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ltpclock(1) [debian man page]

LTPCLOCK(1)							  LTP executables						       LTPCLOCK(1)

NAME
ltpclock - LTP daemon task for managing scheduled events SYNOPSIS
ltpclock DESCRIPTION
ltpclock is a background "daemon" task that periodically performs scheduled LTP activities. It is spawned automatically by ltpadmin in response to the 's' command that starts operation of the LTP protocol, and it is terminated by ltpadmin in response to an 'x' (STOP) command. Once per second, ltpclock takes the following action: First it manages the current state of all links ("spans"). In particular, it checks the age of the currently buffered session block for each span and, if that age exceeds the span's configured aggregation time limit, gives the "buffer full" semaphore for that span to initiate block segmentation and transmission by ltpmeter. In so doing, it also infers link state changes ("link cues") from data rate changes as noted in the RFX database by rfxclock: If the rate of transmission to a neighbor was zero but is now non-zero, then transmission to that neighbor is unblocked. The applicable "buffer empty" semaphore is given if no outbound block is being constructed (enabling start of a new transmission session) and the "segments ready" semaphore is given if the outbound segment queue is non-empty (enabling transmission of segments by the link service output task). If the rate of transmission to a neighbor was non-zero but is now zero, then transmission to that neighbor is blocked -- i.e., the semaphores triggering transmission will no longer be given. If the imputed rate of transmission from a neighbor was non-zero but is now zero, then all timers affecting segment retransmission to that neighbor are suspended. This has the effect of extending the interval of each affected timer by the length of time that the timers remain suspended. If the imputed rate of transmission from a neighbor was zero but is now non-zero, then all timers affecting segment retransmission to that neighbor are resumed. Then ltpclock retransmits all unacknowledged checkpoint segments, report segments, and cancellation segments whose computed timeout intervals have expired. EXIT STATUS
0 ltpclock terminated, for reasons noted in the ion.log file. If this termination was not commanded, investigate and solve the problem identified in the log file and use ltpadmin to restart ltpclock. 1 ltpclock was unable to attach to LTP protocol operations, probably because ltpadmin has not yet been run. FILES
No configuration files are needed. ENVIRONMENT
No environment variables apply. DIAGNOSTICS
The following diagnostics may be issued to the ion.log log file: ltpclock can't initialize LTP. ltpadmin has not yet initialized LTP protocol operations. Can't dispatch events. An unrecoverable database error was encountered. ltpclock terminates. Can't manage links. An unrecoverable database error was encountered. ltpclock terminates. BUGS
Report bugs to <ion-bugs@korgano.eecs.ohiou.edu> SEE ALSO
ltpadmin(1), ltpmeter(1), rfxclock(1) perl v5.14.2 2012-05-25 LTPCLOCK(1)

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LTPADMIN(1)							  LTP executables						       LTPADMIN(1)

NAME
ltpadmin - ION Licklider Transmission Protocol (LTP) administration interface SYNOPSIS
ltpadmin [ commands_filename | . ] DESCRIPTION
ltpadmin configures, starts, manages, and stops LTP operations for the local ION node. It operates in response to LTP configuration commands found in the file commands_filename, if provided; if not, ltpadmin prints a simple prompt (:) so that the user may type commands directly into standard input. If commands_filename is a period (.), the effect is the same as if a command file containing the single command 'x' were passed to ltpadmin -- that is, the ION node's ltpclock task, ltpmeter tasks, and link service adapter tasks are stopped. The format of commands for commands_filename can be queried from ltpadmin with the 'h' or '?' commands at the prompt. The commands are documented in ltprc(5). EXIT STATUS
0 Successful completion of LTP administration. EXAMPLES
ltpadmin Enter interactive LTP configuration command entry mode. ltpadmin host1.ltp Execute all configuration commands in host1.ltp, then terminate immediately. ltpadmin . Stop all LTP operations on the local node. FILES
See ltprc(5) for details of the LTP configuration commands. ENVIRONMENT
No environment variables apply. DIAGNOSTICS
Note: all ION administration utilities expect source file input to be lines of ASCII text that are NL-delimited. If you edit the ltprc file on a Windows machine, be sure to use dos2unix to convert it to Unix text format before presenting it to ltpadmin. Otherwise ltpadmin will detect syntax errors and will not function satisfactorily. The following diagnostics may be issued to the logfile ion.log: ltpadmin can't attach to ION. There is no SDR data store for ltpadmin to use. You should run ionadmin(1) first, to set up an SDR data store for ION. Can't open command file... The commands_filename specified in the command line doesn't exist. Various errors that don't cause ltpadmin to fail but are noted in the ion.log log file may be caused by improperly formatted commands given at the prompt or in the commands_filename file. Please see ltprc(5) for details. BUGS
Report bugs to <ion-bugs@korgano.eecs.ohiou.edu> SEE ALSO
ltpmeter(1), ltprc(5) perl v5.14.2 2012-05-25 LTPADMIN(1)
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