Annotated code sample
The following code implements a client and server that
communicate using XTI
over a NetBIOS connection. The server
opens the file logfile, reads the contents in 1K
chunks, and sends each chunk to the client. The client
reads each chunk of data over the NetBIOS connection,
then writes it to the standard output.
This code has at least two interesting features:
-
The server is concurrent, that is, it communicates with
the client through a child process that uses a transport endpoint
(conn_fd) different from the one that the
parent process listens on for
incoming connection requests (listen_fd).
This, along with a value for bind
->qlen
that
is greater than one (five, in this example) in the call to
t_bind, allows the server to respond to incoming
connection requests in parallel.
-
The client and server implement an application-level protocol to
ensure that the client receives all the data that the server sends.
The application implements this protocol because SCO
NetBIOS and NetBEUI do not support a
connection-oriented service with orderly release.
Example NetBIOS client
1 #include <stdio.h>
2 #include <fcntl.h>
3 #include <xti.h>
4 #define SRV_NAME "NB-XTI-DEMO-SERV"
5 #define RFCNBPATH "/dev/nbcots"
6 #define NBEPATH "/dev/netbeui"
7 extern int t_errno;
8 main (int argc, char *argv[])
9 {
10 int flags = 0;
11 char *netpath = RFCNBPATH;
12 int fd;
13 int nbytes;
14 struct t_call *sndcall;
15 struct nb_addr srv_addr;
16 struct {
17 unsigned short length;
18 char buf[1024];
19 } msg;
20 if ((fd = t_open(netpath, O_RDWR, (struct t_info *) NULL)) < 0) {
21 t_error("t_open failed");
22 exit(1);
23 }
24 if (t_bind(fd, (struct t_bind *) NULL,
25 (struct t_bind *) NULL) < 0) {
26 t_error("t_bind error");
27 exit(2);
28 }
29 if ((sndcall =
30 (struct t_call *)t_alloc(fd, T_CALL, T_ADDR)) == NULL) {
31 t_error("t_alloc failed");
32 exit(3);
33 }
34 sndcall->addr.len = sizeof(srv_addr);
35 sndcall->addr.buf = (char *)&srv_addr;
line 2-
includes the header file that defines the flags O_RDWR
and O_NONBLOCK that can be passed in the flags
argument to t_open (see line 21).
line 4-
defines the name used to identify the server.
Replace the string in this line with the name of the server on
your network.
line 5-
defines a symbol for the device name of the connection-oriented
SCO TCP/NetBIOS transport.
line 6-
defines a symbol for the device name of the
connection-oriented NetBEUI transport.
line 7-
declares the global variable used by all XTI
routines to report an error.
line 10-
initializes the flags argument that will be passed
into t_rcv.
line 11-
assigns the device name of the transport provider to open.
Use the value NBEPATH (instead of RFCNBPATH)
to access NetBEUI.
line 15-
declares the variable that will contain the
NetBIOS name of the server to be contacted.
lines 16-19-
declare the data structure defined by this application for each
chunk of data to be received. The buf field is a
buffer to hold 1K of data. The length field is used to
implement in the application itself a client/server handshake
equivalent to orderly release.
line 20-
opens a connection-oriented transport endpoint
(netpath) with full duplex communication
(O_RDWR). Because O_NONBLOCK is
not specified along with O_RDWR,
t_connect and
t_rcv will block until either they succeed or
an error is detected. To specify both O_RDWR
and O_NONBLOCK, you would code
t_open(netpath, O_NONBLOCK | O_RDWR, (struct t_info *)NULL)
lines 24-25-
let the transport provider bind whatever name it
chooses to the transport endpoint (the first NULL), and
the client does not care to be informed what name was chosen (the
second NULL). This is the normal case for a client.
lines 29-30-
allocate a struct t_call data structure.
The fields of the structure will be assigned the
NetBIOS address information.
line 34-
initializes the length field of the
struct netbuf data structure.
line 35-
initializes
the pointer field in the struct netbuf data structure
with the address of
the buffer where the NetBIOS address information
will be stored.
36 srv_addr.nb_type = NB_UNIQUE;
37 memcpy(srv_addr.nb_name, SRV_NAME, NB_NAMELEN);
38 if (t_connect(fd, sndcall, (struct t_call *) NULL) < 0) {
39 t_error("t_connect failed for fd");
40 exit(4);
41 }
42 while ((nbytes = t_rcv(fd, &msg, sizeof(msg), &flags)) >=
43 sizeof(msg.length)) {
44 if (fwrite(msg.buf, 1, msg.length, stdout) < 0) {
45 fprintf(stderr, "fwrite failed");
46 exit(5);
47 }
48 if (msg.length == 0)
49 break;
50 }
51 if (nbytes == sizeof(msg.length) && msg.length == 0) {
52 if (t_snddis(fd, NULL) < 0) {
53 t_error("t_snddis failed");
54 exit(6);
55 }
56 exit(0);
57 }
58 if (nbytes < sizeof(msg.length)) {
59 fprintf(stderr, "received invalid message, hanging up");
60 t_snddis(fd, (struct t_call *) NULL);
61 exit(7);
62 }
63 else {
64 if (t_errno == TLOOK) {
65 if (t_look(fd) == T_DISCONNECT) {
66 printf("Got T_DISCONNECT, doing t_rcvdis");
67 if (t_rcvdis(fd, (struct t_discon *) NULL) < 0) {
68 t_error("t_rcvdis failed");
69 exit(8);
70 }
71 exit(0);
72 }
73 }
74 else {
75 t_error("t_rcv failed");
76 exit(9);
77 }
78 }
79 }
line 36-
indicates that the name of the server to be contacted is a unique
name, not a group name.
line 37-
initializes the name field of the struct nb_addr
structure with the name of the server.
line 38-
connects to the server.
line 42-
reads nbytes of data through the transport endpoint.
The first two bytes are read into msg.length. The
remaining bytes are read into msg.buf.
line 43-
writes msg.length bytes of data from msg.buf
to the standard output.
lines 48-57-
check if the number of bytes sent was zero.
This is the signal from the server that no more data will be sent.
The client then exits normally.
This is the protocol used by this sample application
to implement the semantics of orderly release over a transport
provider (NetBIOS) that provides only an abortive
disconnect (using t_snddis).
lines 58-62-
check if the client received the length field of the message.
If not, something went wrong. The client bails out by disconnecting.
A more robust client might implement an error recovery mechanism.
lines 64-73-
check if an asynchronous event has occurred. If the client has
received a disconnect request, it consumes the event by calling
t_rcvdis, then exits normally (line 71).
lines 75-76-
implement the client's error recovery algorithm.
This code is reached only if an error has occurred on the call to
t_rcv on line 42. The client could check what error
has occurred by examining the value of t_errno.
In this example, the client simply gives up.
Example NetBIOS server
1 #include <stdio.h>
2 #include <signal.h>
3 #include <stropts.h>
4 #include <xti.h>
5 #include <fcntl.h>
6 #define SRV_NAME "NB-XTI-DEMO-SERV"
7 #define RFCNBPATH "/dev/nbcots"
8 #define NBEPATH "/dev/netbeui"
9 #define DISCONNECT -1
10 extern int t_errno;
11 void run_server(int);
12 int conn_fd;
13 char *netpath = RFCNBPATH;
14 main(int argc, char *argv[])
15 {
16 int listen_fd;
17 struct t_bind *bind;
18 struct t_call *call;
19 struct nb_addr srv_addr;
20 struct nb_addr client_addr;
21 if ((listen_fd =
22 t_open(netpath, O_RDWR, (struct t_info *) NULL)) < 0) {
23 t_error("t_open failed for listen_fd");
24 exit(1);
25 }
26 if ((bind = (struct t_bind *)t_alloc(listen_fd, T_BIND, T_ADDR))
27 == NULL) {
28 t_error("t_alloc of t_bind structure failed");
29 exit(2);
30 }
line 12-
declares the variable that will identify the transport endpoint
to be used by the child process (to be spawned later) when
it communicates with the client.
The variable happens to be global in this example to avoid passing
it around as a parameter. It is referenced both by
main and run_server.
line 13-
assigns the device name of the transport to be used.
Use the value NBEPATH instead of RFCNBPATH
to access NetBEUI.
line 16-
declares the variable to be used by the parent process to
identify the transport endpoint that the parent process will
use to listen for incoming connection requests.
lines 21-22-
open a connection-oriented full-duplex transport
endpoint in non-blocking mode. The third argument is set to
NULL in this example, indicating that the server does
not care to examine any of the transport provider's attributes.
lines 26-27-
allocate the struct t_bind data structure
to be used in the call to t_bind.
28 bind->qlen = 5;
29 bind->addr.len = sizeof(srv_addr);
30 bind->addr.buf = (char *)&srv_addr;
31 srv_addr.nb_type = NB_UNIQUE;
32 memcpy(srv_addr.nb_name, SRV_NAME, NB_NAMELEN);
33 if (t_bind(listen_fd, bind, bind) < 0) {
34 t_error("t_bind failed for listen_fd");
35 exit(3);
36 }
37 if (memcmp(srv_addr.nb_name, SRV_NAME, NB_NAMELEN) != 0) {
38 fprintf(stderr, "t_bind bound wrong address\n");
39 exit(4);
40 }
41 if ((call = (struct t_call *)t_alloc(listen_fd, T_CALL, T_ADDR))
42 == NULL) {
43 t_error("t_alloc failed");
44 exit(5);
45 }
46 call->addr.len = sizeof(srv_addr);
47 call->addr.buf = (char *)&client_addr;
48 while (1) {
49 if (t_listen(listen_fd, call) < 0) {
50 t_error("t_listen failed for listen_fd");
51 exit(6);
52 }
53 if ((conn_fd = accept_call(listen_fd, call)) != DISCONNECT)
54 run_server(listen_fd);
55 }
56 }
line 28-
sets the depth of the queue for incoming connection
requests to five.
line 30-
points
addr.buf
to the
NetBIOS name structure.
lines 31-32-
assign the server's well-known NetBIOS name.
The name is termed ``well-known'' because all clients on
the network are expected to know this name. The server expects
to be the only one on the network with this name, so it assigns
the name type a value of NB_UNIQUE.
line 33-
binds the server's name and the length of the connection
request queue to the transport endpoint. These are specified in
the second argument (first occurrence of bind). The
third argument points to the same bind data structure
specified in the second argument. The transport provider will return
in bind
->qlen
the
actual value of the connection request queue length it can support,
if that is less than the requested value.
lines 41-42-
allocate the struct t_call data structure
to be used in the call to t_listen.
lines 46-47-
set up the call data structure.
call
->add.buf
will point to the name of the
client trying to connect to the server. This value will be
filled in by the call to t_listen on line 49.
lines 48-56-
loop forever listening for connection requests on one transport
endpoint, accepting them on different transport endpoint, then
spawning a child process to communicate with the client.
lines 53-54-
accept the connection with the client on the new transport endpoint,
conn_fd. The server parent process will continue to
listen for incoming connection requests on listen_fd,
while the child process spawned in run_server will
respond to the client.
The functions accept_call and run_server are
application-level functions, not XTI functions.
57 int
58 accept_call(int listen_fd, struct t_call *call)
59 {
60 int resfd;
61 if ((resfd = t_open(netpath, O_RDWR, (struct t_info *) NULL))
62 < 0) {
63 t_error("t_open for responding fd failed");
64 exit(7);
65 }
66 if (t_bind(resfd, (struct t_bind *) NULL,
67 (struct t_bind *) NULL) < 0) {
68 t_error("t_bind for responding fd failed");
69 exit(8);
70 }
71 if (t_accept(listen_fd, resfd, call) < 0) {
72 if (t_errno == TLOOK) {
73 if (t_rcvdis(listen_fd, (struct t_discon *) NULL) < 0) {
74 t_error("t_rcvdis failed for listen_fd");
75 exit(9);
76 }
77 if (t_close(resfd) < 0) {
78 t_error("t_close failed for responding fd");
79 exit(10);
80 }
81 return(DISCONNECT);
82 }
83 t_error("t_accept failed");
84 exit(11);
85 }
86 return(resfd);
87 }
88 connrelease()
89 {
90 exit(0);
91 }
lines 57-87-
open a new transport endpoint, let
the transport bind any valid name to it, then accept
the incoming connection request on that endpoint.
line 61-
opens a new transport endpoint.
line 66-
lets the transport select a NetBIOS name to
bind to the endpoint.
line 71-
accepts on resfd the connection request
received earlier on listen_fd. By accepting the
connection request on a file descriptor different from the one on
which the connection request was received, the server can fork a
child process to handle the client request, while the (parent)
server continues to listen for new clients trying to connect
on the original file descriptor.
lines 72-82-
respond to an asynchronous event. The server assumes the
client is now trying to disconnect. The server responds by
consuming the disconnect event (line 73) and shutting
down the transport endpoint on which it intended to accept the
connection (line 77).
An alternative is to call t_look
after line 72 to determine precisely what asynchronous event
has occurred. The server can then respond appropriately.
See the manual page for t_look for a description of the
asynchronous events returned by this function.
line 81-
returns DISCONNECT to indicate that the connection request
was aborted by the client.
line 86-
returns the value of the transport endpoint on which the
connection request has been accepted.
lines 88-91-
declare the signal handler that is set in line 122. If an unexpected
input message arrives at the transport endpoint, this handler
will be executed. The handler simply exits, tearing down the
transport endpoint the server is listening on. The exit also kills
all of the child processes that are communicating with clients,
thus tearing down their transport endpoints.
Clients will receive the T_DISCONNECT
asynchronous event at their local transport endpoint.
92 void
93 run_server(int listen_fd)
94 {
95 int nbytes;
96 FILE *logfp;
97 struct {
98 unsigned short length;
99 char buf[1024];
100 } msg;
101 switch (fork()) {
102 case -1:
103 perror("fork failed");
104 exit(12);
105 default: /* parent */
106 /* close conn_fd and go up to listen again */
107 if (t_close(conn_fd) < 0) {
108 t_error("t_close failed for conn_fd");
109 exit(13);
110 }
111 return;
112 case 0: /* child */
113 /* close listen_fd and do service */
114 if (t_close(listen_fd) < 0) {
115 t_error("t_close failed for listen_fd");
116 exit(14);
117 }
118 if ((logfp = fopen("logfile", "r")) == NULL) {
119 perror("cannot open logfile");
120 exit(15);
121 }
lines 97-100-
declare the variable to hold the next chunk of data to be read
from the log file and transmitted to a client.
line 101-
spawns a child process to communicate with the client.
lines 105-111-
close conn_fd.
The parent process executes these lines because it will not be
using this transport endpoint. The
transport endpoint associated with conn_fd is not
destroyed, however, because the child process will leave it open
to communicate with the client. The parent
returns to the calling function to continue to listen for
connections on listen_fd.
lines 112-116-
close listen_fd.
The child process executes these lines because it will not be
using this transport endpoint. The
transport endpoint associated with listen_fd is not
destroyed, however, because the parent process will leave it open
to listen for the next incoming connection request from a client.
lines 118-121-
open the log file for reading.
The child process executes these lines.
122 signal(SIGPOLL, connrelease);
123 if (ioctl(conn_fd, I_SETSIG, S_INPUT) < 0) {
124 perror("ioctl I_SETSIG failed");
125 exit(16);
126 }
127 if (t_look(conn_fd) != 0) {
128 fprintf(stderr, "t_look returned unexpected event");
129 exit(17);
130 }
131 while ((nbytes = fread(msg.buf, 1, 1024, logfp)) > 0) {
132 msg.length = nbytes;
133 if (t_snd(conn_fd, &msg, nbytes +
134 sizeof(msg.length), 0) < 0) {
135 t_error("t_snd failed");
136 exit(18);
137 }
138 }
139 msg.length = 0;
140 if (t_snd(conn_fd, &msg, 2, 0) < 0) {
141 t_error("can't send 0 bytes");
142 exit(19);
143 }
144 pause(); /* until disconnect indication arrives */
145 }
146 }
lines 122-146-
list the remaining instructions to be executed by the child process.
line 122-
sets connrelease as the SIGPOLL signal handler.
line 123-
establishes that a SIGPOLL signal will be
generated if an unexpected message arrives at the transport
endpoint denoted by conn_fd.
lines 131-138-
read from the log file in 1K chunks and send both the data and
the number of bytes read to the client.
lines 139-143-
signal the end of the file by sending a message with the length
field set to zero.
line 144-
waits until the SIGPOLL signal is generated. This will
occur when the client receives the message with the length field
set to zero, because the client will send a disconnect indication to
the server by calling t_rcvdis. The signal handler
connrelease will then be called, which calls exit to
terminate the process.
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Getting more information
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Example for obtaining session and adapter status
© 2003 Caldera International, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.7 -- 11 February 2003