RPC_CLNT_CALLS(3) | Library Functions Manual | RPC_CLNT_CALLS(3) |
rpc_clnt_calls
,
clnt_call
, clnt_freeres
,
clnt_geterr
, clnt_perrno
,
clnt_perror
, clnt_sperrno
,
clnt_sperror
, rpc_broadcast
,
rpc_broadcast_exp
, rpc_call
— library routines for client side calls
#include
<rpc/rpc.h>
enum clnt_stat
clnt_call
(CLIENT
*clnt, const rpcproc_t
procnum, const xdrproc_t
inproc, const caddr_t
in, const xdrproc_t
outproc, caddr_t
out, const struct timeval
tout);
bool_t
clnt_freeres
(CLIENT
*clnt, const xdrproc_t
outproc, caddr_t
out);
void
clnt_geterr
(const
CLIENT * clnt, struct
rpc_err * errp);
void
clnt_perrno
(const
enum clnt_stat stat);
void
clnt_perror
(CLIENT
*clnt, const char
*s);
char *
clnt_sperrno
(const
enum clnt_stat stat);
char *
clnt_sperror
(CLIENT
*clnt, const char *
s);
enum clnt_stat
rpc_broadcast
(const rpcprog_t
prognum, const rpcvers_t versnum,
const rpcproc_t procnum, const
xdrproc_t inproc, const caddr_t in,
const xdrproc_t outproc, caddr_t
out, const resultproc_t eachresult,
const char *nettype);
enum clnt_stat
rpc_broadcast_exp
(const rpcprog_t
prognum, const rpcvers_t versnum,
const rpcproc_t procnum, const
xdrproc_t xargs, caddr_t argsp,
const xdrproc_t xresults, caddr_t
resultsp, const resultproc_t eachresult,
const int inittime, const int
waittime, const char * nettype);
enum clnt_stat
rpc_call
(const char *host,
const rpcprog_t prognum, const
rpcvers_t versnum, const rpcproc_t procnum,
const xdrproc_t inproc, const char
*in, const xdrproc_t outproc,
char *out, const char
*nettype);
RPC library routines allow C language programs to make procedure calls on other machines across the network. First, the client calls a procedure to send a request to the server. Upon receipt of the request, the server calls a dispatch routine to perform the requested service, and then sends back a reply.
The
clnt_call
(),
rpc_call
(),
and
rpc_broadcast
()
routines handle the client side of the procedure call. The remaining
routines deal with error handling in the case of errors.
Some of the routines take a
CLIENT handle as one of the arguments. A
CLIENT handle can be created by an RPC creation
routine such as
clnt_create
()
(see rpc_clnt_create(3)).
These routines are safe for use in multithreaded applications. CLIENT handles can be shared between threads, however in this implementation requests by different threads are serialized (that is, the first request will receive its results before the second request is sent).
See rpc(3) for the definition of the CLIENT data structure.
clnt_call
()clnt_create
() (see
rpc_clnt_create(3)). The inproc
argument is the XDR function used to encode the procedure's arguments, and
outproc is the XDR function used to decode the
procedure's results; in is the address of the
procedure's argument(s), and out is the address of
where to place the result(s). The tout argument is
the time allowed for results to be returned, which is overridden by a
time-out set explicitly through
clnt_control
(),
see rpc_clnt_create(3). If the remote call succeeds, the
status returned is RPC_SUCCESS
, otherwise an
appropriate status is returned.clnt_freeres
()clnt_geterr
()clnt_perrno
()rpc_call
().clnt_perror
()clnt_call
().clnt_sperrno
()clnt_perrno
(), but
instead of sending a message to the standard error indicating why an RPC
call failed, return a pointer to a string which contains the message. The
clnt_sperrno
() function is normally used instead
of clnt_perrno
() when the program does not have a
standard error (as a program running as a server quite likely does not),
or if the programmer does not want the message to be output with
printf
()
(see printf(3)), or if a message format different than
that supported by clnt_perrno
() is to be used.
Note: unlike
clnt_sperror
()
and
clnt_spcreateerror
()
(see rpc_clnt_create(3)),
clnt_sperrno
() does not return pointer to static
data so the result will not get overwritten on each call.clnt_sperror
()clnt_perror
(), except that (like
clnt_sperrno
()) it returns a string instead of
printing to standard error. However,
clnt_sperror
() does not append a newline at the
end of the message. Warning: returns pointer to a buffer that is
overwritten on each call.rpc_broadcast
()rpc_call
(), except the call message is
broadcast to all the connectionless transports specified by
nettype. If nettype is
NULL
, it defaults to "netpath". Each
time it receives a response, this routine calls
eachresult
(),
whose form is: bool_t
eachresult
(caddr_t out,
const struct netbuf * addr, const
struct netconfig * netconf) where out is the
same as out passed to
rpc_broadcast
(), except that the remote
procedure's output is decoded there; addr points to
the address of the machine that sent the results, and
netconf is the netconfig structure of the transport
on which the remote server responded. If
eachresult
() returns 0,
rpc_broadcast
() waits for more replies; otherwise
it returns with appropriate status. Warning: broadcast file descriptors
are limited in size to the maximum transfer size of that transport. For
Ethernet, this value is 1500 bytes. The
rpc_broadcast
() function uses
AUTH_SYS
credentials by default (see
rpc_clnt_auth(3)).rpc_broadcast_exp
()rpc_broadcast
(), except that the initial
timeout, inittime and the maximum timeout,
waittime are specified in milliseconds. The
inittime argument is the initial time that
rpc_broadcast_exp
() waits before resending the
request. After the first resend, the re-transmission interval increases
exponentially until it exceeds waittime.rpc_call
()RPC_SUCCESS
if it succeeds, or an appropriate
status is returned. Use the clnt_perrno
() routine
to translate failure status into error messages. Warning:
rpc_call
() uses the first available transport
belonging to the class nettype, on which it can
create a connection. You do not have control of timeouts or authentication
using this routine.These functions are part of libtirpc.
May 7, 1993 | Debian |