X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/f010ad481266d9267f5f4fd0547a9fc891441715..5a20d2ced0a0779b5d8b1cc8064f8404b2727e92:/docs/latex/wx/tipc.tex diff --git a/docs/latex/wx/tipc.tex b/docs/latex/wx/tipc.tex index 4360c0d7ea..9edd9836bd 100644 --- a/docs/latex/wx/tipc.tex +++ b/docs/latex/wx/tipc.tex @@ -1,12 +1,12 @@ \section{Interprocess communication overview}\label{ipcoverview} -Classes: \helpref{wxServer}{wxddeserver}, +Classes: \helpref{wxServer}{wxserver}, \helpref{wxConnection}{wxddeconnection}, -\helpref{wxClient}{wxddeclient} +\helpref{wxClient}{wxclient} %\helpref{wxTCPServer}{wxtcpserver}, \helpref{wxTCPConnection}{wxtcpconnection}, %\helpref{wxTCPClient}{wxtcpclient} -wxWindows has a number of different classes to help with +wxWidgets has a number of different classes to help with interprocess communication and network programming. This section only discusses one family of classes -- the DDE-like protocol -- but here's a list of other useful classes: @@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ but here's a list of other useful classes: for programming popular Internet protocols. \end{itemize} -wxWindows' DDE-like protocol is a high-level protocol based on +wxWidgets' DDE-like protocol is a high-level protocol based on Windows DDE. There are two implementations of this DDE-like protocol: one using real DDE running on Windows only, and another using TCP/IP (sockets) that runs on most platforms. Since the API @@ -34,8 +34,8 @@ convenient synonyms for the IPC classes: {\tt wxServer} for either DDE-based or socket-based implementation is used and the same thing for {\tt wxClient} and {\tt wxConnection}. -By default, DDE implementation is used under Windows. DDE works -only within one computer. If you want to use IPC between +By default, the DDE implementation is used under Windows. DDE works +within one computer only. If you want to use IPC between different workstations you should define {\tt wxUSE\_DDE\_FOR\_IPC} as $0$ before including this header -- this will force using TCP/IP implementation even under Windows. @@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ used for the communications or a valid file name (which shouldn't exist and will be deleted afterwards) in which case a Unix domain socket is created. -{\bf SECURITY NOTE:} Using Internet domain sockets if extremely insecure for +{\bf SECURITY NOTE:} Using Internet domain sockets is extremely insecure for IPC as there is absolutely no access control for them, use Unix domain sockets whenever possible! @@ -108,7 +108,7 @@ need to be overridden. create and return an instance of the derived connection class. \item Create an instance of your client object. \item When appropriate, create a new connection using -\helpref{wxClient::MakeConnection}{wxddeclientmakeconnection}, +\helpref{wxClient::MakeConnection}{wxclientmakeconnection}, with arguments host name (processed in Unix only, use `localhost' for local computer), service name, and topic name for this connection. The client object will call @@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ successful. \item Use the wxConnection member functions to send messages to the server. \end{enumerate} -\subsection{Data transfer} +\subsection{Data transfer}\label{datatransfer} These are the ways that data can be transferred from one application to another. These are methods of wxConnection. @@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ The default data type is wxCF\_TEXT (ASCII text), and the default data size is the length of the null-terminated string. Windows-specific data types could also be used on the PC. -\subsection{Examples} +\subsection{Examples}\label{ipcexamples} See the sample programs {\it server}\/ and {\it client}\/ in the IPC samples directory. Run the server, then the client. This demonstrates @@ -153,7 +153,7 @@ using the Execute, Request, and Poke commands from the client, together with an Advise loop: selecting an item in the server list box causes that item to be highlighted in the client list box. -\subsection{More DDE details} +\subsection{More DDE details}\label{ddedetails} A wxClient object initiates the client part of a client-server DDE-like (Dynamic Data Exchange) conversation (available in both @@ -164,8 +164,8 @@ you need to derive a class from wxConnection and another from wxClient. The custom wxConnection class will receive communications in a `conversation' with a server. and the custom wxServer is required so that a user-overridden -\helpref{wxDDEClient::OnMakeConnection}{wxddeclientonmakeconnection} -member can return a wxDDEConnection of the required class, when a +\helpref{wxClient::OnMakeConnection}{wxddeclientonmakeconnection} +member can return a wxConnection of the required class, when a connection is made. For example: @@ -196,7 +196,7 @@ the derived wxClient. In the following, command line arguments are used to pass the host name (the name of the machine the server is running on) and the server name (identifying the server process). Calling -\helpref{wxDDEClient::MakeConnection}{wxddeclientmakeconnection}\rtfsp +\helpref{wxClient::MakeConnection}{wxddeclientmakeconnection}\rtfsp implicitly creates an instance of {\bf MyConnection} if the request for a connection is accepted, and the client then requests an {\it Advise} loop from the server (an Advise loop is @@ -219,6 +219,3 @@ where the server calls the client when data has changed). connection->StartAdvise("Item"); \end{verbatim} -Note that it is no longer necessary to call wxDDEInitialize or wxDDECleanUp, since -wxWindows will do this itself if necessary. -