Provided by: libxpa-dev_2.1.20-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       XPAServer - The XPA Server-side Programming Interface

SYNOPSIS

       A description of the XPA server-side programming interface.

DESCRIPTION

       Introduction to XPA Server Programming

       Creating an XPA server is easy: you generally only need to call the XPANew() subroutine to
       define a named XPA access point and set up the send and receive callback routines.  You
       then enter an event loop such as XPAMainLoop() to field XPA requests.

         #include <xpa.h>

         XPA XPANew(char *class, char *name, char *help,
             int (*send_callback)(), void *send_data, char *send_mode,
             int (*rec_callback)(),  void *rec_data,  char *rec_mode);

         XPA XPACmdNew(char *class, char *name);

         XPACmd XPACmdAdd(XPA xpa,
                char *name, char *help,
                int (*send_callback)(), void *send_data, char *send_mode,
                int (*rec_callback)(),  void *rec_data,  char *rec_mode);

         void XPACmdDel(XPA xpa, XPACmd cmd);

         XPA XPAInfoNew(char *class, char *name,
             int (*info_callback)(), void *info_data, char *info_mode);

         int XPAFree(XPA xpa);

         void XPAMainLoop(void);

         int XPAPoll(int msec, int maxreq);

         void XPAAtExit(void);

         void XPACleanup(void);

       Introduction

       To use the XPA application programming interface, a software developer generally will
       include the xpa.h definitions file:

         #include <xpa.h>

       in the software module that defines or accesses an XPA access point, and then will link
       against the libxpa.a library:

         gcc -o foo foo.c libxpa.a

       XPA has been compiled using both C and C++ compilers.

       A server program generally defines an XPA access point by calling the XPANew() routine and
       specifies "send" and/or "receive" callback procedures to be executed by the program when
       an external process either sends data or commands to this access point or requests data or
       information from this access point. A program also can define several sub-commands for a
       single access point by calling XPACmdNew() and XPACmdAdd() instead.  Having defined one or
       more public access points in this way, an XPA server program enters its usual event loop
       (or uses the standard XPA event loop).

SEE ALSO

       See xpa(n) for a list of XPA help pages