLL | Use the iphlpapi.dll included on Windows Systems. |
UseIPv6 | Whether to use IPv6. |
AbsoluteTimeout | Determines whether timeouts are inactivity timeouts or absolute timeouts. |
FirewallData | Used to send extra data to the firewall. |
InBufferSize | The size in bytes of the incoming queue of the socket. |
OutBufferSize | The size in bytes of the outgoing queue of the socket. |
CodePage | The system code page used for Unicode to Multibyte translations. |
MaskSensitive | Whether sensitive data is masked in log messages. |
UseInternalSecurityAPI | Whether or not to use the system security libraries or an internal implementation. |
AcceptData Property (ICMP Control)
This property enables or disables data reception (the DataIn event).
Syntax
icmpcontrol.AcceptData[=boolean]
Default Value
True
Remarks
This property enables or disables data reception (the DataIn event). Setting this property to False, temporarily disables data reception (and the DataIn event). Setting this property to True, reenables data reception.
Note: It is recommended to use the PauseData or ProcessData method instead of setting this property.
This property is not available at design time.
Data Type
Boolean
Active Property (ICMP Control)
This property indicates whether the control is active.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.Active[=boolean]
Default Value
False
Remarks
This property indicates whether the control is currently active and can send or receive data.
If the UseConnection configuration setting is set to True, then a local association (connection) to the remote host also is created.
Note: Use the Activate or Deactivate method to control whether the control is active.
This property is not available at design time.
Data Type
Boolean
DataToSend Property (ICMP Control)
This write-only property includes a string of data to be sent to the remote host.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.DataToSend[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property is write-only and contains a string of data to be sent to the remote host. Assigning a string to this property makes the control send the string to the remote host. The Send method provides similar functionality.
The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)/IP subsystem attempts to send the string assigned to this property as a complete message. If socket buffers are full, or if the message cannot be delivered for any other reason, an error is fired, and no portion of the message is sent. This is different from TCP in which case portions of the messages can be sent. ICMP sends either a complete message or nothing at all.
If you are sending data to the remote host faster than it can process it, or faster than the network's bandwidth allows, the outgoing queue might fill up. When this happens, DataToSend fails with error 25036: "[10035] Operation would block" (WSAEWOULDBLOCK). You can trap this error, and then try to send the data again. .
To read or write binary data to the property, a Variant (Byte Array) version is provided in .DataToSendB.
This property is write-only and not available at design time.
Data Type
Binary String
DontRoute Property (ICMP Control)
If this property is set to True, it forces the socket to send data directly to the interface (no routing).
Syntax
icmpcontrol.DontRoute[=boolean]
Default Value
False
Remarks
If this property is set to True, it forces the socket to send data directly to the interface (no routing). Normally, IP sockets send packets of data through routers and gateways until they reach the final destination. If this property is set to True, then data will be delivered on the local subnet only.
This property is not available at design time.
Data Type
Boolean
LocalHost Property (ICMP Control)
The name of the local host or user-assigned IP interface through which connections are initiated or accepted.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.LocalHost[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
The LocalHost property contains the name of the local host as obtained by the gethostname() system call, or if the user has assigned an IP address, the value of that address.
In multi-homed hosts (machines with more than one IP interface) setting LocalHost to the value of an interface will make the control initiate connections (or accept in the case of server controls) only through that interface.
If the control is connected, the LocalHost property shows the IP address of the interface through which the connection is made in internet dotted format (aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd). In most cases, this is the address of the local host, except for multi-homed hosts (machines with more than one IP interface).
NOTE: LocalHost is not persistent. You must always set it in code, and never in the property window.
Data Type
String
MessageSubType Property (ICMP Control)
This property is the subtype of the ICMP message (part of the ICMP header).
Syntax
icmpcontrol.MessageSubType[=integer]
Default Value
0
Remarks
This property contains the subtype of the ICMP message (part of the ICMP header). The ICMP message subtype (also referred to as "code") is a byte value representing the message subclass. Its meaning is associated with the MessageType.
Types and subtypes of ICMP messages are defined in the various internet RFCs and other documentation associated with Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)/IP.
Data Type
Integer
MessageType Property (ICMP Control)
This property includes the type of the ICMP message (part of the ICMP header).
Syntax
icmpcontrol.MessageType[=integer]
Default Value
0
Remarks
This property contains the type of the ICMP message (part of the ICMP header). The ICMP message type is a byte value representing the message class. The message type defines the structure and meaning of the message data assigned to DataToSend.
Types for ICMP messages are defined in the various internet RFCs and other documentation associated with Transmission Control Protocol (TCP/IP). The following are a few examples of ICMP message types:
0 | Echo reply ("ping" reply). |
3 | Destination unreachable. |
4 | Source quench. |
5 | Redirect (change a route). |
8 | Echo request ("ping" request). |
11 | Time exceeded for datagram. |
12 | Parameter problem on datagram. |
13 | Timestamp request. |
14 | Timestamp reply. |
17 | Address mask request. |
18 | Address mask reply. |
Data Type
Integer
RemoteHost Property (ICMP Control)
This property includes the address of the RemoteHost. Domain names are resolved to IP addresses.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.RemoteHost[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property specifies the IP address (IP number in dotted internet format) or the domain name of the remote host.
If this property is set to 255.255.255.255, the control broadcasts data on the local subnet.
If this property is set to a domain name, a DNS request is initiated. Upon successful termination of the request, the property is set to the corresponding address. If the search is not successful, the control fails with an error.
If UseConnection is True, this property must be set before the control is activated (Active is set to True).
Data Type
String
Timeout Property (ICMP Control)
A timeout for the control.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.Timeout[=integer]
Default Value
0
Remarks
If the Timeout property is set to 0, all operations return immediately, potentially failing with an 'WOULDBLOCK' error if data can't be sent or received immediately.
If Timeout is set to a positive value, the control will automatically retry each operation that would otherwise result in a 'WOULDBLOCK' error for a maximum of Timeout seconds.
The control will use DoEvents to enter an efficient wait loop during any potential waiting period, making sure that all system events are processed immediately as they arrive. This ensures that the host application does not "freeze" and remains responsive.
If Timeout expires, and the operation is not yet complete, the control fails with an error.
Please note that by default, all timeouts are inactivity timeouts, i.e. the timeout period is extended by Timeout seconds when any amount of data is successfully sent or received.
The default value for the Timeout property is 0 (asynchronous operation).
Data Type
Integer
TimeToLive Property (ICMP Control)
This property includes the time-to-live (TTL) value for the ICMP packets sent by the control.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.TimeToLive[=integer]
Default Value
0
Remarks
This method contains the time-to-live (TTL) value for the ICMP packets sent by the control. The TTL field of the ICMP packet is a counter limiting the lifetime of a packet.
Each router (or other module) that handles a packet decrements the TTL field by one or more if it holds the packet for more than one second. Thus, the TTL value is effectively a hop count limit on how far a datagram can propagate through the internet. When the TTL value is reduced to zero (or less), the packet is discarded.
If the value of the property is set to zero, then the default TTL value of the underlying Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)/IP subsystem will be used.
This property is not available at design time.
Data Type
Integer
Activate Method (ICMP Control)
This method enables sending and receiving of data.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.Activate
Remarks
This method enables sending and receiving of data. When called, the control will create a communication endpoint (socket) that can be used for sending and receiving ICMP messages. This method must be called before using the control to send and receive data.
If the UseConnection configuration setting is set to , then a local association (connection) to the remote host also is created.
Config Method (ICMP Control)
Sets or retrieves a configuration setting.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.Config ConfigurationString
Remarks
Config is a generic method available in every control. It is used to set and retrieve configuration settings for the control.
These settings are similar in functionality to properties, but they are rarely used. In order to avoid "polluting" the property namespace of the control, access to these internal properties is provided through the Config method.
To set a configuration setting named PROPERTY, you must call Config("PROPERTY=VALUE"), where VALUE is the value of the setting expressed as a string. For boolean values, use the strings "True", "False", "0", "1", "Yes", or "No" (case does not matter).
To read (query) the value of a configuration setting, you must call Config("PROPERTY"). The value will be returned as a string.
Deactivate Method (ICMP Control)
This method disables sending and receiving of data.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.Deactivate
Remarks
This method disables sending and receiving of data. When called, the control will destroy the existing socket and disable data communications.
DoEvents Method (ICMP Control)
Processes events from the internal message queue.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.DoEvents
Remarks
When DoEvents is called, the control processes any available events. If no events are available, it waits for a preset period of time, and then returns.
PauseData Method (ICMP Control)
This method pauses data reception.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.PauseData
Remarks
This method pauses data reception when called. While data reception is paused, the DataIn event will not fire. Call ProcessData to reenable data reception.
ProcessData Method (ICMP Control)
This method reenables data reception after a call to PauseData .
Syntax
icmpcontrol.ProcessData
Remarks
This method reenables data reception after a previous call to PauseData. When PauseData is called, the DataIn event will not fire. To reenable data reception and allow DataIn to fire, call this method.
Note: This method is used only after previously calling PauseData. It does not need to be called to process incoming data by default.
Reset Method (ICMP Control)
Reset the control.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.Reset
Remarks
This method will reset the control's properties to their default values.
ResolveRemoteHost Method (ICMP Control)
Resolves the hostname in RemoteHost to an IP address.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.ResolveRemoteHost
Remarks
This method resolves the hostname specified by RemoteHost to an IP address. The resolved value is available in the RemoteHost property after this method returns.
In most cases calling this method is not necessary, the control will resolve the hostname automatically when necessary. If DelayHostResolution is this method may be called to manually resolve RemoteHost if desired.
Send Method (ICMP Control)
This method sends data to the remote host.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.Send Text
Remarks
This method sends data to the remote host. Calling this method is equivalent to setting the DataToSend property to Text.
SendBytes Method (ICMP Control)
This method sends data to the remote host.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.SendBytes Data
Remarks
This method sends data to the remote host. Calling this method is equivalent to calling the SendBytes/SendText method.
SendText Method (ICMP Control)
This method sends data to the remote host.
Syntax
icmpcontrol.SendText Text
Remarks
This method sends data to the remote host. Calling this method is equivalent to calling the SendBytes/SendText method.
DataIn Event (ICMP Control)
This event is fired when a new ICMP messages come in.
Syntax
Sub icmpcontrol_DataIn(MessageType As Integer, MessageSubType As Integer, MessageData As String, Checksum As Integer, SourceAddress As String)
Remarks
The MessageType parameter shows the type of the ICMP messages and the MessageSubType parameter shows its subtype.
The MessageData parameter contains the message data.
The Checksum parameter is True or False depending on the ICMP checksum validation on the message.
Note: Events are not re-entrant. Performing time-consuming operations within this event will prevent it from firing again in a timely manner and may affect overall performance.
Error Event (ICMP Control)
Fired when information is available about errors during data delivery.
Syntax
Sub icmpcontrol_Error(ErrorCode As Integer, Description As String)
Remarks
The Error event is fired in case of exceptional conditions during message processing. Normally the control fails with an error.
The ErrorCode parameter contains an error code, and the Description parameter contains a textual description of the error. For a list of valid error codes and their descriptions, please refer to the Error Codes section.
ReadyToSend Event (ICMP Control)
Fired when the control is ready to send data.
Syntax
Sub icmpcontrol_ReadyToSend()
Remarks
The ReadyToSend event indicates that the underlying TCP/IP subsystem is ready to accept data after a failed DataToSend.
Config Settings (ICMP Control)
The control accepts one or more of the following configuration settings. Configuration settings are similar in functionality to properties, but they are rarely used. In order to avoid "polluting" the property namespace of the control, access to these internal properties is provided through the Config method.ICMP Config Settings
The default value is .
The default value is False.
The default value for IcmpDllTimeout is 60 seconds.
Note: This configuration setting is valid only when UseICMPDLL is set to True.
Each router (or other module) that handles a packet decrements the TTL field by one or more if it holds the packet for more than one second. Thus, the TTL is effectively a hop count limit on how far a datagram can propagate through the internet. When the TTL is reduced to zero (or less), the packet is discarded.
By default, the default TTL value of the underlying Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)/IP subsystem will be used.
Value | Description |
-1 (default) | The socket option is left unspecified. |
0 | Do not receive all network traffic. |
1 | Receive all network traffic. This enables the promiscuous mode on the network interface card (NIC). On a LAN segment with a network hub, a NIC that supports the promiscuous mode will capture all IPv4 or IPv6 traffic on the LAN, including traffic between other computers on the same LAN segment. |
2 | Receive only socket-level network traffic (this feature may not be implemented by your Windows installation). |
3 | Receive only IP-level network traffic. This option does not enable the promiscuous mode on the NIC. This option affects packet processing only at the IP level. The NIC still receives only those packets directed to its configured unicast and multicast addresses. A socket with this option enabled, however, not only will receive packets directed to specific IP addresses, but also will receive all the IPv4 or IPv6 packets the NIC receives. |
Note: This setting is valid only when UseICMPDLL is set to True.
The default value for this setting is False.
Note: If both this and UseICMPDLL are enabled, the iphlpapi.dll will take precedence.
0 | IPv4 Only |
1 | IPv6 Only |
2 | IPv6 with IPv4 fallback |
Socket Config Settings
Note: This option is not valid for UDP ports.
Some TCP/IP implementations do not support variable buffer sizes. If that is the case, when the control is activated the InBufferSize reverts to its defined size. The same happens if you attempt to make it too large or too small.
Some TCP/IP implementations do not support variable buffer sizes. If that is the case, when the control is activated the OutBufferSize reverts to its defined size. The same happens if you attempt to make it too large or too small.
Base Config Settings
The following is a list of valid code page identifiers:
Identifier | Name |
037 | IBM EBCDIC - U.S./Canada |
437 | OEM - United States |
500 | IBM EBCDIC - International |
708 | Arabic - ASMO 708 |
709 | Arabic - ASMO 449+, BCON V4 |
710 | Arabic - Transparent Arabic |
720 | Arabic - Transparent ASMO |
737 | OEM - Greek (formerly 437G) |
775 | OEM - Baltic |
850 | OEM - Multilingual Latin I |
852 | OEM - Latin II |
855 | OEM - Cyrillic (primarily Russian) |
857 | OEM - Turkish |
858 | OEM - Multilingual Latin I + Euro symbol |
860 | OEM - Portuguese |
861 | OEM - Icelandic |
862 | OEM - Hebrew |
863 | OEM - Canadian-French |
864 | OEM - Arabic |
865 | OEM - Nordic |
866 | OEM - Russian |
869 | OEM - Modern Greek |
870 | IBM EBCDIC - Multilingual/ROECE (Latin-2) |
874 | ANSI/OEM - Thai (same as 28605, ISO 8859-15) |
875 | IBM EBCDIC - Modern Greek |
932 | ANSI/OEM - Japanese, Shift-JIS |
936 | ANSI/OEM - Simplified Chinese (PRC, Singapore) |
949 | ANSI/OEM - Korean (Unified Hangul Code) |
950 | ANSI/OEM - Traditional Chinese (Taiwan; Hong Kong SAR, PRC) |
1026 | IBM EBCDIC - Turkish (Latin-5) |
1047 | IBM EBCDIC - Latin 1/Open System |
1140 | IBM EBCDIC - U.S./Canada (037 + Euro symbol) |
1141 | IBM EBCDIC - Germany (20273 + Euro symbol) |
1142 | IBM EBCDIC - Denmark/Norway (20277 + Euro symbol) |
1143 | IBM EBCDIC - Finland/Sweden (20278 + Euro symbol) |
1144 | IBM EBCDIC - Italy (20280 + Euro symbol) |
1145 | IBM EBCDIC - Latin America/Spain (20284 + Euro symbol) |
1146 | IBM EBCDIC - United Kingdom (20285 + Euro symbol) |
1147 | IBM EBCDIC - France (20297 + Euro symbol) |
1148 | IBM EBCDIC - International (500 + Euro symbol) |
1149 | IBM EBCDIC - Icelandic (20871 + Euro symbol) |
1200 | Unicode UCS-2 Little-Endian (BMP of ISO 10646) |
1201 | Unicode UCS-2 Big-Endian |
1250 | ANSI - Central European |
1251 | ANSI - Cyrillic |
1252 | ANSI - Latin I |
1253 | ANSI - Greek |
1254 | ANSI - Turkish |
1255 | ANSI - Hebrew |
1256 | ANSI - Arabic |
1257 | ANSI - Baltic |
1258 | ANSI/OEM - Vietnamese |
1361 | Korean (Johab) |
10000 | MAC - Roman |
10001 | MAC - Japanese |
10002 | MAC - Traditional Chinese (Big5) |
10003 | MAC - Korean |
10004 | MAC - Arabic |
10005 | MAC - Hebrew |
10006 | MAC - Greek I |
10007 | MAC - Cyrillic |
10008 | MAC - Simplified Chinese (GB 2312) |
10010 | MAC - Romania |
10017 | MAC - Ukraine |
10021 | MAC - Thai |
10029 | MAC - Latin II |
10079 | MAC - Icelandic |
10081 | MAC - Turkish |
10082 | MAC - Croatia |
12000 | Unicode UCS-4 Little-Endian |
12001 | Unicode UCS-4 Big-Endian |
20000 | CNS - Taiwan |
20001 | TCA - Taiwan |
20002 | Eten - Taiwan |
20003 | IBM5550 - Taiwan |
20004 | TeleText - Taiwan |
20005 | Wang - Taiwan |
20105 | IA5 IRV International Alphabet No. 5 (7-bit) |
20106 | IA5 German (7-bit) |
20107 | IA5 Swedish (7-bit) |
20108 | IA5 Norwegian (7-bit) |
20127 | US-ASCII (7-bit) |
20261 | T.61 |
20269 | ISO 6937 Non-Spacing Accent |
20273 | IBM EBCDIC - Germany |
20277 | IBM EBCDIC - Denmark/Norway |
20278 | IBM EBCDIC - Finland/Sweden |
20280 | IBM EBCDIC - Italy |
20284 | IBM EBCDIC - Latin America/Spain |
20285 | IBM EBCDIC - United Kingdom |
20290 | IBM EBCDIC - Japanese Katakana Extended |
20297 | IBM EBCDIC - France |
20420 | IBM EBCDIC - Arabic |
20423 | IBM EBCDIC - Greek |
20424 | IBM EBCDIC - Hebrew |
20833 | IBM EBCDIC - Korean Extended |
20838 | IBM EBCDIC - Thai |
20866 | Russian - KOI8-R |
20871 | IBM EBCDIC - Icelandic |
20880 | IBM EBCDIC - Cyrillic (Russian) |
20905 | IBM EBCDIC - Turkish |
20924 | IBM EBCDIC - Latin-1/Open System (1047 + Euro symbol) |
20932 | JIS X 0208-1990 & 0121-1990 |
20936 | Simplified Chinese (GB2312) |
21025 | IBM EBCDIC - Cyrillic (Serbian, Bulgarian) |
21027 | Extended Alpha Lowercase |
21866 | Ukrainian (KOI8-U) |
28591 | ISO 8859-1 Latin I |
28592 | ISO 8859-2 Central Europe |
28593 | ISO 8859-3 Latin 3 |
28594 | ISO 8859-4 Baltic |
28595 | ISO 8859-5 Cyrillic |
28596 | ISO 8859-6 Arabic |
28597 | ISO 8859-7 Greek |
28598 | ISO 8859-8 Hebrew |
28599 | ISO 8859-9 Latin 5 |
28605 | ISO 8859-15 Latin 9 |
29001 | Europa 3 |
38598 | ISO 8859-8 Hebrew |
50220 | ISO 2022 Japanese with no halfwidth Katakana |
50221 | ISO 2022 Japanese with halfwidth Katakana |
50222 | ISO 2022 Japanese JIS X 0201-1989 |
50225 | ISO 2022 Korean |
50227 | ISO 2022 Simplified Chinese |
50229 | ISO 2022 Traditional Chinese |
50930 | Japanese (Katakana) Extended |
50931 | US/Canada and Japanese |
50933 | Korean Extended and Korean |
50935 | Simplified Chinese Extended and Simplified Chinese |
50936 | Simplified Chinese |
50937 | US/Canada and Traditional Chinese |
50939 | Japanese (Latin) Extended and Japanese |
51932 | EUC - Japanese |
51936 | EUC - Simplified Chinese |
51949 | EUC - Korean |
51950 | EUC - Traditional Chinese |
52936 | HZ-GB2312 Simplified Chinese |
54936 | Windows XP: GB18030 Simplified Chinese (4 Byte) |
57002 | ISCII Devanagari |
57003 | ISCII Bengali |
57004 | ISCII Tamil |
57005 | ISCII Telugu |
57006 | ISCII Assamese |
57007 | ISCII Oriya |
57008 | ISCII Kannada |
57009 | ISCII Malayalam |
57010 | ISCII Gujarati |
57011 | ISCII Punjabi |
65000 | Unicode UTF-7 |
65001 | Unicode UTF-8 |
Identifier | Name |
1 | ASCII |
2 | NEXTSTEP |
3 | JapaneseEUC |
4 | UTF8 |
5 | ISOLatin1 |
6 | Symbol |
7 | NonLossyASCII |
8 | ShiftJIS |
9 | ISOLatin2 |
10 | Unicode |
11 | WindowsCP1251 |
12 | WindowsCP1252 |
13 | WindowsCP1253 |
14 | WindowsCP1254 |
15 | WindowsCP1250 |
21 | ISO2022JP |
30 | MacOSRoman |
10 | UTF16String |
0x90000100 | UTF16BigEndian |
0x94000100 | UTF16LittleEndian |
0x8c000100 | UTF32String |
0x98000100 | UTF32BigEndian |
0x9c000100 | UTF32LittleEndian |
65536 | Proprietary |
This setting only works on these controls: AS3Receiver, AS3Sender, Atom, Client(3DS), FTP, FTPServer, IMAP, OFTPClient, SSHClient, SCP, Server(3DS), Sexec, SFTP, SFTPServer, SSHServer, TCPClient, TCPServer.
Setting this configuration setting to tells the control to use the internal implementation instead of using the system security libraries.
This setting is set to by default on all platforms.
Trappable Errors (ICMP Control)
ICMP Errors
20105 The control is already Active. | |
20108 Cannot change the LocalHost at this time. A connection is in progress. | |
20110 The control must be Active for this operation. | |
20113 Cannot change MaxMessageSize while ICMP is Active. | |
20115 Cannot change RemoteHost when UseConnection is set and the control is Active. | |
20118 Cannot change UseConnection while the control is Active. | |
20119 The message cannot be longer than MaxMessageSize. | |
20120 The message is too short. | |
20121 Cannot create ICMP handle. |
SSL Errors
20271 Cannot load specified security library. | |
20272 Cannot open certificate store. | |
20273 Cannot find specified certificate. | |
20274 Cannot acquire security credentials. | |
20275 Cannot find certificate chain. | |
20276 Cannot verify certificate chain. | |
20277 Error during handshake. | |
20281 Error verifying certificate. | |
20282 Could not find client certificate. | |
20283 Could not find server certificate. | |
20284 Error encrypting data. | |
20285 Error decrypting data. |
TCP/IP Errors
25005 [10004] Interrupted system call. | |
25010 [10009] Bad file number. | |
25014 [10013] Access denied. | |
25015 [10014] Bad address. | |
25023 [10022] Invalid argument. | |
25025 [10024] Too many open files. | |
25036 [10035] Operation would block. | |
25037 [10036] Operation now in progress. | |
25038 [10037] Operation already in progress. | |
25039 [10038] Socket operation on non-socket. | |
25040 [10039] Destination address required. | |
25041 [10040] Message too long. | |
25042 [10041] Protocol wrong type for socket. | |
25043 [10042] Bad protocol option. | |
25044 [10043] Protocol not supported. | |
25045 [10044] Socket type not supported. | |
25046 [10045] Operation not supported on socket. | |
25047 [10046] Protocol family not supported. | |
25048 [10047] Address family not supported by protocol family. | |
25049 [10048] Address already in use. | |
25050 [10049] Can't assign requested address. | |
25051 [10050] Network is down. | |
25052 [10051] Network is unreachable. | |
25053 [10052] Net dropped connection or reset. | |
25054 [10053] Software caused connection abort. | |
25055 [10054] Connection reset by peer. | |
25056 [10055] No buffer space available. | |
25057 [10056] Socket is already connected. | |
25058 [10057] Socket is not connected. | |
25059 [10058] Can't send after socket shutdown. | |
25060 [10059] Too many references, can't splice. | |
25061 [10060] Connection timed out. | |
25062 [10061] Connection refused. | |
25063 [10062] Too many levels of symbolic links. | |
25064 [10063] File name too long. | |
25065 [10064] Host is down. | |
25066 [10065] No route to host. | |
25067 [10066] Directory not empty | |
25068 [10067] Too many processes. | |
25069 [10068] Too many users. | |
25070 [10069] Disc Quota Exceeded. | |
25071 [10070] Stale NFS file handle. | |
25072 [10071] Too many levels of remote in path. | |
25092 [10091] Network subsystem is unavailable. | |
25093 [10092] WINSOCK DLL Version out of range. | |
25094 [10093] Winsock not loaded yet. | |
26002 [11001] Host not found. | |
26003 [11002] Non-authoritative 'Host not found' (try again or check DNS setup). | |
26004 [11003] Non-recoverable errors: FORMERR, REFUSED, NOTIMP. | |
26005 [11004] Valid name, no data record (check DNS setup). |