8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
I have 3 Power7 710 Express boxes and 1 Power7 750Express box that all get into a weird hung state with the same console message. they all have AIX 6.1 TL7 (2x6100-07-08-1339, 2x6100-07-10-1415).
"NIS: Server not responding for domain X.X.X; still trying."
There are other Clients that... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mrmurdock
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi Experts,
I am facing one problem here which is one process always stuck in running state which causes the other similar process to sleep state . This causes my system in hanged state.
On doing cat /proc/<pid>wchan showing the "__init_begin" in the output.
Can you please help me here... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: naveeng
6 Replies
3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi Experts,
I am facing one problem here which is one process always stuck in running state which causes the other similar process to sleep state . This causes my system in hanged state.
On doing cat /proc/<pid>wchan showing the "__init_begin" in the output.
Can you please help me here... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: naveeng
1 Replies
4. BSD
Hi Experts,
I am facing one problem here which is one process always stuck in running state which causes the other similar process to sleep state . This causes my system in hanged state.
On doing cat /proc/<pid>wchan showing the "__init_begin" in the output.
Can you please help me here... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: naveeng
0 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I am studying exec family of functions.Its man page says,it replaces the current process image with a new process image. If it replaces the binary,then after returning back,how does it get the previous parameters of the process which called exec?As replacing process image means replacing... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Radha.Krishna
5 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
hello
is there a family tree, or words that would illustrate the family tree of,
Unix -> Linux
As i would understand Unix, it is a OS.
And Linux is a ?, is Linux a OS or a sub structure inside of the Unix OS ?.
Have you ever seen one of those family tree`s where ma and pa are shown at... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cowLips
3 Replies
7. Programming
how does exec() do it? on successful call of exec() family of functions, they never return...
how to i emulate that.
assume the standard example,
execl("/bin/ls","ls",NULL);
now this would never return.
i m trying to emulate exec()'s never to return feature...
#include<unistd.h>... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: c_d
4 Replies
8. OS X (Apple)
Hi,
I compiled with no error a C program, than I tryed to execute it and than I get this error:
connessione al server fallita: Address family not supported by protocol family
What does it mean?
Why I get this error only on Mac os x while on Ubuntu the program works?
The code is:... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: DNAx86
3 Replies
rpc_name_to_sockaddr(3ncs) rpc_name_to_sockaddr(3ncs)
Name
rpc_name_to_sockaddr - convert a host name and port number to a socket address (client or server)
Syntax
#include <idl/c/rpc.h>
void rpc_$name_to_sockaddr(name, nlength, port, family, sockaddr, slength, status)
unsigned char name;
unsigned long nlength;
unsigned long port;
unsigned long family;
socket_$addr_t *sockaddr;
unsigned long *slength;
status_$t *status;
Arguments
name A string that contains a host name and, optionally, a port and an address family. The format is family:host[port],
where family: and [port] are optional. If you specify a family as part of the name parameter, you must specify
socket_$unspec in the family parameter. The family part of the name parameter is ip; host is the host name; port is an
integer port number.
nlength The number of characters in name.
port The socket port number. This parameter should have the value rpc_$unbound_port if you are not specifying a well-known
port; in this case, the returned socket address will specify the Local Location Broker (LLB) forwarding port at host.
If you specify the port number in the name parameter, this parameter is ignored.
family The address family to use for the socket address. This value corresponds to the communications protocol used to access
the socket and determines how the sockaddr is expressed. If you specify the address family in the name parameter, this
parameter must have the value socket_$unspec.
sockaddr The socket address corresponding to name, port, and family.
slength The length, in bytes, of sockaddr.
status The completion status. If the completion status returned in is equal to status_$ok , then the routine that supplied it
was successful.
Description
The routine provides the socket address for a socket, given the host name, the port number, and the address family.
You can specify the socket address information either as one text string in the name parameter or by passing each of the three elements as
separate parameters( name, port, and family ); in the latter case, the name parameter should contain only the hostname.
Diagnostics
This section lists status codes for errors returned by this routine in
rpc_$not_in_call An internal error.
rpc_$proto_error An internal protocol error. This routine has been superseded by the routine.
Files
See Also
intro(3ncs), rpc_sockaddr_to_name(3ncs), socket_from_name(3ncs)
rpc_name_to_sockaddr(3ncs)