xenial (7) xpaenv.7.gz

Provided by: libxpa-dev_2.1.17-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       XPAEnv -  Environment Variables for XPA Messaging

SYNOPSIS

       Describes the environment variables which can be used to tailor the overall XPA environment.

DESCRIPTION

       The following environment variables are supported by XPA:

       •   XPA_ACL

           If XPA_ACL is true, then host-based XPA Access Control is turned on and only specified machines can
           access specified access points.  If false, then access control is turned off and any machine can
           access point. The default is turn turn access control on.

       •   XPA_ACLFILE

           If XPA Access Control is turned on, this variable specifies the name of the file containing access
           control information for all access points started by this user.  The default file name is:
           $HOME/acls.xpa.

       •   XPA_CONNECT_TIMEOUT

           When an XPA server first starts up, it immediately tries to connect to the XPA name server program
           (xpans) on the host specified by the XPA_NSINET variable. (If this connection fails on the local
           host, and if xpans can be found in the path, then the name server is started automatically.)
           Unfortunately, a mis-configured network can cause this connect attempt to hang for many seconds while
           the connect() system call times out. Therefore, an alarm is started to interrupt the connect() call
           and prevent a long hang.  The initial value of the alarm timeout is 10 seconds, but can be changed by
           setting this environment variable. If you want to disable the alarm and allow the initial connect()
           to time out, set the value of this variable to 0. Normally, users would not change this variable at
           all.

       •   XPA_CLIENT_DOXPA

           Normally, an XPA client (xpaget, xpaset, etc.) will process incoming XPA server requests while
           awaiting the completion of the client request.  Setting this variable to "false" will prevent XPA
           server requests from being processed by the client.

       •   XPA_DEFACL

           If XPA Access Control is turned on, this variable specifies the default access control condition for
           all access points, if the XPA_ACLFILE file does not exist.  The default acl is: $host:* $host +,
           meaning that all processes on the host machine have full access to all access points.

       •   XPA_HOST

           For the INET socket method, XPA utilizes the canonical hostname (as returned by the gethostname()
           routine) to construct the IP part of the method id. Under some circumstances, this might not be a
           correct choice of name and IP. For example, if an XPA server is started on a machine running VPN, you
           might want to use the VPN name and IP instead of the canonical host name, so that other machines in
           the VPN network can access the server. In this case, you can set the XPA_HOST to be the VPN name (if
           resolvable) or, more easily, the VPN IP.

       •   XPA_IOCALLSXPA

           Setting this variable causes all XPA socket IO calls to process outstanding XPA requests whenever the
           primary socket is not ready for IO. This means that a server making a client call will (recursively)
           process incoming server requests while waiting for client completion.  This inter-IO XPA processing
           avoids a rare XPA Race Condition: two or more XPA servers sending messages to one another using an
           XPA client routine such as XPASet() can deadlock while each waits for the other server to respond.
           This can happen, for example, if the servers call XPAPoll() with a time limit, and send messages in
           between the polling call.

           By default, this option is turned off, because we judge that the added code complication and overhead
           involved will not be justified by the amount of its use.  Moreover, processing XPA requests within
           socket IO can lead to non-intuitive results, since incoming server requests will not necessarily be
           processed to completion in the order in which they are received.

       •   XPA_LOGNAME

           XPA preferentially uses the de facto standard environment variable LOGNAME to determine the username
           when registering an access point in the name server. If this environment variable has been used for
           something other than the actual user name (such as a log file name), unexpected results can ensue. In
           such cases, use the XPA_LOGNAME variable to set the user name. (If neither exists, then
           getpwuid(geteuid()) is used as a last resort).

       •   XPA_LONG_TIMEOUT

           XPA is designed to allow data to be sent from one process to another over a long period of time
           (i.e., a program that generates image data sends that data to an image display, but slowly) but it
           also seeks to prevent hangs. This is done by supporting 2 timeout periods: a short timeout for
           protocol communication and a long for data communication.

           The XPA_LONG_TIMEOUT variable controls the long timeout and is used to prevent hangs in cases where
           communication between the client and server that is not controlled by the XPA interface itself.
           Transfer of data between client and server, or a client's wait for a status message after completion
           of the server callback, are two examples of this sort of communication. By default, the long timeout
           is set to 180 seconds.  Setting the value to \-1 will disable long timeouts and allow an infinite
           amount of time.

       •   XPA_MAXHOSTS

           The maximum number of access points that the programs xpaset, xpaget, and xpainfo will communicate
           with at one time. The default is 64, meaning, for example, that the xpaset program will not send a
           message to more than 100 access points at one time and xpaget will not retrieve from more than 100
           access points at one time.

       •   XPA_METHOD

           Determines the socket connection method used by this session of XPA.  The choices are: inet (to use
           INET or Internet-based sockets), localhost (to use the machines localhost inet socket), or local
           (unix) (to use UNIX sockets). The default is INET.  Using the inet method will allow access from
           other machines (subject to access controls) but using localhost or local will not. Localhost is most
           useful for private access and when the machine in question is not connected to the Internet. The unix
           method also can be used for private access and non-Internet connections (Unix platforms only).

           Once defined, the first registration of an XPA access point will ensure that an instance of the XPA
           Name Server (xpans) is running that handles that connection method. All new access points will use
           the new connection method but existing access points will use the original method.

       •   XPA_NSINET

           For the inet method of socket connection, this variable specifies the host and port on which the XPA
           Name Server (xpans) is listens for new access points. The default is $host:$port, meaning that the
           default XPA port (14285) on the current machine (as returned by gethostname()) is used. If several
           machines were all accessing the same XPA access points, you would use this variable to specify that
           they all use the same name server to find out about these access points.  For example, a value of
           myhost:$port would mean that the xpans name server is running on myhost and uses the default port
           12345.  All machines would then get the XPA access points registered with that name server, subject
           to access controls.

           The port used by xpans to register its XPA access point normally is taken to be one greater than the
           port on which it receives new access points from XPA servers. You can specify a specific access point
           port using the syntax machine:port1,port2, i.e., the access point port is specified after the comma.
           For example, $host:12345,23456 will listen for new access ports on 12345 and will accept XPA commands
           on 23456.

       •   XPA_NSREGISTER

           This boolean variable specifies whether a server registers its XPA access point with the specified
           xpans name server. The default is true.  If set to false, the access point still is set up but it is
           not registered with xpans and therefore cannot be accessed by name. (It can be accessed by method, if
           the latter is known.) Note that an access point can be registered later on (using \-remote or
           \-proxy, for example). This variable mainly is useful in cases where the Internet configuration is
           broken (so that registration causes a DNS hang) but you still wish to and can use the server with a
           remote xpans (e.g., ds9's Virtual Observatory capability).

       •   XPA_NSUNIX

           For the local method of socket connection, this variable specifies the name of the Unix file that
           will be used to access the XPA Name Server (xpans). The default is xpans_unix. This variable is not
           usually needed. Note that is the local socket method is used, then remote machines will not be able
           to access the xpans name server or the registered XPA access points.

       •   XPA_NSUSERS

           This variable specifies whether other users' access points will be returned by the XPA Name Server
           (xpans) for use by xpaget, xpaset, etc.  Generally speaking, it is sufficient to run one xpans name
           server per machine and register the access points for all users with that xpans.  This means, for
           example, that if you request information from ds9 by running:

             xpaget ds9 colormap

           you might get information from your own ds9 as well as from another user running ds9 on the same
           machine.  The XPA_NSUSERS variable controls whether you want such access to the access points of
           other users.  By default, only your own access points are returned, so that, in the example above,
           you would only get the colormap information from the ds9 you registered. If, however, you had set the
           value of the XPA_NSUSERS variable to eric,fred, then you would be able to communicate with both eric
           and fred's access points. Note that this variable can be overridden using the \-u switch on the
           xpaget, xpaset, and xpainfo programs.

       •   XPA_PORT

           A semi-colon delimited list of user specified ports to use for specific XPA access points. The format
           is each specification is:

           class:template port1[ port2]

           where port1 is the main (command) port for the access point and port2 is the (secondary) data port.
           If port2 is not specified, it defaults to a value of 0 (meaning the system assigns the port).

           Specification of specific ports is useful, for example, when a machine outside a firewall needs to
           communicate with a machine inside a firewall. In such a case, the firewall should be configured to
           allow socket connections to both the command and data port from the outside machine, and the inside
           XPA program should be started up with the outside machine in its ACL list. Then, when the inside
           program is started with specified ports, outside XPA programs can use "machine:port" to contact the
           inside access points, instead of the access point names. That is, the machine outside the firewall
           does not need access to the XPA name server:

           export XPA_PORT="DS9:ds9 12345 12346"   # on machine "inside" cat foo.fits | xpaset inside:12345 fits
           # on machine "outside"

           Note that 2 ports are required for full XPA communication and therefore 2 ports should be specified
           to go through a firewall.  The second port assignment is not important if you simply are assigning
           the command port in order to communicate commands with a known port (e.g., to bypass the xpans name
           server). If only one (command) port is specified, the system will negotiate a random data port and
           everything will work properly.

           This support is somewhat experimental. If you run into problems, please let us know.

       •   XPA_PORTFILE

           A list of user-specified port to use for specific xpa access points.  The format of the file is:

           class:template port1 [port2]

           where port1 is the main port for the access point and port2 is the data port. If port2 is not
           specified, it defaults to a value of 0 (meaning the system assigns the port).  See XPA_PORT above for
           an explanation of user-specified ports.

       •   XPA_SHORT_TIMEOUT

           XPA is designed to allow data to be sent from one process to another over a long period of time
           (i.e., a program that generates image data sends that data to an image display, but slowly) but it
           also seeks to prevent hangs. This is done by supporting 2 timeout periods: a short timeout for
           protocol communication and a long for data communication.

           The XPA_SHORT_TIMEOUT variable controls the short timeout and is used to prevent hangs in cases where
           the XPA protocol requires internal communication between the client and server that is controlled by
           the XPA interface itself. Authentication is an example of this sort of communication, as is the
           establishment of a data channel between the two processes.  The default value for the short is 30
           seconds (which is a pretty long time, actually). Setting the value to \-1 will disable short timeouts
           and allow an infinite amount of time.

       •   XPA_SIGUSR1

           If the value of this variable is true, then XPA will catch SIGUSR1 signals when performing an I/O
           operation in order to curtail that operation. This facility allows users to send a SIGUSR1 signal to
           an XPA server if a client is hanging up the server by sending or receiving data too slowly (timeouts
           also can be used -- see above). When enabled in this way, the SIGUSR1 signal is ignored at all other
           times, so that its safe to send the signal at any time.  If the variable is set to false, then
           SIGUSR1 is not used at all. Turning off SIGUSR1 would be desired in cases there the program uses
           SIGUSR1 for some other reason and does not want XPA interfering.  The default is to use the signal.

       •   XPA_TIMESTAMP_ERRORS

           If XPA_TIMESTAMP_ERRORS is true, then error messages will include a date/time string.  This can be
           useful when XPA errors are being saved in an error log (e.g. Web/CGI use). The default is false.

       •   XPA_TMPDIR

           This variable specifies the directory into which XPA logs, Unix socket files (when XPA_METHOD is
           local), etc. are stored. The default is /tmp/.xpa.

       •   XPA_VERBOSITY

           Specify the verbosity level of error messages. If the value is set to 0, false, or off, then no error
           messages are printed to stderr.  If the value is 1, then important XPA error messages will be output.
           If the value is set to 2, XPA warnings about out-of-sync messages will also be output.  These latter
           almost always can be ignored.

       •   XPA_VERSIONCHECK

           Specify whether a new access point should check its major and minor XPA version number against the
           version used by the xpans name server at registration time. The default is true. When checking is
           performed, a warning is issued if the server major version is found to be greater than the xpans
           version. Note that the check is performed both by the XPA server and by the xpans process and
           warnings will be issued by each.  Also, instead of the values of true or false, you can give this
           variable an integer value n. In this case, each version checking process (i.e., the XPA-enabled
           server or xpans) will print out a maximum of n warning messages (after which version warnings are
           silently swallowed).

           In general, it is a bad idea to run an XPA-enabled server program using a version of XPA newer than
           the basic xpaset, xpaget, xpaaccess, xpans programs. This sort of mismatch usually will not work due
           to protocol changes.

SEE ALSO

       See xpa(7) for a list of XPA help pages