xref: /freebsd/usr.bin/rpcgen/rpcgen.1 (revision 6af83ee0d2941d18880b6aaa2b4facd1d30c6106)
1.\" @(#)rpcgen.1 1.35 93/06/02 SMI
2.\" $FreeBSD$
3.\" Copyright 1985-1993 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
4.\"
5.Dd March 28, 1993
6.Dt RPCGEN 1
7.Os
8.Sh NAME
9.Nm rpcgen
10.Nd an RPC protocol compiler
11.Sh SYNOPSIS
12.Nm
13.Ar infile
14.Nm
15.Op Fl a
16.Op Fl b
17.Op Fl C
18.Oo
19.Fl D Ns Ar name Ns Op Ar =value
20.Oc
21.Op Fl i Ar size
22.Op Fl I Fl P Op Fl K Ar seconds
23.Op Fl L
24.Op Fl M
25.Op Fl N
26.Op Fl T
27.Op Fl Y Ar pathname
28.Ar infile
29.Nm
30.Oo
31.Fl c |
32.Fl h |
33.Fl l |
34.Fl m |
35.Fl t |
36.Fl \&Sc |
37.Fl \&Ss |
38.Fl \&Sm
39.Oc
40.Op Fl o Ar outfile
41.Op Ar infile
42.Nm
43.Op Fl s Ar nettype
44.Op Fl o Ar outfile
45.Op Ar infile
46.Nm
47.Op Fl n Ar netid
48.Op Fl o Ar outfile
49.Op Ar infile
50.\" .SH AVAILABILITY
51.\" .LP
52.\" SUNWcsu
53.Sh DESCRIPTION
54The
55.Nm
56utility is a tool that generates C code to implement an
57.Tn RPC
58protocol.
59The input to
60.Nm
61is a language similar to C known as
62.Tn RPC
63Language (Remote Procedure Call Language).
64.Pp
65The
66.Nm
67utility is normally used as in the first synopsis where
68it takes an input file and generates three output files.
69If the
70.Ar infile
71is named
72.Pa proto.x ,
73then
74.Nm
75generates a header in
76.Pa proto.h ,
77XDR routines in
78.Pa proto_xdr.c ,
79server-side stubs in
80.Pa proto_svc.c ,
81and client-side stubs in
82.Pa proto_clnt.c .
83With the
84.Fl T
85option,
86it also generates the
87.Tn RPC
88dispatch table in
89.Pa proto_tbl.i .
90.Pp
91The
92.Nm
93utility can also generate sample client and server files
94that can be customized to suit a particular application.
95The
96.Fl \&Sc ,
97.Fl \&Ss
98and
99.Fl \&Sm
100options generate sample client, server and makefile, respectively.
101The
102.Fl a
103option generates all files, including sample files.
104If the
105.Ar infile
106is
107.Pa proto.x ,
108then the client side sample file is written to
109.Pa proto_client.c ,
110the server side sample file to
111.Pa proto_server.c
112and the sample makefile to
113.Pa makefile.proto .
114.Pp
115If option
116.Fl I
117is set,
118the server created can be started both by the port monitors
119(for example,
120.Xr inetd 8 )
121or by itself.
122When it is started by a port monitor,
123it creates servers only for the transport for which
124the file descriptor
125.Em 0
126was passed.
127The name of the transport may be specified
128by setting up the environment variable
129.Ev NLSPROVIDER .
130When the server generated by
131.Nm
132is executed,
133it creates server handles for all the transports
134specified in
135.Ev NETPATH
136environment variable,
137or if it is unset,
138it creates server handles for all the visible transports from
139.Pa /etc/netconfig
140file.
141Note:
142the transports are chosen at run time and not at compile time.
143When the server is self-started,
144it backgrounds itself by default.
145A special define symbol
146.Em RPC_SVC_FG
147can be used to run the server process in foreground.
148.Pp
149The second synopsis provides special features which allow
150for the creation of more sophisticated
151.Tn RPC
152servers.
153These features include support for user provided
154.Em #defines
155and
156.Tn RPC
157dispatch tables.
158The entries in the
159.Tn RPC
160dispatch table contain:
161.Bl -bullet -offset indent -compact
162.It
163pointers to the service routine corresponding to that procedure,
164.It
165a pointer to the input and output arguments,
166.It
167the size of these routines.
168.El
169A server can use the dispatch table to check authorization
170and then to execute the service routine;
171a client library may use it to deal with the details of storage
172management and XDR data conversion.
173.Pp
174The other three synopses shown above are used when
175one does not want to generate all the output files,
176but only a particular one.
177See the
178.Sx EXAMPLES
179section below for examples of
180.Nm
181usage.
182When
183.Nm
184is executed with the
185.Fl s
186option,
187it creates servers for that particular class of transports.
188When
189executed with the
190.Fl n
191option,
192it creates a server for the transport specified by
193.Ar netid .
194If
195.Ar infile
196is not specified,
197.Nm
198accepts the standard input.
199.Pp
200The C preprocessor,
201.Em cc -E
202is run on the input file before it is actually interpreted by
203.Nm .
204For each type of output file,
205.Nm
206defines a special preprocessor symbol for use by the
207.Nm
208programmer:
209.Bl -tag -width indent
210.It RPC_HDR
211defined when compiling into headers
212.It RPC_XDR
213defined when compiling into XDR routines
214.It RPC_SVC
215defined when compiling into server-side stubs
216.It RPC_CLNT
217defined when compiling into client-side stubs
218.It RPC_TBL
219defined when compiling into RPC dispatch tables
220.El
221.Pp
222Any line beginning with
223.Dq %
224is passed directly into the output file,
225uninterpreted by
226.Nm .
227To specify the path name of the C preprocessor use
228.Fl Y
229flag.
230.Pp
231For every data type referred to in
232.Ar infile ,
233.Nm
234assumes that there exists a
235routine with the string
236.Em xdr_
237prepended to the name of the data type.
238If this routine does not exist in the
239.Tn RPC/XDR
240library, it must be provided.
241Providing an undefined data type
242allows customization of
243.Xr xdr 3
244routines.
245.Sh OPTIONS
246The following options are available:
247.Bl -tag -width indent
248.It Fl a
249Generate all files, including sample files.
250.It Fl b
251Backward compatibility mode.
252Generate transport specific
253.Tn RPC
254code for older versions
255of the operating system.
256.It Fl c
257Compile into
258.Tn XDR
259routines.
260.It Fl C
261Generate header and stub files which can be used with
262.Tn ANSI
263C compilers.
264Headers generated with this flag can also be
265used with C++ programs.
266.It Fl D Ns Ar name
267.It Fl D Ns Ar name=value
268.\".It Fl D Ns Ar name Ns Op Ar =value
269Define a symbol
270.Ar name .
271Equivalent to the
272.Em #define
273directive in the source.
274If no
275.Ar value
276is given,
277.Ar value
278is defined as
279.Em 1 .
280This option may be specified more than once.
281.It Fl h
282Compile into C data-definitions (a header).
283.Fl T
284option can be used in conjunction to produce a
285header which supports
286.Tn RPC
287dispatch tables.
288.It Fl i Ar size
289Size at which to start generating inline code.
290This option is useful for optimization.
291The default size is 5.
292.Pp
293Note: in order to provide backwards compatibility with the older
294.Nm
295on the
296.Fx
297platform, the default is actually 0 (which means
298that inline code generation is disabled by default).
299You must specify
300a non-zero value explicitly to override this default.
301.It Fl I
302Compile support for
303.Xr inetd 8
304in the server side stubs.
305Such servers can be self-started or can be started by
306.Xr inetd 8 .
307When the server is self-started, it backgrounds itself by default.
308A special define symbol
309.Em RPC_SVC_FG
310can be used to run the
311server process in foreground, or the user may simply compile without
312the
313.Fl I
314option.
315.Pp
316If there are no pending client requests, the
317.Xr inetd 8
318servers exit after 120 seconds (default).
319The default can be changed with the
320.Fl K
321option.
322All the error messages for
323.Xr inetd 8
324servers
325are always logged with
326.Xr syslog 3 .
327.Pp
328Note:
329Contrary to some systems, in
330.Fx
331this option is needed to generate
332servers that can be invoked through portmonitors and
333.Xr inetd 8 .
334.Pp
335.It Fl K Ar seconds
336By default, services created using
337.Nm
338and invoked through
339port monitors wait 120 seconds
340after servicing a request before exiting.
341That interval can be changed using the
342.Fl K
343flag.
344To create a server that exits immediately upon servicing a request,
345use
346.Fl K Ar 0 .
347To create a server that never exits, the appropriate argument is
348.Fl k Ar -1 .
349.Pp
350When monitoring for a server,
351some portmonitors
352.Em always
353spawn a new process in response to a service request.
354If it is known that a server will be used with such a monitor, the
355server should exit immediately on completion.
356For such servers,
357.Nm
358should be used with
359.Fl K Ar 0 .
360.It Fl l
361Compile into client-side stubs.
362.It Fl L
363When the servers are started in foreground, use
364.Xr syslog 3
365to log the server errors instead of printing them on the standard
366error.
367.It Fl m
368Compile into server-side stubs,
369but do not generate a
370.Qq main
371routine.
372This option is useful for doing callback-routines
373and for users who need to write their own
374.Qq main
375routine to do initialization.
376.It Fl M
377Generate multithread-safe stubs for passing arguments and results between
378rpcgen generated code and user written code.
379This option is useful
380for users who want to use threads in their code.
381However, the
382.Xr rpc_svc_calls 3
383functions are not yet MT-safe, which means that rpcgen generated server-side
384code will not be MT-safe.
385.It Fl N
386Allow procedures to have multiple arguments.
387It also uses the style of parameter passing that closely resembles C.
388So, when passing an argument to a remote procedure, you do not have to
389pass a pointer to the argument, but can pass the argument itself.
390This behavior is different from the old style of
391.Nm
392generated code.
393To maintain backward compatibility,
394this option is not the default.
395.It Fl n Ar netid
396Compile into server-side stubs for the transport
397specified by
398.Ar netid .
399There should be an entry for
400.Ar netid
401in the
402netconfig database.
403This option may be specified more than once,
404so as to compile a server that serves multiple transports.
405.It Fl o Ar outfile
406Specify the name of the output file.
407If none is specified,
408standard output is used
409.Fl ( c ,
410.Fl h ,
411.Fl l ,
412.Fl m ,
413.Fl n ,
414.Fl s ,
415.Fl \&Sc ,
416.Fl \&Sm ,
417.Fl \&Ss ,
418and
419.Fl t
420modes only).
421.It Fl P
422Compile support for
423port monitors
424in the server side stubs.
425.Pp
426Note:
427Contrary to some systems, in
428.Fx
429this option is needed to generate
430servers that can be monitored.
431.Pp
432If the
433.Fl I
434option has been specified,
435.Fl P
436is turned off automatically.
437.It Fl s Ar nettype
438Compile into server-side stubs for all the
439transports belonging to the class
440.Ar nettype .
441The supported classes are
442.Em netpath ,
443.Em visible ,
444.Em circuit_n ,
445.Em circuit_v ,
446.Em datagram_n ,
447.Em datagram_v ,
448.Em tcp ,
449and
450.Em udp
451(see
452.Xr rpc 3
453for the meanings associated with these classes).
454This option may be specified more than once.
455Note:
456the transports are chosen at run time and not at compile time.
457.It Fl \&Sc
458Generate sample client code that uses remote procedure calls.
459.It Fl \&Sm
460Generate a sample
461.Pa Makefile
462which can be used for compiling the application.
463.It Fl \&Ss
464Generate sample server code that uses remote procedure calls.
465.It Fl t
466Compile into
467.Tn RPC
468dispatch table.
469.It Fl T
470Generate the code to support
471.Tn RPC
472dispatch tables.
473.Pp
474The options
475.Fl c ,
476.Fl h ,
477.Fl l ,
478.Fl m ,
479.Fl s ,
480.Fl \&Sc ,
481.Fl \&Sm ,
482.Fl \&Ss ,
483and
484.Fl t
485are used exclusively to generate a particular type of file,
486while the options
487.Fl D
488and
489.Fl T
490are global and can be used with the other options.
491.It Fl Y Ar pathname
492Give the name of the directory where
493.Nm
494will start looking for the C-preprocessor.
495.El
496.Sh EXAMPLES
497The following example:
498.Dl example% rpcgen -T prot.x
499.Pp
500generates all the five files:
501.Pa prot.h ,
502.Pa prot_clnt.c ,
503.Pa prot_svc.c ,
504.Pa prot_xdr.c
505and
506.Pa prot_tbl.i .
507.Pp
508The following example sends the C data-definitions (header)
509to the standard output.
510.Dl example% rpcgen -h prot.x
511.Pp
512To send the test version of the
513.Fl D Ns Ar TEST ,
514server side stubs for
515all the transport belonging to the class
516.Ar datagram_n
517to standard output, use:
518.Dl example% rpcgen -s datagram_n -DTEST prot.x
519.Pp
520To create the server side stubs for the transport indicated
521by
522.Ar netid
523tcp,
524use:
525.Dl example% rpcgen -n tcp -o prot_svc.c prot.x
526.Sh SEE ALSO
527.Xr cc 1 ,
528.Xr rpc 3 ,
529.Xr rpc_svc_calls 3 ,
530.Xr syslog 3 ,
531.Xr xdr 3 ,
532.Xr inetd 8
533.Rs
534.%T The rpcgen chapter in the NETP manual
535.Re
536