inndcomm(3)


NAME

   inndcomm - INND communication part of InterNetNews library

SYNOPSIS

   #include "inndcomm.h"

   int
   ICCopen()

   int
   ICCclose()

   void
   ICCsettimeout(i)
       int              i;

   int
   ICCcommand(cmd, argv, replyp)
       char             cmd;
       char             *argv[];
       char             **replyp;

   int
   ICCcancel(mesgid)
       char             *mesgid;

   int
   ICCreserve(why)
       char             *why;

   int
   ICCpause(why)
       char             *why;

   int
   ICCgo(why)
       char             *why;

   extern char *ICCfailure;

DESCRIPTION

   The routines described in this manual page are part of the InterNetNews
   library, libinn(3).  They are  used  to  send  commands  to  a  running
   innd(8)  daemon  on the local host.  The letters ``ICC'' stand for Innd
   Control Command.

   ICCopen creates a Unix-domain datagram  socket  and  binds  it  to  the
   server's  control socket.  It returns -1 on failure or zero on success.
   This routine must be called before any other routine.

   ICCclose closes any descriptors that have been created by ICCopen.   It
   returns -1 on failure or zero on success.

   ICCsettimeout  can  be  called  before any of the following routines to
   determine how long the library should wait before giving up on  getting
   the  server's  reply.   This  is done by setting and catching a SIGALRM
   signal(2).  If the timeout is less then zero  then  no  reply  will  be
   waited  for.   The SC_SHUTDOWN, SC_XABORT, and SC_XEXEC commands do not
   get a reply either.  The default, which can be obtained by setting  the
   timeout to zero, is to wait until the server replies.

   ICCcommand  sends  the  command cmd with parameters argv to the server.
   It returns -1 on error.  If the server replies, and replyp is not NULL,
   it  will  be  filled in with an allocated buffer that contains the full
   text of the server's reply.  This buffer is a string  in  the  form  of
   ``<digits><space><text>''  where  ``digits''  is  the text value of the
   recommended exit code; zero indicates  success.   Replies  longer  then
   4000  bytes  will be truncated.  The possible values of cmd are defined
   in the ``inndcomm.h'' header file.  The parameters for each command are
   described  in  ctlinnd(8).   This  routine  returns -1 on communication
   failure, or the exit status sent by the  server  which  will  never  be
   negative.

   ICCcancel  sends  a  ``cancel''  message  to the server.  Mesgid is the
   Message-ID of the article that should be canceled.  The return value is
   the same as for ICCcommand.

   ICCpause,  ICCreserve,  and  ICCgo  send  a  ``pause,'' ``reserve,'' or
   ``go'' command to the server, respectively.   If  ICCreserve  is  used,
   then  the  why  value  used  in the ICCpause invocation must match; the
   value used in the ICCgo invocation must always match that the one  used
   in the ICCpause invocation.  The return value for all three routines is
   the same as for ICCcommand.

   If any routine described above  fails,  the  ICCfailure  variable  will
   identify the system call that failed.

HISTORY

   Written  by  Rich  $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> for InterNetNews.  This is
   revision 1.10, dated 1993/01/29.

SEE ALSO

   ctlinnd(8), innd(8), libinn(3).

                                                               INNDCOMM(3)





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