KEYRING-GETMSG(2) KEYRING-GETMSG(2) NAME keyring: getmsg, sendmsg, senderrmsg - send and receive messages on undelimited streams SYNOPSIS include "keyring.m"; keyring := load Keyring Keyring->PATH; getmsg: fn(fd: ref Sys->FD): array of byte; sendmsg: fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, buf: array of byte, n: int): int; senderrmsg: fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, s: string): int; DESCRIPTION These functions allow arbitrary data, packed into arrays of bytes, to be exchanged on network connections using connection-oriented transport protocols that do not preserve record boundaries (eg, TCP/IP without ssl(3)). They are used to implement various authentication protocols, including auth(6), as implemented by keyring-auth(2). Each data message is transmitted with a five-byte header containing a four-character zero-padded decimal count n ter- minated by a newline, followed by n bytes of message data. An error message has a similar structure, except that the first character of the count is replaced by an exclamation mark (!); the message data following contains the diagnostic string in its UTF-8 encoding (see utf(6)). Getmsg reads the next message from fd and returns its data content. Sendmsg sends the first n bytes of buf as a message on fd, and returns n. Senderrmsg sends the error message s. SOURCE /libinterp/keyring.c DIAGNOSTICS Sendmsg and senderrmsg return -1 if there was an error writ- ing to fd; they set the system error string. Getmsg returns nil if there was an error reading from fd; it sets the sys- tem error string to reflect the cause. It also returns nil if an error message was received instead of a data message; the system error string will contain the error message's diagnostic. Page 1 Plan 9 (printed 11/24/24)