PLUMBMSG(2)                                           PLUMBMSG(2)

     NAME
          plumbmsg - plumbing message module

     SYNOPSIS
          include "plumbmsg.m";
          plumbmsg := load Plumbmsg Plumbmsg->PATH;
          Msg: import plumbmsg;

          Msg: adt
          {
              src:    string;
              dst:    string;
              dir:    string;
              kind:   string;
              attr:   string;
              data:   array of byte;
              # used by applications
              send:   fn(msg: self ref Msg): int;
              recv:   fn(): ref Msg;
              # used by plumb and send, recv
              pack:   fn(msg: self ref Msg): array of byte;
              unpack: fn(b: array of byte): ref Msg;
          };

          Attr: adt
          {
              name: string;
              val:  string;
          };

          init:         fn(willsend: int, rcvport: string, maxdata: int): int;
          shutdown:     fn();
          string2attrs: fn(s: string): list of ref Attr;
          attrs2string: fn(l: list of ref Attr): string;
          lookup:       fn(attrs: list of ref Attr, name: string): (int, string);

     DESCRIPTION
          Plumbmsg is an interface for message-passing between appli-
          cations via the plumber(8). It allows applications to
          receive messages from the plumber on a logical input port,
          and send messages to other applications via the plumber.

          Init must be called once when the application starts, to set
          up its plumbing connections.  Applications can choose to
          send messages, receive them, or do both.  Note that the
          plumber must be running before any of these functions are
          useful.  Normally, that is done by the window system's ini-
          tialisation procedure, but in specialised systems, plumbing
          can be used for attribute-oriented communication even with-
          out a window system.

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     PLUMBMSG(2)                                           PLUMBMSG(2)

          If the application will be sending messages via the plumber,
          the value willsend must be non-zero, and init will open an
          appropriate channel to the plumber; if the application will
          not send messages, the value should be zero.

          If the application is prepared to receive messages, the
          parameter rcvport names its logical input port, which must
          also be known to the plumber (ie, it must be named as a pos-
          sible destination in plumbing(6)); init will open an appro-
          priate channel to receive messages from the plumber.  The
          parameter maxdata gives the size in bytes of the largest
          message the application is prepared to receive.  Applica-
          tions that only send messages set rcvport to nil.

          Init returns returns -1 if for any reason either connection
          cannot be set up correctly, in particular if the plumber is
          not running or the input port is unknown.  Otherwise it
          returns a non-negative value.

          The following program fragment establishes input and output
          plumbing for an application `edit':

               plumbed := 0;
               plumbmsg = load Plumbmsg Plumbmsg->PATH;
               if(plumbmsg->init(1, "edit", 1000) >= 0)
                    plumbed = 1;

          The variable plumbed is set to allow the application to dis-
          able its plumbing user interface (and not attempt to send
          messages) if initialisation fails.

          The Msg adt encapsulates the message data routed between
          applications and provides member functions to send and
          receive them.  Its components are used as follows:

          src     The name of the program generating the message.

          dst     The output port to which the plumber should route
                  the message.  In practice, destination is often left
                  empty, and the destination port will be determined
                  by the plumber applying the automatic routing rules
                  (cf.  plumbing(6))

          dir     The directory in which to interpret the data (eg, if
                  the data is a local file name).

          kind    The format of the data.  Currently, `text' is the
                  only type that applications understand, but the
                  plumbing system can route any kind of data.

          attr    A string containing name=value pairs (eg, click=7),

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     PLUMBMSG(2)                                           PLUMBMSG(2)

                  separated by tabs.  Normally the value should be
                  created using attrs2string and parsed using
                  string2attrs, described below.

          data    The message to be conveyed.  If kind is text, and
                  the message is a string s, data will be `array of
                  byte s' (ie, its UTF encoding).

          Plumbing messages are created directly using Limbo's ref
          operator, giving the desired value to each field.  For exam-
          ple:

                    msg := ref Msg(
                         "WmSh",
                         "",
                         workdir->init(),
                         "text",
                         attr,
                         array of byte text);

          The plumbing messages are exchanged with the plumber using
          two member functions:

          m.send(msg)
               Writes a plumbing message to the plumber.  It returns
               the number of bytes written (the result of write in
               sys-read(2) which does the writing).  It returns -1 if
               the plumber cannot route the message.

          Msg.recv()
               Reads a plumbing message from the file representing the
               application's input port, previously opened by init.
               It waits for a message, and returns a reference to a
               Msg that contains the message data.

          Shutdown sends a message to the plumber that shuts down
          plumbing for the application's input port rcvport. An appli-
          cation must call it before it exits if it has an active
          input port.

          String2attrs takes a string containing a tab-separated list
          of attribute pairs and returns a list of references to Attr
          adts.

          Attr2string converts a list of references to Attr adts into
          a string of the form name=valuename=value . . .  .  The
          name=value pairs are separated by a single tab.

          Lookup searches attrs for an attribute name, and if found,
          returns the tuple (1,value).  If name is not found, lookup
          returns (0, nil).

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     PLUMBMSG(2)                                           PLUMBMSG(2)

        Packed message format
          The format of plumbing messages as transmitted, and member
          functions that encapsulate it, are documented here for com-
          pleteness, and in case the details are useful in interpret-
          ing plumbing messages outside the Inferno environment.

          Plumbing messages have a fixed structure: five lines of text
          giving UTF representations of the corresponding fields of
          Msg, then a line giving the length of data in decimal, fol-
          lowed by the bytes of data:

               source\n
               destination\n
               directory\n
               kind\n
               attributes\n
               n\n
               n bytes

          The details are encapsulated in two functions:

          m.pack()
               Pack packs the contents Msg m into an array of byte for
               subsequent transmission using write (see sys-read(2)).

          Msg.unpack(b)
               Unpack unpacks an array of byte b to form a copy of the
               original Msg, which it returns.

     FILES
          /chan/plumb.input    file to send messages to the plumber
          /chan/plumb.rcvport  file to receive messages routed to the
                               logical name rcvport

     SOURCE
          /appl/lib/plumbmsg.b

     BUGS
          Shutdown should not be needed: the plumber(8), as a file
          server, must know that a particular client has vanished.

     Page 4                       Plan 9            (printed 11/22/24)