shithub: purgatorio

ref: d1540c7f666e3c5d636b48c956b444205b50502d
dir: /man/2/msgio/

View raw version
.TH MSGIO 2
.SH NAME
msgio: getmsg, sendmsg, senderrmsg, getstring, putstring, getbytearray, putbytearray, puterror \- exchange data on delimited and undelimited streams
.SH SYNOPSIS
.EX
include "msgio.m";
msgio := load Msgio Msgio->PATH;

init:         fn();

getmsg:       fn(fd: ref Sys->FD): array of byte;
sendmsg:      fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, buf: array of byte, n: int): int;
senderrmsg:   fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, s: string): int;

getstring:    fn(fd: ref Sys->FD): (string, string);
putstring:    fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, s: string): int;
getbytearray: fn(fd: ref Sys->FD): (array of byte, string);
putbytearray: fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, a: array of byte, n: int): int;
puterror:     fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, s: string): int;
.EE
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B Msgio
provides two complementary sets of functions for the exchange of data over a network
connection that uses a connection-oriented transport protocols.
The connection is represented by a file descriptor
.IR fd .
.PP
.B Init
must be called before any other operation of the module.
.PP
The first set allows arbitrary data, packed into arrays of bytes, to be exchanged
on network connections using protocols such as TCP/IP that do not preserve
record boundaries.
They are used to implement various authentication protocols, including
.IR auth (6).
.PP
Each data message is transmitted with a five-byte header containing a four-character zero-padded decimal count
.I n
terminated by a newline, followed by
.I n
bytes of message data.
An error message has a similar structure, except that the first character
of the count is replaced by an exclamation mark
.RB ( ! );
the message data following
contains the diagnostic string in its UTF-8 encoding (see
.IR utf (6)).
.PP
.B Getmsg
reads the next message from
.I fd
and returns its data content.
.PP
.B Sendmsg
sends the first
.I n
bytes of
.I buf
as a message on
.IR fd ,
and returns
.IR n .
.PP
.B Senderrmsg
sends the error message
.IR s .
.PP
The second set of functions provide
I/O for strings, byte arrays and error strings over network connections that
provide a record structure for communication (as provided for arbitrary
networks by
.IR ssl (3)).
.PP
.B Putstring
writes string
.I s
to
.IR fd.
It returns the number of bytes written, or -1 if an error occurred.
Messages written by
.B putstring
are truncated to 4096 bytes.
.PP
.B Getstring
reads a string as written by
.B putstring
from
.IR fd
and returns a tuple
.RI ( result , error ).
If successful, the error
string is nil.
.PP
.B Putbytearray
writes the array of bytes
.I a
to
.IR fd .
It returns the number of bytes written, or -1 if an error occurred.
Messages written by
.B putbytearray
are truncated to 4096 bytes.
.PP
.B Getbytearray
reads an array of bytes as written by
.B putbytearray
from
.IR fd
and returns a tuple of the form
.RI ( result , error ).
If successful, the error string is nil.
.PP
.B Puterror
writes an error string
.I s
to
.IR fd .
It can be used in place of
.B putstring
or
.B putbytearray
to cause a corresponding
.B getstring
or
.B getbytearray
to fail
(in the receiving process),
forcing them to return the error string
.IR s .
It may not be longer than
.BR Sys->ERRMAX
bytes.
.SH SOURCE
.B /appl/lib/msgio.b
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
The output functions return an
.B int
which is -1 if there was an I/O error,
and a non-negative value otherwise;
they also set the system error string.
.B Getmsg
returns nil if there was an error reading from
.IR fd ;
it sets the system error string to reflect the cause.
It also returns nil
if an error message was received instead of a data message;
the system error string will contain the error message's diagnostic.
The other input functions (for streams with delimiters)
return a tuple that includes a string indicating the cause of the
error, as the second element of the tuple.
.SH BUGS
The module is really intended to retrofit the original Inferno authentication
protocols into a new regime, and is not yet intended for general-purpose use,
hence the irregular naming and calling conventions, inherited from the original implementation in
.BR Keyring .