913 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
913 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
.TH 9P 2
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.SH NAME
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Srv,
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chatty9p,
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dirread9p,
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emalloc9p,
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erealloc9p,
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estrdup9p,
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listensrv,
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postmountsrv,
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postsharesrv,
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postsrv,
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readbuf,
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readstr,
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respond,
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responderror,
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srv,
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srvacquire,
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srvforker,
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srvrelease,
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threadlistensrv,
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threadpostmountsrv,
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threadpostsharesrv,
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threadpostsrv,
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threadsrv,
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threadsrvforker,
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auth9p,
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authattach,
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authread,
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authwrite \- 9P file service
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.ft L
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.nf
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#include <u.h>
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#include <libc.h>
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#include <fcall.h>
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#include <thread.h>
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#include <9p.h>
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.fi
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.PP
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.ft L
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.nf
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.ta \w'\fL1234'u +\w'\fLTree* 'u
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typedef struct Srv {
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Tree* tree;
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void (*attach)(Req *r);
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void (*auth)(Req *r);
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void (*open)(Req *r);
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void (*create)(Req *r);
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void (*read)(Req *r);
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void (*write)(Req *r);
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void (*remove)(Req *r);
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void (*flush)(Req *r);
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void (*stat)(Req *r);
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void (*wstat)(Req *r);
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void (*walk)(Req *r);
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char* (*walk1)(Fid *fid, char *name, Qid *qid);
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char* (*clone)(Fid *oldfid, Fid *newfid);
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void (*destroyfid)(Fid *fid);
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void (*destroyreq)(Req *r);
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void (*start)(Srv *s);
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void (*end)(Srv *s);
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void* aux;
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int infd;
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int outfd;
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void (*forker)(void (*fn)(void*), void *arg, int flags);
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} Srv;
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.fi
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.PP
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.nf
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.ft L
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.ta \w'\fLvoid* 'u
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void srv(Srv *s)
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int postsrv(Srv *s, char *name);
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void postmountsrv(Srv *s, char *name, char *mtpt, int flag)
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void postsharesrv(Srv *s, char *name, char *mtpt, char *desc)
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void listensrv(Srv *s, char *addr)
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void threadsrv(Srv *s)
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int threadpostsrv(Srv *s, char *name);
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void threadpostmountsrv(Srv *s, char *name, char *mtpt, int flag)
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void threadpostsharesrv(Srv *s, char *name, char *mtpt, char *desc)
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void threadlistensrv(Srv *s, char *addr)
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void srvforker(void (*fn)(void*), void *arg, int flags)
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void threadsrvforker(void (*fn)(void*), void *arg, int flags)
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void respond(Req *r, char *error)
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void responderror(Req*)
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void readstr(Req *r, char *src)
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void readbuf(Req *r, void *src, long nsrc)
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typedef int Dirgen(int n, Dir *dir, void *aux)
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void dirread9p(Req *r, Dirgen *gen, void *aux)
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void walkandclone(Req *r, char *(*walk1)(Fid *old, char *name, void *v),
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char *(*clone)(Fid *old, Fid *new, void *v), void *v)
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.fi
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.PP
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.nf
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.ft L
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.ta \w'\fLvoid* 'u
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void srvrelease(Srv *s)
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void srvacquire(Srv *s)
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.fi
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.PP
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.fi
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.PP
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.nf
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.ft L
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.ta \w'\fLvoid* 'u
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void* emalloc9p(ulong n)
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void* erealloc9p(void *v, ulong n)
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char* estrdup9p(char *s)
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.fi
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.PP
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.nf
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.ft L
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extern int chatty9p;
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.fi
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.PP
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.nf
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.ft L
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.ta \w'\fLvoid* 'u
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void auth9p(Req *r);
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int authattach(Req *r);
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void authread(Req *r);
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void authwrite(Req *r);
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.fi
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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The function
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.I srv
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and
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.I threadsrv
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serve a 9P session by reading requests from
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.BR s->infd ,
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dispatching them to the function pointers kept in
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.BR Srv ,
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and
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writing the responses to
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.BR s->outfd .
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(Typically,
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.I postmountsrv
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or
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.I threadpostmountsrv
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initializes the
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.B infd
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and
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.B outfd
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structure members. See the description below.)
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.PP
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.B Req
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and
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.B Fid
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structures are allocated one-to-one with uncompleted
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requests and active fids, and are described in
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.IR 9pfid (2).
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.PP
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The behavior of
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.I srv
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depends on whether there is a file tree
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(see
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.IR 9pfile (2))
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associated with the server, that is,
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whether the
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.B tree
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element is nonzero.
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The differences are made explicit in the
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discussion of the service loop below.
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The
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.B aux
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element is the client's, to do with as it pleases.
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.PP
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.I Srv
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does not return until the 9P conversation is finished.
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Since it is usually run in a separate process so that
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the caller can exit, the service loop has little chance
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to return gracefully on out of memory errors.
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It calls
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.IR emalloc9p ,
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.IR erealloc9p ,
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and
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.I estrdup9p
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to obtain its memory.
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The default implementations of these functions
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act as
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.IR malloc ,
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.IR realloc ,
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and
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.I strdup
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but abort the program if they run out of memory.
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If alternate behavior is desired, clients can link against
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alternate implementations of these functions.
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.PP
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The functions
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.I srvforker
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and
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.I threadsrvforker
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handle the creation of new processes on a connection which use
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.I rfork
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(see
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.IR fork (2))
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or
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.I procrfork
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(see
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.IR thread (2)).
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.PP
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.I Postsrv
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and
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.I threadpostsrv
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are wrappers that create a separate process in which to run
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.IR srv .
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They do the following:
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.IP
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Initialize
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.IB s -> infd
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and
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.IB s -> outfd
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to be one end of a freshly allocated pipe.
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.IP
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If
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.B name
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is non-nil, post the other end file descriptor under the name
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.BI /srv/ name .
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.IP
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Initialize
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.IB s -> forker
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to either
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.I srvforker
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or
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.I threadsrvforker
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unless already initialized to a non-nil value.
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.IP
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Fork a child process via
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.IB s -> forker
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using the
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.BR RFPROC ,
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.BR RFNOWAIT ,
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.BR RFNAMEG ,
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.B RFNOTEG
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and
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.B RFMEM
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flags. This isolates the service loop from the callers
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namespace and from notes posted to the callers note group
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but shares data and bss segments.
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.IP
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The child process then waits for the parent to copy its
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file descriptor table via
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.I rfork
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using
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.B RFFDG
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flag. This way, the service loop will share the original
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file descriptor table with previously created child
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processes of the caller.
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.IP
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The child process then closes the other end file descriptor
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and calls
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.IR srv .
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.IP
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The parent process returns from the function with the
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mountable file descriptor
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.IR sfd .
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On error,
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.I postsrv
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and
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.I threadpostsrv
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return a file descriptor of
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.BR -1
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with error string set.
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.PP
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.I Postmountsrv
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and
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.I threadpostmntsrv
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call
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.I postsrv
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with
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.I name
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and then if
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.I mtpt
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is non-nil,
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call
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.BI amount( sfd ,
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.IB mtpt ,
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.IB flag ,
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\fB"")\fR;
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otherwise, close the file descriptor.
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If any error occurs during
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this process, the entire process is terminated by calling
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.I sysfatal
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(see
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.IR perror (2)).
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.PP
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.I Postsharesrv
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is similar to
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.I Postmountsrv
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but instead of mounting the service on a directory, it is
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put in a share (see
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.IR shr (3))
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where
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.IB mtpt
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is the name of the share and
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.IB desc
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is the name of the service channel.
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.PP
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.I Listensrv
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and
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.I threadlistensrv
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create a separate process to announce as
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.IR addr .
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The process listens for incoming connections,
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creating a new process to serve each.
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Using these functions results in
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.I srv
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and the service functions
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being run in multiple processes simultaneously.
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The library locks its own data structures as necessary;
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the client may need to lock data it shares between
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the multiple connections.
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.SS Service functions
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The functions in a
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.B Srv
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structure named after 9P transactions
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are called to satisfy requests as they arrive.
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If a function is provided, it
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.I must
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arrange for
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.I respond
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to be called when the request is satisfied.
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The only parameter of each service function
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is a
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.B Req*
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parameter (say
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.IR r ).
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The incoming request parameters are stored in
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.IB r -> ifcall \fR;
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.IB r -> fid
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and
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.IB r -> newfid
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are pointers to
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.B Fid
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structures corresponding to the
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numeric fids in
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.IB r -> ifcall \fR;
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similarly,
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.IB r -> oldreq
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is the
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.B Req
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structure corresponding to
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.IB r -> ifcall.oldtag \fR.
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The outgoing response data should be stored in
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.IB r -> ofcall \fR.
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The one exception to this rule is that
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.I stat
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should fill in
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.IB r -> d
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rather than
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.IB r -> ofcall.stat \fR:
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the library will convert the structure into the machine-independent
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wire representation.
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Similarly,
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.I wstat
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may consult
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.IB r -> d
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rather than decoding
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.IB r -> ifcall . stat
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itself.
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When a request has been handled,
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.I respond
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should be called with
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.I r
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and an error string.
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If the request was satisfied successfully, the error
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string should be a nil pointer.
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Note that it is permissible for a function to return
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without itself calling
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.IR respond ,
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as long as it has arranged for
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.I respond
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to be called at some point in the future
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by another proc sharing its address space,
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but see the discussion of
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.I flush
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below.
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Once
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.I respond
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has been called, the
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.B Req*
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as well as any pointers it once contained must
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be considered freed and not referenced.
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.PP
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.I Responderror
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calls
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.I respond
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with the system error string
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(see
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.IR errstr (2)).
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.PP
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If the service loop detects an error in a request
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(e.g., an attempt to reuse an extant fid, an open of
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an already open fid, a read from a fid opened for write, etc.)
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it will reply with an error without consulting
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the service functions.
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.PP
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The service loop provided by
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.I srv
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(and indirectly by
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.I postmountsrv
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and
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.IR threadpostmountsrv )
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is single-threaded.
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If it is expected that some requests might
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block, arranging for alternate processes
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to handle them is suggested (see
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.IR 9pqueue (2)).
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.PP
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.I Srvrelease
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temporarily releases the calling process from the server
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loop and if neccesary spawns a new process to handle 9p
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requests. When released, the process can do blocking work
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that would otherwise halt processing of 9p requests.
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.I Srvacquire
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rejoins the calling process with the server loop after
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a srvrelease.
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.PP
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The constraints on the service functions are as follows.
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These constraints are checked while the server executes.
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If a service function fails to do something it ought to have,
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.I srv
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will call
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.I endsrv
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and then abort.
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.TP
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.I Auth
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If authentication is desired,
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the
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.I auth
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function should record that
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.IB r -> afid
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is the new authentication fid and
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set
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.IB r -> afid -> qid
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and
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.IR ofcall.qid .
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.I Auth
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may be nil, in which case it will be treated as having
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responded with the error
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.RI `` "argv0: authentication not required" ,''
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where
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.I argv0
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is the program name variable as set by
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.I ARGBEGIN
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(see
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.IR arg (2)).
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.TP
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.I Attach
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The
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.I attach
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function should check the authentication state of
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.I afid
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if desired,
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and set
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.IB r -> fid -> qid
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and
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.I ofcall.qid
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to the qid of the file system root.
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.I Attach
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may be nil only if file trees are in use;
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in this case, the qid will be filled from the root
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of the tree, and no authentication will be done.
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.TP
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.I Walk
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If file trees are in use,
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.I walk
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is handled internally, and
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.IB srv -> walk
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is never called.
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.IP
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If file trees are not in use,
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.I walk
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should consult
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.IB r -> ifcall . wname
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and
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.IB r -> ifcall . nwname \fR,
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filling in
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.IB ofcall . qid
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and
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.IB ofcall . nqid \fR,
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and also copying any necessary
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.I aux
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state from
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.IB r -> fid
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to
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.IB r -> newfid
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when the two are different.
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As long as
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.I walk
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sets
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.IB ofcall . nqid
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appropriately, it can
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.I respond
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with a nil error string even when 9P
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demands an error
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.RI ( e.g. ,
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|
in the case of a short walk);
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the library detects error conditions and handles them appropriately.
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.IP
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Because implementing the full walk message is intricate and
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prone to error, the helper routine
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.I walkandclone
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will handle the request given pointers to two functions
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.I walk1
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and (optionally)
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.IR clone .
|
|
.IR Clone ,
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if non-nil, is called to signal the creation of
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.I newfid
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|
from
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.IR oldfid .
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|
Typically a
|
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.I clone
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routine will copy or increment a reference count in
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.IR oldfid 's
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.I aux
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element.
|
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.I Walk1
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should walk
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.I fid
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to
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.IR name ,
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initializing
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.IB fid -> qid
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to the new path's qid.
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Both should return nil
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on success or an error message on error.
|
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.I Walkandclone
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will call
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.I respond
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after handling the request.
|
|
.TP
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.I Walk1\fR, \fPClone
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|
If the client provides functions
|
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.IB srv -> walk1
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|
and (optionally)
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.IB srv -> clone \fR,
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the 9P service loop will call
|
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.I walkandclone
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|
with these functions to handle the request.
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|
Unlike the
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.I walk1
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above,
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.IB srv -> walk1
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must fill in both
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.IB fid -> qid
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and
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.BI * qid
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with the new qid on a successful walk.
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.TP
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.I Open
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If file trees are in use, the file
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metadata will be consulted on open, create, remove, and wstat
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to see if the requester has the appropriate permissions.
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If not, an error will be sent back without consulting a service function.
|
|
.IP
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|
If not using file trees or the user has the appropriate permissions,
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.I open
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is called with
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.IB r -> ofcall . qid
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already initialized to the one stored in the
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.B Fid
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structure (that is, the one returned in the previous walk).
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|
If the qid changes, both should be updated.
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|
.TP
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.I Create
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The
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.I create
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function must fill in
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both
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.IB r -> fid -> qid
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and
|
|
.IB r -> ofcall . qid
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|
on success.
|
|
When using file trees,
|
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.I create
|
|
should allocate a new
|
|
.B File
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|
with
|
|
.IR createfile ;
|
|
note that
|
|
.I createfile
|
|
may return nil (because, say, the file already exists).
|
|
If the
|
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.I create
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function is nil,
|
|
.I srv
|
|
behaves as though it were a function that always responded
|
|
with the error ``create prohibited''.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.I Remove
|
|
.I Remove
|
|
should mark the file as removed, whether
|
|
by calling
|
|
.I removefile
|
|
when using file trees, or by updating an internal data structure.
|
|
In general it is not a good idea to clean up the
|
|
.I aux
|
|
information associated with the corresponding
|
|
.B File
|
|
at this time, to avoid memory errors if other
|
|
fids have references to that file.
|
|
Instead, it is suggested that
|
|
.I remove
|
|
simply mark the file as removed (so that further
|
|
operations on it know to fail) and wait until the
|
|
file tree's destroy function is called to reclaim the
|
|
.I aux
|
|
pointer.
|
|
If not using file trees, it is prudent to take the
|
|
analogous measures.
|
|
If
|
|
.I remove
|
|
is not provided, all remove requests will draw
|
|
``remove prohibited'' errors.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.I Read
|
|
The
|
|
.I read
|
|
function must be provided; it fills
|
|
.IB r -> ofcall . data
|
|
with at most
|
|
.IB r -> ifcall . count
|
|
bytes of data from offset
|
|
.IB r -> ifcall . offset
|
|
of the file.
|
|
It also sets
|
|
.IB r -> ofcall . count
|
|
to the number of bytes being returned.
|
|
If using file trees,
|
|
.I srv
|
|
will handle reads of directories internally, only
|
|
calling
|
|
.I read
|
|
for requests on files.
|
|
.I Readstr
|
|
and
|
|
.I readbuf
|
|
are useful for satisfying read requests on a string or buffer.
|
|
Consulting the request in
|
|
.IB r -> ifcall \fR,
|
|
they fill
|
|
.IB r -> ofcall . data
|
|
and set
|
|
.IB r -> ofcall . count \fR;
|
|
they do not call
|
|
.IB respond .
|
|
Similarly,
|
|
.I dirread9p
|
|
can be used to handle directory reads in servers
|
|
not using file trees.
|
|
The passed
|
|
.I gen
|
|
function will be called as necessary to
|
|
fill
|
|
.I dir
|
|
with information for the
|
|
.IR n th
|
|
entry in the directory.
|
|
The string pointers placed in
|
|
.I dir
|
|
should be fresh copies
|
|
made with
|
|
.IR estrdup9p ;
|
|
they will be freed by
|
|
.I dirread9p
|
|
after each successful call to
|
|
.IR gen .
|
|
.I Gen
|
|
should return zero if it successfully filled
|
|
.IR dir ,
|
|
minus one on end of directory.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.I Write
|
|
The
|
|
.I write
|
|
function is similar but need not be provided.
|
|
If it is not, all writes will draw
|
|
``write prohibited'' errors.
|
|
Otherwise,
|
|
.I write
|
|
should attempt to write the
|
|
.IB r -> ifcall . count
|
|
bytes of
|
|
.IB r -> ifcall . data
|
|
to offset
|
|
.IB r -> ifcall . offset
|
|
of the file, setting
|
|
.IB r -> ofcall . count
|
|
to the number of bytes actually written.
|
|
Most programs consider it an error to
|
|
write less than the requested amount.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.I Stat
|
|
.I Stat
|
|
should fill
|
|
.IB r -> d
|
|
with the stat information for
|
|
.IB r -> fid \fR.
|
|
If using file trees,
|
|
.IB r -> d
|
|
will have been initialized with the stat info from
|
|
the tree, and
|
|
.I stat
|
|
itself may be nil.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.I Wstat
|
|
The
|
|
.I wstat
|
|
function consults
|
|
.IB r -> d
|
|
in changing the metadata for
|
|
.IB r -> fid
|
|
as described in
|
|
.IR stat (5).
|
|
When using file trees,
|
|
.I srv
|
|
will take care to check that the request satisfies
|
|
the permissions outlined in
|
|
.IR stat (5).
|
|
Otherwise
|
|
.I wstat
|
|
should take care to enforce permissions
|
|
where appropriate.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.I Flush
|
|
Servers that always call
|
|
.I respond
|
|
before returning from the service functions
|
|
need not provide a
|
|
.I flush
|
|
implementation:
|
|
.I flush
|
|
is only necessary in programs
|
|
that arrange for
|
|
.I respond
|
|
to be called asynchronously.
|
|
.I Flush
|
|
should cause the request
|
|
.IB r -> oldreq
|
|
to be cancelled or hurried along.
|
|
If
|
|
.I oldreq
|
|
is cancelled, this should be signalled by calling
|
|
.I respond
|
|
on
|
|
.I oldreq
|
|
with error string
|
|
.RB ` interrupted '.
|
|
.I Flush
|
|
must respond to
|
|
.I r
|
|
with a nil error string.
|
|
.I Flush
|
|
may respond to
|
|
.I r
|
|
before forcing a response to
|
|
.IB r -> oldreq \fR.
|
|
In this case, the library will delay sending
|
|
the
|
|
.I Rflush
|
|
message until the response to
|
|
.IB r -> oldreq
|
|
has been sent.
|
|
.PD
|
|
.PP
|
|
.IR Destroyfid ,
|
|
.IR destroyreq ,
|
|
.IR start ,
|
|
and
|
|
.I end
|
|
are auxiliary functions, not called in direct response to 9P requests.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.I Destroyfid
|
|
When a
|
|
.BR Fid 's
|
|
reference count drops to zero
|
|
.RI ( i.e.,
|
|
it has been clunked and there are no outstanding
|
|
requests referring to it),
|
|
.I destroyfid
|
|
is called to allow the program to dispose
|
|
of the
|
|
.IB fid -> aux
|
|
pointer.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.I Destroyreq
|
|
Similarly, when a
|
|
.BR Req 's
|
|
reference count drops to zero
|
|
.RI ( i.e. ,
|
|
it has been handled via
|
|
.I respond
|
|
and other outstanding pointers to it have been closed),
|
|
.I destroyreq
|
|
is called to allow the program to dispose of the
|
|
.IB r -> aux
|
|
pointer.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.I Start
|
|
This gets called (from the forked service process)
|
|
prior entering the 9P service loop.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.I End
|
|
Once the 9P service loop has finished
|
|
(end of file been reached on the service pipe
|
|
or a bad message has been read),
|
|
.I end
|
|
is called (if provided) to allow any final cleanup.
|
|
For example, it was used by the Palm Pilot synchronization
|
|
file system (never finished) to gracefully terminate the serial conversation once
|
|
the file system had been unmounted.
|
|
After calling
|
|
.IR end ,
|
|
the service loop (which runs in a separate process
|
|
from its caller) terminates using
|
|
.I _exits
|
|
(see
|
|
.IR exits (2)).
|
|
.PD
|
|
.PP
|
|
.I Auth9p,
|
|
.I authattach,
|
|
.I authwrite,
|
|
and
|
|
.I authread
|
|
are functions to assist in the creation of authenticated
|
|
file servers.
|
|
.I Auth9p
|
|
sets
|
|
.I afid
|
|
to point to
|
|
.B /mnt/factotum/rpc
|
|
then calls
|
|
.I respond.
|
|
It can be used as the
|
|
.I auth
|
|
service function address.
|
|
.I Authattach
|
|
will return 0 if the session has properly
|
|
authenticated or will return -1 and
|
|
call
|
|
.I respond
|
|
with an apropiate error.
|
|
.I Authread
|
|
and
|
|
.I authwrite
|
|
can be called from the
|
|
.I read
|
|
and
|
|
.I write
|
|
service functions respectfully to handle
|
|
calls on the
|
|
.I afid.
|
|
.PP
|
|
If the
|
|
.B chatty9p
|
|
flag is at least one,
|
|
a transcript of the 9P session is printed
|
|
on standard error.
|
|
If the
|
|
.B chatty9p
|
|
flag is greater than one,
|
|
additional unspecified debugging output is generated.
|
|
By convention, servers written using this library
|
|
accept the
|
|
.B -D
|
|
option to increment
|
|
.BR chatty9p .
|
|
.SH EXAMPLES
|
|
.IR Archfs (4),
|
|
.IR cdfs (4),
|
|
.IR nntpfs (4),
|
|
.IR snap (4),
|
|
and
|
|
.B /sys/src/cmd/ramfs.c
|
|
are good examples of simple single-threaded file servers.
|
|
.PP
|
|
In general, the
|
|
.B File
|
|
interface is appropriate for maintaining arbitrary file trees (as in
|
|
.IR ramfs ).
|
|
The
|
|
.B File
|
|
interface is best avoided when the
|
|
tree structure is easily generated as necessary;
|
|
this is true when the tree is highly structured (as in
|
|
.I cdfs
|
|
and
|
|
.IR nntpfs )
|
|
or is maintained elsewhere.
|
|
.SH SOURCE
|
|
.B /sys/src/lib9p
|
|
.SH SEE ALSO
|
|
.IR 9pfid (2),
|
|
.IR 9pfile (2),
|
|
.IR 9pqueue (2),
|
|
.IR srv (3),
|
|
.IR shr (3),
|
|
.IR intro (5)
|
|
.SH BUGS
|
|
The switch to 9P2000 was taken as an opportunity to tidy
|
|
much of the interface; we promise to avoid such gratuitous change
|
|
in the future.
|