man pages section 3: Networking Library Functions

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Updated: July 2014
 
 

SLPUnescape(3SLP)

Name

SLPUnescape - translate escaped characters into UTF-8

Synopsis

cc [ flag... ] file... –lslp [ library... ]
#include <slp.h>

SLPError SLPUnescape(const char *pcInBuf, char** ppcOutBuf,
     SLPBoolean isTag);

Description

The SLPUnescape() function processes the input string in pcInbuf and unescapes any SLP reserved characters. If the isTag parameter is SLPTrue, then look for bad tag characters and signal an error if any are found with the SLP_PARSE_ERROR code. No transformation is performed if the input string is an opaque. The results are put into a buffer allocated by the API library and returned in the ppcOutBuf parameter. This buffer should be deallocated using SLPFree(3SLP) when the memory is no longer needed.

Parameters

pcInBuf

Pointer to the input buffer to process for escape characters.

ppcOutBuf

Pointer to a pointer for the output buffer with the SLP reserved characters escaped. Must be freed using SLPFree(3SLP) when the memory is no longer needed.

isTag

When true, the input buffer is checked for bad tag characters.

Errors

This function or its callback may return any SLP error code. See the ERRORS section in slp_api(3SLP).

Examples

Example 1 Using SLPUnescape()

The following example decodes the representation for “,tag,”:

char* pcOutBuf;
SLPError err;

err = SLPUnescape("\\2c tag\\2c", &pcOutbuf, SLP_TRUE);

Environment Variables

SLP_CONF_FILE

When set, use this file for configuration.

Attributes

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE
ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Availability
service/network/slp

See also

slpd(1M),SLPFree(3SLP), slp_api(3SLP), slp.conf(4), slpd.reg(4), attributes(5)

Managing Service Location Protocol Services in Oracle Solaris 11.2

Guttman, E., Perkins, C., Veizades, J., and Day, M.RFC 2608, Service Location Protocol, Version 2. The Internet Society. June 1999.

Kempf, J. and Guttman, E. RFC 2614, An API for Service Location. The Internet Society. June 1999.