/* startserver.c --- open a connection to the CVS server under Windows NT Jim Blandy --- August 1995 */ #include "cvs.h" #include "rcmd.h" #include #include #include #include #include /* Apply the Winsock shutdown function to a CRT file descriptor. */ static void shutdown_fd (int fd, int how) { SOCKET s; if ((s = _get_osfhandle (fd)) < 0) error (1, errno, "couldn't get socket handle from file descriptor"); if (shutdown (s, how) == SOCKET_ERROR) error (1, 0, "couldn't shut down socket half"); } void wnt_start_server (int *tofd, int *fromfd, char *client_user, char *server_user, char *server_host, char *server_cvsroot) { char *cvs_server; char *command; struct servent *s; unsigned short port; int read_fd, write_fd; if (! (cvs_server = getenv ("CVS_SERVER"))) cvs_server = "cvs"; command = alloca (strlen (cvs_server) + strlen (server_cvsroot) + 50); sprintf (command, "%s -d %s server", cvs_server, server_cvsroot); if ((s = getservbyname("shell", "tcp")) == NULL) port = IPPORT_CMDSERVER; else port = s->s_port; read_fd = rcmd (&server_host, port, client_user, (server_user ? server_user : client_user), command, 0); if (read_fd < 0) error (1, errno, "cannot start server via rcmd"); /* Split the socket into a reading and a writing half. */ if ((write_fd = dup (read_fd)) < 0) error (1, errno, "duplicating server connection"); #if 0 /* This ought to be legal, since I've duped it, but shutting down the writing end of read_fd seems to terminate the whole connection. */ shutdown_fd (read_fd, 1); shutdown_fd (write_fd, 0); #endif *tofd = write_fd; *fromfd = read_fd; } void wnt_shutdown_server (int fd) { SOCKET s; if ((s = _get_osfhandle (fd)) < 0) error (1, errno, "couldn't get handle of server connection"); if (shutdown (s, 2) == SOCKET_ERROR) error (1, 0, "couldn't shutdown server connection"); if (closesocket (s) == SOCKET_ERROR) error (1, 0, "couldn't close server connection"); }