cpython/Demo/rpc
Andrew M. Kuchling 2a9b9cbea0 #687648 from Robert Schuppenies: use classic division. 2008-09-13 01:43:28 +00:00
..
MANIFEST *** empty log message *** 1993-12-17 14:32:26 +00:00
README Patch #469517: Info about rpcgen compilers. 2001-10-11 19:23:28 +00:00
T.py Whitespace normalization. Ran reindent.py over the entire source tree. 2004-07-18 05:56:09 +00:00
mountclient.py #2503 make singletons compared with "is" not == or != 2008-03-29 15:24:25 +00:00
nfsclient.py #2503 make singletons compared with "is" not == or != 2008-03-29 15:24:25 +00:00
rnusersclient.py Whitespace normalization. Ran reindent.py over the entire source tree. 2004-07-18 05:56:09 +00:00
rpc.py #2503 make singletons compared with "is" not == or != 2008-03-29 15:24:25 +00:00
test undo opaque=fopaque changes; make test script more flexible 1995-10-11 18:54:15 +00:00
xdr.py #687648 from Robert Schuppenies: use classic division. 2008-09-13 01:43:28 +00:00

README

This is a Python interface to Sun RPC, designed and implemented mostly
by reading the Internet RFCs about the subject.

*** NOTE: xdr.py has evolved into the standard module xdrlib.py ***

There are two library modules, xdr.py and rpc.py, and several example
clients: mountclient.py, nfsclient.py, and rnusersclient.py,
implementing the NFS Mount protocol, (part of) the NFS protocol, and
the "rnusers" protocol (used by rusers(1)), respectively.  The latter
demonstrates the use of broadcast via the Port mapper's CALLIT
procedure.

There is also a way to create servers in Python.

To test the nfs client, run it from the shell with something like this:

  python -c 'import nfsclient; nfsclient.test()' [hostname [filesystemname]]

When called without a filesystemname, it lists the filesystems at the
host; default host is the local machine.

Other clients are tested similarly.

For hostname, use e.g. wuarchive.wustl.edu or gatekeeper.dec.com (two
hosts that are known to export NFS filesystems with little restrictions).

There are now two different RPC compilers:

1) Wim Lewis rpcgen.py found on http://www.omnigroup.com/~wiml/soft/stale-index.html#python. 

2) Peter Åstrands rpcgen.py, which is part of "pynfs" (http://www.cendio.se/~peter/pynfs/).