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GDOMAP(8)                    GNUstep System Manual                   GDOMAP(8)

NAME
       gdomap - GNUstep Distributed Objects name server

SYNOPSIS
       gdomap  [-C|-H]  [-I  pidfile] [-L name] [-M name] [-N] [-P number] [-R
       name] [-T type] [-U name] [-a file] [-c file] [-d]  [-f]  [-i  seconds]
       [-j path] [-p]

DESCRIPTION
       gdomap  The  gdomap  daemon is used by GNUstep programs to look up dis-
       tributed objects of processes running across the network  (and  between
       different  user  accounts on a single machine).  The daemon is NOT used
       for lookup where two processes belonging to the same user are  using  a
       host-local  connection.  This manual page explains the usage of gdomap.
       For design and implementation information (and special notes for  pack-
       agers),  please  see  the HTML documentation installed in $GNUSTEP_SYS-
       TEM_DOC, under Command-line Tools.

       Usually the gdomap daemon is started at  system  boot  time  and  binds
       itself  to  port  538. See the GNUstep Build Guide for a sample startup
       script.

       By default gdomap probes every machine on the local network to  see  if
       there is a copy of gdomap running on it.  This is done for class-C net-
       works and subnets of class-C networks.  If your host is on a class-B or
       class-A  net then the default behaviour is to treat it as a class-C net
       and probe only the hosts that would be expected on a class-C network of
       the same number.

       If  you are running on a class-A or class-B network, or if your net has
       a large number of hosts which will not have gdomap on them  -  you  may
       want  to  supply  a  configuration  file listing the hosts to be probed
       explicitly, rather than getting gdomap to probe all hosts on the  local
       net.

       You  may also want to supply the configuration file so that hosts which
       are not actually on your local network can still  be  found  when  your
       code  tries to connect to a host using @"*" as the host name.  NB. this
       functionality does not exist in OpenStep.

       A configuration file consists of a list of IP addresses to  be  probed.
       The  IP  addresses  should be in standard 'dot' notation, one per line.
       Empty lines are permitted in the configuration  file.   Anything  on  a
       line  after  a hash ('#') is ignored.  You tell gdomap about the config
       file with the '-c' command line option.

       gdomap uses the SIOCGIFCONF ioctl to build a list of IP  addresses  and
       netmasks  for  the  network  interface  cards on your machine.  On some
       operating systems, this facility is not available (or  is  broken),  so
       you  must  tell  gdomap the addresses and masks of the interfaces using
       the '-a' command line option.  The file named with '-a' should  contain
       a  series of lines with space separated pairs of addresses and masks in
       'dot' notation.  You must NOT include loopback interfaces in this list.
       If  you want to support broadcasting of probe information on a network,
       you may supply the broadcast address as a third item on the  line.   If
       your  operating  system  has  some other method of giving you a list of
       network interfaces and masks, please send me example code so that I can
       implement it in gdomap.

OPTIONS
       -C     help about configuration

       -H     general help

       -I     pid file to write pid

       -L name
              perform lookup for name then quit.

       -M name
              machine name for -L and -N

       -N     list all names registered on host

       -P number
              port number required for -R option.

       -R name
              register name locally then quit.

       -T type
              port  type  for  -L  ,  -R  and  -U  options - tcp_gdo, udp_gdo,
              tcp_foreign, udp_foreign.

       -U name
              unregister name locally then quit.

       -a file
              use config file for interface list.

       -c file
              use config file for probe.

       -d     extra debug logging (normally via syslog).

       -f     avoid fork() to make debugging easy

       -i seconds
              re-probe at this interval (roughly), min 60

       -j path
              place the process in a chroot jail at this path rather  than  in
              /tmp

       -p     disable probing for other servers

FILES
       Use the -c option to specify a configuration file for gdomap. See under
       DESCRIPTION for possible configurations.

DIAGNOSTICS
       Kill  with  SIGUSR1  to  obtain  a  dump  of   all   known   peers   in
       /tmp/gdomap.dump

       gdomap -N lists all registered names on the local host.

SEE ALSO
       gdomap -C gives above instructions on how to set up gdomap.

       gdnc(1), GNUstep(7), gpbs(1)

       The  GNUstep  Build  Guide  example  rc  script:  <http://gnustep.made-
       it.com/BuildGuide/index.html#GNUSTEP.SERVICES>

HISTORY
       Work on gdomap started in October 1996.

       This manual page first appeared in gnustep-base 1.7.1 (June 2003).

AUTHORS
       gdomap was written by Richard Frith-Macdonald <rfm@gnu.org>

       This manual page was put together by Martin  Brecher  <martin@mb-itcon-
       sulting.com>.

GNUstep                           August 2003                        GDOMAP(8)

Czas wygenerowania: 0.00013 sek.


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