On Sat, 18 Jul 2009 06:25:19 EDT erik quanstrom <quans...@quanstro.net> wrote: > On Sat Jul 18 03:46:01 EDT 2009, bakul+pl...@bitblocks.com wrote: > > Has anyone extended the idea of channels where the > > sender/receiver are on different machines (or at least in > > different processes)? A netcat equivalent for channels! > > i think the general idea is that if you want to do this between > arbitrary machines, you provide a 9p interface. you can think > of 9p as a channel with a predefined set of messages. acme > does this. kernel devices do this. > > however inferno provides file2chan > http://www.vitanuova.com/inferno/man/2/sys-file2chan.html. > of course, somebody has to provide the 9p interface, even > if that's just posting a fd to /srv. > > if you wanted to do something like file2chan in plan 9 and c, you're > going to have to marshal your data. this means that chanconnect > as specified is impossible. (acme avoids this by using text only. > the kernel devices keep this under control by using a defined > byte order and very few binary interfaces.) i don't know how you would > solve the naming problems e.g. acme would have using dial-string > addressing (i assume that's what you ment; host-port addressing is > ip specific.). what would be the port-numbering huristic for allowing > multiple acmes on the same cpu server? > > after whittling away problem cases, i think one is left with pipes, > and it seems pretty clear how to connect things so that > chan <-> pipe <-> chan. one could generalize to multiple > machines by using tools like cpu(1).
First of all, thanks for all the responses! I should've mentioned this won't run on top of plan9 (or Unix). What I really want is alt! I brought up RPC but really, this is just Limbo's "chan of <type>" idea. In the concurrent application where I want to use this, it would factor out a bunch of stuff and simplify communication. The chanconnect("<host>:<port>") syntax was to get the idea across. A real building block might look something like this: int fd = <get a pipe end to something somehow> Chan c = fd2chan(fd, <marshalling functions>); Ideally I'd generate relevant struct definitions and marshalling functions from the same spec. -- bakul