-
-
.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
.. SPDX-License-Identifier: CC-BY-4.0
.. CAUTION: this document is generated from source in doc/src/rtd.
.. To make changes edit the source and recompile the document.
.. Do NOT make changes directly to .rst or .md files.
-
============================================================================================
Man Page: rmr_wh_open
============================================================================================
-RMR Library Functions
-============================================================================================
-
-
-NAME
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+RMR LIBRARY FUNCTIONS
+=====================
+
+
+
+NAME
+----
+
rmr_wh_open
-
-SYNOPSIS
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
+
+
+SYNOPSIS
+--------
+
::
-
- #include <rmr/rmr.h>
- void* rmr_wh_open( void* vctx, char* target )
-
-
-
-DESCRIPTION
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-The rmr_wh_open function creates a direct link for sending, a
-wormhole, to another RMr based process. Sending messages
-through a wormhole requires that the connection be
+ #include <rmr/rmr.h>
+
+ rmr_whid_t rmr_wh_open( void* vctx, char* target )
+
+
+
+DESCRIPTION
+-----------
+
+The ``rmr_wh_open`` function creates a direct link for
+sending, a wormhole, to another RMR based process. Sending
+messages through a wormhole requires that the connection be
established overtly by the user application (via this
-function), and that the ID returned by rmr_wh_open be passed
-to the rmr_wh_send_msg function.
-
-*Target* is the *name* or *IP-address* combination of the
-processess that the wormhole should be connected to. *Vctx*
-is the RMr void context pointer that was returned by the
-rmr_init function.
-
-When invoked, this function immediatly attempts to connect to
-the target process. If the connection cannot be established,
-an error is returned to the caller, and no direct messages
-can be sent to the target. Once a wormhole is connected, the
-underlying transport mechanism (e.g. NNG) will provide
-reconnects should the connection be lost, however the
+function), and that the ID returned by ``rmr_wh_open`` be
+passed to the ``rmr_wh_send_msg`` function.
+
+*Vctx* is the RMR void context pointer that was returned by
+the ``rmr_init`` function. *Target* is the *name and port,*
+or *IP-address and port,* combination for the process that
+the wormhole should be connected to. For example,
+"localhost:6123".
+
+When invoked, this function immediately attempts to connect
+to the target process. If the connection cannot be
+established, an error is returned to the caller, and no
+direct messages can be sent to the target. Once a wormhole is
+connected, the underlying transport mechanism (e.g. NNG) will
+provide reconnects should the connection be lost, however the
handling of messages sent when a connection is broken is
undetermined as each underlying transport mechanism may
handle buffering and retries differently.
-
-RETURN VALUE
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-The rmr_wh_open function returns a type rmr_whid_t which must
-be passed to the rmr_wh_send_msg function when sending a
-message. The id may also be tested to determine success or
-failure of the connection by using the RMR_WH_CONNECTED macro
-and passing the ID as the parameter; a result of 1 indicates
-that the connection was esablished and that the ID is valid.
-
-ERRORS
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
+
+
+RETURN VALUE
+------------
+
+The ``rmr_wh_open`` function returns a type
+``rmr_whid_t`` which must be passed to the
+``rmr_wh_send_msg`` function when sending a message. The id
+may also be tested to determine success or failure of the
+connection by using the RMR_WH_CONNECTED macro and passing
+the ID as the parameter; a result of 1 indicates that the
+connection was established and that the ID is valid.
+
+
+ERRORS
+------
+
The following error values are specifically set by this RMR
function. In some cases the error message of a system call is
propagated up, and thus this list might be incomplete.
-
-EINVAL
-
- A parameter passed was not valid.
-
-EACCESS
-
- The user application does not have the ability to
- establish a wormhole to the indicated target (or maybe any
- target).
-
-ECONNREFUSED
-
- The connection was refused.
-
-
-EXAMPLE
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
+ .. list-table::
+ :widths: auto
+ :header-rows: 0
+ :class: borderless
+
+ * - **EINVAL**
+ -
+ A parameter passed was not valid.
+
+ * - **EACCESS**
+ -
+ The user application does not have the ability to establish a
+ wormhole to the indicated target (or maybe any target).
+
+ * - **ECONNREFUSED**
+ -
+ The connection was refused.
+
+
+
+
+EXAMPLE
+-------
+
::
-
+
void* rmc;
rmr_whid_t wh;
+
rmc = rmr_init( "43086", 4096, 0 ); // init context
wh = rmr_wh_open( rmc, "localhost:6123" );
if( !RMR_WH_CONNECTED( wh ) ) {
strerror( errno ) );
}
-
-
-SEE ALSO
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
+
+
+SEE ALSO
+--------
+
rmr_alloc_msg(3), rmr_call(3), rmr_free_msg(3),
rmr_get_rcvfd(3), rmr_payload_size(3), rmr_send_msg(3),
rmr_rcv_msg(3), rmr_rcv_specific(3), rmr_rts_msg(3),