view etc/gnuserv.1 @ 5127:a9c41067dd88 ben-lisp-object

more cleanups, terminology clarification, lots of doc work -------------------- ChangeLog entries follow: -------------------- man/ChangeLog addition: 2010-03-05 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> * internals/internals.texi (Introduction to Allocation): * internals/internals.texi (Integers and Characters): * internals/internals.texi (Allocation from Frob Blocks): * internals/internals.texi (lrecords): * internals/internals.texi (Low-level allocation): Rewrite section on allocation of Lisp objects to reflect the new reality. Remove references to nonexistent XSETINT and XSETCHAR. modules/ChangeLog addition: 2010-03-05 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> * postgresql/postgresql.c (allocate_pgconn): * postgresql/postgresql.c (allocate_pgresult): * postgresql/postgresql.h (struct Lisp_PGconn): * postgresql/postgresql.h (struct Lisp_PGresult): * ldap/eldap.c (allocate_ldap): * ldap/eldap.h (struct Lisp_LDAP): Same changes as in src/ dir. See large log there in ChangeLog, but basically: ALLOC_LISP_OBJECT -> ALLOC_NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT LISP_OBJECT_HEADER -> NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT_HEADER ../hlo/src/ChangeLog addition: 2010-03-05 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> * alloc.c: * alloc.c (old_alloc_sized_lcrecord): * alloc.c (very_old_free_lcrecord): * alloc.c (copy_lisp_object): * alloc.c (zero_sized_lisp_object): * alloc.c (zero_nonsized_lisp_object): * alloc.c (lisp_object_storage_size): * alloc.c (free_normal_lisp_object): * alloc.c (FREE_FIXED_TYPE_WHEN_NOT_IN_GC): * alloc.c (ALLOC_FROB_BLOCK_LISP_OBJECT): * alloc.c (Fcons): * alloc.c (noseeum_cons): * alloc.c (make_float): * alloc.c (make_bignum): * alloc.c (make_bignum_bg): * alloc.c (make_ratio): * alloc.c (make_ratio_bg): * alloc.c (make_ratio_rt): * alloc.c (make_bigfloat): * alloc.c (make_bigfloat_bf): * alloc.c (size_vector): * alloc.c (make_compiled_function): * alloc.c (Fmake_symbol): * alloc.c (allocate_extent): * alloc.c (allocate_event): * alloc.c (make_key_data): * alloc.c (make_button_data): * alloc.c (make_motion_data): * alloc.c (make_process_data): * alloc.c (make_timeout_data): * alloc.c (make_magic_data): * alloc.c (make_magic_eval_data): * alloc.c (make_eval_data): * alloc.c (make_misc_user_data): * alloc.c (Fmake_marker): * alloc.c (noseeum_make_marker): * alloc.c (size_string_direct_data): * alloc.c (make_uninit_string): * alloc.c (make_string_nocopy): * alloc.c (mark_lcrecord_list): * alloc.c (alloc_managed_lcrecord): * alloc.c (free_managed_lcrecord): * alloc.c (sweep_lcrecords_1): * alloc.c (malloced_storage_size): * buffer.c (allocate_buffer): * buffer.c (compute_buffer_usage): * buffer.c (DEFVAR_BUFFER_LOCAL_1): * buffer.c (nuke_all_buffer_slots): * buffer.c (common_init_complex_vars_of_buffer): * buffer.h (struct buffer_text): * buffer.h (struct buffer): * bytecode.c: * bytecode.c (make_compiled_function_args): * bytecode.c (size_compiled_function_args): * bytecode.h (struct compiled_function_args): * casetab.c (allocate_case_table): * casetab.h (struct Lisp_Case_Table): * charset.h (struct Lisp_Charset): * chartab.c (fill_char_table): * chartab.c (Fmake_char_table): * chartab.c (make_char_table_entry): * chartab.c (copy_char_table_entry): * chartab.c (Fcopy_char_table): * chartab.c (put_char_table): * chartab.h (struct Lisp_Char_Table_Entry): * chartab.h (struct Lisp_Char_Table): * console-gtk-impl.h (struct gtk_device): * console-gtk-impl.h (struct gtk_frame): * console-impl.h (struct console): * console-msw-impl.h (struct Lisp_Devmode): * console-msw-impl.h (struct mswindows_device): * console-msw-impl.h (struct msprinter_device): * console-msw-impl.h (struct mswindows_frame): * console-msw-impl.h (struct mswindows_dialog_id): * console-stream-impl.h (struct stream_console): * console-stream.c (stream_init_console): * console-tty-impl.h (struct tty_console): * console-tty-impl.h (struct tty_device): * console-tty.c (allocate_tty_console_struct): * console-x-impl.h (struct x_device): * console-x-impl.h (struct x_frame): * console.c (allocate_console): * console.c (nuke_all_console_slots): * console.c (DEFVAR_CONSOLE_LOCAL_1): * console.c (common_init_complex_vars_of_console): * data.c (make_weak_list): * data.c (make_weak_box): * data.c (make_ephemeron): * database.c: * database.c (struct Lisp_Database): * database.c (allocate_database): * database.c (finalize_database): * device-gtk.c (allocate_gtk_device_struct): * device-impl.h (struct device): * device-msw.c: * device-msw.c (mswindows_init_device): * device-msw.c (msprinter_init_device): * device-msw.c (finalize_devmode): * device-msw.c (allocate_devmode): * device-tty.c (allocate_tty_device_struct): * device-x.c (allocate_x_device_struct): * device.c: * device.c (nuke_all_device_slots): * device.c (allocate_device): * dialog-msw.c (handle_question_dialog_box): * elhash.c: * elhash.c (struct Lisp_Hash_Table): * elhash.c (finalize_hash_table): * elhash.c (make_general_lisp_hash_table): * elhash.c (Fcopy_hash_table): * elhash.h (htentry): * emacs.c (main_1): * eval.c: * eval.c (size_multiple_value): * event-stream.c (finalize_command_builder): * event-stream.c (allocate_command_builder): * event-stream.c (free_command_builder): * event-stream.c (event_stream_generate_wakeup): * event-stream.c (event_stream_resignal_wakeup): * event-stream.c (event_stream_disable_wakeup): * event-stream.c (event_stream_wakeup_pending_p): * events.h (struct Lisp_Timeout): * events.h (struct command_builder): * extents-impl.h: * extents-impl.h (struct extent_auxiliary): * extents-impl.h (struct extent_info): * extents-impl.h (set_extent_no_chase_aux_field): * extents-impl.h (set_extent_no_chase_normal_field): * extents.c: * extents.c (gap_array_marker): * extents.c (gap_array): * extents.c (extent_list_marker): * extents.c (extent_list): * extents.c (stack_of_extents): * extents.c (gap_array_make_marker): * extents.c (extent_list_make_marker): * extents.c (allocate_extent_list): * extents.c (SLOT): * extents.c (mark_extent_auxiliary): * extents.c (allocate_extent_auxiliary): * extents.c (attach_extent_auxiliary): * extents.c (size_gap_array): * extents.c (finalize_extent_info): * extents.c (allocate_extent_info): * extents.c (uninit_buffer_extents): * extents.c (allocate_soe): * extents.c (copy_extent): * extents.c (vars_of_extents): * extents.h: * faces.c (allocate_face): * faces.h (struct Lisp_Face): * faces.h (struct face_cachel): * file-coding.c: * file-coding.c (finalize_coding_system): * file-coding.c (sizeof_coding_system): * file-coding.c (Fcopy_coding_system): * file-coding.h (struct Lisp_Coding_System): * file-coding.h (MARKED_SLOT): * fns.c (size_bit_vector): * font-mgr.c: * font-mgr.c (finalize_fc_pattern): * font-mgr.c (print_fc_pattern): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_pattern_p): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_pattern_create): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_name_parse): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_name_unparse): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_pattern_duplicate): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_pattern_add): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_pattern_del): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_pattern_get): * font-mgr.c (fc_config_create_using): * font-mgr.c (fc_strlist_to_lisp_using): * font-mgr.c (fontset_to_list): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_p): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_up_to_date): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_build_fonts): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_get_cache): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_get_fonts): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_set_current): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_get_blanks): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_get_rescan_interval): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_set_rescan_interval): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_app_font_add_file): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_app_font_add_dir): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_app_font_clear): * font-mgr.c (size): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_config_substitute): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_font_render_prepare): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_font_match): * font-mgr.c (Ffc_font_sort): * font-mgr.c (finalize_fc_config): * font-mgr.c (print_fc_config): * font-mgr.h: * font-mgr.h (struct fc_pattern): * font-mgr.h (XFC_PATTERN): * font-mgr.h (struct fc_config): * font-mgr.h (XFC_CONFIG): * frame-gtk.c (allocate_gtk_frame_struct): * frame-impl.h (struct frame): * frame-msw.c (mswindows_init_frame_1): * frame-x.c (allocate_x_frame_struct): * frame.c (nuke_all_frame_slots): * frame.c (allocate_frame_core): * gc.c: * gc.c (GC_CHECK_NOT_FREE): * glyphs.c (finalize_image_instance): * glyphs.c (allocate_image_instance): * glyphs.c (Fcolorize_image_instance): * glyphs.c (allocate_glyph): * glyphs.c (unmap_subwindow_instance_cache_mapper): * glyphs.c (register_ignored_expose): * glyphs.h (struct Lisp_Image_Instance): * glyphs.h (struct Lisp_Glyph): * glyphs.h (struct glyph_cachel): * glyphs.h (struct expose_ignore): * gui.c (allocate_gui_item): * gui.h (struct Lisp_Gui_Item): * keymap.c (struct Lisp_Keymap): * keymap.c (make_keymap): * lisp.h: * lisp.h (struct Lisp_String_Direct_Data): * lisp.h (struct Lisp_String_Indirect_Data): * lisp.h (struct Lisp_Vector): * lisp.h (struct Lisp_Bit_Vector): * lisp.h (DECLARE_INLINE_LISP_BIT_VECTOR): * lisp.h (struct weak_box): * lisp.h (struct ephemeron): * lisp.h (struct weak_list): * lrecord.h: * lrecord.h (struct lrecord_implementation): * lrecord.h (MC_ALLOC_CALL_FINALIZER): * lrecord.h (struct lcrecord_list): * lstream.c (finalize_lstream): * lstream.c (sizeof_lstream): * lstream.c (Lstream_new): * lstream.c (Lstream_delete): * lstream.h (struct lstream): * marker.c: * marker.c (finalize_marker): * marker.c (compute_buffer_marker_usage): * mule-charset.c: * mule-charset.c (make_charset): * mule-charset.c (compute_charset_usage): * objects-impl.h (struct Lisp_Color_Instance): * objects-impl.h (struct Lisp_Font_Instance): * objects-tty-impl.h (struct tty_color_instance_data): * objects-tty-impl.h (struct tty_font_instance_data): * objects-tty.c (tty_initialize_color_instance): * objects-tty.c (tty_initialize_font_instance): * objects.c (finalize_color_instance): * objects.c (Fmake_color_instance): * objects.c (finalize_font_instance): * objects.c (Fmake_font_instance): * objects.c (reinit_vars_of_objects): * opaque.c: * opaque.c (sizeof_opaque): * opaque.c (make_opaque_ptr): * opaque.c (free_opaque_ptr): * opaque.h: * opaque.h (Lisp_Opaque): * opaque.h (Lisp_Opaque_Ptr): * print.c (printing_unreadable_lcrecord): * print.c (external_object_printer): * print.c (debug_p4): * process.c (finalize_process): * process.c (make_process_internal): * procimpl.h (struct Lisp_Process): * rangetab.c (Fmake_range_table): * rangetab.c (Fcopy_range_table): * rangetab.h (struct Lisp_Range_Table): * scrollbar.c: * scrollbar.c (create_scrollbar_instance): * scrollbar.c (compute_scrollbar_instance_usage): * scrollbar.h (struct scrollbar_instance): * specifier.c (finalize_specifier): * specifier.c (sizeof_specifier): * specifier.c (set_specifier_caching): * specifier.h (struct Lisp_Specifier): * specifier.h (struct specifier_caching): * symeval.h: * symeval.h (SYMBOL_VALUE_MAGIC_P): * symeval.h (DEFVAR_SYMVAL_FWD): * symsinit.h: * syntax.c (init_buffer_syntax_cache): * syntax.h (struct syntax_cache): * toolbar.c: * toolbar.c (allocate_toolbar_button): * toolbar.c (update_toolbar_button): * toolbar.h (struct toolbar_button): * tooltalk.c (struct Lisp_Tooltalk_Message): * tooltalk.c (make_tooltalk_message): * tooltalk.c (struct Lisp_Tooltalk_Pattern): * tooltalk.c (make_tooltalk_pattern): * ui-gtk.c: * ui-gtk.c (allocate_ffi_data): * ui-gtk.c (emacs_gtk_object_finalizer): * ui-gtk.c (allocate_emacs_gtk_object_data): * ui-gtk.c (allocate_emacs_gtk_boxed_data): * ui-gtk.h: * window-impl.h (struct window): * window-impl.h (struct window_mirror): * window.c (finalize_window): * window.c (allocate_window): * window.c (new_window_mirror): * window.c (mark_window_as_deleted): * window.c (make_dummy_parent): * window.c (compute_window_mirror_usage): * window.c (compute_window_usage): Overall point of this change and previous ones in this repository: (1) Introduce new, clearer terminology: everything other than int or char is a "record" object, which comes in two types: "normal objects" and "frob-block objects". Fix up all places that referred to frob-block objects as "simple", "basic", etc. (2) Provide an advertised interface for doing operations on Lisp objects, including creating new types, that is clean and consistent in its naming, uses the above-referenced terms and avoids referencing "lrecords", "old lcrecords", etc., which should hide under the surface. (3) Make the size_in_bytes and finalizer methods take a Lisp_Object rather than a void * for consistency with other methods. (4) Separate finalizer method into finalizer and disksaver, so that normal finalize methods don't have to worry about disksaving. Other specifics: (1) Renaming: LISP_OBJECT_HEADER -> NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT_HEADER ALLOC_LISP_OBJECT -> ALLOC_NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT implementation->basic_p -> implementation->frob_block_p ALLOCATE_FIXED_TYPE_AND_SET_IMPL -> ALLOC_FROB_BLOCK_LISP_OBJECT *FCCONFIG*, wrap_fcconfig -> *FC_CONFIG*, wrap_fc_config *FCPATTERN*, wrap_fcpattern -> *FC_PATTERN*, wrap_fc_pattern (the last two changes make the naming of these macros consistent with the naming of all other macros, since the objects are named fc-config and fc-pattern with a hyphen) (2) Lots of documentation fixes in lrecord.h. (3) Eliminate macros for copying, freeing, zeroing objects, getting their storage size. Instead, new functions: zero_sized_lisp_object() zero_nonsized_lisp_object() lisp_object_storage_size() free_normal_lisp_object() (copy_lisp_object() already exists) LISP_OBJECT_FROB_BLOCK_P() (actually a macro) Eliminated: free_lrecord() zero_lrecord() copy_lrecord() copy_sized_lrecord() old_copy_lcrecord() old_copy_sized_lcrecord() old_zero_lcrecord() old_zero_sized_lcrecord() LISP_OBJECT_STORAGE_SIZE() COPY_SIZED_LISP_OBJECT() COPY_SIZED_LCRECORD() COPY_LISP_OBJECT() ZERO_LISP_OBJECT() FREE_LISP_OBJECT() (4) Catch the remaining places where lrecord stuff was used directly and use the advertised interface, e.g. alloc_sized_lrecord() -> ALLOC_SIZED_LISP_OBJECT(). (5) Make certain statically-declared pseudo-objects (buffer_local_flags, console_local_flags) have their lheader initialized correctly, so things like copy_lisp_object() can work on them. Make extent_auxiliary_defaults a proper heap object Vextent_auxiliary_defaults, and make extent auxiliaries dumpable so that this object can be dumped. allocate_extent_auxiliary() now just creates the object, and attach_extent_auxiliary() creates an extent auxiliary and attaches to an extent, like the old allocate_extent_auxiliary(). (6) Create EXTENT_AUXILIARY_SLOTS macro, similar to the foo-slots.h files but in a macro instead of a file. The purpose is to avoid duplication when iterating over all the slots in an extent auxiliary. Use it. (7) In lstream.c, don't zero out object after allocation because allocation routines take care of this. (8) In marker.c, fix a mistake in computing marker overhead. (9) In print.c, clean up printing_unreadable_lcrecord(), external_object_printer() to avoid lots of ifdef NEW_GC's. (10) Separate toolbar-button allocation into a separate allocate_toolbar_button() function for use in the example code in lrecord.h.
author Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
date Fri, 05 Mar 2010 04:08:17 -0600
parents 807b51903ed4
children 73eef12660cd
line wrap: on
line source

.TH GNUSERV 1 "" "XEmacs Server"
.UC 4
.SH NAME
gnuserv, gnuclient \- Server and Clients for XEmacs
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B gnuclient
[-nw] [-display display] [-q] [-v] [-l library] [-batch] [-f function] [-eval form] 
[-h hostname] [-p port] [-r remote-pathname] [[+line] file] ...
.br
.B gnudoit [-q] 
form
.br
.B gnuserv
.br
.B gnuattach   
Removed as of gnuserv 3.x
.SH DESCRIPTION

.PP
\fIgnuserv\fP is a server program run as a subprocess of XEmacs to handle
all incoming and outgoing requests from \fIgnuclient\fP. It is not usually
invoked directly, but is started from XEmacs by loading the \fIgnuserv\fP
package and evaluating the Lisp form (gnuserv-start).
.PP
\fIgnuclient\fP allows the user to request a running XEmacs process to
edit the named files or directories and/or evaluate lisp forms.
Depending on your environment, TTY, X, GTK, or MS Windows frames, as well as
batch (frameless) execution of Lisp may be available.
One typical use for this is with a dialup connection to a machine on
which an XEmacs process is currently running.
.PP
\fIgnudoit\fP is a shell script frontend to ``gnuclient -batch -eval form''.
Its use is deprecated. Try to get used to calling gnuclient directly.
.PP
\fIgnuattach\fP no longer exists. Its functionality has been replaced by
\fIgnuclient -nw\fP.
.SH OPTIONS
.PP 
\fIgnuclient\fP supports as many of the command line options of Emacs as
make sense in this context. In addition it adds a few of its own. 
.br
For backward compatibility, ``long'' options (\fi.e.\fP, with doubled hyphen)
may be specified using a single hyphen instead of a doubled one.  Similarly,
the ``-nw'' option is a historical artifact: a multiletter option with no
double-hyphen version.
.TP 8
.BI \-nw
This option makes \fIgnuclient\fP act as a frontend such that XEmacs
can attach to the current TTY. XEmacs will then open a new TTY frame.
The effect is similar to having started a new XEmacs on this TTY with
the ``-nw'' option. It currently only works if XEmacs is running on
the same machine as gnuclient. This is the default if the `DISPLAY'
environment variable is not set.
.TP 8
.BI \--display " display, " \-display " display" 
If this option is given or the `DISPLAY' environment variable is set
then gnuclient will tell XEmacs to edit files in a frame on the
specified X device.
.TP 8
.BI \-q
This option informs \fIgnuclient\fP to exit once connection has been
made with the XEmacs process.  Normally \fIgnuclient\fP waits until
all of the files on the command line have been finished with (their
buffers killed) by the XEmacs process, and all the forms have been
evaluated.  Note that this is \fIdifferent\fP from XEmacs itself, where
this option means to inhibit loading of the user init file.
.TP 8
.BI \-v
When this option is specified \fIgnuclient\fP will request for the
specified files to be viewed instead of edited.
.TP 8
.BI \-l " library"
Tell Emacs to load the specified library.
.TP 8
.BI \-batch
Tell Emacs not to open any frames. Just load libraries and evaluate
lisp code.  If no files to execute, functions to call or forms to eval 
are given using the
.BR \-l ,
.BR \-f ,
or
.B \-eval
options, then forms to eval are read from STDIN.
.TP 8
.BI \-f " function," 
Make Emacs execute the lisp function.
.TP 8
.BI \--eval " form, " \-eval " form" 
Make Emacs execute the Lisp form.
.TP 8
.BI \-h " hostname"
Used only with Internet-domain sockets, this option specifies the host
machine which should be running \fIgnuserv\fP. If this option is not
specified then the value of the environment variable GNU_HOST is used
if set. If no hostname is specified, and the GNU_HOST variable is not
set, an Internet connection will not be attempted. N\.B.:
\fIgnuserv\fP does NOT allow Internet connections unless XAUTH
authentication is used or the GNU_SECURE variable has been specified
and points at a file listing all trusted hosts. (See SECURITY below.)

.br
An Internet address (``dotted-quad'') may be specified instead of a
hostname.  IPv6 support is not robust.

.br
A hostname of \fBunix\fP can be used to specify that
the connection to the server should use a Unix-domain socket (if
supported) rather than an Internet-domain socket.
.TP 8
.BI \-p " port"
Used only with Internet-domain sockets, this option specifies the
service port used to communicate between server and clients.  If this
option is not specified, then the value of the environment variable
GNU_PORT is used, if set, otherwise a service called ``gnuserv'' is
looked up in the services database.  Finally, if no other value can be
found for the port, then a default port is used which is usually 21490
+ uid.
.br
Note that since \fIgnuserv\fP doesn't allow command-line options, the port for
it will have to be specified via one of the alternative methods.
.TP 8
.BI \-r " pathname"
Used only with Internet-domain sockets, the pathname argument may be
needed to inform XEmacs how to reach the root directory of a remote
machine.  \fIgnuclient\fP prepends this string to each path argument
given.  For example, if you were trying to edit a file on a client
machine called otter, whose root directory was accessible from the
server machine via the path /net/otter, then this argument should be
set to '/net/otter'.  If this option is omitted, then the value is
taken from the environment variable GNU_NODE, if set, or the empty
string otherwise.
.TP 8
.BI "[+n] file"
This is the path of the file to be edited.  If the file is a directory, then
the directory browsers dired or monkey are usually invoked instead.
The cursor is put at line number 'n' if specified.

.SH SETUP
\fIgnuserv\fP is included with recent versions of XEmacs; no installation
is required.  The server must be started before clients may attempt to
connect.  Start the server by evaluating the Lisp form (gnuserv-start), or
interactively by typing `M-x gnuserv-start'.

.SH CONFIGURATION
The behavior of this suite of programs can be customized to a large extent.
Type `M-x customize-group RET gnuserv RET'.  More documentation can be found
in the file `gnuserv.el'

.SH EXAMPLE
.RS 4
gnuclient -q -f mh-smail
.br
gnuclient -h cuckoo -r /ange@otter: /tmp/*
.br
gnuclient -nw ../src/listproc.c
.RE
.br

.br
More examples and sample wrapper scripts are provided in the
etc/gnuserv directory of the XEmacs installation.


.SH SYSV IPC
SysV IPC is a build-time option, enabled by defining the symbol SYSV_IPC
at the top of gnuserv.h.  It is used to communicate between \fIgnuclient\fP
and \fIgnuserv\fP.  It is incompatible with both Unix-domain and
Internet-domain socket communication as described below. A file called
/tmp/gsrv??? is created as a key for the message queue, and if removed
will cause the communication between server and client to fail until
the server is restarted.
.SH UNIX-DOMAIN SOCKETS
Unix-domain sockets are a build-time option, enabled by defining the symbol
UNIX_DOMAIN_SOCKETS at the top of gnuserv.h.  A Unix-domain socket is used
to communicate between \fIgnuclient\fP
and \fIgnuserv\fP.  A file called /tmp/gsrvdir????/gsrv is created for
communication.  If the symbol USE_TMPDIR is set at the top of gnuserv.h,
$TMPDIR, when set, is used instead of /tmp.  If that file is deleted,
or TMPDIR has different values for the server and the client, communication
between server and client will fail.  Only the user running gnuserv will be
able to connect to the socket.
.SH INTERNET-DOMAIN SOCKETS
Internet-domain sockets are a build-time option, enabled by defining the
symbol INTERNET_DOMAIN_SOCKETS at the top of gnuserv.h.  Internet-domain
sockets are used to communicate between \fIgnuclient\fP and \fIgnuserv\fP.
Both Internet-domain and Unix-domain sockets can be used at the same
time.  If a hostname is specified via -h or via the GNU_HOST
environment variable, \fIgnuclient\fP establish connections using an
Internet domain socket. If not, a local connection is attempted via
either a Unix-domain socket or SYSV IPC.
.SH SECURITY
Using Internet-domain sockets, a more robust form of security is
needed that wasn't necessary with either Unix-domain sockets or SysV
IPC. Currently, two authentication protocols are supported to provide
this: MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 (based on the X11 xauth(1) program) and a
simple host-based access control mechanism, hereafter called
GNUSERV-1. The GNUSERV-1 protocol is always available.  Support
for MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 is enabled (by defining AUTH_MAGIC_COOKIE
at the top of gnuserv.h.
.PP
\fIgnuserv\fP, using GNUSERV-1, performs a limited form of access
control at the machine level. By default no Internet-domain socket is
opened.  If the variable GNU_SECURE can be found in \fIgnuserv\fP's
environment, and it names a readable filename, then this file is
opened and assumed to be a list of hosts, one per line, from which the
server will allow requests. Connections from any other host will be
rejected. Even the machine on which \fIgnuserv\fP is running is not
permitted to make connections via the Internet socket unless its
hostname is explicitly specified in this file.  Note that a host may
be either a numeric IP address or a hostname, and that
.I any
user on an approved host may connect to your gnuserv and execute arbitrary
Lisp (e.g., delete all your files).
If this file contains a lot of
hostnames then the server may take quite a long time to start up.
.PP
When the MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 protocol is enabled, an Internet socket
\fIis\fP opened by default. \fIgnuserv\fP will accept a connection from
any host, and will wait for a "magic cookie" (essentially, a password)
to be presented by the client. If the client doesn't present the
cookie, or if the cookie is wrong, the authentication of the client is
considered to have failed. At this point. \fIgnuserv\fP falls back to
the GNUSERV-1 protocol; If the client is calling from a host listed in
the GNU_SECURE file, the connection will be accepted, otherwise it
will be rejected. 
.TP 4
.I  Using MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 authentication
When the \fIgnuserv\fP server is started, it looks for a cookie
defined for display 999 on the machine where it is running. If the
cookie is found, it will be stored for use as the authentication
cookie. These cookies are defined in an authorization file (usually
~/.Xauthority) that is manipulated by the X11 xauth(1) program. For
example, a machine "kali" which runs an emacs that invokes
\fIgnuserv\fP should respond as follows (at the shell prompt) when set
up correctly.
.PP
.RS 8
kali% xauth list
.br
GS65.SP.CS.CMU.EDU:0  MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1  11223344
.br
KALI.FTM.CS.CMU.EDU:999  MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1  1234
.RE
.PP
.RS 4
In the above case, the authorization file defines two cookies. The
second one, defined for screen 999 on the server machine, is used for
gnuserv authentication. 
.PP
On the client machine's side, the authorization file must contain an
identical line, specifying the 
.I server's 
cookie. In other words, on a machine "foobar" which wishes to connect
to "kali,"  the `xauth list' output should contain the line:
.PP
.RS 4
KALI.FTM.CS.CMU.EDU:999  MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1  1234
.RE
.PP
For more information on authorization files, take a look at the
xauth(1X11) man page, or invoke xauth interactively (without any
arguments) and type "help" at the prompt. Remember that case in the
name of the authorization protocol (i.e.`MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1') 
.I is
significant!
.RE


.SH ENVIRONMENT
.PP
.TP 8
.B DISPLAY
Default X (or GTK) device for display of edit frame.

.SH FILES
.PP
.TP 8
.B /tmp/gsrv???
(SYSV_IPC only)
.TP 8
.B /tmp/gsrvdir???/gsrv
(unix domain sockets only)
.TP 8
.B ~/.xemacs/init.el
XEmacs customization file, see xemacs(1).
.SH SEE ALSO
.PP
.TP 8
xauth(1X11), Xsecurity(1X11), gnuserv.el
.SH BUGS
.PP 
NULs occurring in result strings don't get passed back to gnudoit properly.

.SH AUTHOR.
Andy Norman (ange@hplb.hpl.hp.com), based heavily upon
etc/emacsclient.c, etc/server.c and lisp/server.el from the GNU Emacs
18.52 distribution.  Various modifications from Bob Weiner (weiner@mot.com),
Darrell Kindred (dkindred@cmu.edu), Arup Mukherjee (arup@cmu.edu), Ben
Wing (ben@xemacs.org) and Hrvoje Niksic (hniksic@xemacs.org).