SRV 3
NAME
srv - server registry
SYNOPSIS
bind #s /srv #s/ service1 #s/ service2 ...
DESCRIPTION
The
srv device provides a one-level directory holding
already-open channels to services.
In effect,
srv is a bulletin board on which processes may post open file descriptors
to make them available to other processes.
To install a channel, create a new file such as /srv/myserv and then write a text string (suitable for strtoul ; see atof (2)) giving the file descriptor number of an open file. Any process may then open /srv/myserv to acquire another reference to the open file that was registered.
An entry in srv holds a reference to the associated file even if no process has the file open. Removing the file from /srv releases that reference.
It is an error to write more than one number into a server file, or to create a file with a name that is already being used.
EXAMPLE
To drop one end of a pipe into
/srv , that is, to create a named pipe:
.EX
int fd, p[2];
char buf[32];
pipe(p);
fd = create("/srv/namedpipe", OWRITE, 0666);
fprint(fd, "%d", p[0]);
close(fd);
close(p[0]);
fprint(p[1], "hello");
At this point, any process may open and read /srv/namedpipe to receive the hello string. Data written to /srv/namedpipe can be received by executing
.EX read(p[1], buf, sizeof buf);in the above process.
SOURCE
/sys/src/9/port/devsrv.c