Windows Sockets Error Codes


Most Windows Sockets 2 functions do not return the specific cause of an error when the function returns. For information, see the​​Handling Winsock Errors​​ topic.

The ​WSAGetLastError​ function returns the last error that occurred for the calling thread. When a particular Windows Sockets function indicates an error has occurred, this function should be called immediately to retrieve the extended error code for the failing function call. These error codes and a short text description associated with an error code are defined in the Winerror.h header file. The​FormatMessage​ function can be used to obtain the message string for the returned error.

For information on how to handle error codes when porting socket applications to Winsock, see ​​Error Codes - errno, h_errno and WSAGetLastError​​.

The following list describes the possible error codes returned by the ​WSAGetLastError​ function. Errors are listed in numerical order with the error macro name. Some error codes defined in the Winsock2.h header file are not returned from any function.


Return code/value

Description


WSA_INVALID_HANDLE

6



Specified event object handle is invalid.

An application attempts to use an event object, but the specified handle is not valid. Note that this error is returned by the operating system, so the error number may change in future releases of Windows.



WSA_NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY

8



Insufficient memory available.

An application used a Windows Sockets function that directly maps to a Windows function. The Windows function is indicating a lack of required memory resources. Note that this error is returned by the operating system, so the error number may change in future releases of Windows.



WSA_INVALID_PARAMETER

87



One or more parameters are invalid.

An application used a Windows Sockets function which directly maps to a Windows function. The Windows function is indicating a problem with one or more parameters. Note that this error is returned by the operating system, so the error number may change in future releases of Windows.



WSA_OPERATION_ABORTED

995



Overlapped operation aborted.

An overlapped operation was canceled due to the closure of the socket, or the execution of the SIO_FLUSH command in ​WSAIoctl​. Note that this error is returned by the operating system, so the error number may change in future releases of Windows.



WSA_IO_INCOMPLETE

996



Overlapped I/O event object not in signaled state.

The application has tried to determine the status of an overlapped operation which is not yet completed. Applications that use ​WSAGetOverlappedResult​ (with the fWait flag set to FALSE) in a polling mode to determine when an overlapped operation has completed, get this error code until the operation is complete. Note that this error is returned by the operating system, so the error number may change in future releases of Windows.



WSA_IO_PENDING

997


Overlapped operations will complete later.



The application has initiated an overlapped operation that cannot be completed immediately. A completion indication will be given later when the operation has been completed. Note that this error is returned by the operating system, so the error number may change in future releases of Windows.



WSAEINTR

10004



Interrupted function call.

A blocking operation was interrupted by a call to ​​WSACancelBlockingCall​​.



WSAEBADF

10009



File handle is not valid.

The file handle supplied is not valid.



WSAEACCES

10013



Permission denied.

An attempt was made to access a socket in a way forbidden by its access permissions. An example is using a broadcast address for ​sendto​ without broadcast permission being set using ​setsockopt​(SO_BROADCAST).

Another possible reason for the WSAEACCES error is that when the ​bind​ function is called (on Windows NT 4.0 with SP4 and later), another application, service, or kernel mode driver is bound to the same address with exclusive access. Such exclusive access is a new feature of Windows NT 4.0 with SP4 and later, and is implemented by using the ​​SO_EXCLUSIVEADDRUSE​​ option.



WSAEFAULT

10014



Bad address.

The system detected an invalid pointer address in attempting to use a pointer argument of a call. This error occurs if an application passes an invalid pointer value, or if the length of the buffer is too small. For instance, if the length of an argument, which is a ​sockaddr​ structure, is smaller than the sizeof(sockaddr).



WSAEINVAL

10022



Invalid argument.

Some invalid argument was supplied (for example, specifying an invalid level to the ​setsockopt​ function). In some instances, it also refers to the current state of the socket—for instance, calling ​accept​ on a socket that is not listening.



WSAEMFILE

10024



Too many open files.

Too many open sockets. Each implementation may have a maximum number of socket handles available, either globally, per process, or per thread.



WSAEWOULDBLOCK

10035



Resource temporarily unavailable.

This error is returned from operations on nonblocking sockets that cannot be completed immediately, for example ​recv​ when no data is queued to be read from the socket. It is a nonfatal error, and the operation should be retried later. It is normal for WSAEWOULDBLOCK to be reported as the result from calling ​connect​on a nonblocking SOCK_STREAM socket, since some time must elapse for the connection to be established.



WSAEINPROGRESS

10036



Operation now in progress.

A blocking operation is currently executing. Windows Sockets only allows a single blocking operation—per- task or thread—to be outstanding, and if any other function call is made (whether or not it references that or any other socket) the function fails with the WSAEINPROGRESS error.



WSAEALREADY

10037



Operation already in progress.

An operation was attempted on a nonblocking socket with an operation already in progress—that is, calling​connect​ a second time on a nonblocking socket that is already connecting, or canceling an asynchronous request (WSAAsyncGetXbyY) that has already been canceled or completed.



WSAENOTSOCK

10038



Socket operation on nonsocket.

An operation was attempted on something that is not a socket. Either the socket handle parameter did not reference a valid socket, or for ​select​, a member of an fd_set was not valid.



WSAEDESTADDRREQ

10039



Destination address required.

A required address was omitted from an operation on a socket. For example, this error is returned if ​sendto​ is called with the remote address of ADDR_ANY.



WSAEMSGSIZE

10040



Message too long.

A message sent on a datagram socket was larger than the internal message buffer or some other network limit, or the buffer used to receive a datagram was smaller than the datagram itself.



WSAEPROTOTYPE

10041



Protocol wrong type for socket.

A protocol was specified in the ​socket​ function call that does not support the semantics of the socket type requested. For example, the ARPA Internet UDP protocol cannot be specified with a socket type of SOCK_STREAM.



WSAENOPROTOOPT

10042



Bad protocol option.

An unknown, invalid or unsupported option or level was specified in a ​getsockopt​ or ​setsockopt​ call.



WSAEPROTONOSUPPORT

10043



Protocol not supported.

The requested protocol has not been configured into the system, or no implementation for it exists. For example, a ​socket​ call requests a SOCK_DGRAM socket, but specifies a stream protocol.



WSAESOCKTNOSUPPORT

10044



Socket type not supported.

The support for the specified socket type does not exist in this address family. For example, the optional type SOCK_RAW might be selected in a ​socket​ call, and the implementation does not support SOCK_RAW sockets at all.



WSAEOPNOTSUPP

10045



Operation not supported.

The attempted operation is not supported for the type of object referenced. Usually this occurs when a socket descriptor to a socket that cannot support this operation is trying to accept a connection on a datagram socket.



WSAEPFNOSUPPORT

10046



Protocol family not supported.

The protocol family has not been configured into the system or no implementation for it exists. This message has a slightly different meaning from WSAEAFNOSUPPORT. However, it is interchangeable in most cases, and all Windows Sockets functions that return one of these messages also specify WSAEAFNOSUPPORT.



WSAEAFNOSUPPORT

10047



Address family not supported by protocol family.

An address incompatible with the requested protocol was used. All sockets are created with an associated address family (that is, AF_INET for Internet Protocols) and a generic protocol type (that is, SOCK_STREAM). This error is returned if an incorrect protocol is explicitly requested in the ​socket​ call, or if an address of the wrong family is used for a socket, for example, in ​sendto​.



WSAEADDRINUSE

10048



Address already in use.

Typically, only one usage of each socket address (protocol/IP address/port) is permitted. This error occurs if an application attempts to ​bind​ a socket to an IP address/port that has already been used for an existing socket, or a socket that was not closed properly, or one that is still in the process of closing. For server applications that need to bind multiple sockets to the same port number, consider using ​setsockopt​ (SO_REUSEADDR). Client applications usually need not call bind at all—​connect​ chooses an unused port automatically. Whenbind is called with a wildcard address (involving ADDR_ANY), a WSAEADDRINUSE error could be delayed until the specific address is committed. This could happen with a call to another function later, including connect,​listen​, ​WSAConnect​, or ​WSAJoinLeaf​.



WSAEADDRNOTAVAIL

10049



Cannot assign requested address.

The requested address is not valid in its context. This normally results from an attempt to ​bind​ to an address that is not valid for the local computer. This can also result from ​connect​, ​sendto​, ​WSAConnect​,​WSAJoinLeaf​, or ​WSASendTo​ when the remote address or port is not valid for a remote computer (for example, address or port 0).



WSAENETDOWN

10050



Network is down.

A socket operation encountered a dead network. This could indicate a serious failure of the network system (that is, the protocol stack that the Windows Sockets DLL runs over), the network interface, or the local network itself.



WSAENETUNREACH

10051



Network is unreachable.

A socket operation was attempted to an unreachable network. This usually means the local software knows no route to reach the remote host.



WSAENETRESET

10052



Network dropped connection on reset.

The connection has been broken due to keep-alive activity detecting a failure while the operation was in progress. It can also be returned by ​setsockopt​ if an attempt is made to set ​SO_KEEPALIVE​ on a connection that has already failed.



WSAECONNABORTED

10053



Software caused connection abort.

An established connection was aborted by the software in your host computer, possibly due to a data transmission time-out or protocol error.



WSAECONNRESET

10054



Connection reset by peer.

An existing connection was forcibly closed by the remote host. This normally results if the peer application on the remote host is suddenly stopped, the host is rebooted, the host or remote network interface is disabled, or the remote host uses a hard close (see ​setsockopt​ for more information on the SO_LINGER option on the remote socket). This error may also result if a connection was broken due to keep-alive activity detecting a failure while one or more operations are in progress. Operations that were in progress fail with WSAENETRESET. Subsequent operations fail with WSAECONNRESET.



WSAENOBUFS

10055



No buffer space available.

An operation on a socket could not be performed because the system lacked sufficient buffer space or because a queue was full.



WSAEISCONN

10056



Socket is already connected.

A connect request was made on an already-connected socket. Some implementations also return this error if​sendto​ is called on a connected SOCK_DGRAM socket (for SOCK_STREAM sockets, the to parameter insendto is ignored) although other implementations treat this as a legal occurrence.



WSAENOTCONN

10057



Socket is not connected.

A request to send or receive data was disallowed because the socket is not connected and (when sending on a datagram socket using ​sendto​) no address was supplied. Any other type of operation might also return this error—for example, ​setsockopt​ setting ​SO_KEEPALIVE​ if the connection has been reset.



WSAESHUTDOWN

10058



Cannot send after socket shutdown.

A request to send or receive data was disallowed because the socket had already been shut down in that direction with a previous ​shutdown​ call. By calling shutdown a partial close of a socket is requested, which is a signal that sending or receiving, or both have been discontinued.



WSAETOOMANYREFS

10059



Too many references.

Too many references to some kernel object.



WSAETIMEDOUT

10060



Connection timed out.

A connection attempt failed because the connected party did not properly respond after a period of time, or the established connection failed because the connected host has failed to respond.



WSAECONNREFUSED

10061



Connection refused.

No connection could be made because the target computer actively refused it. This usually results from trying to connect to a service that is inactive on the foreign host—that is, one with no server application running.



WSAELOOP

10062



Cannot translate name.

Cannot translate a name.



WSAENAMETOOLONG

10063



Name too long.

A name component or a name was too long.



WSAEHOSTDOWN

10064



Host is down.

A socket operation failed because the destination host is down. A socket operation encountered a dead host. Networking activity on the local host has not been initiated. These conditions are more likely to be indicated by the error WSAETIMEDOUT.



WSAEHOSTUNREACH

10065



No route to host.

A socket operation was attempted to an unreachable host. See WSAENETUNREACH.



WSAENOTEMPTY

10066



Directory not empty.

Cannot remove a directory that is not empty.



WSAEPROCLIM

10067



Too many processes.

A Windows Sockets implementation may have a limit on the number of applications that can use it simultaneously. ​WSAStartup​ may fail with this error if the limit has been reached.



WSAEUSERS

10068



User quota exceeded.

Ran out of user quota.



WSAEDQUOT

10069



Disk quota exceeded.

Ran out of disk quota.



WSAESTALE

10070



Stale file handle reference.

The file handle reference is no longer available.



WSAEREMOTE

10071



Item is remote.

The item is not available locally.



WSASYSNOTREADY

10091



Network subsystem is unavailable.

This error is returned by ​WSAStartup​ if the Windows Sockets implementation cannot function at this time because the underlying system it uses to provide network services is currently unavailable. Users should check:


  • That the appropriate Windows Sockets DLL file is in the current path.
  • That they are not trying to use more than one Windows Sockets implementation simultaneously. If there is more than one Winsock DLL on your system, be sure the first one in the path is appropriate for the network subsystem currently loaded.
  • The Windows Sockets implementation documentation to be sure all necessary components are currently installed and configured correctly.



WSAVERNOTSUPPORTED

10092



Winsock.dll version out of range.

The current Windows Sockets implementation does not support the Windows Sockets specification version requested by the application. Check that no old Windows Sockets DLL files are being accessed.



WSANOTINITIALISED

10093



Successful WSAStartup not yet performed.

Either the application has not called ​WSAStartup​ or WSAStartup failed. The application may be accessing a socket that the current active task does not own (that is, trying to share a socket between tasks), or​WSACleanup​ has been called too many times.



WSAEDISCON

10101



Graceful shutdown in progress.

Returned by ​WSARecv​ and ​WSARecvFrom​ to indicate that the remote party has initiated a graceful shutdown sequence.



WSAENOMORE

10102



No more results.

No more results can be returned by the ​WSALookupServiceNext​ function.



WSAECANCELLED

10103



Call has been canceled.

A call to the ​WSALookupServiceEnd​ function was made while this call was still processing. The call has been canceled.



WSAEINVALIDPROCTABLE

10104



Procedure call table is invalid.

The service provider procedure call table is invalid. A service provider returned a bogus procedure table to Ws2_32.dll. This is usually caused by one or more of the function pointers being NULL.



WSAEINVALIDPROVIDER

10105



Service provider is invalid.

The requested service provider is invalid. This error is returned by the ​WSCGetProviderInfo​ and​WSCGetProviderInfo32​ functions if the protocol entry specified could not be found. This error is also returned if the service provider returned a version number other than 2.0.



WSAEPROVIDERFAILEDINIT

10106



Service provider failed to initialize.

The requested service provider could not be loaded or initialized. This error is returned if either a service provider's DLL could not be loaded (​LoadLibrary​ failed) or the provider's ​WSPStartup​ or ​NSPStartup​ function failed.



WSASYSCALLFAILURE

10107



System call failure.

A system call that should never fail has failed. This is a generic error code, returned under various conditions.

Returned when a system call that should never fail does fail. For example, if a call to ​WaitForMultipleEvents​fails or one of the registry functions fails trying to manipulate the protocol/namespace catalogs.

Returned when a provider does not return SUCCESS and does not provide an extended error code. Can indicate a service provider implementation error.



WSASERVICE_NOT_FOUND

10108



Service not found.

No such service is known. The service cannot be found in the specified name space.



WSATYPE_NOT_FOUND

10109



Class type not found.

The specified class was not found.



WSA_E_NO_MORE

10110



No more results.

No more results can be returned by the ​WSALookupServiceNext​ function.



WSA_E_CANCELLED

10111



Call was canceled.

A call to the ​WSALookupServiceEnd​ function was made while this call was still processing. The call has been canceled.



WSAEREFUSED

10112



Database query was refused.

A database query failed because it was actively refused.



WSAHOST_NOT_FOUND

11001



Host not found.

No such host is known. The name is not an official host name or alias, or it cannot be found in the database(s) being queried. This error may also be returned for protocol and service queries, and means that the specified name could not be found in the relevant database.



WSATRY_AGAIN

11002



Nonauthoritative host not found.

This is usually a temporary error during host name resolution and means that the local server did not receive a response from an authoritative server. A retry at some time later may be successful.



WSANO_RECOVERY

11003



This is a nonrecoverable error.

This indicates that some sort of nonrecoverable error occurred during a database lookup. This may be because the database files (for example, BSD-compatible HOSTS, SERVICES, or PROTOCOLS files) could not be found, or a DNS request was returned by the server with a severe error.



WSANO_DATA

11004



Valid name, no data record of requested type.

The requested name is valid and was found in the database, but it does not have the correct associated data being resolved for. The usual example for this is a host name-to-address translation attempt (using​gethostbyname​ or ​WSAAsyncGetHostByName​) which uses the DNS (Domain Name Server). An MX record is returned but no A record—indicating the host itself exists, but is not directly reachable.



WSA_QOS_RECEIVERS

11005



QoS receivers.

At least one QoS reserve has arrived.



WSA_QOS_SENDERS

11006



QoS senders.

At least one QoS send path has arrived.



WSA_QOS_NO_SENDERS

11007



No QoS senders.

There are no QoS senders.



WSA_QOS_NO_RECEIVERS

11008



QoS no receivers.

There are no QoS receivers.



WSA_QOS_REQUEST_CONFIRMED

11009



QoS request confirmed.

The QoS reserve request has been confirmed.



WSA_QOS_ADMISSION_FAILURE

11010



QoS admission error.

A QoS error occurred due to lack of resources.



WSA_QOS_POLICY_FAILURE

11011



QoS policy failure.

The QoS request was rejected because the policy system couldn't allocate the requested resource within the existing policy.



WSA_QOS_BAD_STYLE

11012



QoS bad style.

An unknown or conflicting QoS style was encountered.



WSA_QOS_BAD_OBJECT

11013



QoS bad object.

A problem was encountered with some part of the filterspec or the provider-specific buffer in general.



WSA_QOS_TRAFFIC_CTRL_ERROR

11014



QoS traffic control error.

An error with the underlying traffic control (TC) API as the generic QoS request was converted for local enforcement by the TC API. This could be due to an out of memory error or to an internal QoS provider error.



WSA_QOS_GENERIC_ERROR

11015



QoS generic error.

A general QoS error.



WSA_QOS_ESERVICETYPE

11016



QoS service type error.

An invalid or unrecognized service type was found in the QoS flowspec.



WSA_QOS_EFLOWSPEC

11017



QoS flowspec error.

An invalid or inconsistent flowspec was found in the ​QOS​ structure.



WSA_QOS_EPROVSPECBUF

11018



Invalid QoS provider buffer.

An invalid QoS provider-specific buffer.



WSA_QOS_EFILTERSTYLE

11019



Invalid QoS filter style.

An invalid QoS filter style was used.



WSA_QOS_EFILTERTYPE

11020



Invalid QoS filter type.

An invalid QoS filter type was used.



WSA_QOS_EFILTERCOUNT

11021



Incorrect QoS filter count.

An incorrect number of QoS FILTERSPECs were specified in the FLOWDESCRIPTOR.



WSA_QOS_EOBJLENGTH

11022



Invalid QoS object length.

An object with an invalid ObjectLength field was specified in the QoS provider-specific buffer.



WSA_QOS_EFLOWCOUNT

11023



Incorrect QoS flow count.

An incorrect number of flow descriptors was specified in the QoS structure.



WSA_QOS_EUNKOWNPSOBJ

11024



Unrecognized QoS object.

An unrecognized object was found in the QoS provider-specific buffer.



WSA_QOS_EPOLICYOBJ

11025



Invalid QoS policy object.

An invalid policy object was found in the QoS provider-specific buffer.



WSA_QOS_EFLOWDESC

11026



Invalid QoS flow descriptor.

An invalid QoS flow descriptor was found in the flow descriptor list.



WSA_QOS_EPSFLOWSPEC

11027



Invalid QoS provider-specific flowspec.

An invalid or inconsistent flowspec was found in the QoS provider-specific buffer.



WSA_QOS_EPSFILTERSPEC

11028



Invalid QoS provider-specific filterspec.

An invalid FILTERSPEC was found in the QoS provider-specific buffer.



WSA_QOS_ESDMODEOBJ

11029



Invalid QoS shape discard mode object.

An invalid shape discard mode object was found in the QoS provider-specific buffer.



WSA_QOS_ESHAPERATEOBJ

11030



Invalid QoS shaping rate object.

An invalid shaping rate object was found in the QoS provider-specific buffer.



WSA_QOS_RESERVED_PETYPE

11031



Reserved policy QoS element type.

A reserved policy element was found in the QoS provider-specific buffer.



 

Requirements



Header


Winsock2.h; Winerror.h