Internet and AT&T Unix
Gordon C. Galligher
gorpong at telxon.uucp
Tue Jun 6 06:30:48 AEST 1989
I have a question which may seem quite childish to some of you. I have a
"logical" answer, but as is often the case with computers, the logical answer
is not always the correct one. I am currently writing a program which needs
to open up a few Internet sockets and then accept requests from a strictly
local system program to talk to these internet systems. (The "systems" are
just printers on a terminal server). I have started building this in the
mind that it may be useful so I have put in hooks for both 4.xBSD sockets
and System V message passing. As I started building the daemon which will
actually open up the internet ports, I realized that if this were a system V
system, it wouldn't have Berkeley sockets.
If this is the case, then all of the systems which are on the Internet are
strictly Berkeley systems (or hybrids like HP-UX or SunOS). Is this the case?
Does some flavor of vanilla AT&T UNIX System V.x support Inet domain sockets?
Do I need to have this program this generic? Could I just restrict it to
4.xBSD information?
I do apologize for this if it has already be discussed, and as I said, I
believe the logical answers for the above are: yes, no, no, yes
but the logical is not always the correct one. Please e-mail your responses
and if there is enough call for it, I will post my results. Thank you very
much.
-- Gordon.
Gordon C. Galligher <|> ...!uunet!telxon!gorpong <|> gorpong at telxon.uucp.uu.net
Telxon Corporation <|> "Before they warped out of orbit I beamed the whole kit
Akron, Ohio, 44313 <|> and kabootle into their engine room." - Scotty
(216) 867-3700 (3512)<|> (Trouble with Tribbles)
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