Net::SNPP::Server(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Net::SNPP::Server(3)NAMENet::SNPP::ServerDESCRIPTION
An object interface for creating SNPP servers. Almost everything you
need to create your very own SNPP server is here in this module. There
is a callback() method that can replace default function with your own.
them. Any SNPP command can be overridden or new/custom ones can be
created using custom_command(). To disable commands you just don't
want to deal with, use disable_command().
SYNOPSIS
There may be a synopsis here someday ...
METHODSnew()
Create a Net::SNPP::Server object listening on a port. By default,
it only listens on the localhost (127.0.0.1) - specify MultiHomed
to listen on all addresses or LocalAddr to listen on only one.
my $svr = Net::SNPP::Server->new(
Port => port to listen on
BindTo => interface address to bind to
MultiHomed => listen on all interfaces if true (and BindTo is unset)
Listen => how many simultaneous connections to handle (SOMAXCONN)
# the following two options are only used by handle_client()
MaxErrors => maximum number of errors before disconnecting client
Timeout => timeout while waiting for data (uses SIGARLM)
);
client()
Calls accept() for you and returns a client handle. This method
will block if there is no waiting client. The handle returned is a
subclass of IO::Handle, so all IO::Handle methods should work.
my $client = $server->client();
ip()
Return the IP address associated with a client handle.
printf "connection from %s", $client->ip();
socket()
Returns the raw socket handle. This mainly exists for use with
select() or IO::Select.
my $select = IO::Select->new();
$select->add( $server->socket() );
connected()
For use with a client handle. True if server socket is still
alive.
shutdown()
Shuts down the server socket.
$server->shutdown(2);
callback()
Insert a callback into Server.pm.
$server->callback( 'process_page', \&my_function );
$server->callback( 'validate_pager_id', \&my_function );
$server->callback( 'validate_pager_pin', \&my_function );
$server->callback( 'write_log', \&my_function );
$server->callback( 'create_id_and_pin', \&my_function );
process_page( $PAGER_ID, \%PAGE, \@RESULTS )
$PAGER_ID = [
0 => retval of validate_pager_id
1 => retval of validate_pager_pin ] $PAGE = {
mess => $,
responses => [], }
validate_pager_id( PAGER_ID )
The return value of this callback will be saved as the pager id
that is passed to the process_page callback as the first list
element of the first argument.
validate_pager_pin( VALIDATED_PAGER_ID, PIN )
The value returned by this callback will be saved as the second
list element in the first argument to process_page. The PAGER_ID
input to this callback is the output from the validate_pager_id
callback.
NOTE: If you really care about the PIN, you must use this
callback. The default callback will return 1 if the pin is not
set.
write_log
First argument is a Unix syslog level, such as "warning" or
"info." The rest of the arguments are the message. Return value
is ignored.
create_id_and_pin
Create an ID and PIN for a 2way message.
custom_command()
Create a custom command or override a default command in
handle_client(). The command name must be 4 letters or numbers.
The second argument is a coderef that should return a text command,
i.e. "250 OK" and some "defined" value to continue the client loop.
+++If no value is set, the client will be disconnected after
executing your command.+++ If you need MSTA or KTAG, this is the
hook you need to implement them.
The subroutine will be passed the command arguments, split on
whitespace.
sub my_MSTA_sub {
my( $id, $password ) = @_;
# ...
return "250 OK", 1;
}
$server->custom_command( "MSTA", \&my_MSTA_sub );
disable_command()
Specify a command to disable in the server. This is useful, for
instance, if you don't want to support level 3 commands.
$server->disable_command( "2WAY", "550 2WAY not supported here" );
The second argument is an optional custom error message. The
default is:
"500 Command Not Implemented, Try Again"
handle_client()
Takes the result of $server->client() and takes care of parsing the
user input. This should be quite close to being rfc1861
compliant. If you specified Timeout to be something other than 0
in new(), SIGARLM will be used to set a timeout. If you use this,
make sure to take signals into account when writing your code.
fork()'ing before calling handle_client is a good way to avoid
interrupting code that shouldn't be interrupted.
forked_server()
Creates a server in a forked process. The return value is an array
(or arrayref depending on context) containing a read-only pipe and
the pid of the new process. Pages completed will be written to the
pipe as a semicolon delimited array.
my($pipe,$pid) = $server->forked_server();
my $line = $pipe->getline();
chomp( $line );
my( $pgr, $pgr, %pagedata ) = split( /;/, $line );
AUTHOR
Al Tobey <tobeya@tobert.org>
Some ideas from Sendpage::SNPPServer
Kees Cook <cook@cpoint.net> http://outflux.net/
TODO
Add more hooks for callbacks
Implement the following level 2 and level 3 commands
4.5.1 LOGIn <loginid> [password]
4.5.3 LEVEl <ServiceLevel>
4.5.5 COVErage <AlternateArea>
4.5.7 CALLerid <CallerID>
4.6.3 EXPTag <hours>
4.6.5 ACKRead <0|1>
4.6.6 RTYPe <Reply_Type_Code>
SEE ALSO
Net::Cmd Socket
perl v5.14.0 2004-04-08 Net::SNPP::Server(3)