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IPX(3) Library Functions Manual IPX(3)

NAME

ipx_addr, ipx_ntoaIPX address conversion routines

LIBRARY

library “libipx”

SYNOPSIS

#include <sys/types.h>
#include <netipx/ipx.h>

struct ipx_addr
ipx_addr(const char *cp);

char *
ipx_ntoa(struct ipx_addr ipx);

DESCRIPTION

The routine () interprets character strings representing IPX addresses, returning binary information suitable for use in system calls. The routine () takes IPX addresses and returns ASCII strings representing the address in a notation in common use:

<network number>.<host number>.<port number>

Trailing zero fields are suppressed, and each number is printed in hexadecimal, in a format suitable for input to (). Any fields lacking super-decimal digits will have a trailing ‘H’ appended.

An effort has been made to ensure that () be compatible with most formats in common use. It will first separate an address into 1 to 3 fields using a single delimiter chosen from period ‘.’, colon ‘:’ or pound-sign ‘#’. Each field is then examined for byte separators (colon or period). If there are byte separators, each subfield separated is taken to be a small hexadecimal number, and the entirety is taken as a network-byte-ordered quantity to be zero extended in the high-network-order bytes. Next, the field is inspected for hyphens, in which case the field is assumed to be a number in decimal notation with hyphens separating the millennia. Next, the field is assumed to be a number: It is interpreted as hexadecimal if there is a leading ‘0x’ (as in C), a trailing ‘H’ (as in Mesa), or there are any super-decimal digits present. It is interpreted as octal if there is a leading ‘0’ and there are no super-octal digits. Otherwise, it is converted as a decimal number.

RETURN VALUES

None. (See BUGS.)

SEE ALSO

hosts(5), networks(5)

HISTORY

The precursor ns_addr() and ns_toa() functions appeared in 4.3BSD.

BUGS

The string returned by ipx_ntoa() resides in a static memory area. The function ipx_addr() should diagnose improperly formed input, and there should be an unambiguous way to recognize this.

June 4, 1993 Debian