Provided by: tcllib_1.19-dfsg-2_all bug

NAME

       comm - A remote communication facility for Tcl (8.3 and later)

SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  8.3

       package require comm  ?4.6.3?

       ::comm::comm send ?-async? ?-command callback? id cmd ?arg arg ...?

       ::comm::comm self

       ::comm::comm interps

       ::comm::comm connect ?id?

       ::comm::comm new chan ?name value ...?

       ::comm::comm channels

       ::comm::comm config

       ::comm::comm config name

       ::comm::comm config ?name value ...?

       ::comm::comm shutdown id

       ::comm::comm abort

       ::comm::comm destroy

       ::comm::comm hook event ?+? ?script?

       ::comm::comm remoteid

       ::comm::comm_send

       ::comm::comm return_async

       $future return ?-code code? ?value?

       $future configure ?-command ?cmdprefix??

       $future cget -command

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The comm command provides an inter-interpreter remote execution facility much like Tk's send(3tk), except
       that it uses sockets rather than the X server for the communication path.  As a result, comm  works  with
       multiple  interpreters,  works  on  Windows  and  Macintosh systems, and provides control over the remote
       execution path.

       These commands work just like send and winfo interps :

                  ::comm::comm send ?-async? id cmd ?arg arg ...?
                  ::comm::comm interps

       This is all that is really needed to know in order to use comm

   COMMANDS
       The package initializes ::comm::comm as the default chan.

       comm names communication endpoints with an id unique to each machine.  Before sending commands, the id of
       another  interpreter  is  needed.   Unlike  Tk's  send,  comm doesn't implicitly know the id's of all the
       interpreters on the system.  The following four methods make up the basic comm interface.

       ::comm::comm send ?-async? ?-command callback? id cmd ?arg arg ...?
              This invokes the given command in the interpreter named by id.  The command waits for  the  result
              and remote errors are returned unless the -async or -command option is given.  If -async is given,
              send returns immediately and there is no further notification of result.   If  -command  is  used,
              callback  specifies  a  command to invoke when the result is received.  These options are mutually
              exclusive.  The callback will receive arguments in the form -option value, suitable for array set.
              The  options are: -id, the comm id of the interpreter that received the command; -serial, a unique
              serial for each command sent to a particular comm  interpreter;  -chan,  the  comm  channel  name;
              -code,  the  result  code  of  the  command;  -errorcode,  the  errorcode, if any, of the command;
              -errorinfo, the errorinfo, if any, of the command; and -result, the return value of  the  command.
              If  connection  is lost before a reply is received, the callback will be invoked with a connection
              lost message with -code equal to -1.  When -command is used, the command returns the unique serial
              for the command.

       ::comm::comm self
              Returns the id for this channel.

       ::comm::comm interps
              Returns  a  list  of  all  the  remote id's to which this channel is connected.  comm learns a new
              remote id when a command is first issued it, or when a remote id first issues a  command  to  this
              comm channel.  ::comm::comm ids is an alias for this method.

       ::comm::comm connect ?id?
              Whereas  ::comm::comm send will automatically connect to the given id, this forces a connection to
              a remote id without sending a command.  After this, the remote  id  will  appear  in  ::comm::comm
              interps.

   EVAL SEMANTICS
       The  evaluation  semantics  of ::comm::comm send are intended to match Tk's send exactly. This means that
       comm evaluates arguments on the remote side.

       If you find that ::comm::comm send doesn't work for a particular command, try the same  thing  with  Tk's
       send  and  see if the result is different.  If there is a problem, please report it.  For instance, there
       was had one report that this command produced an error.  Note  that  the  equivalent  send  command  also
       produces the same error.

                  % ::comm::comm send id llength {a b c}
                  wrong # args: should be "llength list"
                  % send name llength {a b c}
                  wrong # args: should be "llength list"

       The  eval  hook  (described below) can be used to change from send's double eval semantics to single eval
       semantics.

   MULTIPLE CHANNELS
       More than one comm channel (or listener) can be created in each Tcl interpreter.  This allows flexibility
       to  create full and restricted channels.  For instance, hook scripts are specific to the channel they are
       defined against.

       ::comm::comm new chan ?name value ...?
              This creates a new channel and Tcl command with the given channel name.  This new command controls
              the  new  channel  and  takes all the same arguments as ::comm::comm.  Any remaining arguments are
              passed to the config method.  The fully qualified channel name is returned.

       ::comm::comm channels
              This lists all the channels allocated in this Tcl interpreter.

       The default configuration parameters for a new channel are:

                  "-port 0 -local 1 -listen 0 -silent 0"

       The default channel ::comm::comm is created with:

                  "::comm::comm new ::comm::comm -port 0 -local 1 -listen 1 -silent 0"

   CHANNEL CONFIGURATION
       The config method acts similar  to  fconfigure  in  that  it  sets  or  queries  configuration  variables
       associated with a channel.

       ::comm::comm config

       ::comm::comm config name

       ::comm::comm config ?name value ...?
              When given no arguments, config returns a list of all variables and their value With one argument,
              config returns the value of just that argument.  With an  even  number  of  arguments,  the  given
              variables are set to the given values.

       These configuration variables can be changed (descriptions of them are elsewhere in this manual page):

       -listen ?0|1?

       -local  ?0|1?

       -port   ?port?

       -silent ?0|1?

       -socketcmd ?commandname?

       -interp ?interpreter?

       -events ?eventlist?

       These configuration variables are read only:

       -chan    chan

       -serial  n

       -socket  sockIn

       When config changes the parameters of an existing channel (with the exception of -interp and -events), it
       closes and reopens the listening socket.  An automatically assigned channel  id  will  change  when  this
       happens.   Recycling  the socket is done by invoking ::comm::comm abort, which causes all active sends to
       terminate.

   ID/PORT ASSIGNMENTS
       comm uses a TCP port for endpoint id.  The interps (or ids) method merely lists  all  the  TCP  ports  to
       which  the  channel  is  connected.   By default, each channel's id is randomly assigned by the operating
       system (but usually starts at a low value around 1024 and increases each time a new  socket  is  opened).
       This  behavior  is  accomplished by giving the -port config option a value of 0.  Alternately, a specific
       TCP port number may be provided for a given channel.  As a special case, comm contains code to allocate a
       a  high-numbered  TCP  port  (>10000)  by  using  -port  {}.   Note  that  a channel won't be created and
       initialized unless the specific port can be allocated.

       As a special case, if the channel is configured with -listen 0, then  it  will  not  create  a  listening
       socket  and  will  use  an  id  of  0  for  itself.  Such a channel is only good for outgoing connections
       (although once a connection is established, it can carry send traffic in both  directions).   As  another
       special case, if the channel is configured with -silent 0, then the listening side will ignore connection
       attempts where the protocol negotiation phase failed, instead of throwing an error.

   EXECUTION ENVIRONMENT
       A communication channel in its default configuration will use the current interpreter for  the  execution
       of all received scripts, and of the event scripts associated with the various hooks.

       This insecure setup can be changed by the user via the two options -interp, and -events.

       When  -interp is set all received scripts are executed in the slave interpreter specified as the value of
       the option. This interpreter is expected to exist before configuration. I.e. it is the responsibility  of
       the  user  to create it. However afterward the communication channel takes ownership of this interpreter,
       and will destroy it when the communication channel  is  destroyed.   Note  that  reconfiguration  of  the
       communication  channel  to  either a different interpreter or the empty string will release the ownership
       without destroying the previously configured interpreter.  The empty string has  a  special  meaning,  it
       restores the default behaviour of executing received scripts in the current interpreter.

       Also  of  note  is  that  replies  and callbacks (a special form of reply) are not considered as received
       scripts. They are trusted, part of the internal machinery of comm, and therefore always executed  in  the
       current interpreter.

       Even  if  an  interpreter has been configured as the execution environment for received scripts the event
       scripts associated with the various hooks will by default still be executed in the  current  interpreter.
       To change this use the option -events to declare a list of the events whose scripts should be executed in
       the declared interpreter as well. The contents of this option are ignored if the communication channel is
       configured to execute received scripts in the current interpreter.

   REMOTE INTERPRETERS
       By  default,  each  channel  is  restricted  to accepting connections from the local system.  This can be
       overridden by using the -local 0 configuration option For such channels, the id parameter takes the  form
       { id host }.

       WARNING:  The  host  must  always be specified in the same form (e.g., as either a fully qualified domain
       name, plain hostname or an IP address).

   CLOSING CONNECTIONS
       These methods give control over closing connections:

       ::comm::comm shutdown id
              This closes the connection to id, aborting  all  outstanding  commands  in  progress.   Note  that
              nothing  prevents  the  connection from being immediately reopened by another incoming or outgoing
              command.

       ::comm::comm abort
              This invokes shutdown on all open connections in this comm channel.

       ::comm::comm destroy
              This aborts all connections and then destroys the this comm channel itself, including closing  the
              listening socket.  Special code allows the default ::comm::comm channel to be closed such that the
              ::comm::comm command it is not destroyed.  Doing so closes the listening socket,  preventing  both
              incoming and outgoing commands on the channel.  This sequence reinitializes the default channel:

                  "::comm::comm destroy; ::comm::comm new ::comm::comm"

       When  a  remote  connection  is  lost  (because the remote exited or called shutdown), comm can invoke an
       application callback.  This can be used to cleanup or restart an ancillary process,  for  instance.   See
       the lost callback below.

   CALLBACKS
       This is a mechanism for setting hooks for particular events:

       ::comm::comm hook event ?+? ?script?
              This  uses a syntax similar to Tk's bind command.  Prefixing script with a + causes the new script
              to be appended.  Without this, a new script replaces any existing script.  When invoked without  a
              script, no change is made.  In all cases, the new hook script is returned by the command.

              When  an  event  occurs,  the  script associated with it is evaluated with the listed variables in
              scope and available.  The return code (not the return value) of the script is commonly used decide
              how to further process after the hook.

              Common variables include:

              chan   the name of the comm channel (and command)

              id     the id of the remote in question

              fid    the file id for the socket of the connection

       These are the defined events:

       connecting
              Variables: chan, id

              This  hook  is invoked before making a connection to the remote named in id.  An error return (via
              error) will abort the connection attempt with the error.  Example:

                  % ::comm::comm hook connecting {
                      if {[string match {*[02468]} $id]} {
                          error "Can't connect to even ids"
                      }
                  }
                  % ::comm::comm send 10000 puts ok
                  Connect to remote failed: Can't connect to even ids
                  %

       connected
              Variables: chan, fid, id, host, and port.

              This hook is invoked immediately after making  a  remote  connection  to  id,  allowing  arbitrary
              authentication  over  the  socket  named  by  fid.   An  error  return (via error ) will close the
              connection with the error.  host and port are merely extracted from the id; changing any of  these
              will  have  no  effect  on the connection, however.  It is also possible to substitute and replace
              fid.

       incoming
              Variables: chan, fid, addr, and remport.

              Hook invoked when receiving an incoming connection, allowing arbitrary authentication over  socket
              named  by  fid.   An error return (via error) will close the connection with the error.  Note that
              the peer is named by remport and addr but that the remote id is still unknown.  Example:

                  ::comm::comm hook incoming {
                      if {[string match 127.0.0.1 $addr]} {
                          error "I don't talk to myself"
                      }
                  }

       eval   Variables: chan, id, cmd, and buffer.

              This hook is invoked after collecting a complete script from a remote but  before  evaluating  it.
              This  allows  complete control over the processing of incoming commands.  cmd contains either send
              or async.  buffer holds the script to evaluate.  At the time the hook is called, $chan remoteid is
              identical in value to id.

              By  changing  buffer,  the hook can change the script to be evaluated.  The hook can short circuit
              evaluation and cause a value to be immediately returned by using return result (or, from within  a
              procedure,  return -code return result).  An error return (via error) will return an error result,
              as is if the script caused the error.  Any other return will evaluate  the  script  in  buffer  as
              normal.   For  compatibility  with  3.2,  break and return -code break result is supported, acting
              similarly to return {} and return -code return result.

              Examples:

              [1]    augmenting a command

                         % ::comm::comm send [::comm::comm self] pid
                         5013
                         % ::comm::comm hook eval {puts "going to execute $buffer"}
                         % ::comm::comm send [::comm::comm self] pid
                         going to execute pid
                         5013

              [2]    short circuiting a command

                         % ::comm::comm hook eval {puts "would have executed $buffer"; return 0}
                         % ::comm::comm send [::comm::comm self] pid
                         would have executed pid
                         0

              [3]    Replacing double eval semantics

                         % ::comm::comm send [::comm::comm self] llength {a b c}
                         wrong # args: should be "llength list"
                         % ::comm::comm hook eval {return [uplevel #0 $buffer]}
                         return [uplevel #0 $buffer]
                         % ::comm::comm send [::comm::comm self] llength {a b c}
                         3

              [4]    Using a slave interpreter

                         % interp create foo
                         % ::comm::comm hook eval {return [foo eval $buffer]}
                         % ::comm::comm send [::comm::comm self] set myvar 123
                         123
                         % set myvar
                         can't read "myvar": no such variable
                         % foo eval set myvar
                         123

              [5]    Using a slave interpreter (double eval)

                         % ::comm::comm hook eval {return [eval foo eval $buffer]}

              [6]    Subverting the script to execute

                         % ::comm::comm hook eval {
                             switch -- $buffer {
                                 a {return A-OK}
                                 b {return B-OK}
                                 default {error "$buffer is a no-no"}
                             }
                         }
                         % ::comm::comm send [::comm::comm self] pid
                         pid is a no-no
                         % ::comm::comm send [::comm::comm self] a
                         A-OK

       reply  Variables: chan, id, buffer, ret, and return().

              This hook is invoked after collecting a complete reply script from a remote but before  evaluating
              it.   This  allows  complete  control  over the processing of replies to sent commands.  The reply
              buffer is in one of the following forms

              •      return result

              •      return -code code result

              •      return -code code -errorinfo info -errorcode ecode msg

       For safety reasons, this is decomposed.  The return result is in ret, and the return switches are in  the
       return array:

              •      return(-code)return(-errorinfo)return(-errorcode)

       Any  of  these  may  be  the  empty  string.  Modifying these four variables can change the return value,
       whereas modifying buffer has no effect.

       callback
              Variables: chan, id, buffer, ret, and return().

              Similar to reply, but used for callbacks.

       lost   Variables: chan, id, and reason.

              This hook is invoked when the connection to id  is  lost.   Return  value  (or  thrown  error)  is
              ignored.  reason is an explanatory string indicating why the connection was lost.  Example:

                  ::comm::comm hook lost {
                      global myvar
                      if {$myvar(id) == $id} {
                          myfunc
                          return
                      }
                  }

   UNSUPPORTED
       These interfaces may change or go away in subsequence releases.

       ::comm::comm remoteid
              Returns  the  id  of the sender of the last remote command executed on this channel.  If used by a
              proc being invoked remotely, it must be  called  before  any  events  are  processed.   Otherwise,
              another command may get invoked and change the value.

       ::comm::comm_send
              Invoking  this  procedure  will  substitute  the  Tk  send  and  winfo interps commands with these
              equivalents that use ::comm::comm.

                  proc send {args} {
                      eval ::comm::comm send $args
                  }
                  rename winfo tk_winfo
                  proc winfo {cmd args} {
                      if {![string match in* $cmd]} {
                          return [eval [list tk_winfo $cmd] $args]
                      }
                      return [::comm::comm interps]
                  }

   SECURITY
       Starting with version 4.6 of the package an option -socketcmd is supported, allowing the user of  a  comm
       channel  to specify which command to use when opening a socket. Anything which is API-compatible with the
       builtin ::socket (the default) can be used.

       The envisioned main use is the specification of the tls::socket command, see package tls, to  secure  the
       communication.

                # Load and initialize tls
                package require tls
                tls::init  -cafile /path/to/ca/cert -keyfile ...

                # Create secured comm channel
                ::comm::comm new SECURE -socketcmd tls::socket -listen 1
                ...

       The  sections  Execution  Environment  and  Callbacks  are  also  relevant to the security of the system,
       providing means to restrict the execution to a specific environment, perform  additional  authentication,
       and the like.

   BLOCKING SEMANTICS
       There  is  one  outstanding  difference  between  comm  and  send.  When blocking in a synchronous remote
       command, send uses an internal C hook (Tk_RestrictEvents) to the event  loop  to  look  ahead  for  send-
       related  events  and  only process those without processing any other events.  In contrast, comm uses the
       vwait command as a semaphore to indicate the return message  has  arrived.   The  difference  is  that  a
       synchronous  send  will block the application and prevent all events (including window related ones) from
       being processed, while a synchronous ::comm::comm send will block the application but still  allow  other
       events to get processed.  In particular, after idle handlers will fire immediately when comm blocks.

       What can be done about this?  First, note that this behavior will come from any code using vwait to block
       and wait for an event to occur.  At the cost of multiple channel support, comm could  be  changed  to  do
       blocking  I/O on the socket, giving send-like blocking semantics.  However, multiple channel support is a
       very useful feature of comm that it is deemed too important to lose.  The remaining approaches involve  a
       new  loadable  module written in C (which is somewhat against the philosophy of comm) One way would be to
       create a modified version of the vwait command that allow the event flags passed to Tcl_DoOneEvent to  be
       specified.   For  comm, just the TCL_FILE_EVENTS would be processed.  Another way would be to implement a
       mechanism like Tk_RestrictEvents, but apply it to the Tcl event loop (since  comm  doesn't  require  Tk).
       One of these approaches will be available in a future comm release as an optional component.

   ASYNCHRONOUS RESULT GENERATION
       By default the result returned by a remotely invoked command is the result sent back to the invoker. This
       means that the result is generated synchronously, and the server handling the call  is  blocked  for  the
       duration of the command.

       While  this  is  tolerable  as long as only short-running commands are invoked on the server long-running
       commands, like database queries make this a problem. One command can prevent the processing  requests  of
       all other clients for an arbitrary period of time.

       Before  version  4.5  of  comm the only solution was to rewrite the server command to use the Tcl builtin
       command vwait, or one of its relatives like tkwait, to open a new event  loop  which  processes  requests
       while  the long-running operation is executed. This however has its own perils, as this makes it possible
       to both overflow the Tcl stack with a large number of event loop, and to have a newer requests block  the
       return of older ones, as the eventloop have to be unwound in the order of their creation.

       The proper solution is to have the invoked command indicate to comm that it cannot or will not deliver an
       immediate, synchronous result, but will do so later. At that point the  framework  can  put  sending  the
       actual result on hold and continue processing requests using the main event loop. No blocking, no nesting
       of event loops. At some future date the long running operation delivers  the  result  to  comm,  via  the
       future object, which is then forwarded to the invoker as usual.

       The  necessary support for this solution has been added to comm since version 4.5, in the form of the new
       method return_async.

       ::comm::comm return_async
              This command is used by a remotely invoked script to notify the comm channel which invoked it that
              the  result  to  send  back  to the invoker is not generated synchronously. If this command is not
              called the default/standard behaviour of comm is to send the synchronously generated result of the
              script itself to the invoker.

              The  result  of return_async is an object. This object, called a future is where the result of the
              script has to be delivered to when it becomes ready. When  that  happens  it  will  take  all  the
              necessary  actions  to  deliver  the result to the invoker of the script, and then destroy itself.
              Should comm have lost the connection to the invoker while the result is being computed the  future
              will  not  try to deliver the result it got, but just destroy itself. The future can be configured
              with a command to call when the invoker is lost. This enables the user to implement an early abort
              of the long-running operation, should this be supported by it.

              An example:

              # Procedure invoked by remote clients to run database operations.
              proc select {sql} {
                  # Signal the async generation of the result

                  set future [::comm::comm return_async]

                  # Generate an async db operation and tell it where to deliver the result.

                  set query [db query -command [list $future return] $sql]

                  # Tell the database system which query to cancel if the connection
                  # goes away while it is running.

                  $future configure -command [list db cancel $query]

                  # Note: The above will work without problem only if the async
                  # query will nover run its completion callback immediately, but
                  # only from the eventloop. Because otherwise the future we wish to
                  # configure may already be gone. If that is possible use 'catch'
                  # to prevent the error from propagating.
                  return
              }

       The API of a future object is:

              $future return ?-code code? ?value?
                     Use this method to tell the future that long-running operation has completed. Arguments are
                     an optional return value (defaults to the empty string), and the Tcl return code  (defaults
                     to OK).

                     The  future will deliver this information to invoker, if the connection was not lost in the
                     meantime, and then destroy itself. If the connection  was  lost  it  will  do  nothing  but
                     destroy itself.

              $future configure ?-command ?cmdprefix??

              $future cget -command
                     These  methods  allow the user to retrieve and set a command to be called if the connection
                     the future belongs to has been lost.

   COMPATIBILITY
       comm exports itself as a package.  The package version number is in the form major  .  minor,  where  the
       major  version  will  only change when a non-compatible change happens to the API or protocol.  Minor bug
       fixes and changes will only affect the minor version.  To load comm this command is usually used:

                  package require comm 3

       Note that requiring no version (or a specific version) can also be done.

       The revision history of comm includes these releases:

       4.6.3  Fixed ticket [ced0d60fc9]. Added proper detection of eof on a socket, properly closing it.

       4.6.2  Fixed bugs 2972571 and 3066872, the first a misdetection of quoted brace after  double  backslash,
              the other a blocking gets making for an obvious (hinsight) DoS attack on comm channels.

       4.6.1  Changed  the  implementation of comm::commCollect to emulate lindex's pre-Tcl 8 behaviour, i.e. it
              was given the ability to parse out the first word of a list, even if the whole  buffer  is  not  a
              well-formed  list.  Without this change the first word could only be extracted if the whole buffer
              was a well-formed list (ever since Tcl 8), and in a ver-high-load situation, i.e. a server sending
              lots and/or large commands very fast, this may never happen, eventually crashing the receiver when
              it runs out of memory. With the change the receiver is always able to process the first word  when
              it becomes well-formed, regardless of the structure of the remainder of the buffer.

       4.6    Added the option -socketcmd enabling users to override how a socket is opened. The envisioned main
              use is the specification of the tls::socket command, see package tls, to secure the communication.

       4.5.7  Changed handling of ports already in use to provide a proper error message.

       4.5.6  Bugfix in the replacement for vwait, made robust against of variable names containing spaces.

       4.5.5  Bugfix in the handling of hooks, typo in variable name.

       4.5.4  Bugfix in the handling of the result received by the send method. Replaced  an  after  idle  unset
              result with an immediate unset, with the information saved to a local variable.

              The  after  idle can spill into a forked child process if there is no event loop between its setup
              and the fork. This may bork the child if the next event loop is the vwait of  comm's  send  a  few
              lines  above  the  after  idle, and the child used the same serial number for its next request. In
              that case the parent's after idle unset will delete the very array element the  child  is  waiting
              for,  unlocking  the  vwait,  causing  it  to  access  a now missing array element, instead of the
              expected result.

       4.5.3  Bugfixes in the wrappers for the builtin update and vwait commands.

       4.5.2  Bugfix in the wrapper for the builtin update command.

       4.5.1  Bugfixes in the handling of -interp for regular scripts. The handling of the buffer was wrong  for
              scripts which are a single statement as list. Fixed missing argument to new command commSendReply,
              introduced by version 4.5. Affected debugging.

       4.5    New server-side feature. The command invoked on the server can now switch comm from  the  standard
              synchronous  return  of  its result to an asynchronous (defered) return. Due to the use of snit to
              implement the future objects used by this feature from this version on comm requires at least  Tcl
              8.3 to run. Please read the section Asynchronous Result Generation for more details.

       4.4.1  Bugfix in the execution of hooks.

       4.4    Bugfixes in the handling of -interp for regular and hook scripts. Bugfixes in channel cleanup.

       4.3.1  Introduced  -interp  and  -events  to  enable easy use of a slave interp for execution of received
              scripts, and of event scripts.

       4.3    Bugfixes, and introduces -silent to allow the user to force the server/listening side to  silently
              ignore connection attempts where the protocol negotiation failed.

       4.2    Bugfixes,  and  most  important,  switched  to utf-8 as default encoding for full i18n without any
              problems.

       4.1    Rewrite  of  internal  code  to  remove  old  pseudo-object  model.   Addition  of  send  -command
              asynchronous callback option.

       4.0    Per request by John LoVerso. Improved handling of error for async invoked commands.

       3.7    Moved into tcllib and placed in a proper namespace.

       3.6    A  bug  in  the  looking  up  of  the  remoteid for a executed command could be triggered when the
              connection was closed while several asynchronous sends were queued to be executed.

       3.5    Internal change to how reply messages from a send are handled.  Reply  messages  are  now  decoded
              into  the  value  to  pass to return; a new return statement is then cons'd up to with this value.
              Previously, the return code was passed in from the remote as a command  to  evaluate.   Since  the
              wire  protocol  has not changed, this is still the case.  Instead, the reply handling code decodes
              the reply message.

       3.4    Added more source commentary, as well as documenting config variables in this man page.  Fixed bug
              were  loss  of  connection would give error about a variable named pending rather than the message
              about the lost connection.  comm ids is now an alias for comm interps (previously, it an alias for
              comm  chans).   Since  the method invocation change of 3.0, break and other exceptional conditions
              were not being returned correctly from comm send.  This has been fixed by removing the extra level
              of  indirection  into  the  internal  procedure commSend.  Also added propagation of the errorCode
              variable.  This means that these commands return exactly as they would with send:

                  comm send id break
                  catch {comm send id break}
                  comm send id expr 1 / 0

       Added a new hook for reply messages.  Reworked method invocation to avoid the use of  comm:*  procedures;
       this  also cut the invocation time down by 40%.  Documented comm config (as this manual page still listed
       the defunct comm init!)

       3.3    Some minor bugs were corrected and the documentation was cleaned  up.   Added  some  examples  for
              hooks.  The return semantics of the eval hook were changed.

       3.2    A  new  wire protocol, version 3, was added.  This is backwards compatible with version 2 but adds
              an exchange of supported protocol versions to allow protocol negotiation in the  future.   Several
              bugs with the hook implementation were fixed.  A new section of the man page on blocking semantics
              was added.

       3.1    All the documented hooks were implemented.  commLostHook was removed.   A  bug  in  comm  new  was
              fixed.

       3.0    This  is  a  new  version  of comm with several major changes.  There is a new way of creating the
              methods available under the comm command.  The comm init method has been retired and  is  replaced
              by  comm  configure which allows access to many of the well-defined internal variables.  This also
              generalizes the options available to comm new.  Finally, there is now a protocol version exchanged
              when  a  connection  is  established.   This  will  allow  for  future  on-wire  protocol changes.
              Currently, the protocol version is set to 2.

       2.3    comm ids was renamed to comm channels.  General support for comm hook was fully  implemented,  but
              only  the  lost  hook exists, and it was changed to follow the general hook API.  commLostHook was
              unsupported (replaced by comm hook lost) and commLost was removed.

       2.2    The died hook was renamed lost, to be accessed by commLostHook and an early implementation of comm
              lost hook.  As such, commDied is now commLost.

       2.1    Unsupported method comm remoteid was added.

       2.0    comm  has  been  rewritten  from  scratch  (but  is  fully  compatible  with Comm 1.0, without the
              requirement to use obTcl).

TLS SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS

       This package uses the TLS package to handle the security for https urls and other socket connections.

       Policy decisions like the set of protocols to support and what ciphers to use are not the  responsibility
       of  TLS,  nor  of  this  package  itself  however.   Such  decisions  are the responsibility of whichever
       application is using the package, and are likely influenced by the set of servers  the  application  will
       talk to as well.

       For        example,        in        light        of        the        recent        POODLE        attack
       [http://googleonlinesecurity.blogspot.co.uk/2014/10/this-poodle-bites-exploiting-ssl-30.html]  discovered
       by  Google  many  servers  will  disable  support  for  the  SSLv3  protocol.   To handle this change the
       applications using TLS must be patched, and not this package, nor TLS itself.  Such a  patch  may  be  as
       simple as generally activating tls1 support, as shown in the example below.

                  package require tls
                  tls::init -tls1 1 ;# forcibly activate support for the TLS1 protocol

                  ... your own application code ...

AUTHOR

       John LoVerso, John@LoVerso.Southborough.MA.US

       http://www.opengroup.org/~loverso/tcl-tk/#comm

LICENSE

       Please      see      the      file      comm.LICENSE     that     accompanied     this     source,     or
       http://www.opengroup.org/www/dist_client/caubweb/COPYRIGHT.free.html.

       This license for comm, new as of version 3.2, allows it to be used for free, without any licensing fee or
       royalty.

BUGS

       •      If  there  is  a  failure  initializing  a channel created with ::comm::comm new, then the channel
              should be destroyed.  Currently, it is left in an inconsistent state.

       •      There should be a way to force a channel to quiesce when changing the configuration.

       The following items can be implemented with the existing hooks and are  listed  here  as  a  reminder  to
       provide a sample hook in a future version.

       •      Allow easier use of a slave interp for actual command execution (especially when operating in "not
              local" mode).

       •      Add host list (xhost-like) or "magic cookie" (xauth-like) authentication to initial handshake.

       The following are outstanding todo items.

       •      Add an interp discovery and name->port mapping.  This is likely to  be  in  a  separate,  optional
              nameserver.  (See also the related work, below.)

       •      Fix the {id host} form so as not to be dependent upon canonical hostnames.  This requires fixes to
              Tcl to resolve hostnames!

       This man page is bigger than the source file.

ON USING OLD VERSIONS OF TCL

       Tcl7.5 under Windows contains a bug that causes the interpreter to hang  when  EOF  is  reached  on  non-
       blocking sockets.  This can be triggered with a command such as this:

                  "comm send $other exit"

       Always make sure the channel is quiescent before closing/exiting or use at least Tcl7.6 under Windows.

       Tcl7.6 on the Mac contains several bugs.  It is recommended you use at least Tcl7.6p2.

       Tcl8.0  on  UNIX  contains  a  socket  bug  that  can  crash Tcl.  It is recommended you use Tcl8.0p1 (or
       Tcl7.6p2).

RELATED WORK

       Tcl-DP provides an  RPC-based  remote  execution  interface,  but  is  a  compiled  Tcl  extension.   See
       http://www.cs.cornell.edu/Info/Projects/zeno/Projects/Tcl-DP.html.

       Michael  Doyle  <miked@eolas.com>  has  code  that implements the Tcl-DP RPC interface using standard Tcl
       sockets,      much      like      comm.       The      DpTcl      package      is      available       at
       http://chiselapp.com/user/gwlester/repository/DpTcl.

       Andreas  Kupries  <andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net>  uses comm and has built a simple nameserver as
       part of his Pool library.  See http://www.purl.org/net/akupries/soft/pool/index.htm.

BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

       This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and  other  problems.   Please
       report  such  in the category comm of the Tcllib Trackers [http://core.tcl.tk/tcllib/reportlist].  Please
       also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either package and/or documentation.

       When proposing code changes, please provide unified diffs, i.e the output of diff -u.

       Note further that attachments are strongly preferred over inlined patches. Attachments  can  be  made  by
       going  to the Edit form of the ticket immediately after its creation, and then using the left-most button
       in the secondary navigation bar.

SEE ALSO

       send(3tk)

KEYWORDS

       comm, communication, ipc, message, remote communication, remote execution,  rpc,  secure,  send,  socket,
       ssl, tls

CATEGORY

       Programming tools

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 1995-1998 The Open Group. All Rights Reserved.
       Copyright (c) 2003-2004 ActiveState Corporation.
       Copyright (c) 2006-2009 Andreas Kupries <andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net>