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ONC+ Developer's Guide Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library |
1. Introduction to ONC+ Technologies
4. Programmer's Interface to RPC
5. Advanced RPC Programming Techniques
6. Porting From TS-RPC to TI-RPC
7. Multithreaded RPC Programming
8. Extensions to the Oracle Solaris RPC Library
B. RPC Protocol and Language Specification
Hyper Integer and Unsigned Hyper Integer
Double-Precision Floating Point Encoding
Quadruple-Precision Floating Point
Quadruple-Precision Floating Point Encoding
This section contains the XDR language specification.
This specification uses a modified Backus-Naur Form notation for describing the XDR language. Here is a brief description of the notation:
The characters |, (, ), [, ], and * are special.
Terminal symbols are strings of any characters embedded in quotes (").
Nonterminal symbols are strings of nonspecial italic characters.
Alternative items are separated by a vertical bar (|).
Optional items are enclosed in brackets.
Items are grouped by enclosing them in parentheses.
A * following an item means 0 or more occurrences of the item.
For example, consider the following pattern:
"a " "very" (", " " very")* [" cold " "and"] " rainy " ("day" | "night")
An infinite number of strings match this pattern. A few of them are:
a very rainy day a very, very rainy day a very cold and rainy day a very, very, very cold and rainy night
The following conventions are used in the specification.
White space serves to separate items and is otherwise ignored.
An identifier is a letter followed by an optional sequence of letters, digits, or underbars (_). The case of identifiers is not ignored.
A constant is a sequence of one or more decimal digits, optionally preceded by a minus sign (-), as seen in the following code example.
Example C-1 XDR Specification
Syntax Information declaration: type-specifier identifier | type-specifier identifier "[" value "]" | type-specifier identifier "<" [ value ] ">" | "opaque" identifier "[" value "]" | "opaque" identifier "<" [ value ] ">" | "string" identifier "<" [ value ] ">" | type-specifier "*" identifier | "void" value: constant | identifier type-specifier: [ "unsigned" ] "int" | [ "unsigned" ] "hyper" | "float" | "double" | "quadruple" | "bool" | enum-type-spec | struct-type-spec | union-type-spec | identifier enum-type-spec: "enum" enum-body enum-body: "{" ( identifier "=" value ) ( "," identifier "=" value )* "}" struct-type-spec: "struct" struct-body struct-body: "{" ( declaration ";" ) ( declaration ";" )* "}" union-type-spec: "union" union-body union-body: "switch" "(" declaration ")" "{" ( "case" value ":" declaration ";" ) ( "case" value ":" declaration ";" )* [ "default" ":" declaration ";" ] "}" constant-def: "const" identifier "=" constant ";" type-def: "typedef" declaration ";" | "enum" identifier enum-body ";" | "struct" identifier struct-body ";" | "union" identifier union-body ";" definition: type-def | constant-def specification: definition *
The following are keywords and cannot be used as identifiers:
|
Only unsigned constants can be used as size specifications for arrays. If an identifier is used, it must have been declared previously as an unsigned constant in a const definition.
Constant and type identifiers within the scope of a specification are in the same namespace and must be declared uniquely within this scope.
Similarly, variable names must be unique within the scope of struct and union declarations. Nested struct and union declarations create new scopes.
The discriminant of a union must be of a type that evaluates to an integer. That is, it must be an int, an unsigned int, a bool, an enum type, or any typedef that evaluates to one of these. Also, the case values must be legal discriminant values. Finally, a case value cannot be specified more than once within the scope of a union declaration.
The following example is a short XDR data description of a file data structure that might be used to transfer files from one machine to another.
Example C-2 XDR File Data Structure
const MAXUSERNAME = 32;/* max length of a user name */ const MAXFILELEN = 65535; /* max length of a file */ const MAXNAMELEN = 255; /* max length of a file name */ /* Types of files: */ enum filekind { TEXT = 0, /* ascii data */ DATA = 1, /* raw data */ EXEC = 2 /* executable */ }; /* File information, per kind of file: */ union filetype switch (filekind kind) { case TEXT: void; /* no extra information */ case DATA: string creator<MAXNAMELEN>; /* data creator */ case EXEC: string interpreter<MAXNAMELEN>; /*proginterptr*/ }; /* A complete file: */ struct file { string filename<MAXNAMELEN>; /* name of file */ filetype type; /* info about file */ string owner<MAXUSERNAME>; /* owner of file */ opaque data<MAXFILELEN>; /* file data */ };
Suppose now that a user named linda wants to store her LISP program sillyprog that contains just the data "quit." Her file would be encoded as listed in the following table.
Table C-1 XDR Data Description Example
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