NAME¶
XPACommon - Getting Common Information About Access Points
SYNOPSIS¶
There are various kinds of generic information you can retrieve about an XPA
access point by using the xpaget command.
DESCRIPTION¶
You can find out which XPA access points have been registered with the currently
running XPA name server by executing the xpaget command to retrieve info from
the XPA name server:
xpaget xpans
If, for example, the stest test server program is running, the following XPA
access points will be returned (the specifics of the returned info will vary
for different machines and users):
XPA xpa gs 838e2f67:1262 eric
XPA xpa1 gs 838e2f67:1266 eric
XPA c_xpa gs 838e2f67:1267 eric
XPA i_xpa i 838e2f67:1268 eric
Note that access to this information is subject to the usual XPA Access Control
restrictions.
Each XPA access point supports a number of reserved sub-commands that provide
access to different kinds of information, e.g. the access control for that
access point. These sub-commands can be executed by using xpaset or xpaget at
the command line, or
XPAGet() or
XPASet() in programs, e.g:
xpaget ds9 -acl
xpaget ds9 -help
xpaget ds9 env FOO
xpaset -p ds9 env FOO foofoo
With the exception of
\-help and
\-version, reserved sub-commands
are available only on the machine on which the XPA server itself is running.
The following reserved sub-commands are defined for all access points:
- •
- \-acl get (set) the access control list [options:
host type acl, for set]
The 'xpaset' option allows you to add a new acl for a given host, or change
the acl for an existing host. See XPA Access Control for more information.
This access point is available only on the server machine.
- •
- \-env get (set) an environment variable [options:
name (value, for set)]
The 'xpaget' option will return the value of the named environment variable.
The 'xpaset' option will set the value of the names variable to the
specified value. This access point is available only on the server
machine. (Please be advised that we have had problems setting environment
variables in static Tcl/Tk programs such as ds9 running under Linux.)
- •
- \-clipboard set(get) information on a named
clipboard
Clients can store ASCII state information on any number of named clipboards.
Clipboards of the same name created by clients on different machines are
kept separate. The syntax for creating a clipboard is:
[data] ⎪ xpaset [server] -clipboard add⎪append [clipboard_name]
xpaset -p [server] -clipboard delete [clipboard_name]
Use "add" to create a new clipboard or replace the contents of an
existing one. Use "append" to append to an existing clipboard.
Information on a named clipboard is retrieved using:
xpaget [server] -clipboard [clipboard_name]
- •
- \-exec set: execute commands from buffer [options:
none]
If \-exec is specified in the paramlist of an 'xpaset' call, then further
sub-commands will be retrieved from the data buffer.
- •
- \-help get: return help string for this XPA or
sub-command [options: name (for sub\-commands)]
Each XPA access point and each XPA sub-command can have a help string
associated with it that is specified when the access point is defined. The
\-help option will return this help string. For XPA access points that
contain user-defined sub\-commands, you can get the help string for a
particular sub-command by specifying its name, or else get the help
strings for all sub-commands if not name is specified.
- •
- \-ltimeout get (set) the long timeout value
[options: seconds⎪reset]
The 'xpaget' option will return the value of the long timeout (in seconds).
The 'xpaset' option will set the value of the long timeout. If
"reset" is specified, then the timeout value will be reset to
the default value.
- •
- \-nsconnect set: re-establish name server connection
to all XPA's [options: none]
If the XPA Name Server (xpans) process has terminated unexpectedly and then
re\-started, this sub-command can be used to re-establish the connection.
You use it by sending the command to the [name:port] or [file] of the
access point instead of to the XPA name (since the latter requires the
xpans connection!):
xpaset -p 838e2f67:1268 -nsconnect
See xpans for more information.
- •
- \-nsdisconnect set: break name server connection to
all XPA's [options: none]
This sub-command will terminate the connection to the XPA Name Server
(xpans), thereby making all access points inaccessible except through
their underlying [name:port] or [file] identifiers. I forget why we added
it, it seems pretty useless.
- •
- \-stimeout get (set) the short timeout value
[options: seconds⎪reset]
The 'xpaget' option will return the value of the short timeout (in seconds).
The 'xpaset' option will set the value of the short timeout. If
"reset" is specified, then the timeout value will be reset to
the default value.
- •
- \-remote set: register xpa with remote server
[options: host[:port] [acl]] [\-proxy]
This sub-command will register the XPA access point with the XPA name server
(xpans) on the specified host (which must already be running). The
specified host also is given access control to the access point, using the
specified acl or the default acl of "+" (meaning the remote host
can xpaset, xpaget, xpainfo or xpaaccess). If the acl is specified as
"-", then the access point is unregistered. See Communication
Between Machines for more information on how this sub-command is
used.
- •
- \-version get: return XPA version string [options:
none]
The version refers to the version of XPA used to define this access point
(currently something like 2.0).
You can add your own reserved commands to all XPA access points by using the
XPACmdAdd() routine, passing the XPA handle returned by
XPA
XPAGetReserved(void) as the first argument. Note again that these will
only be available on the machine where the XPA service is running.
SEE ALSO¶
See
xpa(7) for a list of XPA help pages