You probably want to use poll (or select) for handling the events. So after establishing the connections, you have the file descriptors, and in addition you have the standard input, which also has a file descriptor from the OS (namely 0), and you can pass all those file descriptors to poll, which notifies you when there is incoming data on any of the file descriptors. Example code:
/* fd1, fd2 are sockets */
while(1) {
pollfd fds[3];
int ret;
fds[0].fd = fd1;
fds[1].fd = fd2;
fds[2].fd = STDIN_FILENO;
fds[0].events = POLLIN;
fds[1].events = POLLIN;
fds[2].events = POLLIN;
ret = poll(fds, 3, -1); /* poll() blocks, but you can set a timeout here */
if(ret < 0) {
perror("poll");
}
else if(ret == 0) {
printf("timeout\n");
}
else {
if(fds[0].revents & POLLIN) {
/* incoming data from fd1 */
}
if(fds[0].revents & (POLLERR | POLLNVAL)) {
/* error on fd1 */
}
if(fds[1].revents & POLLIN) {
/* incoming data from fd2 */
}
if(fds[1].revents & (POLLERR | POLLNVAL)) {
/* error on fd2 */
}
if(fds[2].revents & POLLIN) {
/* incoming data from stdin */
char buf[1024];
int bytes_read = read(STDIN_FILENO, buf, 1024);
/* handle input, which is stored in buf */
}
}
}
You didn't mention the OS. This works for POSIX (OS X, Linux, Windows with mingw). If you need to use the Win32 API, it'll look a bit different but the principle is the same.