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author | jestin | 2003-01-07 10:38:54 +0000 |
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committer | jestin | 2003-01-07 10:38:54 +0000 |
commit | c23f7ec61f2b57ffb6cf5057a453dafe89416ef1 (patch) | |
tree | 59d43e00bb38e1c8186aa66cc3dc704ac33e1b61 /doc/ivy-java.sgml | |
parent | 963e19d598586288b23779643cd72ff5bb4c3335 (diff) | |
download | ivy-java-c23f7ec61f2b57ffb6cf5057a453dafe89416ef1.zip ivy-java-c23f7ec61f2b57ffb6cf5057a453dafe89416ef1.tar.gz ivy-java-c23f7ec61f2b57ffb6cf5057a453dafe89416ef1.tar.bz2 ivy-java-c23f7ec61f2b57ffb6cf5057a453dafe89416ef1.tar.xz |
Rajout de docs sur IvyDaemon
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/ivy-java.sgml')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ivy-java.sgml | 37 |
1 files changed, 30 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ivy-java.sgml b/doc/ivy-java.sgml index 310a733..5408851 100644 --- a/doc/ivy-java.sgml +++ b/doc/ivy-java.sgml @@ -75,7 +75,8 @@ library. There is also a section dedicated to this port. <sect1><title>What is Ivy?</title> <para> -Ivy is a software bus designed at <ulink url="http://www.cena.fr/">CENA</ulink> (France). A software bus is a system +Ivy is a software bus designed at <ulink url="http://www.cena.fr/">CENA</ulink> (France). +A software bus is a system that allows software applications to exchange information with the illusion of broadcasting that information, selection being performed by the receiving applications. Using a software bus is very similar to dealing with events in a @@ -108,12 +109,12 @@ The Ivy java library (aka ivy-java or fr.dgac.ivy) is a java package that allows you to connect applications to an Ivy bus. You can use it to write applications in java. You can also use it to integrate any thread-safe java application. So far, this library has been tested and used on a variety of -java virtual machines (from 1.1.8 to 1.4.0), and on a variety of architectures +java virtual machines (from 1.1.7 to 1.4.1), and on a variety of architectures (GNU/Linux, Solaris, Windows NT,XP,2000, MacOSX). </para> <para> -The Ivy C library was originally developed by François-Régis Colin and then +The Ivy java library was originally developed by François-Régis Colin and then by Yannick Jestin at CENA. It is maintained by a group at CENA (Toulouse, France) </para> </sect2> @@ -153,7 +154,8 @@ machine to the jar file. <sect1><title>Your first Ivy application</title> <para> -We are going to write a "Hello world translater" for an Ivy bus. The application will subscribe to all messages starting with "Hello", and re-emit them after +We are going to write a "Hello world translater" for an Ivy bus. The application will +subscribe to all messages starting with "Hello", and re-emit them after translating "Hello" into "Bonjour". In addition, the application will quit when it receives any message containing exactly "Bye". </para> @@ -380,6 +382,10 @@ with this name to leave the bus .bye (or .quit) forces the JPROBE application to exit. This is the same as issing an end of file character on a single input line ( ^D ). </para></listitem> <listitem><para> +.direct client id message sends the direct message to the remote client, using +the numeric id +</para></listitem> +<listitem><para> .list gives the list of clients seen on the ivy bus </para></listitem> <listitem><para> @@ -391,15 +397,32 @@ check the connectivity. </para> </sect2> +<sect2><title>fr.dgac.ivy.IvyDaemon utility</title> +<para> +As the launching and quitting of an ivy bus is a bit slow, it is not +convenient to spawn an Ivy client each time we want to send a simple message. +To do so, we can use the IvyDaemon, which is a TCP daemon sitting and waiting +on the port 3456, and also connected on the default bus. Each time a remote +application connects to this port, every line read until EOF will be forwarded +on the bus. The standard port and bus domain can be overriden by command line +switches. ( java fr.dgac.ivy.IvyDaemon -h ). +</para> + +<para>First, spawn an ivy Damon: $ java fr.dgac.ivy.IvyDaemon</para> +<para>then, within your shell scripts, use a short tcp connexion ( for instance +netcat ) : $ echo "hello world" | nc -q 0 localhost 3456 +</para> +<para>The message will be sent on the default Ivy Bus.</para> +</sect2> + <sect2><title>Direct messages</title> <para> Direct messages is an ivy feature allowing the exchange of information between two ivy clients. It overrides the subscription mechanism, making the exchange faster ( there is no regexp matching, etc ). However, this features breaks the software bus metaphor, and should be replaced with the relevant bounded -regexps, at the cost of a small CPU overhead. So far, the sending of direct -message is not available from java, but the receiving is available in the -fr.dgac.Ivy class. +regexps, at the cost of a small CPU overhead. The full direct message +mechanism in java has been made available since the ivy-java-1.2.3. </para> </sect2> |