NAME¶
xpaset - send data to one or more XPA servers
SYNOPSIS¶
<data> ⎪ xpaset [\-h] [\-i nsinet] [\-m method] [\-n] [\-p] [\-s]
[\-t sval,lval] [\-u users] [\-v] <template⎪host:port> [paramlist]
OPTIONS¶
-h print help message
-i access XPA point on different machine (override XPA_NSINET)
-m override XPA_METHOD environment variable
-n don't wait for the status message after server completes
-p don't read (or send) buf data from stdin
-s enter server mode
-t [s,l] set short and long timeouts (override XPA_[SHORT,LONG]_TIMEOUT)
-u [users] XPA points can be from specified users (override XPA_NSUSERS)
-v verify message to stdout
--version display version and exit
DESCRIPTION¶
Data read from stdin will be sent to access points matching the template or
host:port. A set of qualifying parameters can be appended.
Normally, xpaset reads data input from stdin until EOF and sends those data to
the XPA target, along with parameters entered on the command line. For example
to send a FITS file to the ds9 image display:
cat foo.fits ⎪ xpaset ds9 fits
Sometimes, however, it is desirable to send only parameters to an XPA access
point, without sending data. For such cases, use the \-p switch to indicate
that there is no data being send to stdin. For example, to change the colormap
used by the ds9 image display program, use:
csh> xpaset -p ds9 cmap Heat
Of course, this also can be accomplished by sending EOF to stdin in any of the
usual ways:
csh> echo "" ⎪ xpaset ds9 cmap Heat
csh> xpaget ds9 cmap Heat < /dev/null
csh> xpaset ds9 cmap Heat
^D # Ctl-D signals EOF
The \-s switch puts xpaset into server mode, in which commands and data can be
sent to access points without having to run xpaset multiple times. (Its not
clear if this buys you much!) The syntax for sending commands in server mode
is:
csh> xpaset -s
xpaset ds9 colormap I8
^D
xpaset ds9 regions
circle 200 300 40
circle 300 400 50
^D
etc.
After the required "xpaset" command is specified, optional ASCII data
can be appended (as in the region example). A single data/command set is
delimited by ^D. Note that typing ^D when a command is expected terminates the
program.
NB: server mode only works from the terminal and only ASCII data can be sent in
this way.
Examples -
csh> xpaset ds9 file < foo.fits
csh> echo "stop" ⎪ xpaset myhost:12345
SEE ALSO¶
See
xpa(7) for a list of XPA help pages