NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUES | ERRORS | USAGE | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO | NOTES
cc [ flag ... ] file ... -lxfn [ library ... ] #include <xfn/xfn.h>FN_ctx_t *fn_ctx_handle_from_initial(unsigned int authoritative, FN_status_t *status);
This operation returns a handle to the caller's Initial Context. On successful return, the handle points to a context which meets the specification of the XFN Initial Context (see fns_initial_context(5)).
authoritative specifies whether the handle to the context returned should be authoritative with respect to information the context obtains from the naming service. When the flag is non-zero, subsequent operations on the context will access the most authoritative information. When authoritative is 0, the handle to the context returned need not be authoritative.
fn_ctx_handle_from_initial() returns a pointer to an FN_ctx_t object if the operation succeeds; it returns a NULL pointer (0) otherwise.
fn_ctx_handle_from_initial() sets only the status code portion of the status object status.
Authoritativeness is determined by specific naming services. For example, in a naming service that supports replication using a master/slave model, the source of authoritative information would come from the master server. In some naming systems, bypassing the naming service cache may reach servers which provide the most authoritative information. The availability of an authoritative context might be lower due to the lower number of servers offering this service. For the same reason, it might also provide poorer performance than contexts that need not be authoritative.
Applications set authoritative to 0 for typical day-to-day operations. Applications only set authoritative to a non-zero value when they require access to the most authoritative information, possibly at the expense of lower availability and/or poorer performance.
It is implementation-dependent whether authoritativeness is transferred from one context to the next as composite name resolution proceeds. Getting an authoritative context handle to the Initial Context means that operations on bindings in the Initial Context are processed using the most authoritative information. Contexts referenced implicitly through an authoritative Initial Context (for example, through the use of composite names) may not necessarily themselves be authoritative.
See attributes (5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
---|---|
MT-Level | MT-Safe |
FN_ctx_t(3XFN), FN_status_t(3XFN), fn_ctx_get_ref(3XFN), fn_ctx_handle_from_ref(3XFN), xfn(3XFN), xfn_status_codes(3XFN), attributes(5), fns_initial_context(5)
The implementation of XFN in this Solaris release is based on the X/Open preliminary specification. It is likely that there will be minor changes to these interfaces to reflect changes in the final version of this specification. The next minor release of Solaris will offer binary compatibility for applications developed using the current interfaces. As the interfaces evolve toward standardization, it is possible that future releases of Solaris will require minor source code changes to applications that have been developed against the preliminary specification.
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUES | ERRORS | USAGE | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO | NOTES