x25, PF_X25 — ITU-T X.25 / ISO-8208 protocol interface.
#include <sys/socket.h> #include <linux/x25.h>
x25_socket = socket( |
PF_X25, | |
SOCK_SEQPACKET, | ||
0) ; |
X25 sockets provide an interface to the X.25 packet layer protocol. This allows applications to communicate over a public X.25 data network as standardized by International Telecommunication Union's recommendation X.25 (X.25 DTE-DCE mode). X25 sockets can also be used for communication without an intermediate X.25 network (X.25 DTE-DTE mode) as described in ISO-8208.
Message boundaries are preserved — a read(2) from a socket will retrieve the same chunk of data as output with the corresponding write(2) to the peer socket. When necessary, the kernel takes care of segmenting and re-assembling long messages by means of the X.25 M-bit. There is no hard-coded upper limit for the message size. However, re-assembling of a long message might fail if there is a temporary lack of system resources or when other constraints (such as socket memory or buffer size limits) become effective. If that occurs, the X.25 connection will be reset.
The AF_X25
socket address
family uses the struct
sockaddr_x25 for representing network addresses
as defined in ITU-T recommendation X.121.
struct sockaddr_x25 { sa_family_t sx25_family
; /* must be AF_X25 */x25_address sx25_addr
; /* X.121 Address */};
sx25_addr
contains a char array x25_addr[]
to be
interpreted as a null-terminated string. sx25_addr.x25_addr[]
consists of up to 15 (not counting the terminating 0) ASCII
characters forming the X.121 address. Only the decimal
digit characters from '0' to '9' are allowed.
The following X.25-specific socket options can be set by
using setsockopt(2) and read
with getsockopt(2) with the
level parameter set to SOL_X25
.
X25_QBITINCL
Controls whether the X.25 Q-bit (Qualified Data Bit) is accessible by the user. It expects an integer argument. If set to 0 (default), the Q-bit is never set for outgoing packets and the Q-bit of incoming packets is ignored. If set to 1, an additional first byte is prepended to each message read from or written to the socket. For data read from the socket, a 0 first byte indicates that the Q-bits of the corresponding incoming data packets were not set. A first byte with value 1 indicates that the Q-bit of the corresponding incoming data packets was set. If the first byte of the data written to the socket is 1 the Q-bit of the corresponding outgoing data packets will be set. If the first byte is 0 the Q-bit will not be set.
Plenty, as the X.25 PLP implementation is CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL
.
This man page is incomplete.
There is no dedicated application programmer's header file
yet; you need to include the kernel header file <
linux/x25.h
>
CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL
might also imply that
future versions of the interface are not binary
compatible.
X.25 N-Reset events are not propagated to the user process yet. Thus, if a reset occurred, data might be lost without notice.
This page is part of release 2.79 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, and information about reporting
bugs, can be found at
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
This man page is Copyright (C) 1998 Heiner Eisen. Permission is granted to distribute possibly modified copies of this page provided the header is included verbatim, and in case of nontrivial modification author and date of the modification is added to the header. $Id: x25.7,v 1.4 1999/05/18 10:35:12 freitag Exp $ |