NAME¶
XPATcl - the XPA Interface to the Tcl/Tk Environment
SYNOPSIS¶
Tcl/Tk programs can act as XPA clients and/or servers using the Tcl interface to
XPA that is contained in the libtclxpa.so shared object.
Server Routines
set xpa [xpanew class name help sproc sdata smode rproc rdata rmode]
xpafree xpa
set xpa [xpanew class name help iproc idata imode]
set xpa [xpacmdnew class name]
xpacmdadd xpa name help sproc sdata smode rproc rdata rmode
xpacmddel xpa cmd
set val [xparec xpa option]
options: name, class, method, cmdfd, datafd, cmdchan, datachan
xpasetbuf xpa buf len
xpaerror xpa message
xpamessage xpa message
Client Routines
set xpa [xpaopen mode]
xpaclose xpa
set got [xpaget xpa template paramlist mode bufs lens names errs n]
set got [xpaget xpa template paramlist mode chans names errs n]
set got [xpaset xpa template paramlist mode buf len names errs n]
set got [xpasetfd xpa template paramlist mode chan names errs n]
set got [xpainfo xpa template paramlist mode names errs n]
# NB: 2.1 calling sequence change
# set got [xpaaccess template type] (2.0.5)
set got [xpaaccess xpa template paramlist mode names errs n]
set got [xpanslookup template type classes names methods]
DESCRIPTION¶
You can call
XPANew(),
XPACmdNew(), or
XPAInfoNew() within
a C routine to add C\-based XPA server callbacks to a TCL/Tk program that uses
a Tcl/Tk event loop (either
vwait() or the Tk event loop); Such a
program does not need or want to use the XPA event loop. Therefore, in order
to add XPA access points to the Tcl/Tk loop, the following routine should be
called beforehand:
int XPATclAddInput(XPA xpa);
Normally, the xpa argument is NULL, meaning that all current XPA access points
are registered with the event loop. However, if a single XPA access point is
to be added (i.e., after the event loop is started) then the handle of that
XPA access point can be passed to this routine.
The significance of the XPA/TCL interface goes beyond the support for using XPA
inside C code. The interface allows you to write XPA servers and to make calls
to the XPA client interface within the Tcl environment using the Tcl language
directly. The XPA/Tcl interface can be loaded using the following package
command:
package require tclxpa 2.0
Alternatively, you can load the shared object (called libtclxpa.so ) directly:
load .../libtclxpa.so tclxpa
Once the tclxpa package is loaded, you can use Tcl versions of XPA routines to
define XPA servers or make client XPA calls. The interface for these routines
is designed to match the Unix XPA interface as nearly as possible. Please
refer to XPA Servers and XPA Clients for general information about these
routines.
The file test.tcl in the XPA source directory gives examples for using the
XPA/Tcl interface.
The following notes describe the minor differences between the interfaces.
XPANew
set xpa [xpanew class name help sproc sdata smode rproc rdata rmode]
rproc and sproc routines are routines. The calling sequence of the rproc routine
is identical to its C counterpart:
proc rec_cb { xpa client_data paramlist buf len } { ... }
The sproc routine, however is slightly different from its C counterpart because
of the difficulty of passing data back from the callback to C:
proc sendcb { xpa client_data paramlist } { ... }
Note that the C\-based server's char **buf and int *len arguments are missing
from the Tcl callback. This is because we did not know how to fill buf with
data and pass it back to the C routines for communication with the client.
Instead, the Tcl server callback uses the following routine to set buf and
len:
xpasetbuf xpa buf len
where:
arg explanation
------ -----------
xpa the first argument of the server callback
buf the data to be returned to the client
len data length in bytes, (if absent, use length of the buf object)
When this routine is called, a copy of buf is saved for transmission to the
client.
The fact that buf is duplicated means that TCL server writers might wish to
perform the I/O directly within the callback, rather than have XPA do it
automatically at the end of the routine. To do this, set:
fillbuf=false
in the xpanew smode and then perform I/O through the Tcl channel obtained from:
set dchan [xparec $xpa datachan]
where:
arg explanation
------ -----------
xpa the first argument of the server callback
datachan literal string "datachan" that returns the data channel
len data length in bytes, (if absent, use length of the buf object)
NB: datachan and cmdchan are not available under Windows. It is necessary to use
the "raw" equivalents: datafd and cmdfd.
The same considerations apply to the rproc for receive servers: a copy of the
incoming data is generated to pass to the receive callback. This copy again
can be avoided by using "fillbuf=false" in the rmode and then
reading the incoming data from datachan.
The send and receive callback routines can use the xpaerror and xpamessage
routines to send errors and messages back to the client. If you also want tcl
itself to field an error condition, use the standard return call:
return ?-code c? ?-errorinfo i? ?-errorcode ec? string
See the Tcl man page for more info.
XPARec
The Tcl xparec procedure supplies server routines with access to information
that is available via macros in the C interface:
set val [xparec xpa <option>]
where option is: name, class, method, cmdfd, datafd, cmdchan, datachan. Note
that two additional identifiers, cmdchan and datachan, have been added to to
provide Tcl channels corresponding to datafd and cmdfd. (These latter might
still be retrieved in Tcl and passed back to a C routines.) An additional
option called "version" can be used to determine the XPA version
used to build the Tcl interface. Note that the standard options require a
valid XPA handle, but "version" does not (since it simply reports
the value of the XPA_VERSION definition in the XPA source include file).
NB: datachan and cmdchan are not available under Windows. It is necessary to use
the "raw" equivalents: datafd and cmdfd.
macro explanation
------ -----------
class class of this xpa
name name of this xpa
method method string (inet or local connect info)
cmdchan Tcl channel of command socket
datachan Tcl channel of data socket
cmdfd fd of command socket
datafd fd of data socket
sendian endian-ness of server ("little" or "big")
cendian endian-ness of client ("little" or "big"
version XPA version used to build this code
Under Windows, the Tcl event handler cannot automatically sense when an XPA
socket is ready for IO (i.e.
Tcl_CreateFileHandler() is not available
under Windows). The Windows Tcl event handler therefore must be awakened
occasionally for check for XPA events. This is done using the standard
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime() call. The time parameter is defined in tclloop.c
and is currently set to 1000 microseconds (1/1000 of a second).
The version option can be used to differentiate between source code versions. It
was created to support legacy Tcl code that needs to maintain the 2.0.5
calling sequence for xpaaccess. You can use a version test such as:
if [catch { xparec "" version } version] {
puts "pre-2.1.0e"
} else {
puts [split $version .]
}
SEE ALSO¶
See
xpa(7) for a list of XPA help pages