Provided by: manpages-dev_3.54-1ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       xdr - library routines for external data representation

SYNOPSIS AND DESCRIPTION

       These  routines  allow  C  programmers  to  describe  arbitrary  data structures in a machine-independent
       fashion.  Data for remote procedure calls are transmitted using these routines.

       The prototypes below are declared in <rpc/xdr.h> and make use of the following types:

           typedef int bool_t;

           typedef bool_t (*xdrproc_ti) (XDR *, void *,...);

       For the declaration of the XDR type, see <rpc/xdr.h>.

       bool_t xdr_array(XDR *xdrs, char **arrp, unsigned int *sizep,
                        unsigned int maxsize, unsigned int elsize,
                        xdrproc_t elproc);

              A filter primitive that translates between variable-length arrays and their corresponding external
              representations.  The argument arrp is the address of the pointer to the array, while sizep is the
              address of the element count of the array; this element count cannot exceed maxsize.  The argument
              elsize  is  the  sizeof  each of the array's elements, and elproc is an XDR filter that translates
              between the array elements' C form, and their external representation.  This routine  returns  one
              if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_bool(XDR *xdrs, bool_t *bp);

              A   filter   primitive   that   translates  between  booleans  (C  integers)  and  their  external
              representations.  When encoding data, this filter produces values of either  one  or  zero.   This
              routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_bytes(XDR *xdrs, char **sp, unsigned int *sizep,
                        unsigned int maxsize);

              A   filter   primitive   that   translates   between  counted  byte  strings  and  their  external
              representations.  The argument sp is the address of the string pointer.  The length of the  string
              is  located  at address sizep; strings cannot be longer than maxsize.  This routine returns one if
              it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_char(XDR *xdrs, char *cp);

              A filter primitive that translates between C characters and their external representations.   This
              routine  returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.  Note: encoded characters are not packed, and
              occupy 4 bytes each.  For  arrays  of  characters,  it  is  worthwhile  to  consider  xdr_bytes(),
              xdr_opaque() or xdr_string().

       void xdr_destroy(XDR *xdrs);

              A  macro  that  invokes  the  destroy  routine  associated with the XDR stream, xdrs.  Destruction
              usually involves freeing private data structures associated with the  stream.   Using  xdrs  after
              invoking xdr_destroy() is undefined.

       bool_t xdr_double(XDR *xdrs, double *dp);

              A  filter  primitive  that  translates  between  C  double  precision  numbers  and their external
              representations.  This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_enum(XDR *xdrs, enum_t *ep);

              A filter primitive that  translates  between  C  enums  (actually  integers)  and  their  external
              representations.  This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_float(XDR *xdrs, float *fp);

              A  filter  primitive  that  translates  between C floats and their external representations.  This
              routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       void xdr_free(xdrproc_t proc, char *objp);

              Generic freeing routine.  The first argument is the XDR routine for the object being  freed.   The
              second  argument  is  a pointer to the object itself.  Note: the pointer passed to this routine is
              not freed, but what it points to is freed (recursively).

       unsigned int xdr_getpos(XDR *xdrs);

              A macro that invokes the get-position routine associated with the XDR stream, xdrs.   The  routine
              returns  an  unsigned  integer,  which indicates the position of the XDR byte stream.  A desirable
              feature of XDR streams is that simple arithmetic works with this number, although the  XDR  stream
              instances need not guarantee this.

       long *xdr_inline(XDR *xdrs, int len);

              A macro that invokes the inline routine associated with the XDR stream, xdrs.  The routine returns
              a pointer to a contiguous piece of the stream's buffer; len is the  byte  length  of  the  desired
              buffer.  Note: pointer is cast to long *.

              Warning:  xdr_inline()  may  return NULL (0) if it cannot allocate a contiguous piece of a buffer.
              Therefore the behavior may vary among stream instances; it exists for the sake of efficiency.

       bool_t xdr_int(XDR *xdrs, int *ip);

              A filter primitive that translates between C integers and their  external  representations.   This
              routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_long(XDR *xdrs, long *lp);

              A  filter  primitive  that  translates between C long integers and their external representations.
              This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       void xdrmem_create(XDR *xdrs, char *addr, unsigned int size,
                          enum xdr_op op);

              This routine initializes the XDR stream object pointed to by xdrs.  The stream's data  is  written
              to, or read from, a chunk of memory at location addr whose length is no more than size bytes long.
              The op determines the direction of the XDR stream (either XDR_ENCODE, XDR_DECODE, or XDR_FREE).

       bool_t xdr_opaque(XDR *xdrs, char *cp, unsigned int cnt);

              A filter primitive that translates between fixed size opaque data and its external representation.
              The  argument  cp is the address of the opaque object, and cnt is its size in bytes.  This routine
              returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_pointer(XDR *xdrs, char **objpp,
                          unsigned int objsize, xdrproc_t xdrobj);

              Like xdr_reference() except that it serializes NULL pointers, whereas  xdr_reference()  does  not.
              Thus, xdr_pointer() can represent recursive data structures, such as binary trees or linked lists.

       void xdrrec_create(XDR *xdrs, unsigned int sendsize,
                          unsigned int recvsize, char *handle,
                          int (*readit) (char *, char *, int),
                          int (*writeit) (char *, char *, int));

              This  routine  initializes the XDR stream object pointed to by xdrs.  The stream's data is written
              to a buffer of size sendsize; a value of zero indicates the system should use a suitable  default.
              The  stream's data is read from a buffer of size recvsize; it too can be set to a suitable default
              by passing a zero value.  When a stream's output buffer is full, writeit  is  called.   Similarly,
              when  a  stream's  input buffer is empty, readit is called.  The behavior of these two routines is
              similar to the system calls read(2) and write(2), except that  handle  is  passed  to  the  former
              routines as the first argument.  Note: the XDR stream's op field must be set by the caller.

              Warning: this XDR stream implements an intermediate record stream.  Therefore there are additional
              bytes in the stream to provide record boundary information.

       bool_t xdrrec_endofrecord(XDR *xdrs, int sendnow);

              This routine can be invoked only on streams created by xdrrec_create().  The data  in  the  output
              buffer is marked as a completed record, and the output buffer is optionally written out if sendnow
              is nonzero.  This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdrrec_eof(XDR *xdrs);

              This routine can be invoked only on streams created by xdrrec_create().  After consuming the  rest
              of  the  current  record  in the stream, this routine returns one if the stream has no more input,
              zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdrrec_skiprecord(XDR *xdrs);

              This routine can be invoked only  on  streams  created  by  xdrrec_create().   It  tells  the  XDR
              implementation  that  the  rest  of  the  current  record  in  the stream's input buffer should be
              discarded.  This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_reference(XDR *xdrs, char **pp, unsigned int size,
                            xdrproc_t proc);

              A primitive that provides pointer chasing within structures.  The argument pp is  the  address  of
              the  pointer;  size  is  the sizeof the structure that *pp points to; and proc is an XDR procedure
              that filters the structure between its C form  and  its  external  representation.   This  routine
              returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

              Warning: this routine does not understand NULL pointers.  Use xdr_pointer() instead.

       xdr_setpos(XDR *xdrs, unsigned int pos);

              A  macro  that invokes the set position routine associated with the XDR stream xdrs.  The argument
              pos is a position value obtained from xdr_getpos().  This routine returns one if  the  XDR  stream
              could be repositioned, and zero otherwise.

              Warning:  it  is  difficult to reposition some types of XDR streams, so this routine may fail with
              one type of stream and succeed with another.

       bool_t xdr_short(XDR *xdrs, short *sp);

              A filter primitive that translates between C short integers and  their  external  representations.
              This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       void xdrstdio_create(XDR *xdrs, FILE *file, enum xdr_op op);

              This routine initializes the XDR stream object pointed to by xdrs.  The XDR stream data is written
              to, or read from, the stdio stream file.  The argument op determines  the  direction  of  the  XDR
              stream (either XDR_ENCODE, XDR_DECODE, or XDR_FREE).

              Warning:  the destroy routine associated with such XDR streams calls fflush(3) on the file stream,
              but never fclose(3).

       bool_t xdr_string(XDR *xdrs, char **sp, unsigned int maxsize);

              A  filter  primitive  that  translates  between  C  strings  and  their   corresponding   external
              representations.   Strings cannot be longer than maxsize.  Note: sp is the address of the string's
              pointer.  This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_u_char(XDR *xdrs, unsigned char *ucp);

              A  filter  primitive  that  translates  between  unsigned  C   characters   and   their   external
              representations.  This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_u_int(XDR *xdrs, unsigned *up);

              A filter primitive that translates between C unsigned integers and their external representations.
              This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_u_long(XDR *xdrs, unsigned long *ulp);

              A  filter  primitive  that  translates  between  C  unsigned  long  integers  and  their  external
              representations.  This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_u_short(XDR *xdrs, unsigned short *usp);

              A  filter  primitive  that  translates  between  C  unsigned  short  integers  and  their external
              representations.  This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_union(XDR *xdrs, int *dscmp, char *unp,
                        struct xdr_discrim *choices,
                        xdrproc_t defaultarm);     /* may equal NULL */

              A filter primitive that translates between a discriminated C union and its corresponding  external
              representation.   It  first  translates  the  discriminant  of  the  union located at dscmp.  This
              discriminant is always an enum_t.  Next the union located at  unp  is  translated.   The  argument
              choices  is a pointer to an array of xdr_discrim() structures.  Each structure contains an ordered
              pair of [value,proc].  If the union's discriminant is equal to the associated value, then the proc
              is  called  to  translate the union.  The end of the xdr_discrim() structure array is denoted by a
              routine of value NULL.  If the discriminant is not found in the choices array, then the defaultarm
              procedure is called (if it is not NULL).  Returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_vector(XDR *xdrs, char *arrp, unsigned int size,
                         unsigned int elsize, xdrproc_t elproc);

              A  filter  primitive  that translates between fixed-length arrays and their corresponding external
              representations.  The argument arrp is the address of the pointer to the array, while size is  the
              element  count  of the array.  The argument elsize is the sizeof each of the array's elements, and
              elproc is an XDR filter that translates between the array elements' C  form,  and  their  external
              representation.  This routine returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

       bool_t xdr_void(void);

              This  routine  always  returns  one.   It  may  be  passed to RPC routines that require a function
              argument, where nothing is to be done.

       bool_t xdr_wrapstring(XDR *xdrs, char **sp);

              A primitive that calls xdr_string(xdrs, sp,MAXUN.UNSIGNED ); where MAXUN.UNSIGNED is  the  maximum
              value  of an unsigned integer.  xdr_wrapstring() is handy because the RPC package passes a maximum
              of two XDR routines as arguments, and xdr_string(), one of the most  frequently  used  primitives,
              requires three.  Returns one if it succeeds, zero otherwise.

SEE ALSO

       rpc(3)

       The following manuals:
              eXternal Data Representation Standard: Protocol Specification
              eXternal Data Representation: Sun Technical Notes
              XDR: External Data Representation Standard, RFC 1014, Sun Microsystems, Inc., USC-ISI.

COLOPHON

       This  page  is  part  of  release 3.54 of the Linux man-pages project.  A description of the project, and
       information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

                                                   2007-12-30                                             XDR(3)