diff options
author | Jack Jansen <jack.jansen@cwi.nl> | 1995-03-01 14:05:27 (GMT) |
---|---|---|
committer | Jack Jansen <jack.jansen@cwi.nl> | 1995-03-01 14:05:27 (GMT) |
commit | dcb0a9bde882ed339ef781c45f4df7a4dd90e787 (patch) | |
tree | f4ff1dce1e08af6df33ed6438960d4a194b920b1 /Doc/libctb.tex | |
parent | ad0ee8369c63197a984a40a3b362ff29100d01bb (diff) | |
download | cpython-dcb0a9bde882ed339ef781c45f4df7a4dd90e787.zip cpython-dcb0a9bde882ed339ef781c45f4df7a4dd90e787.tar.gz cpython-dcb0a9bde882ed339ef781c45f4df7a4dd90e787.tar.bz2 |
Yet another one...
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/libctb.tex')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/libctb.tex | 146 |
1 files changed, 146 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/libctb.tex b/Doc/libctb.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6d68398 --- /dev/null +++ b/Doc/libctb.tex @@ -0,0 +1,146 @@ +\section{Built-in module \sectcode{ctb}} +\bimodindex{ctb} + +This module provides a partial interface to the Macintosh +Communications Toolbox. Currently, only Connection Manager tools are +supported. + +\begin{datadesc}{error} +The exception raised on errors. +\end{datadesc} + +\begin{datadesc}{cmData} +\dataline{cmCntl} +\dataline{cmAttn} +Flags for the \var{channel} argument of the \var{Read} and \var{Write} +methods. +\end{datadesc} + +\begin{datadesc}{cmFlagsEOM} +End-of-message flag for \var{Read} and \var{Write}. +\end{datadesc} + +\begin{datadesc}{choose*} +Values returned by \var{Choose}. +\end{datadesc} + +\begin{datadesc}{cmStatus*} +Bits in the status as returned by \var{Status}. +\end{datadesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{available}{} +Returns 1 if the communication toolbox is available, zero otherwise. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{CMNew}{name\, sizes} +Create a connection object using the connection tool named +\var{name}. \var{sizes} is a 6-tuple given buffer sizes for data in, +data out, control in, control out, attention in and attention out. +Alternatively, passing \var{None} will result in default buffer sizes. +\end{funcdesc} + +\subsection{connection object} +For all connection methods that take a \var{timeout} argument, a value +of \code{-1} is indefinite, meaning that the command runs to completion. + +\renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(connection object method)} + +\begin{datadesc}{callback} +If this member is set to a value other than \var{None} it should point +to a function accepting a single argument (the connection +object). This will make all connection object methods work +asynchronously, with the callback routine being called upon +completion. + +{\em Note:} for reasons beyond my understanding the callback routine +is never called currently. You are advised against using asynchronous +calls for the time being. +\end{datadesc} + + +\begin{funcdesc}{Open}{timeout} +Open an outgoing connection, waiting at most \var{timeout} seconds for +the connection to be established. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{Listen}{timeout} +Wait for an incoming connection. Stop waiting after \var{timeout} +seconds. This call is only meaningful to some tools. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{accept}{yesno} +Accept (when \var{yesno} is non-zero) or reject an incoming call after +\var{Listen} returned. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{Close}{timeout\, now} +Close a connection. When \var{now} is zero, the close is orderly +(i.e. outstanding output is flushed, etc) with a timeout of +\var{timeout} seconds. When \var{now} is non-zero the close is +immedeate, discarding output. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{Read}{len\, chan\, timeout} +Read \var{len} bytes or until \var{timeout} seconds have passed from +the channel \var{chan} (which is one of \var{cmData}, \var{cmCntl} or +\var{cmAttn}). Returns a 2-tuple: the data read and the end-of-message +flag. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{Write}{buf\, chan\, timeout\, eom} +Write \var{buf} to channel \var{chan}, aborting after \var{timeout} +seconds. When \var{eom} has the value \var{cmFlagsEOM} an +end-of-message indicator will be written after the data (if this +concept has a meaning for this communication tool). The method returns +the number of bytes written. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{Status}{} +Return connection status as the 2-tuple \code{(sizes, +flags)}. \var{Sizes} is a 6-tuple giving the actual buffer sizes used +(see \var{CMNew}), \var{flags} is a set of bits describing the state +of the connection. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{GetConfig}{} +Return the configuration string of the communication tool. These +configuration strings are tool-dependent, but usually easily parsed +and modified. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{SetConfig}{str} +Set the configuration string for the tool. The strings are parsed +left-to-right, with later values taking precedence. This means +individual configuration parameters can be modified by simply appending +something like \code{'baud 4800'} to the end of the string returned by +\var{GetConfig} and passing that to this method. The method returns +the number of characters actually parsed by the tool before it +encountered an error (or completed successfully). +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{Choose}{} +Present the user with a dialog to choose a communication tool and +configure it. If there is an outstanding connection some choices (like +selecting a different tool) may cause the connection to be +aborted. The return value (one of the \var{choose*} constants) will +indicate this. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{Idle}{} +Give the tool a chance to use the processor. You should call this +method regularly. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{Abort}{} +Abort an outstanding asynchronous \var{Open} or \var{Listen}. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{Reset}{} +Reset a connection. Exact meaning depends on the tool. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{Break}{length} +Send a break. Whether this means anything, what it means and +interpretation of the \var{length} parameter depend on the tool in +use. +\end{funcdesc} |