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NAME
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Mux, muxinit, muxrpc, muxthreads – protocol multiplexor
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SYNOPSIS
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#include <mux.h>
struct Mux
{
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uint mintag;
uint maxtag;
int (*settag)(Mux *mux, void *msg, uint tag);
int (*gettag)(Mux *mux, void *msg);
int (*send)(Mux *mux, void *msg);
void *(*recv)(Mux *mux);
void *(*nbrecv)(Mux *mux);
void *aux;
... /* private fields follow */
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};
void muxinit(Mux *mux);
void* muxrpc(Mux *mux, void *request);
void muxprocs(Mux *mux);
Muxrpc*muxrpcstart(Mux *mux, void *request);
void* muxrpccanfinish(Muxrpc *rpc);
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DESCRIPTION
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Libmux is a generic protocol multiplexor. A client program initializes
a Mux structure with information about the protocol (mainly in
the form of helper functions) and can then use muxrpc to execute
individual RPCs without worrying about details of multiplexing
requests and demultiplexing responses.
Libmux assumes that the protocol messages contain a tag (or message
ID) field that exists for the sole purpose of demultiplexing messages.
Libmux chooses the tags and then calls a helper function to put
them in the outgoing messages. Libmux calls another helper function
to retrieve tags from incoming messages. It also calls helper
functions to
send and receive packets.
A client should allocate a Mux structure and then call muxinit
to initialize the library’s private elements. The client must
initialize the following elements:
mintag, maxtag
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The range of valid tags; maxtag is the maximum valid tag plus
one, so that maxtag–mintag is equal to the number of valid tags.
If libmux runs out of tags (all tags are being used for RPCs currently
in progress), a new call to muxrpc will block until an executing
call finishes.
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settag, gettag
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Set or get the tag value in a message.
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send, recv, nbrecv
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Send or receive protocol messages on the connection. Recv should
block until a message is available and should return nil if the
connection is closed. Nbrecv should not block; it returns nil
if there is no message available to be read. Libmux will arrange
that only one call to recv or nbrecv is active at a time.
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aux An auxiliary pointer for use by the client. Once a client has
initialized the Mux structure, it can call muxrpc to execute RPCs.
The request is the message passed to settag and send. The return
value is the response packet, as provided by recv, or nil if an
error occurred. Muxprocs allocates new procs (see thread(3)) in
which to run send and
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recv. After a call to muxprocs, muxrpc will run send and recv
in these procs instead of in the calling proc. This is useful
if the implementation of either (particularly recv) blocks an
entire proc and there are other threads in the calling proc that
need to remain active.
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Libmux also provides a non-blocking interface, useful for programs
forced to use a select(3)-based main loop. Muxrpcstart runs the
first half of muxrpc: it assigns a tag and sends the request,
but does not wait for the reply. Instead it returns a pointer
to a Muxrpc structure that represents the in-progress call. Muxrpccanfinish
checks whether the given
call can finish. If no mux procs have been started, muxrpccanfinish
may call nbrecv to poll for newly arrived responses.
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EXAMPLE
SOURCE
SEE ALSO
BUGS
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Libmux does not know how to free protocol messages, so message
arriving with unexpected or invalid tags are leaked.
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