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Documented all the sysdeps (only briefly, I admit).

Except for Filters, RIP and OSPF, the progdocs are complete.
This commit is contained in:
Martin Mares 2000-06-05 12:49:04 +00:00
parent 525fa2c1f0
commit 73275d855d
5 changed files with 100 additions and 26 deletions

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D sysdep.sgml
C unix

27
sysdep/sysdep.sgml Normal file
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<!--
BIRD Programmer's Guide: Sysdeps
(c) 2000 Martin Mares <mj@ucw.cz>
-->
<chapt>System dependent parts
<sect>Introduction
<p>We've tried to make BIRD as portable as possible, but unfortunately
communication with the network stack differs from one OS to another,
so we need at least some OS specific code. The good news is that this
code is isolated in a small set of modules:
<descrip>
<tagp><tt/config.h/</tagp> is a header file with configuration information,
definition of the standard set of types and so on.
<tagp/Startup module/ controls BIRD startup. Common for a family of OS'es (e.g.,
for all Unices).
<tagp/Logging module/ manages the system logs. [per OS family]
<tagp/IO module/ gives an implementation of sockets, timers and the
global event queue. [per OS family]
<tagp/KRT module/ implements the Kernel and Device protocols. This
is the most arcane part of the system dependent stuff and some
functions differ even between various releases of a single OS.
</descrip>

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H UNIX system dependent parts
S log.c
S krt.c
# io.c is documented under Resources

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* Can be freely distributed and used under the terms of the GNU GPL.
*/
/**
* DOC: Kernel synchronization
*
* This system dependent module implements the Kernel and Device protocol,
* that is synchronization of interface lists and routing tables with the
* OS kernel.
*
* The whole kernel synchronization is a bit messy and touches some internals
* of the routing table engine, because routing table maintenance is a typical
* example of the proverbial compatibility between different Unices and we want
* to keep the overhead of our krt business as low as possible and avoid maintaining
* a local routing table copy.
*
* The kernel syncer can work in three different modes (according to system config header):
* Either with a single routing table and single KRT protocol [traditional Unix]
* or with many routing tables and separate krt protocols for all of them
* or with many routing tables, but every scan including all tables, so we start
* separate krt protocols which cooperate with each other [Linux 2.2].
* In this case, we keep only a single scan timer.
*
* We use FIB node flags to keep track of route synchronization status. We also
* attach temporary &rte's to the routing tables, but it cannot harm the rest of
* BIRD since table synchronization is an atomic process.
*
* When starting up, we cheat by looking if there is another
* KRT instance to be initialized later and performing table scan
* only once for all the instances.
*/
/*
* If you are brave enough, continue now. You cannot say you haven't been warned.
*/
#undef LOCAL_DEBUG
#include "nest/bird.h"
@ -18,30 +51,6 @@
#include "unix.h"
#include "krt.h"
/*
* The whole kernel synchronization is a bit messy and touches some internals
* of the routing table engine, because routing table maintenance is a typical
* example of the proverbial compatibility between different Unices and we want
* to keep the overhead of our krt business as low as possible and avoid maintaining
* a local routing table copy.
*
* The kernel syncer can work in three different modes (according to system config header):
* o Single routing table, single krt protocol. [traditional Unix]
* o Many routing tables, separate krt protocols for all of them.
* o Many routing tables, but every scan includes all tables, so we start
* separate krt protocols which cooperate with each other. [Linux 2.2]
* In this case, we keep only a single scan timer.
*
* The hacky bits:
* o We use FIB node flags to keep track of route synchronization status.
* o When starting up, we cheat by looking if there is another kernel
* krt instance to be initialized later and performing table scan
* only once for all the instances.
* o We attach temporary rte's to routing tables.
*
* If you are brave enough, continue now. You cannot say you haven't been warned.
*/
static int krt_uptodate(rte *k, rte *e);
/*

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@ -1,11 +1,18 @@
/*
* BIRD Library -- Logging Functions
*
* (c) 1998--1999 Martin Mares <mj@ucw.cz>
* (c) 1998--2000 Martin Mares <mj@ucw.cz>
*
* Can be freely distributed and used under the terms of the GNU GPL.
*/
/**
* DOC: Logging
*
* The Logging module offers a simple set of functions for writing
* messages to system logs and to the debug output.
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
@ -94,6 +101,16 @@ vlog(int class, char *msg, va_list args)
cli_echo(class, buf);
}
/**
* log - log a message
* @msg: printf-like formatting string with message class information
* prepended (%L_DEBUG to %L_BUG, see |lib/birdlib.h|)
*
* This function formats a message according to the format string @msg
* and writes it to the corresponding logfile (as specified in the
* configuration). Please note that the message is automatically
* formatted as a full line, no need to include |\n| inside.
*/
void
log(char *msg, ...)
{
@ -107,6 +124,13 @@ log(char *msg, ...)
va_end(args);
}
/**
* bug - report an internal error
* @msg: a printf-like error message
*
* This function logs an internal error and aborts execution
* of the program.
*/
void
bug(char *msg, ...)
{
@ -117,6 +141,13 @@ bug(char *msg, ...)
abort();
}
/**
* bug - report a fatal error
* @msg: a printf-like error message
*
* This function logs a fatal error and aborts execution
* of the program.
*/
void
die(char *msg, ...)
{
@ -127,6 +158,13 @@ die(char *msg, ...)
exit(1);
}
/**
* debug - write to debug output
* @msg: a printf-like message
*
* This function formats the message @msg and prints it out
* to the debugging output. No newline character is appended.
*/
void
debug(char *msg, ...)
{