man-pages/rpcgen.1
cvsdist 8f07cacb4e auto-import changelog data from man-pages-1.30-4.src.rpm
Fri Aug 04 2000 Trond Eivind Glomsrød <teg@redhat.com>
- fixed bad header specification (#15364)
- removed obsolete patches from package
- updated the rest
Wed Jul 12 2000 Prospector <bugzilla@redhat.com>
- automatic rebuild
Mon Jun 19 2000 Matt Wilson <msw@redhat.com>
- defattr before docs in filelist
Sat Jun 17 2000 Trond Eivind Glomsrød <teg@redhat.com>
- updated to 1.30
Tue Jun 06 2000 Trond Eivind Glomsrød <teg@redhat.com>
- use %{_tmppath}
Wed May 31 2000 Trond Eivind Glomsrød <teg@redhat.com>
- remove resolv.conf(5) - part of bind-utils
Tue May 30 2000 Trond Eivind Glomsrød <teg@redhat.com>
- Remove resolver, dlclose, dlerror, dlopen, dlsym as these are included in
    other packages.
Tue May 30 2000 Trond Eivind Glomsrød <teg@redhat.com>
- use %{_mandir) instead of /usr/man
- verify and fix bug in mmap man page (#7382)
- verify and fix missing data in recvfrom man page (#1736)
- verify and fix missing data in putw man page (#10104)
- fixed sendfile(2) man page (#5599)
- fixed tzset man page (#11623)
Mon May 15 2000 Trond Eivind Glomsrød <teg@redhat.com>
- updated to 1.29
- split off other languages into separate RPMS
Thu Mar 16 2000 Florian La Roche <Florian.LaRoche@redhat.com>
- do not use group "man"
Fri Mar 03 2000 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- don't apply the netman-cvs man pages anymore, as they seem to be really
    out of date
Sat Feb 05 2000 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- put back man3/resolver.3
Fri Feb 04 2000 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- remove non-man pages (#7814)
Fri Feb 04 2000 Matt Wilson <msw@redhat.com>
- exclude dir.1 and vdir.1 (these are in the fileutils package)
Thu Feb 03 2000 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- version 1.28
Fri Nov 05 1999 Michael K. Johnson <johnsonm@redhat.com>
- Fixed SIGILL, SIGQUIT in signals.7
Wed Oct 06 1999 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- fox man page for getcwd
Wed Sep 22 1999 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- added man pages for set/getcontext
Tue Sep 14 1999 Bill Nottingham <notting@redhat.com>
- remove some bad man pages
Mon Sep 13 1999 Preston Brown <pbrown@redhat.com>
- czech, german, spanish, russian man pages
Thu Sep 09 1999 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- version 1.26
- add french man pages
- add italian man pages
Fri Jul 23 1999 Jeff Johnson <jbj@redhat.com>
- update to 1.25.
Fri Apr 16 1999 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- fiox man page fro ftw
Mon Apr 05 1999 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- spellnig fixse
Tue Mar 30 1999 Bill Nottingham <notting@redhat.com>
- updated to 1.23
Thu Mar 25 1999 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- added kernel net manpages
Mon Mar 22 1999 Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com>
- updated printf man page
- added rpcgen man page
Sun Mar 21 1999 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- auto rebuild in the new build environment (release 6)
Thu Mar 18 1999 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- leave the lilo man pages alone (oops)
Fri Feb 12 1999 Michael Maher <mike@redhat.com>
- fixed bug #413
Mon Jan 18 1999 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- remove lilo man pages too
- got rebuilt for 6.0
Tue Sep 08 1998 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- version 1.21
Sat Jun 20 1998 Jeff Johnson <jbj@redhat.com>
- updated to 1.20
Wed May 06 1998 Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
- get rid of the modutils man pages
- updated to 1.19
Fri Apr 24 1998 Prospector System <bugs@redhat.com>
- translations modified for de, fr, tr
Wed Apr 08 1998 Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com>
- updated to 1.18
Sun Oct 19 1997 Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com>
- updated to 1.17
- moved build root to /var
Thu Jul 31 1997 Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com>
- made a noarch package
2004-09-09 08:14:25 +00:00

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.\" @(#)rpcgen.new.1 1.1 90/11/09 TIRPC 1.0; from 40.10 of 10/10/89
.\" Copyright (c) 1988,1990 Sun Microsystems, Inc. - All Rights Reserved.
.nr X
.if \nX=0 .ds x} rpcgen 1 "" "\&"
.if \nX=1 .ds x} rpcgen 1 ""
.if \nX=2 .ds x} rpcgen 1 "" "\&"
.if \nX=3 .ds x} rpcgen "" "" "\&"
.TH \*(x}
.SH NAME
\f4rpcgen\f1 \- an RPC protocol compiler
.SH SYNOPSIS
.ft 4
.nf
rpcgen \f2infile\f4
.fi
.ft 1
.br
.ft 4
.nf
rpcgen [\-D\f2name\f4[=\f2value\f4]] [\-T] [\-K \f2secs\fP] \f2infile\f4
.fi
.ft 1
.br
.ft 4
.nf
rpcgen \-c|\-h|\-l|\-m|\-t [\-o \f2outfile\f4 ] \f2infile\f4
.fi
.ft 1
.br
.ft 4
.nf
rpcgen [\-I] \-s \f2nettype\f4 [\-o \f2outfile\f4] \f2infile\f4
.fi
.ft 1
.br
.ft 4
.nf
rpcgen \-n \f2netid\f4 [\-o \f2outfile\f4] \f2infile\f4
.ft 1
.SH DESCRIPTION
.P
\f4rpcgen\f1
is a tool that generates C code to implement an RPC protocol.
The input to
\f4rpcgen\f1
is a language similar to C known as
RPC Language (Remote Procedure Call Language).
.P
\f4rpcgen\f1
is normally used as in the first synopsis where
it takes an input file and generates up to four output files.
If the
\f2infile\f1
is named
\f4proto.x\f1,
then
\f4rpcgen\f1
will generate a header file in
\f4proto.h\f1,
XDR routines in
\f4proto_xdr.c\f1,
server-side stubs in
\f4proto_svc.c\f1,
and client-side stubs in
\f4proto_clnt.c\f1.
With the
\f4\-T\f1
option,
it will also generate the RPC dispatch table in
\f4proto_tbl.i\f1.
With the
\f4\-Sc\f1
option,
it will also generate sample code which would illustrate how to use the
remote procedures on the client side. This code would be created in
\f4proto_client.c\f1.
With the
\f4\-Ss\f1
option,
it will also generate a sample server code which would illustrate how to write
the remote procedures. This code would be created in
\f4proto_server.c\f1.
.P
The server created can be started both by the port monitors
(for example, \f4inetd\f1 or \f4listen\f1)
or by itself.
When it is started by a port monitor,
it creates servers only for the transport for which
the file descriptor \f40\fP was passed.
The name of the transport must be specified
by setting up the environmental variable
\f4PM_TRANSPORT\f1.
When the server generated by
\f4rpcgen\f1
is executed,
it creates server handles for all the transports
specified in
\f4NETPATH\f1
environment variable,
or if it is unset,
it creates server handles for all the visible transports from
\f4/etc/netconfig\f1
file.
Note:
the transports are chosen at run time and not at compile time.
When the server is self-started,
it backgrounds itself by default.
A special define symbol
\f4RPC_SVC_FG\f1
can be used to run the server process in foreground.
.P
The second synopsis provides special features which allow
for the creation of more sophisticated RPC servers.
These features include support for user provided
\f4#defines\f1
and RPC dispatch tables.
The entries in the RPC dispatch table contain:
.RS
.PD 0
.TP 3
\(bu
pointers to the service routine corresponding to that procedure,
.TP
\(bu
a pointer to the input and output arguments
.TP
\(bu
the size of these routines
.PD
.RE
A server can use the dispatch table to check authorization
and then to execute the service routine;
a client library may use it to deal with the details of storage
management and XDR data conversion.
.P
The other three synopses shown above are used when
one does not want to generate all the output files,
but only a particular one.
Some examples of their usage is described in the
EXAMPLE
section below.
When
\f4rpcgen\f1
is executed with the
\f4\-s\f1
option,
it creates servers for that particular class of transports.
When
executed with the
\f4\-n\f1
option,
it creates a server for the transport specified by
\f2netid\f1.
If
\f2infile\f1
is not specified,
\f4rpcgen\f1
accepts the standard input.
.P
The C preprocessor,
\f4cc \-E\f1
[see \f4cc\fP(1)],
is run on the input file before it is actually interpreted by
\f4rpcgen\f1.
For each type of output file,
\f4rpcgen\f1
defines a special preprocessor symbol for use by the
\f4rpcgen\f1
programmer:
.P
.PD 0
.TP 12
\f4RPC_HDR\f1
defined when compiling into header files
.TP
\f4RPC_XDR\f1
defined when compiling into XDR routines
.TP
\f4RPC_SVC\f1
defined when compiling into server-side stubs
.TP
\f4RPC_CLNT\f1
defined when compiling into client-side stubs
.TP
\f4RPC_TBL\f1
defined when compiling into RPC dispatch tables
.PD
.P
Any line beginning with
`\f4%\f1'
is passed directly into the output file,
uninterpreted by
\f4rpcgen\f1.
.P
For every data type referred to in
\f2infile\f1,
\f4rpcgen\f1
assumes that there exists a
routine with the string
\f4xdr_\f1
prepended to the name of the data type.
If this routine does not exist in the RPC/XDR
library, it must be provided.
Providing an undefined data type
allows customization of XDR routines.
.br
.ne 10
.P
The following options are available:
.TP
\f4\-a\f1
Generate all the files including sample code for client and server side.
.TP
\f4\-b\f1
This generates code for the SunOS4.1 style of rpc. It is
for backward compatibilty. This is the default.
.TP
\f4\-5\f1
This generates code for the SysVr4 style of rpc. It is used by the
Transport Independent RPC that is in Svr4 systems.
By default rpcgen generates code for SunOS4.1 stype of rpc.
.TP
\f4\-c\f1
Compile into XDR routines.
.TP
\f4\-C\f1
Generate code in ANSI C. This option also generates code that could be
compiled with the C++ compiler. This is the default.
.TP
\f4\-k\f1
Generate code in K&R C. The default is ANSI C.
.TP
\f4\-D\f2name\f4[=\f2value\f4]\f1
Define a symbol
\f2name\f1.
Equivalent to the
\f4#define\f1
directive in the source.
If no
\f2value\f1
is given,
\f2value\f1
is defined as \f41\f1.
This option may be specified more than once.
.TP
\f4\-h\f1
Compile into
\f4C\f1
data-definitions (a header file).
\f4\-T\f1
option can be used in conjunction to produce a
header file which supports RPC dispatch tables.
.TP
\f4\-I\f1
Generate a service that can be started from inetd. The default is
to generate a static service that handles transports selected with \f4\-s\f1.
Using \f4\-I\f1 allows starting a service by either method.
.TP
\f4-K\f2 secs\f1
By default, services created using \f4rpcgen\fP wait \f4120\fP seconds
after servicing a request before exiting.
That interval can be changed using the \f4-K\fP flag.
To create a server that exits immediately upon servicing a request,
\f4-K\ 0\fP can be used.
To create a server that never exits, the appropriate argument is
\f4-K\ -1\fP.
.IP
When monitoring for a server,
some portmonitors, like
\f4listen\fP(1M),
.I always
spawn a new process in response to a service request.
If it is known that a server will be used with such a monitor, the
server should exit immediately on completion.
For such servers, \f4rpcgen\fP should be used with \f4-K\ -1\fP.
.TP
\f4\-l\f1
Compile into client-side stubs.
.TP
\f4\-m\f1
Compile into server-side stubs,
but do not generate a \(lqmain\(rq routine.
This option is useful for doing callback-routines
and for users who need to write their own
\(lqmain\(rq routine to do initialization.
.TP
\f4\-n \f2netid\f1
Compile into server-side stubs for the transport
specified by
\f2netid\f1.
There should be an entry for
\f2netid\f1
in the
netconfig database.
This option may be specified more than once,
so as to compile a server that serves multiple transports.
.TP
\f4\-N\f1
Use the newstyle of rpcgen. This allows procedures to have multiple arguments.
It also uses the style of parameter passing that closely resembles C. So, when
passing an argument to a remote procedure you do not have to pass a pointer to
the argument but the argument itself. This behaviour is different from the oldstyle
of rpcgen generated code. The newstyle is not the default case because of
backward compatibility.
.TP
\f4\-o \f2outfile\f1
Specify the name of the output file.
If none is specified,
standard output is used
(\f4\-c\f1,
\f4\-h\f1,
\f4\-l\f1,
\f4\-m\f1,
\f4\-n\f1,
\f4\-s\f1,
\f4\-s\Sc,
\f4\-s\Ss
and
\f4\-t\f1
modes only).
.TP
\f4\-s \f2nettype\f1
Compile into server-side stubs for all the
transports belonging to the class
\f2nettype\f1.
The supported classes are
\f4netpath\f1,
\f4visible\f1,
\f4circuit_n\f1,
\f4circuit_v\f1,
\f4datagram_n\f1,
\f4datagram_v\f1,
\f4tcp\f1,
and
\f4udp\f1
[see \f4rpc\fP(3N)
for the meanings associated with these classes].
This option may be specified more than once.
Note:
the transports are chosen at run time and not at compile time.
.TP
\f4\-Sc\f1
Generate sample code to show the use of remote procedure and how to bind
to the server before calling the client side stubs generated by rpcgen.
.TP
\f4\-Ss\f1
Generate skeleton code for the remote procedures on the server side. You would need
to fill in the actual code for the remote procedures.
.TP
\f4\-t\f1
Compile into RPC dispatch table.
.TP
\f4\-T\f1
Generate the code to support RPC dispatch tables.
.P
The options
\f4\-c\f1,
\f4\-h\f1,
\f4\-l\f1,
\f4\-m\f1,
\f4\-s\f1
and
\f4\-t\f1
are used exclusively to generate a particular type of file,
while the options
\f4\-D\f1
and
\f4\-T\f1
are global and can be used with the other options.
.br
.ne 5
.SH NOTES
The RPC Language does not support nesting of structures.
As a work-around,
structures can be declared at the top-level,
and their name used inside other structures in
order to achieve the same effect.
.P
Name clashes can occur when using program definitions,
since the apparent scoping does not really apply.
Most of these can be avoided by giving
unique names for programs,
versions,
procedures and types.
.P
The server code generated with
\f4\-n\f1
option refers to the transport indicated by
\f2netid\f1
and hence is very site specific.
.SH EXAMPLE
The following example:
.IP
.ft 4
$ rpcgen \-T prot.x
.ft 1
.P
generates the five files:
\f4prot.h\f1,
\f4prot_clnt.c\f1,
\f4prot_svc.c\f1,
\f4prot_xdr.c\f1
and
\f4prot_tbl.i\f1.
.P
The following example sends the C data-definitions (header file)
to the standard output.
.IP
.ft 4
$ rpcgen \-h prot.x
.ft 1
.P
To send the test version of the
\f4-DTEST\f1,
server side stubs for
all the transport belonging to the class
\f4datagram_n\f1
to standard output, use:
.IP
.ft 4
$ rpcgen \-s datagram_n \-DTEST prot.x
.ft 1
.P
To create the server side stubs for the transport indicated
by
\f2netid\f1
\f4tcp\f1,
use:
.IP
.ft 4
$ rpcgen \-n tcp \-o prot_svc.c prot.x
.ft 1
.SH "SEE ALSO"
\f4cc\fP(1).