NAME¶
xpaaccess - see if template matches registered XPA access points
SYNOPSIS¶
xpaaccess [\-c] [\-h] [\-i nsinet] [\-m method] [\-n] [\-t sval,lval] [\-u
users] \-v <template> [type]
OPTIONS¶
-c contact each access point individually
-h print help message
-i access XPA point on different machine (override XPA_NSINET)
-m override XPA_METHOD environment variable
-n return number of matches instead of "yes" or "no"
-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 print info about each successful access point
-V print info or error about each access point
--version display version and exit
DESCRIPTION¶
xpaaccess returns "yes" to stdout (with a return error code if 1) if
there are existing XPA access points that match the template (and optional
access type: g,i,s). Otherwise, it returns "no" (with a return error
code of 0). If \-n is specified, the number of matches is returned instead
(both to stdout and in the returned error code). If \-v is specified, each
access point is displayed to stdout instead of the number of matches.
By default, xpaaccess simply contacts the xpans name server to find the list of
registered access points that match the specified template. It also checks to
make sure the specified types are supported by that access point. This is the
fastest way to determine available access points. However, an access point
might registered but not yet available, if, for example, the server program
has not entered its event loop to process XPA requests. To find access points
that are guaranteed to be available for processing, use the \-c (contact)
switch. With this switch, xpaaccess contacts each matching XPA server (rather
than the name server) to make sure the registered access point really is ready
for processing. In this mode, if an access point is registered but not
available, xpaaccess will pause for a period of time equal to the
XPA_LONG_TIMEOUT, in order to give the server a chance to ready itself. By
default, this timeout is 30 seconds. You can shorten the time of delay using
the \-t "short,long" switch. For example, to shorten the delay time
to 2 seconds, use:
xpaaccess -c -t "2,2" ds9
The first argument is the short delay value, and is ignored in this operation.
The second is the long delay timeout.
Note also that the default xpaaccess method (no \-c switch) does not check
access control (acls) but rather only checks whether the access point is both
registered with the xpans name server and provides the specified type of
access. In other words, the default xpaaccess could return 'yes' when you
might not actually have access. This mode also always returns 'yes' for the
xpans name server itself, regardless of whether the name server is active. The
\-c (contact) switch, which contacts the access point directly, can and does
check the access control (only for servers using version 2.1 and above) and
also returns the real status of xpans.
SEE ALSO¶
See
xpa(7) for a list of XPA help pages