ChorusOS 5.0 Features and Architecture Overview

Network Commands

The ChorusOS operating system offers the following network commands:

Table 3-1 ChorusOS Network Commands

Command 

IPv4 Compatible 

IPv6 Compatible 

arp

Yes 

N/A 

ftp

Yes 

Yes 

ftpd

Yes 

No 

gifconfig

Yes 

Yes 

ifconfig

Yes 

Yes 

ndp

No 

Yes 

netstat

Yes 

Yes 

nfsd

Yes 

No 

nfsstat

Yes 

No 

ping

Yes 

N/A 

ping6 

N/A 

Yes 

pppstart

Yes 

No 

route

Yes 

Yes 

rpcbind

Yes 

Yes 

rpcinfo 

Yes 

Yes 

teld

Yes 

No 

tftpd

Yes 

Yes 

ypcat

Yes 

No 

ypmatch

Yes 

No 

ypwhich

Yes 

No 

dhclient

Yes 

No 

dhcpd

Yes 

No 

ntpd

Yes 

No 

ntpdate

Yes 

No 

ntpq

Yes 

No 

tcpdump

Yes 

Yes 

rtsol

N/A 

Yes 

rtsold

N/A 

Yes 

traceroute

Yes 

No 

Naming Services

Naming services in the ChorusOS operating system are provided by DNS and NIS.

The Domain Name System (DNS) commands provide a standard, stable and robust architecture used for the naming architecture on the Internet Protocol. DNS is used widely on the Internet.

Name resolution is ensured by DNS servers (named), one of which is the primary server. This server reads the name records stored in a database on disk (this database file is managed by the administrator). The other servers are secondary, which means that they acquire the name records from the primary server, and do not read them from the main database file. However, these secondary servers may store records in a cache file on disk to improve restart performances. These cache files are not intended to be edited manually. The user program performs the name resolution by sending queries to DNS name servers. Generally, each host is configured such that it knows the addresses of all name servers (primary and secondary).

The ChorusOS operating system can also be bound to a Network Information Service (NIS) database.

The naming service API is summarized in the following table:

Command 

Description 

named

DNS server 

named-xfer

Perform an inbound zone transfer 

gethostbyname

Convert name into IP address 

gethostbyaddress

Convert IP address into name 

gethostbyname2

Perform lookups in address families other than AF_INET

gethostbyaddr

Get network host entry from IP address 

gethostent

Reads /etc/hosts, and opens file if necessary

sethostent

Opens and/or rewinds /etc/hosts

endhostent

Closes the file 

herror

Print an error message describing a failure 

hstrerror

Returns a string which is the message text corresponding to the value of the err parameter 

getaddrinfo

Protocol-independent nodename-to-address translation 

freeaddrinfo

Frees structure pointed to by the ai argument

gai_strerror

Returns a pointer to a string describing a given error code 

getnetent

Get network entry 

getnetbyaddr

Search for net name by address 

getnetbyname

Search for net address by name 

setnetent

Opens and rewinds the file 

endnetent

Closes the file