man(1) Manual page archive

 STYX(2) STYX(2)
 NAME
 Styx: Rmsg, Tmsg, dir2text, istmsg, packdir, packdirsize,
 readmsg, qid2text, unpackdir - interface to Styx file
 protocol
 SYNOPSIS
 include "styx.m";
 styx := load Styx Styx->PATH;
 Tmsg: adt {
 tag: int;
 pick {
 Readerror =>
 error: string; # tag is unused in this case
 Version =>
 msize: int;
 version: string;
 Auth =>
 afid: int;
 uname, aname: string;
 Attach =>
 fid, afid: int;
 uname, aname: string;
 Flush =>
 oldtag: int;
 Walk =>
 fid, newfid: int;
 names: array of string;
 Open =>
 fid, mode: int;
 Create =>
 fid: int;
 name: string;
 perm, mode: int;
 Read =>
 fid: int;
 offset: big;
 count: int;
 Write =>
 fid: int;
 offset: big;
 data: array of byte;
 Clunk or
 Stat or
 Remove =>
 fid: int;
 Wstat =>
 fid: int;
 stat: Sys->Dir;
 }
 STYX(2) STYX(2)
 read: fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, msize: int): ref Tmsg;
 unpack: fn(a: array of byte): (int, ref Tmsg);
 pack: fn(nil: self ref Tmsg): array of byte;
 packedsize: fn(nil: self ref Tmsg): int;
 text: fn(nil: self ref Tmsg): string;
 mtype: fn(nil: self ref Tmsg): int;
 };
 Rmsg: adt {
 tag: int;
 pick {
 Readerror =>
 error: string; # tag is unused in this case
 Version =>
 msize: int;
 version: string;
 Auth =>
 aqid: Sys->Qid;
 Attach =>
 qid: Sys->Qid;
 Flush =>
 Error =>
 ename: string;
 Clunk or
 Remove or
 Wstat =>
 Walk =>
 qids: array of Sys->Qid;
 Create or
 Open =>
 qid: Sys->Qid;
 iounit: int;
 Read =>
 data: array of byte;
 Write =>
 count: int;
 Stat =>
 stat: Sys->Dir;
 }
 read: fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, msize: int): ref Rmsg;
 unpack: fn(a: array of byte): (int, ref Rmsg);
 pack: fn(nil: self ref Rmsg): array of byte;
 packedsize: fn(nil: self ref Rmsg): int;
 text: fn(nil: self ref Rmsg): string;
 mtype: fn(nil: self ref Rmsg): int;
 };
 init: fn();
 readmsg: fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, msize: int): (array of byte, string);
 istmsg: fn(f: array of byte): int;
 STYX(2) STYX(2)
 compatible: fn(t: ref Tmsg.Version, msize: int, version: string): (int, string);
 packdirsize: fn(d: Sys->Dir): int;
 packdir: fn(d: Sys->Dir): array of byte;
 unpackdir: fn(f: array of byte): (int, Sys->Dir);
 dir2text: fn(d: Sys->Dir): string;
 qid2text: fn(q: Sys->Qid): string;
 VERSION: con "9P2000";
 MAXWELEM: con 16;
 NOTAG: con 16rFFFF;
 NOFID: con ~0;
 IOHDRSZ: con implementation-defined;
 MAXRPC: con implementation-defined;
 DESCRIPTION
 Styx provides a Limbo interface to send and receive messages
 of the Styx file service protocol, described by Section 5 of
 this manual (a thorough reading of which is advised before
 using this module). Init must be called before using any
 other function in the module.
 A Styx client transmits requests to a server as `T-messages'
 and receives replies in matching `R-messages'. A T-message
 is here represented by values of the type Tmsg, and an R-
 message by values of type Rmsg. Every message has a tag
 value, and the alternatives of the pick adt represent the
 possible operation types of a T-message, generally with
 parameter names and types corresponding to those described
 in section 5. The exceptions are: Tmsg.Write and Rmsg.Read
 contain an array of byte, data, to hold the data for the
 corresponding message, and the `count' parameter of the mes-
 sage is simply the length of that array; and there is an
 alternative labelled Readerror that does not appear in the
 protocol but is used to represent input errors as described
 below. Also note that values that are `unsigned' integers
 in the protocol are typically given signed integer types in
 the Limbo representation (in particular, fids, qid paths,
 counts and offsets), and applications should take appropri-
 ate care when manipulating them.
 The following functions are provided by Tmsg:
 read(fd, msize)
 Read file descriptor fd to obtain exactly one T-message
 and return (a reference to) the corresponding Tmsg. A
 nil value is returned on end of file. Otherwise, if
 the read fails or the data read does not form a valid
 T-message, the value returned will be a Tmsg.Readerror
 value in which the error member describes the error.
 Msize gives the maximum number of bytes in any accept-
 able T-message, and should be the value negotiated in
 STYX(2) STYX(2)
 the exchange of version messages; any incoming message
 larger than that will result in a diagnostic as a
 Tmsg.Readerror value. An msize of 0 means `no limit
 negotiated' and should (only) be used until a message
 size has been negotiated by exchange of version(5) mes-
 sages.
 t.pack()
 Return an array of bytes containing the value of t in
 the machine-independent format described in Section 5.
 It can return nil only if the message t is itself nil
 or has an invalid type.
 unpack(a)
 The array a is assumed to contain zero or more T-
 messages. Unpack attempts to unpack the first message,
 and returns a tuple of the form (n,v). If successful,
 n is the number of bytes at the start of a used by the
 message, and v is the corresponding Tmsg value. If a
 contains the prefix of a valid message but more data is
 required to complete it, n is zero (and v is nil); the
 caller will typically read more data, append it to a,
 and try again. If the message is invalid, n is -1 and
 v is nil.
 t.packedsize()
 Return the number of bytes required for the value of t
 when packed in its machine-independent format. (Zero
 is returned if t is invalid.)
 t.text()
 Return a printable string showing the contents of t,
 for tracing or debugging.
 t.mtype()
 Return the Styx message type of the message.
 An R-message is represented by Rmsg. Its member functions
 behave exactly as those for Tmsg, except that they operate
 on R-messages not T-messages.
 When a client reads a directory, the data returned in the
 reply must be formatted as described in read(5): an array of
 directory entries, one per file, with each entry formatted
 in a machine-independent format. An appropriate array value
 can be produced by packdir from a Sys->Dir structure, as
 used by sys-stat(2). The space that packed representation
 will take can be calculated beforehand by packdirsize. The
 server will usually fill the buffer for the reply to the
 read with as many entries as will fit, checking the space
 remaining against the result of packdirsize and if the value
 will fit, storing the result of packdir. Given an array a
 STYX(2) STYX(2)
 containing at most one packed directory value (as produced
 by packdir), unpackdir returns a tuple (n, d) where n is -1
 if a is illegally formatted; n is zero if a does not contain
 a complete directory entry value; and otherwise n is the
 number of bytes of a used to produce the unpacked Dir value
 d .
 The functions dir2text and qid2text produce printable
 strings showing the contents of the corresponding data
 structures, for use when tracing or debugging.
 Applications that acts as file servers will read T-messages
 and reply with R-messages. They can use Tmsg.read to read
 each T-message, build an Rmsg reply value r, and use r.pack
 to produce an array of bytes to be written in reply by
 Sys->write (see sys-read(2)).
 A few specialised programs might need the lower-level func-
 tion readmsg that underlies Tmsg.read and Rmsg.read. It
 reads a single message, which can be either a T-message or
 R-message, and returns it as an array of bytes, which can
 then be unpacked using Tmsg.unpack or Rmsg.unpack. Msize is
 the negotiated message size, or 0 meaning `no limit'. The
 predicate istmsg returns true if the contents of array f
 looks like a packed representation of a T-message, judging
 only by its type byte.
 When generating the version message (see version(5)), the
 constant NOTAG can be used in Tmsg.tag and Rmsg.tag to
 represent `no tag value'. The constant VERSION names the
 current version of the protocol, and can be used as the
 value of Tmsg.version.
 Compatible can be used by a server to compare its msize and
 version (which is typically VERSION) to those in the
 Tmsg.Version message received from a client, to decide its
 reply, following the rules in version(5). It returns a tuple
 (m, v) with values for use in the Rmsg.Version reply. M is
 the lesser of msize and t.msize, and v is the negotiated
 protocol version, or the value "unknown" if no version could
 be agreed. The constant MAXRPC is a reasonable value for
 msize on current systems. The resulting value m can subse-
 quently be given to the various read functions as the limit
 msize. The constant IOHDRSZ gives the amount to allow for
 protocol overhead, when limiting data size for Tmsg.Write
 and Rmsg.Read.
 The constant NOFID can be used as the value of afid of the
 attach message when authentication is not required (see
 attach(5)).
 The constant MAXWELEM gives the protocol-defined limit on
 STYX(2) STYX(2)
 the length of the arrays Tmsg.names and Rmsg.qids. For
 specialised applications, the module defines constants
 Tversion, Rversion, etc. for the message types of the proto-
 col, and the other constants mentioned in Section 5.
 SOURCE
 /appl/lib/styx.b
 SEE ALSO
 styxservers(2), intro(5)

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /