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1 .TH GNUSERV 1 "" "XEmacs Server"
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2 .UC 4
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3 .SH NAME
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4 gnuserv, gnuclient \- Server and Clients for XEmacs
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5 .SH SYNOPSIS
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6 .B gnuclient
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7 [-nw] [-display display] [-q] [-v] [-l library] [-batch] [-f function] [-eval form]
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8 [-h hostname] [-p port] [-r remote-pathname] [[+line] file] ...
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9 .br
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10 .B gnudoit [-q]
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11 form
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12 .br
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13 .B gnuserv
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14 .br
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15 .B gnuattach
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16 Removed as of gnuserv 3.x
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17 .SH DESCRIPTION
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18
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19 .PP
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20 \fIgnuserv\fP is a server program run as a subprocess of XEmacs to handle
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21 all incoming and outgoing requests from \fIgnuclient\fP. It is not usually
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22 invoked directly, but is started from XEmacs by loading the \fIgnuserv\fP
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23 package and evaluating the Lisp form (gnuserv-start).
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24 .PP
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25 \fIgnuclient\fP allows the user to request a running XEmacs process to
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26 edit the named files or directories and/or evaluate lisp forms.
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27 Depending on your environment, TTY, X, GTK, or MS Windows frames, as well as
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28 batch (frameless) execution of Lisp may be available.
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29 One typical use for this is with a dialup connection to a machine on
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30 which an XEmacs process is currently running.
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31 .PP
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32 \fIgnudoit\fP is a shell script frontend to ``gnuclient -batch -eval form''.
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33 Its use is deprecated. Try to get used to calling gnuclient directly.
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34 .PP
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35 \fIgnuattach\fP no longer exists. Its functionality has been replaced by
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36 \fIgnuclient -nw\fP.
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37 .SH OPTIONS
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38 .PP
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39 \fIgnuclient\fP supports as many of the command line options of Emacs as
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40 make sense in this context. In addition it adds a few of its own.
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41 .br
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42 For backward compatibility, ``long'' options (\fi.e.\fP, with doubled hyphen)
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43 may be specified using a single hyphen instead of a doubled one. Similarly,
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44 the ``-nw'' option is a historical artifact: a multiletter option with no
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45 double-hyphen version.
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46 .TP 8
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47 .BI \-nw
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48 This option makes \fIgnuclient\fP act as a frontend such that XEmacs
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49 can attach to the current TTY. XEmacs will then open a new TTY frame.
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50 The effect is similar to having started a new XEmacs on this TTY with
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51 the ``-nw'' option. It currently only works if XEmacs is running on
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52 the same machine as gnuclient. This is the default if the `DISPLAY'
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53 environment variable is not set.
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54 .TP 8
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55 .BI \--display " display, " \-display " display"
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56 If this option is given or the `DISPLAY' environment variable is set
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57 then gnuclient will tell XEmacs to edit files in a frame on the
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58 specified X device.
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59 .TP 8
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60 .BI \-q
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61 This option informs \fIgnuclient\fP to exit once connection has been
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62 made with the XEmacs process. Normally \fIgnuclient\fP waits until
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63 all of the files on the command line have been finished with (their
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64 buffers killed) by the XEmacs process, and all the forms have been
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65 evaluated. Note that this is \fIdifferent\fP from XEmacs itself, where
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66 this option means to inhibit loading of the user init file.
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67 .TP 8
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68 .BI \-v
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69 When this option is specified \fIgnuclient\fP will request for the
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70 specified files to be viewed instead of edited.
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71 .TP 8
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72 .BI \-l " library"
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73 Tell Emacs to load the specified library.
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74 .TP 8
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75 .BI \-batch
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76 Tell Emacs not to open any frames. Just load libraries and evaluate
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77 lisp code. If no files to execute, functions to call or forms to eval
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78 are given using the
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79 .BR \-l ,
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80 .BR \-f ,
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81 or
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82 .B \-eval
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83 options, then forms to eval are read from STDIN.
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84 .TP 8
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85 .BI \-f " function,"
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86 Make Emacs execute the lisp function.
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87 .TP 8
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88 .BI \--eval " form, " \-eval " form"
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89 Make Emacs execute the Lisp form.
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90 .TP 8
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91 .BI \-h " hostname"
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92 Used only with Internet-domain sockets, this option specifies the host
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93 machine which should be running \fIgnuserv\fP. If this option is not
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94 specified then the value of the environment variable GNU_HOST is used
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95 if set. If no hostname is specified, and the GNU_HOST variable is not
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96 set, an Internet connection will not be attempted. N\.B.:
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97 \fIgnuserv\fP does NOT allow Internet connections unless XAUTH
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98 authentication is used or the GNU_SECURE variable has been specified
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99 and points at a file listing all trusted hosts. (See SECURITY below.)
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100
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101 .br
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102 An Internet address (``dotted-quad'') may be specified instead of a
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103 hostname. IPv6 support is not robust.
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104
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105 .br
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106 A hostname of \fBunix\fP can be used to specify that
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107 the connection to the server should use a Unix-domain socket (if
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108 supported) rather than an Internet-domain socket.
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109 .TP 8
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110 .BI \-p " port"
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111 Used only with Internet-domain sockets, this option specifies the
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112 service port used to communicate between server and clients. If this
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113 option is not specified, then the value of the environment variable
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114 GNU_PORT is used, if set, otherwise a service called ``gnuserv'' is
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115 looked up in the services database. Finally, if no other value can be
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116 found for the port, then a default port is used which is usually 21490
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117 + uid.
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118 .br
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119 Note that since \fIgnuserv\fP doesn't allow command-line options, the port for
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120 it will have to be specified via one of the alternative methods.
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121 .TP 8
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122 .BI \-r " pathname"
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123 Used only with Internet-domain sockets, the pathname argument may be
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124 needed to inform XEmacs how to reach the root directory of a remote
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125 machine. \fIgnuclient\fP prepends this string to each path argument
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126 given. For example, if you were trying to edit a file on a client
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127 machine called otter, whose root directory was accessible from the
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128 server machine via the path /net/otter, then this argument should be
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129 set to '/net/otter'. If this option is omitted, then the value is
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130 taken from the environment variable GNU_NODE, if set, or the empty
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131 string otherwise.
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132 .TP 8
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133 .BI "[+n] file"
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134 This is the path of the file to be edited. If the file is a directory, then
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135 the directory browsers dired or monkey are usually invoked instead.
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136 The cursor is put at line number 'n' if specified.
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137
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138 .SH SETUP
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139 \fIgnuserv\fP is included with recent versions of XEmacs; no installation
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140 is required. The server must be started before clients may attempt to
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141 connect. Start the server by evaluating the Lisp form (gnuserv-start), or
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142 interactively by typing `M-x gnuserv-start'.
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143
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144 .SH CONFIGURATION
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145 The behavior of this suite of programs can be customized to a large extent.
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146 Type `M-x customize-group RET gnuserv RET'. More documentation can be found
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147 in the file `gnuserv.el'
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148
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149 .SH EXAMPLE
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150 .RS 4
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151 gnuclient -q -f mh-smail
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152 .br
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153 gnuclient -h cuckoo -r /ange@otter: /tmp/*
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154 .br
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155 gnuclient -nw ../src/listproc.c
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156 .RE
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157 .br
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158
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159 .br
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160 More examples and sample wrapper scripts are provided in the
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161 etc/gnuserv directory of the XEmacs installation.
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162
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163
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164 .SH SYSV IPC
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165 SysV IPC is a build-time option, enabled by defining the symbol SYSV_IPC
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166 at the top of gnuserv.h. It is used to communicate between \fIgnuclient\fP
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167 and \fIgnuserv\fP. It is incompatible with both Unix-domain and
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168 Internet-domain socket communication as described below. A file called
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169 /tmp/gsrv??? is created as a key for the message queue, and if removed
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170 will cause the communication between server and client to fail until
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171 the server is restarted.
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172 .SH UNIX-DOMAIN SOCKETS
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173 Unix-domain sockets are a build-time option, enabled by defining the symbol
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174 UNIX_DOMAIN_SOCKETS at the top of gnuserv.h. A Unix-domain socket is used
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175 to communicate between \fIgnuclient\fP
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176 and \fIgnuserv\fP. A file called /tmp/gsrvdir????/gsrv is created for
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177 communication. If the symbol USE_TMPDIR is set at the top of gnuserv.h,
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178 $TMPDIR, when set, is used instead of /tmp. If that file is deleted,
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179 or TMPDIR has different values for the server and the client, communication
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180 between server and client will fail. Only the user running gnuserv will be
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181 able to connect to the socket.
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182 .SH INTERNET-DOMAIN SOCKETS
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183 Internet-domain sockets are a build-time option, enabled by defining the
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184 symbol INTERNET_DOMAIN_SOCKETS at the top of gnuserv.h. Internet-domain
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185 sockets are used to communicate between \fIgnuclient\fP and \fIgnuserv\fP.
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186 Both Internet-domain and Unix-domain sockets can be used at the same
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187 time. If a hostname is specified via -h or via the GNU_HOST
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188 environment variable, \fIgnuclient\fP establish connections using an
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189 Internet domain socket. If not, a local connection is attempted via
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190 either a Unix-domain socket or SYSV IPC.
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191 .SH SECURITY
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192 Using Internet-domain sockets, a more robust form of security is
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193 needed that wasn't necessary with either Unix-domain sockets or SysV
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194 IPC. Currently, two authentication protocols are supported to provide
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195 this: MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 (based on the X11 xauth(1) program) and a
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196 simple host-based access control mechanism, hereafter called
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197 GNUSERV-1. The GNUSERV-1 protocol is always available. Support
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198 for MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 is enabled (by defining AUTH_MAGIC_COOKIE
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199 at the top of gnuserv.h.
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200 .PP
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201 \fIgnuserv\fP, using GNUSERV-1, performs a limited form of access
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202 control at the machine level. By default no Internet-domain socket is
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203 opened. If the variable GNU_SECURE can be found in \fIgnuserv\fP's
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204 environment, and it names a readable filename, then this file is
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205 opened and assumed to be a list of hosts, one per line, from which the
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206 server will allow requests. Connections from any other host will be
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207 rejected. Even the machine on which \fIgnuserv\fP is running is not
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208 permitted to make connections via the Internet socket unless its
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209 hostname is explicitly specified in this file. Note that a host may
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210 be either a numeric IP address or a hostname, and that
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211 .I any
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212 user on an approved host may connect to your gnuserv and execute arbitrary
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213 Lisp (e.g., delete all your files).
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214 If this file contains a lot of
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215 hostnames then the server may take quite a long time to start up.
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216 .PP
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217 When the MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 protocol is enabled, an Internet socket
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218 \fIis\fP opened by default. \fIgnuserv\fP will accept a connection from
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219 any host, and will wait for a "magic cookie" (essentially, a password)
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220 to be presented by the client. If the client doesn't present the
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221 cookie, or if the cookie is wrong, the authentication of the client is
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222 considered to have failed. At this point. \fIgnuserv\fP falls back to
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223 the GNUSERV-1 protocol; If the client is calling from a host listed in
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224 the GNU_SECURE file, the connection will be accepted, otherwise it
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225 will be rejected.
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226 .TP 4
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227 .I Using MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 authentication
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228 When the \fIgnuserv\fP server is started, it looks for a cookie
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229 defined for display 999 on the machine where it is running. If the
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230 cookie is found, it will be stored for use as the authentication
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231 cookie. These cookies are defined in an authorization file (usually
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232 ~/.Xauthority) that is manipulated by the X11 xauth(1) program. For
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233 example, a machine "kali" which runs an emacs that invokes
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234 \fIgnuserv\fP should respond as follows (at the shell prompt) when set
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235 up correctly.
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236 .PP
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237 .RS 8
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238 kali% xauth list
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239 .br
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240 GS65.SP.CS.CMU.EDU:0 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 11223344
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241 .br
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242 KALI.FTM.CS.CMU.EDU:999 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 1234
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243 .RE
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244 .PP
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245 .RS 4
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246 In the above case, the authorization file defines two cookies. The
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247 second one, defined for screen 999 on the server machine, is used for
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248 gnuserv authentication.
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249 .PP
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250 On the client machine's side, the authorization file must contain an
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251 identical line, specifying the
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252 .I server's
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253 cookie. In other words, on a machine "foobar" which wishes to connect
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254 to "kali," the `xauth list' output should contain the line:
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255 .PP
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256 .RS 4
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257 KALI.FTM.CS.CMU.EDU:999 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 1234
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258 .RE
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259 .PP
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260 For more information on authorization files, take a look at the
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261 xauth(1X11) man page, or invoke xauth interactively (without any
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262 arguments) and type "help" at the prompt. Remember that case in the
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263 name of the authorization protocol (i.e.`MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1')
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264 .I is
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265 significant!
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266 .RE
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267
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268
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269 .SH ENVIRONMENT
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270 .PP
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271 .TP 8
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272 .B DISPLAY
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273 Default X (or GTK) device for display of edit frame.
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274
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275 .SH FILES
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276 .PP
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277 .TP 8
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278 .B /tmp/gsrv???
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279 (SYSV_IPC only)
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280 .TP 8
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281 .B /tmp/gsrvdir???/gsrv
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282 (unix domain sockets only)
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283 .TP 8
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284 .B ~/.xemacs/init.el
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285 XEmacs customization file, see xemacs(1).
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286 .SH SEE ALSO
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287 .PP
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288 .TP 8
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289 xauth(1X11), Xsecurity(1X11), gnuserv.el
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290 .SH BUGS
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291 .PP
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292 NULs occurring in result strings don't get passed back to gnudoit properly.
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293
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294 .SH AUTHOR.
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295 Andy Norman (ange@hplb.hpl.hp.com), based heavily upon
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296 etc/emacsclient.c, etc/server.c and lisp/server.el from the GNU Emacs
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297 18.52 distribution. Various modifications from Bob Weiner (weiner@mot.com),
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298 Darrell Kindred (dkindred@cmu.edu), Arup Mukherjee (arup@cmu.edu), Ben
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299 Wing (ben@xemacs.org) and Hrvoje Niksic (hniksic@xemacs.org).
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