gophfilt man page on DragonFly

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GOPHFILT(1)							   GOPHFILT(1)

NAME
       gophfilt - oneshot connection to gopher document server

SYNOPSIS
       gophfilt [-t type] [-p path] [-h host] [-s port] [-i item]

DESCRIPTION
       The  gophfilt  program  is  a  oneshot command line driven version of a
       gopher client, suitable for use in shell- or awk-scripts.

       The Internet Gopher is a distributed  document  delivery	 service.   It
       allows a neophyte user to access various types of data residing on mul‐
       tiple hosts in a seamless fashion.  This is accomplished by  presenting
       the user a hierarchical arrangement of documents and by using a client-
       server communications model.  The Internet Gopher Server accepts simple
       queries, and responds by sending the client a document.

       Gophfilt	 can  operate in either of two modes.  The first one is in the
       spirit of unix filters, in that it accepts requests on stdin and writes
       results	to  stdout.   The  request  is	in the form of a tab-delimited
       .cache item.  For example:

	  1Master Gopher at UMN	   1/	gopher.tc.umn.edu   70

       (Or in string notation)

	  "1Master Gopher at UMN\t1/\tgopher.tc.umn.edu\t70\n"

       This example would result in the retrieval of the root  directory  from
       the Master Gopher.

       Gophfilt's other mode permits the construction of a gopher request from
       arguments provided on the command line.	 In  this  "manual"  mode,  at
       least  the  path and type items must be provided.  The default host and
       port are taken from the file conf.h at module build time.

       -p specifies the path to the requested data.  From our "filter" example
       above, the field "1/" is the path.

       -t  specifies  the type of the requested data.  From our example above,
       the leading "1" character is the type (directory, in this case).

       -h specifies the name of the host where the server is to be found.  The
       default host (CLIENT1_HOST from file conf.h) is used if not provided.

       -s  specifies  the  service  (port) that the server is monitoring.  The
       default port (CLIENT1_PORT from file conf.h) is used if not provided.

       -i specifies a search item.  This field immediately  follows  the  path
       field in the transmitted request.

       -T  specifies  a receiver timeout in seconds.  This is the maximum time
       that gophfilt will wait for more data.  If the "timeout"	 return	 value
       is  noticed  by	the  calling  program, any data received to that point
       should be considered suspect.

       To recreate using manual operation the request from  our	 example,  one
       would execute the following command.

       gophfilt -t 1 -p 1/ -h gopher.tc.umn.edu -s 70

MORE EXAMPLES
       Here  is	 an  example that demonstrates the usefulness of the gophfilt.
       This specific example only works on the Rutgers campus, but illustrates
       the point

       gophfilt -t 0 -p "webster default SPELL" -i flatulence
	 -h hangout.rutgers.edu -s 770 | gophfilt

       This  example  requests	a selector item from the Webster's Dictionary,
       and then pipes that item to gophfilt for subsequent  retrieval  of  the
       actual definition.  The result is available on stdout for use.

RETURNS
       Gophfilt returns the following completion codes on exit:

	   0 Successful completion.

	  -1 Error in parsing command line arguments.

	  -2 Manual operation and insufficient parameters were provided.

	  -3 Piped operation and unable to read selector from stdin.

	  -4 Unsupported item type requested.

	  -5 Unable to connect to specified host and port combination.

	  -6 Error encountered writing to stdout.

	  -7 Timeout occurred while waiting for more data.

								   GOPHFILT(1)
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