32223c1b7d
Mostly on comments.
177 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
177 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
$FreeBSD$
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PLEASE READ THE DISCLAIMER FILE. DO NOT CALL THE SUN MICROSYSTEMS SUPPORT
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LINE WITH QUESTIONS ON THIS RELEASE. THEY CANNOT ANSWER QUESTIONS ABOUT THIS
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UNSUPPORTED SOURCE RELEASE.
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TIRPCSRC 2.3 29 Aug 1994
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This distribution contains SunSoft's implementation of transport-independent
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RPC (TI-RPC), External Data Representation (XDR), and various utilities and
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documentation. These libraries and programs form the base of Open Network
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Computing (ONC), and are derived directly from the Solaris 2.3 source.
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Previous releases of RPC Source based on SunOS 4.x were ported to 4.2BSD and
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used Sockets as the transport interface. These versions were
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transport-specific RPC (TS-RPC).
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TI-RPC is an enhanced version of TS-RPC that requires the UNIX System V
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Transport Layer Interface (TLI) or an equivalent X/Open Transport Interface
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(XTI). TI-RPC is on-the-wire compatible with the TS-RPC, which is supported
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by almost 70 vendors on all major operating systems. TS-RPC source code
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(RPCSRC 4.0) remains available from several internet sites.
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This release is a native source release, that is, it is compatible for
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building on Solaris 2.3. This release was built on Solaris 2.3 using SunPro
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SPARCompiler 2.0.1.
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Solaris 2.3 is based on System V, Release 4 (SVR4), and while this release
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should be mostly compatible with other SVR4 systems, some Solaris facilities
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that are assumed may not be available. In particular, this release uses the
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Makefile format supported by SparcCompiler 2.0.1. Second, the Secure RPC
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routines use the Solaris Name Service Switch to access public-key credential
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databases. This code will need to be ported if your system does not support
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the Name Service Switch. Finally, this release uses the synchronization
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interfaces of UI Threads to make certain interfaces thread-safe. These
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interfaces are found in libthread in Solaris 2.3 and later.
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Applications linked with this release's librpc must link with the United
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States domestic version of libcrypt in order to resolve the cbc_crypt() and
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ecb_crypt() functions. These routines are used with Secure RPC however all
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RPC programs that link with this release's librpc will need to link with the
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domestic libcrypt. Note that the Solaris 2.3 Encryption Kit is only available
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within the United States. (PLEASE NOTE: The RPC implementation found in
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Solaris 2.3's libnsl does *not* have this requirement; linking with libcrypt
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is only a requirement for the TIRPCSRC 2.3 version of librpc.)
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DOCUMENTATION NOTE
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The documentation found in the doc directory are derived from the Solaris 2.3
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Network Interfaces Programming Guide. A small number of compile examples are
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given, and these use libnsl to link in the RPC library. This release builds
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the RPC library as librpc. To use this release's librpc, use the link command
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"-lrpc -lnsl -lcrypt". This links the application with TIRPCSRC 2.3's librpc
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for RPC routines, Solaris's libnsl for other networking functions, and
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libcrypt for the cbc_crypt() and ecb_crypt functions.
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WHY IS THIS RELEASE BEING DONE?
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This release is being distributed to make the Sun implementation of the ONC
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technologies available for reference and porting to non-Solaris platforms.
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The current release is a native source distribution, and provides services
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that are already available on Solaris 2.3 (such as the RPC headers, the RPC
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library in libnsl, rpcbind, rpcinfo, etc.). It is not our intention to
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replace these services. See the DISCLAIMER for further information about the
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legal status of this release.
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WHAT'S NEW IN THIS RELEASE: TIRPCSRC 2.3
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The previous release was TIRPCSRC 2.0.
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1. This release is based on Solaris 2.3. The previous release was
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based on Solaris 2.0. This release contains a significant number of
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bug fixes and other enhancements over TIRPCSRC 2.0.
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2. The RPC library is thread safe for all client-side interfaces
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(clnt_create, clnt_call, etc.). The server-side interfaces
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(svc_create, svc_run, etc.) are not thread safe in this release. The
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server-side interfaces will be made thread safe in the next release of
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TIRPCSRC. Please see the manual pages for details about which
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interfaces are thread safe.
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3. As part of the work to make the RPC library thread-safe, rpcgen has
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been enhanced to generate thread-safe RPC stubs (the -M option). Note
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that this modifies the call-signature for the stub functions; the
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procedure calling the RPC stub must now pass to the stub a pointer to
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an allocated structure where results will be placed by the stub. See
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the rpcgen manual page and the rpcgen Programming Guide for details.
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4. The Remote Asynchronous Calls (RAC) library is now included. RAC was
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first introduced in TIRPCSRC 1.0, and was bundled with librpc. It is
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now a separate library. The asynchronous call model that RAC provides
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can be achieved by using threads for making client-side RPC calls.
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The ONC Technology group recommends using threads (where possible) to
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achieve asynchrony rather than RAC. See the rpc_rac(3n) manual page
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for details.
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ROADMAP
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The directory hierarchy is as follows:
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cmd/ Utilities
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cmd/rpcgen The RPC Language compiler (for .x files)
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cmd/rpcbind The RPC bindery and portmapper
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cmd/rpcinfo RPC bindery query utility
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cmd/keyserv The Secure RPC keyserver
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cmd/demo Some simple ONC demo services
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doc/ Postscript versions of ONC documentation
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head/ Header files
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head/rpcsvc RPCL (.x) specifications for various ONC services, and
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header files.
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lib/ Libraries
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lib/librpc The RPC and XDR library
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lib/librac The Remote Asynchronous Calls (RAC) library
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man/ Manual pages for the RPC library and utilities.
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uts/common/rpc RPC header files
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BUILD INSTRUCTIONS
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Prior to building the release, you must define the SRC environment variable
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to be the path to the top-level Makefile. For example, if /usr/src/tirpcsrc
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is where to top-level Makefile is located, execute this command prior to
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building the release:
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setenv SRC /usr/src/tirpcsrc (csh)
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or
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SRC=/usr/src/tirpcsrc; export SRC (sh)
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The sources in the lib directory depend on header files installed from head
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and uts/common/rpc, and the programs in the cmd directory depend on libraries
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from lib. Therefore, you should do a "make install" to build the release.
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The top-level Makefile builds the release. The "ROOT" macro defines where the
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headers and libraries are installed. The default for ROOT is "/proto". You
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may change this by either modifiying Makefile.master, or issuing the build
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command with a new definition for ROOT:
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make install ROOT=/opt/onc
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You will of course need write privileges for the destination directory.
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The headers, libraries and executables will be built and installed under the
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ROOT.
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The demonstration services in the demo directory are not built by the
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top-level "make install" command. To build these, cd to the cmd/demo
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directory and enter "make". The four services will be built.
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RPCGEN MUST BE INSTALLED in a path that make can find. To run the
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services, rpcbind must be running, then invoke the service
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(you probably will want to put it in the background). rpcinfo can be
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used to check that the service succeeded in getting registered with
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rpcbind, and to ping the service (see rpcinfo's man page). You can
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then use the corresponding client program to exercise the service.
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BUILDING ONC APPLICATIONS
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See the Makefiles in the demonstration services for examples of building
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ONC applications with this release. The $(ROOT)/usr/include directory
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must be included in the compiler header file search path (-I), and the
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$(ROOT)/usr/lib directory must be included in the linker library file search
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path (-L). Also, to run executables built dynamically, the shared library
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search path (LD_LIBRARY_PATH) must also include $(ROOT)/usr/lib. In addition
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to linking in this release's librpc (via -lrpc), you must also link with
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Solaris's libnsl (-lnsl) and the US domestic version of libcrypt (-lcrypt).
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