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129 lines
3.7 KiB
Groff
129 lines
3.7 KiB
Groff
.\"
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.\" $Id: ports.2,v 1.1 1997/02/27 07:32:14 gdr Exp $
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.\"
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.\" .TH "PORTS IPC" 2 GNO "System Calls" "16 December 1996"
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.TH "PORTS IPC" 2 "16 December 1996" GNO "System Calls"
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.SH NAME
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.BR pbind ,
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.BR pcreate ,
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.BR pdelete ,
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.BR pgetcount ,
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.BR pgetport ,
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.BR preceive ,
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.BR preset ,
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.BR psend
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\- GNO ports IPC system
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.nf
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#include <sys/ports.h>
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int pcreate (int \fIcount\fR);
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int pbind (int \fIportid\fR, const char *\fIname\fR);
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int pgetport (const char *\fIname\fR);
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int psend (int \fIportid\fR, long \fImsg\fR);
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long preceive (int \fIportid\fR);
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int pdelete (int \fIportid\fR, int (*\fIdispose\fR)(long));
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int preset (int \fIportid\fR, int (*\fIdispose\fR)(long));
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int pgetcount (int \fIportid\fR);
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.fi
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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The Ports IPC (interprocess communication) machanism is a very flexible,
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powerful, and efficient method of interprocess communication. A port
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is a queue that can contain a number of 32-bit values. The size of the port
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(how many messages it can contain) is specified as the
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.IR count
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parameter of the
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.BR pcreate
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call.
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.LP
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Creation of a port is done with
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.BR pcreate .
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You must specify the size of the port in this call, which must be at least
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1 (one). The larger the port, the more data it can hold without blocking
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the sending process.
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.BR pcreate
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returns a port ID value that must be used in subsequent calls to the Ports
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IPC routines.
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.LP
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A name may be associated with a port; this allows totally unrelated processes
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to access a port without having to communicate the port ID through some
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other method, and without knowing the process ID of the other. To bind a
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name to a port, call
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.BR pbind .
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The
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.IR name
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argument may be any length, but only the first 32 characters are significant.
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If a name has already been bound to the chosen
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.IR portid ,
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-1 is returned and
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.BR errno
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is set.
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.LP
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To get the
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.IR portid
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of a port by it's name, use the
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.BR pgetport
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call, with
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.IR name
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as the name of the port for which you wish to obtain the port ID.
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If no port is associated with
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.IR name ,
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-1 is returned and errno is set. Names are only unbound from a port
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when that port is deleted.
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.LP
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.BR psend is used to send a 32-bit datum to a port. If the port is full
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(that is, if there are more unread messages in the port than are specified
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in the
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.BR pcreate
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call), then the sending process blocks until a message is read from the
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port. Messages are retrieved from a port using the
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.BR preceie
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call.
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.BR pgetcount
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returns the number of messages in the port that have not been received;
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this may be used to avoid blocking on a
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.BR psend
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call.
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.LP
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If you wish to clear the contents of a port, (for example to synchronize
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communication after an error condition), use the
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.BR preset
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call. The arguments to this call are the port ID and the address of a
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.IR dispose
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function. Each message in the port, before being cleared, is passed to the
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.IR dispose
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function so that appropriate clean-up actio nmay be taken on the data.
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For example, if the messages correspond to the address of memory blocks
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obtained with
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.BR malloc (3),
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you could pass
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.BR free (3)
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as
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.IR dispose
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to automatically deallocate that memory. If you don't wish to take any
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special action on the data being cleared, pass the NULL pointer for the
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.IR dispose
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argument.
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.LP
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To destroy a port, make the
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.BR pdelete
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call. It accepts the same arguments as
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.BR preset
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and they operate as described above. The difference between
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.BR preset
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and
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.BR pdelete
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is that the latter totally destroys a port; it may no longer be used.
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.BR preset
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clears a ports data but leaves the port open for more data transmissions.
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.SH EXAMPLES
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For an example of the use of ports, see the source code to the print
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spooling utilities,
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.BR lpc (1),
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.BR lpr (1),
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.BR lpd (8),
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and
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.BR FilePort .
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.SH "SEE ALSO"
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.BR procsend (2).
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