Provided by: libipx-dev_10.3~svn296373-10_amd64 bug

NAME

       ipx_addr, ipx_ntoa — IPX address conversion routines

LIBRARY

       IPX Address Conversion Support Library (libipx, -lipx)

SYNOPSIS

       #include <sys/types.h>
       #include <netipx/ipx.h>

       struct ipx_addr
       ipx_addr(const char *cp);

       char *
       ipx_ntoa(struct ipx_addr ipx);

DESCRIPTION

       The  routine  ipx_addr()  interprets  character  strings  representing  IPX  addresses,  returning binary
       information suitable for use in system calls.  The routine ipx_ntoa() takes  IPX  addresses  and  returns
       ASCII strings representing the address in a notation in common use:

             <network number>.<host number>.<port number>

       Trailing  zero fields are suppressed, and each number is printed in hexadecimal, in a format suitable for
       input to ipx_addr().  Any fields lacking super-decimal digits will have a trailing ‘H’ appended.

       An effort has been made to ensure that ipx_addr() be compatible with most formats in common use.  It will
       first separate an address into 1 to 3 fields using a single delimiter chosen from period ‘.’,  colon  ‘:’
       or pound-sign ‘#’.  Each field is then examined for byte separators (colon or period).  If there are byte
       separators,  each subfield separated is taken to be a small hexadecimal number, and the entirety is taken
       as a network-byte-ordered quantity to be zero extended in the high-network-order bytes.  Next, the  field
       is  inspected  for  hyphens,  in  which case the field is assumed to be a number in decimal notation with
       hyphens separating the millennia.  Next, the field is assumed to  be  a  number:  It  is  interpreted  as
       hexadecimal  if  there  is a leading ‘0x’ (as in C), a trailing ‘H’ (as in Mesa), or there are any super-
       decimal digits present.  It is interpreted as octal if there is a leading ‘0’ and  there  are  no  super-
       octal digits.  Otherwise, it is converted as a decimal number.

RETURN VALUES

       None.  (See “BUGS”.)

SEE ALSO

       hosts(5), networks(5)

HISTORY

       The precursor ns_addr() and ns_toa() functions appeared in 4.3BSD.

BUGS

       The  string  returned  by  ipx_ntoa()  resides  in  a static memory area.  The function ipx_addr() should
       diagnose improperly formed input, and there should be an unambiguous way to recognize this.

Debian                                            June 4, 1993                                            IPX(3)