NETDIR(3NSL) | Networking Services Library Functions | NETDIR(3NSL) |
cc [ flag... ] file... -lnsl [ library...] #include <netdir.h> int netdir_getbyname(struct netconfig *config, struct nd_hostserv *service, struct nd_addrlist **addrs);
int netdir_getbyaddr(struct netconfig *config, struct nd_hostservlist **service, struct netbuf *netaddr);
void netdir_free(void *ptr, int struct_type);
int netdir_options(struct netconfig *config, int option, int fildes, char *pointer_to_args);
char *taddr2uaddr(struct netconfig *config, struct netbuf *addr);
struct netbuf *uaddr2taddr(struct netconfig *config, char *uaddr);
void netdir_perror(char *s);
char *netdir_sperror(void);
The netdir_getbyname() function maps the machine name and service name in the nd_hostserv structure to a collection of addresses of the type understood by the transport identified in the netconfig structure. This function returns all addresses that are valid for that transport in the nd_addrlist structure. The nd_hostserv structure contains the following members:
char *h_host; /* host name */ char *h_serv; /* service name */
The nd_addrlist structure contains the following members:
int n_cnt; /* number of addresses */ struct netbuf *n_addrs;
The netdir_getbyname() function accepts some special-case host names. The host names are defined in <netdir.h>. The currently defined host names are:
HOST_SELF
HOST_ANY
HOST_SELF_CONNECT
HOST_BROADCAST
All fields of the nd_hostserv structure must be initialized.
To find the address of a given host and service on all available transports, call the netdir_getbyname() function with each struct netconfig structure returned by getnetconfig(3NSL).
The netdir_getbyaddr() function maps addresses to service names. The function returns service, a list of host and service pairs that yield these addresses. If more than one tuple of host and service name is returned, the first tuple contains the preferred host and service names:
struct nd_hostservlist { int *h_cnt; /* number of hostservs found */ struct hostserv *h_hostservs; }
The netdir_free() structure is used to free the structures allocated by the name to address translation functions. The ptr parameter points to the structure that has to be freed. The parameter struct_type identifies the structure:
struct netbuf ND_ADDR struct nd_addrlist ND_ADDRLIST struct hostserv ND_HOSTSERV struct nd_hostservlist ND_HOSTSERVLIST
The netdir_options() function is used to do all transport-specific setups and option management. fildes is the associated file descriptor. option, fildes, and pointer_to_args are passed to the netdir_options() function for the transport specified in config. Currently four values are defined for option:
ND_SET_BROADCAST
ND_SET_RESERVEDPORT
ND_CHECK_RESERVEDPORT
ND_MERGEADDR
The specific actions of each option follow.
ND_SET_BROADCAST
ND_SET_RESERVEDPORT
ND_CHECK_RESERVEDPORT
ND_MERGEADDR
char s_uaddr; /* server's universal address */ char c_uaddr; /* client's universal address */ char m_uaddr; /* the result */
If s_uaddr is an address such as 0.0.0.0.1.12, and the call is successful m_uaddr is set to an address such as 192.11.109.89.1.12. For most transports, m_uaddr is identical to s_uaddr.
If a transport provider does not support an option, netdir_options returns -1 and the error message can be printed through netdir_perror() or netdir_sperror().
The taddr2uaddr() and uaddr2taddr() functions support translation between universal addresses and TLI type netbufs. The taddr2uaddr() function takes a struct netbuf data structure and returns a pointer to a string that contains the universal address. It returns NULL if the conversion is not possible. This is not a fatal condition as some transports do not support a universal address form.
The free() function is used to free the universal address returned by the taddr2uaddr() function.
The uaddr2taddr() function is the reverse of the taddr2uaddr() function. It returns the struct netbuf data structure for the given universal address and NULL on failure.
The netdir_perror() function prints an error message in standard output that states the cause of a name-to-address mapping failure. The error message is preceded by the string given as an argument.
The netdir_sperror() function returns a string with an error message that states the cause of a name-to-address mapping failure.
The netdir_getbyname(), netdir_getbyaddr(), and netdir_options() functions return 0 on success and a non-zero value on failure.
ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
MT-Level | Safe |
February 14, 2015 |