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authorJelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org>2005-09-21 09:16:55 +0000
committerGerald (Jerry) Carter <jerry@samba.org>2007-10-10 13:38:34 -0500
commitcc6fae19aec734aa71e93d92b2e1a8145170c811 (patch)
treef3c98da041bf9135e21d88234ccb47425e9cb91c /source4/pidl
parent3e4f47aaff41b5bb6d1d86025915a3a63dc1ea73 (diff)
downloadsamba-cc6fae19aec734aa71e93d92b2e1a8145170c811.tar.gz
samba-cc6fae19aec734aa71e93d92b2e1a8145170c811.tar.bz2
samba-cc6fae19aec734aa71e93d92b2e1a8145170c811.zip
r10380: Use pod-style documentation rather then XML-doc, in good perl style.
(This used to be commit fcc1ba97a3dd955208d8d9555ff8dab455239412)
Diffstat (limited to 'source4/pidl')
-rwxr-xr-xsource4/pidl/Makefile.PL14
-rw-r--r--source4/pidl/README5
-rwxr-xr-xsource4/pidl/pidl401
-rw-r--r--source4/pidl/pidl.1.xml606
4 files changed, 403 insertions, 623 deletions
diff --git a/source4/pidl/Makefile.PL b/source4/pidl/Makefile.PL
index fa250cabc3..f5cd3e4eff 100755
--- a/source4/pidl/Makefile.PL
+++ b/source4/pidl/Makefile.PL
@@ -3,23 +3,13 @@ WriteMakefile(
'NAME' => 'Parse::Pidl',
'VERSION_FROM' => 'lib/Parse/Pidl.pm',
'EXE_FILES' => [ 'pidl' ],
- 'PMLIBDIRS' => [ 'lib' ],
'test' => { 'TESTS' => 'tests/*.pl' }
);
sub MY::postamble {
<<'EOT';
-lib/Parse/Pidl/IDL.pm :: idl.yp
- yapp -s -m 'Parse::Pidl::IDL' -o 'lib/Parse/Pidl/IDL.pm' idl.yp
+lib/Parse/Pidl/IDL.pm: idl.yp
+ yapp -s -m 'Parse::Pidl::IDL' -o lib/Parse/Pidl/IDL.pm idl.yp
-doc: pidl.1 pidl.1.html
-
-XSLTPROC=xsltproc
-
-%.1: %.1.xml
- test -z "$(XSLTPROC)" || $(XSLTPROC) -o $@ http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/manpages/docbook.xsl $<
-
-%.html: %.xml
- test -z "$(XSLTPROC)" || $(XSLTPROC) -o $@ http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/html/docbook.xsl $<
EOT
}
diff --git a/source4/pidl/README b/source4/pidl/README
index 7458344761..c90105a0ef 100644
--- a/source4/pidl/README
+++ b/source4/pidl/README
@@ -22,11 +22,6 @@ Run Makefile.PL to generate the Makefile.
Then run "make install" (as root) to install.
-Documentation:
-==============
-Run 'make doc' to generate the manpage and a HTML version of the manpage.
-This requires the xsltproc utility to be installed.
-
Internals overview:
===================
diff --git a/source4/pidl/pidl b/source4/pidl/pidl
index 5d248ce7a3..7ef30c32b7 100755
--- a/source4/pidl/pidl
+++ b/source4/pidl/pidl
@@ -7,6 +7,407 @@
# Copyright jelmer@samba.org 2005
# released under the GNU GPL
+=head1 NAME
+
+pidl - IDL Compiler written in Perl
+
+=head1 SYNOPSIS
+
+pidl --help
+pidl [--outputdir[=OUTNAME]] [--parse-idl-tree] [--dump-idl-tree] [--dump-ndr-tree] [--ndr-header[=OUTPUT]] [--header[=OUTPUT]] [--ejs[=OUTPUT]] [--swig[=OUTPUT]] [--uint-enums] [--ndr-parser[=OUTPUT]] [--client] [--server] [--dcom-proxy] [--com-header] [--warn-compat] [--quiet] [--verbose] [--template] [--eth-parser[=OUTPUT]] [--diff] [--dump-idl] [<idlfile>.idl]...
+
+=head1 DESCRIPTION
+
+pidl is an IDL compiler written in Perl that aims to be somewhat
+compatible with the midl compiler. IDL stands for
+"Interface Definition Language".
+
+pidl can generate stubs for DCE/RPC server code, DCE/RPC
+client code and ethereal dissectors for DCE/RPC traffic.
+
+IDL compilers like pidl take a description
+of an interface as their input and use it to generate C
+(though support for other languages may be added later) code that
+can use these interfaces, pretty print data sent
+using these interfaces, or even generate ethereal
+dissectors that can parse data sent over the
+wire by these interfaces.
+
+pidl takes IDL files in the same format as is used by midl,
+converts it to a .pidl file (which contains pidl's internal representation of the interface) and can then generate whatever output you need.
+.pidl files should be used for debugging purposes only. Write your
+interface definitions in .idl format.
+
+The goal of pidl is to implement a IDL compiler that can be used
+while developing the RPC subsystem in Samba (for
+both marshalling/unmarshalling and debugging purposes).
+
+=head1 OPTIONS
+
+=over 4
+
+=item I<--help>
+
+Show list of available options.</para></listitem>
+
+=item I<--outputdir OUTNAME>
+
+Write output files to the specified directory. Defaults to the current
+directory.
+
+=item I<--parse-idl-tree>
+
+Read internal tree structure from input files rather
+then assuming they contain IDL.
+
+=item I<--dump-idl>
+
+Generate a new IDL file. File will be named OUTNAME.idl.</para></listitem>
+
+=item I<--header>
+
+Generate a C header file for the specified interface. Filename defaults to OUTNAME.h.
+
+=item I<--ndr-header>
+
+Generate a C header file with the prototypes for the NDR parsers. Filename defaults to ndr_OUTNAME.h.
+
+=item I<--ndr-parser>
+
+Generate a C file containing NDR parsers. Filename defaults to ndr_OUTNAME.c.
+
+=item I<--server>
+
+Generate boilerplate for the RPC server that implements
+the interface. Filename defaults to ndr_OUTNAME_s.c.
+
+=item I<--template>
+
+Generate stubs for a RPC server that implements the interface. Output will
+be written to stdout.
+
+=item I<--eth-parser>
+
+Generate an Ethereal dissector (in C) for the interface. Filename
+defaults to packet-dcerpc-OUTNAME.c.
+
+Pidl will read additional data from an ethereal conformance file if present.
+Such a file should have the same location as the IDL file but with the
+extension I<cnf> rather then I<idl>. See below for details on the format of
+this file.
+
+=item I<--diff>
+
+Parse an IDL file, generate a new IDL file based on the internal data
+structures and see if there are any differences with the original IDL file.
+Useful for debugging pidl.
+
+=item I<--dump-idl-tree>
+
+Tell pidl to dump the internal tree representation of an IDL
+file the to disk. Useful for debugging pidl.
+
+=item I<--dump-ndr-tree>
+
+Tell pidl to dump the internal NDR information tree it generated
+from the IDL file to disk. Useful for debugging pidl.
+
+=back
+
+=head1 IDL SYNTAX
+
+IDL files are always preprocessed using the C preprocessor.
+
+Pretty much everything in an interface (the interface itself, functions,
+parameters) can have attributes (or properties whatever name you give them).
+Attributes always prepend the element they apply to and are surrounded
+by square brackets ([]). Multiple attributes are separated by comma's;
+arguments to attributes are specified between parentheses.
+
+See the section COMPATIBILITY for the list of attributes that
+pidl supports.
+
+C-style comments can be used.
+
+=head2 CONFORMANT ARRAYS
+
+A conformant array is one with that ends in [*] or []. The strange
+things about conformant arrays are:
+
+=over 1
+=item they can only appear as the last element of a structure
+=item the array size appears before the structure itself on the wire.
+=back
+
+So, in this example:
+
+ typedef struct {
+ long abc;
+ long count;
+ long foo;
+ [size_is(count)] long s[*];
+ } Struct1;
+
+it appears like this:
+
+ [size_is] [abc] [count] [foo] [s...]
+
+the first [size_is] field is the allocation size of the array, and
+occurs before the array elements and even before the structure
+alignment.
+
+Note that size_is() can refer to a constant, but that doesn't change
+the wire representation. It does not make the array a fixed array.
+
+midl.exe would write the above array as the following C header:
+
+ typedef struct {
+ long abc;
+ long count;
+ long foo;
+ long s[1];
+ } Struct1;
+
+pidl takes a different approach, and writes it like this:
+
+ typedef struct {
+ long abc;
+ long count;
+ long foo;
+ long *s;
+ } Struct1;
+
+=head2 VARYING ARRAYS
+
+A varying array looks like this:
+
+ typedef struct {
+ long abc;
+ long count;
+ long foo;
+ [size_is(count)] long *s;
+ } Struct1;
+
+This will look like this on the wire:
+
+ [abc] [count] [foo] [PTR_s] [count] [s...]
+
+=head2 FIXED ARRAYS
+
+A fixed array looks like this:
+
+ typedef struct {
+ long s[10];
+ } Struct1;
+
+The NDR representation looks just like 10 separate long
+declarations. The array size is not encoded on the wire.
+
+pidl also supports "inline" arrays, which are not part of the IDL/NDR
+standard. These are declared like this:
+
+ typedef struct {
+ uint32 foo;
+ uint32 count;
+ uint32 bar;
+ long s[count];
+ } Struct1;
+
+This appears like this:
+
+ [foo] [count] [bar] [s...]
+
+Fixed arrays are an extension added to support some of the strange
+embedded structures in security descriptors and spoolss.
+
+This section is by no means complete. See the OpenGroup and MSDN
+ documentation for additional information.
+
+=head1 COMPATIBILITY WITH MIDL
+
+=head2 Missing features in pidl
+
+The following MIDL features are not (yet) implemented in pidl
+or are implemented with an incompatible interface:
+
+=over
+=item Asynchronous communication
+=item Typelibs (.tlb files)
+=item Datagram support (ncadg_*)
+=back
+
+=head2 Supported attributes
+
+in, out, ref, length_is, switch_is, size_is, uuid, case, default, string,
+unique, ptr, pointer_default, v1_enum, object, helpstring, range, local,
+call_as, endpoint, switch_type, progid, coclass, iid_is.
+
+=head2 PIDL Specific properties
+
+=over 4
+
+=item public
+
+The [public] property on a structure or union is a pidl extension that
+forces the generated pull/push functions to be non-static. This allows
+you to declare types that can be used between modules. If you don't
+specify [public] then pull/push functions for other than top-level
+functions are declared static.
+
+=item noprint
+
+The [noprint] property is a pidl extension that allows you to specify
+that pidl should not generate a ndr_print_*() function for that
+structure or union. This is used when you wish to define your own
+print function that prints a structure in a nicer manner. A good
+example is the use of [noprint] on dom_sid, which allows the
+pretty-printing of SIDs.
+
+=item value
+
+The [value(expression)] property is a pidl extension that allows you
+to specify the value of a field when it is put on the wire. This
+allows fields that always have a well-known value to be automatically
+filled in, thus making the API more programmer friendly. The
+expression can be any C expression.
+
+=item relative
+
+The [relative] property can be supplied on a pointer. When it is used
+it declares the pointer as a spoolss style "relative" pointer, which
+means it appears on the wire as an offset within the current
+encapsulating structure. This is not part of normal IDL/NDR, but it is
+a very useful extension as it avoids the manual encoding of many
+complex structures.
+
+=item subcontext(length)
+
+Specifies that a size of I<length>
+bytes should be read, followed by a blob of that size,
+which will be parsed as NDR.
+
+=item flag
+
+Specify boolean options, mostly used for
+low-level NDR options. Several options
+can be specified using the | character.
+Note that flags are inherited by substructures!
+
+=item nodiscriminant
+
+The [nodiscriminant] property on a union means that the usual uint16
+discriminent field at the start of the union on the wire is
+omitted. This is not normally allowed in IDL/NDR, but is used for some
+spoolss structures.
+
+=item charset(name)
+
+Specify that the array or string uses the specified
+charset. If this attribute is specified, pidl will
+take care of converting the character data from this format
+to the host format. Commonly used values are UCS2, DOS and UTF8.
+
+=back
+
+=head2 Unsupported MIDL properties
+
+aggregatable, appobject, async_uuid, bindable, control, cpp_quote,
+defaultbind, defaultcollelem, defaultvalue, defaultvtable, dispinterface,
+displaybind, dual, entry, first_is, helpcontext, helpfile, helpstringcontext,
+helpstringdll, hidden, idl_module, idl_quote, id, immediatebind, importlib,
+import, include, includelib, last_is, lcid, licensed, max_is, module,
+ms_union, no_injected_text, nonbrowsable, noncreatable, nonextensible, odl,
+oleautomation, optional, pragma, propget, propputref, propput, readonly,
+requestedit, restricted, retval, source, transmit_as, uidefault,
+usesgetlasterror, vararg, vi_progid, wire_marshal.
+
+=head1 ETHEREAL CONFORMANCE FILES
+
+Pidl needs additional data for ethereal output. This data is read from
+so-called conformance files. This section describes the format of these
+files.
+
+Conformance files are simple text files with a single command on each line.
+Empty lines and lines starting with a '#' character are ignored.
+Arguments to commands are seperated by spaces.
+
+The following commands are currently supported:
+
+=over 4
+
+=item TYPE name dissector ft_type base_type mask valsstring alignment
+
+Register new data type with specified name, what dissector function to call
+and what properties to give header fields for elements of this type.
+
+=item NOEMIT type
+
+Suppress emitting a dissect_type function for the specified type
+
+=item PARAM_VALUE type param
+
+Set parameter to specify to dissector function for given type.
+
+=item HF_FIELD hf title filter ft_type base_type valsstring mask description
+
+Generate a custom header field with specified properties.
+
+=item HF_RENAME old_hf_name new_hf_name
+
+Force the use of new_hf_name when the parser generator was going to
+use old_hf_name.
+
+This can be used in conjunction with HF_FIELD in order to make more then
+one element use the same filter name.
+
+=item STRIP_PREFIX prefix
+
+Remove the specified prefix from all function names (if present).
+
+=item PROTOCOL longname shortname filtername
+
+Change the short-, long- and filter-name for the current interface in
+Ethereal.
+
+=item FIELD_DESCRIPTION field desc
+
+Change description for the specified header field. `field' is the hf name of the field.
+
+=item IMPORT dissector code...
+
+Code to insert when generating the specified dissector. @HF@ and
+@PARAM@ will be substituted.
+
+=back
+
+=head1 EXAMPLES
+
+ # Generating an ethereal parser
+ $ ./pidl --eth-parser -- atsvc.idl
+
+ # Generating a TDR parser
+ $ ./pidl --tdr-parser --tdr-header --header -- regf.idl
+
+=head1 VERSION
+
+This man page is correct for version 4.0 of the Samba suite. L<http://www.samba.org/>.
+
+=head1 SEE ALSO
+
+L<http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/rpc/rpc/field_attributes.asp>
+L<http://wiki.ethereal.com/DCE/RPC>
+yapp(1)
+
+=head1 AUTHOR
+
+pidl was written by Andrew Tridgell, Stefan Metzmacher, Tim Potter and Jelmer
+Vernooij.
+
+This manpage was written by Jelmer Vernooij, partially based on the original
+pidl README by Andrew Tridgell.
+
+=cut
+
use strict;
use FindBin qw($RealBin);
use lib "$RealBin";
diff --git a/source4/pidl/pidl.1.xml b/source4/pidl/pidl.1.xml
deleted file mode 100644
index 2ac40efe00..0000000000
--- a/source4/pidl/pidl.1.xml
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,606 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
-<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//Samba-Team//DTD DocBook V4.2-Based Variant V1.0//EN" "http://www.samba.org/samba/DTD/samba-doc">
-<refentry id="pidl.1">
-
-<refmeta>
- <refentrytitle>pidl</refentrytitle>
- <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
-</refmeta>
-
-<refnamediv>
- <refname>pidl</refname>
- <refpurpose>IDL Compiler written in Perl</refpurpose>
-</refnamediv>
-
-<refsynopsisdiv>
- <cmdsynopsis>
- <command>pidl</command>
- <arg choice="opt">--help</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--outputdir OUTNAME</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--parse-idl-tree</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--dump-idl-tree</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--dump-ndr-tree</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--ndr-header[=OUTPUT]</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--header[=OUTPUT]</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--ejs[=OUTPUT]</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--swig[=OUTPUT]</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--uint-enums</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--ndr-parser[=OUTPUT]</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--client</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--server</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--dcom-proxy</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--com-header</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--warn-compat</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--quiet</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--verbose</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--template</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--eth-parser[=OUTPUT]</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--diff</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">--dump-idl</arg>
- <arg choice="req">idlfile</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">idlfile2</arg>
- <arg choice="opt">...</arg>
- </cmdsynopsis>
-</refsynopsisdiv>
-
-<refsect1>
- <title>DESCRIPTION</title>
-
- <para>pidl is an IDL compiler written in Perl that aims to be somewhat
- compatible with the midl compiler. IDL stands for
- "Interface Definition Language".</para>
-
- <para>pidl can generate stubs for DCE/RPC server code, DCE/RPC
- client code and ethereal dissectors for DCE/RPC traffic.</para>
-
- <para>IDL compilers like <emphasis>pidl</emphasis> take a description
- of an interface as their input and use it to generate C
- (though support for other languages may be added later) code that
- can use these interfaces, pretty print data sent
- using these interfaces, or even generate ethereal
- dissectors that can parse data sent over the
- wire by these interfaces. </para>
-
- <para>pidl takes IDL files in the same format as is used by midl,
- converts it to a .pidl file (which contains pidl's internal representation of the interface) and can then generate whatever output you need.
- .pidl files should be used for debugging purposes only. Write your
- interface definitions in .idl format.
- </para>
-
- <para>
- The goal of pidl is to implement a IDL compiler that can be used
- while developing the RPC subsystem in Samba (for
- both marshalling/unmarshalling and debugging purposes).
- </para>
-
-</refsect1>
-
-<refsect1>
- <title>OPTIONS</title>
-
- <variablelist>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--help</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Show list of available options.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--outputdir OUTNAME</term>
- <listitem><para>Write output files to the specified directory.
- Defaults to the current directory.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--parse-idl-tree</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Read internal tree structure from input files rather
- then assuming they contain IDL.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--dump-idl</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Generate a new IDL file. File will be named OUTNAME.idl.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--header</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Generate a C header file for the specified interface. Filename defaults to OUTNAME.h.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--ndr-header</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Generate a C header file with the prototypes for the NDR parsers. Filename defaults to ndr_OUTNAME.h.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--ndr-parser</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Generate a C file containing NDR parsers.
- Filename defaults to ndr_OUTNAME.c.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--server</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Generate boilerplate for the RPC server that implements
- the interface. Filename defaults to ndr_OUTNAME_s.c</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--template</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Generate stubs for a RPC server that implements
- the interface. Output will be written to stdout.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--eth-parser</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Generate an Ethereal dissector (in C) for the interface. Filename
- defaults to packet-dcerpc-OUTNAME.c.
- </para>
-
- <para>Pidl will read additional data
- from an ethereal conformance file if present. Such a file should
- have the same location as the IDL file but with the extension
- <quote>cnf</quote> rather then <quote>idl</quote>. See
- below for details on the format of this file.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--diff</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Parse an IDL file, generate a new IDL file based
- on the internal data structures and see if there are
- any differences with the
- original IDL file. Useful for debugging pidl.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--dump-idl-tree</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Tell pidl to dump the internal tree representation of an IDL
- file the to disk. Useful
- for debugging pidl.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term>--dump-ndr-tree</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Tell pidl to dump the internal NDR information tree it generated
- from the IDL file to disk. Useful for debugging pidl.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- </variablelist>
-</refsect1>
-
-<refsect1>
- <title>IDL SYNTAX</title>
-
- <para>IDL files are always preprocessed using the C preprocessor.</para>
-
- <para>Pretty much everything in an interface (the interface itself,
- functions, parameters) can have attributes (or properties
- whatever name you give them). Attributes
- always prepend the element they apply to and are surrounded
- by square brackets ([]). Multiple attributes
- are separated by comma's; arguments to attributes are
- specified between parentheses. </para>
-
- <para>See the section COMPATIBILITY for the list of attributes that
- pidl supports.</para>
-
- <para>C-style comments can be used.</para>
-
-<refsect2>
- <title>CONFORMANT ARRAYS</title>
-
- <para>
-A conformant array is one with that ends in [*] or []. The strange
-things about conformant arrays are:
-</para>
-
-<simplelist>
- <member>they can only appear as the last element of a structure</member>
- <member>the array size appears before the structure itself on the wire. </member>
-</simplelist>
-
-<para>
- So, in this example:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
- typedef struct {
- long abc;
- long count;
- long foo;
- [size_is(count)] long s[*];
- } Struct1;
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>
-it appears like this:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-[size_is] [abc] [count] [foo] [s...]
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>
-the first [size_is] field is the allocation size of the array, and
-occurs before the array elements and even before the structure
-alignment.
-</para>
-
-<para>
-Note that size_is() can refer to a constant, but that doesn't change
-the wire representation. It does not make the array a fixed array.
-</para>
-
-<para>
-midl.exe would write the above array as the following C header:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
- typedef struct {
- long abc;
- long count;
- long foo;
- long s[1];
- } Struct1;
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>
-pidl takes a different approach, and writes it like this:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
- typedef struct {
- long abc;
- long count;
- long foo;
- long *s;
- } Struct1;
-</programlisting>
-
-</refsect2>
-
-<refsect2>
- <title>VARYING ARRAYS</title>
-
-<para>
-A varying array looks like this:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
- typedef struct {
- long abc;
- long count;
- long foo;
- [size_is(count)] long *s;
- } Struct1;
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>
-This will look like this on the wire:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-[abc] [count] [foo] [PTR_s] [count] [s...]
-</programlisting>
-
-</refsect2>
-
-<refsect2>
- <title>FIXED ARRAYS</title>
-
-<para>
-A fixed array looks like this:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
- typedef struct {
- long s[10];
- } Struct1;
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>
-The NDR representation looks just like 10 separate long
-declarations. The array size is not encoded on the wire.
-</para>
-
-<para>
-pidl also supports "inline" arrays, which are not part of the IDL/NDR
-standard. These are declared like this:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
- typedef struct {
- uint32 foo;
- uint32 count;
- uint32 bar;
- long s[count];
- } Struct1;
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>
-This appears like this:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-[foo] [count] [bar] [s...]
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>
-Fixed arrays are an extension added to support some of the strange
-embedded structures in security descriptors and spoolss.
-</para>
-
-</refsect2>
-
-<para>This section is by no means complete. See the OpenGroup and MSDN
- documentation for additional information.</para>
-</refsect1>
-
-<refsect1>
- <title>COMPATIBILITY WITH MIDL</title>
-
- <refsect2>
- <title>Missing features in pidl</title>
- <para>
- The following MIDL features are not (yet) implemented in pidl
- or are implemented with an incompatible interface:
- </para>
-
- <simplelist>
- <member>Asynchronous communication</member>
- <member>Typelibs (.tlb files)</member>
- <member>Datagram support (ncadg_*)</member>
- </simplelist>
- </refsect2>
-
- <refsect2>
- <title>Supported properties (attributes is the MIDL term)</title>
-
- <para>
- in, out, ref, length_is, switch_is, size_is, uuid, case, default, string, unique, ptr, pointer_default, v1_enum, object, helpstring, range, local, call_as, endpoint, switch_type, progid, coclass, iid_is.
- </para>
-
-</refsect2>
-
-<refsect2>
- <title>PIDL Specific properties</title>
-
-<variablelist>
- <varlistentry><term>public</term>
- <listitem><para>
-The [public] property on a structure or union is a pidl extension that
-forces the generated pull/push functions to be non-static. This allows
-you to declare types that can be used between modules. If you don't
-specify [public] then pull/push functions for other than top-level
-functions are declared static.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term>noprint</term>
- <listitem><para>
-The [noprint] property is a pidl extension that allows you to specify
-that pidl should not generate a ndr_print_*() function for that
-structure or union. This is used when you wish to define your own
-print function that prints a structure in a nicer manner. A good
-example is the use of [noprint] on dom_sid, which allows the
-pretty-printing of SIDs.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term>value</term>
- <listitem><para>
-The [value(expression)] property is a pidl extension that allows you
-to specify the value of a field when it is put on the wire. This
-allows fields that always have a well-known value to be automatically
-filled in, thus making the API more programmer friendly. The
-expression can be any C expression.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term>relative</term>
- <listitem><para>
-The [relative] property can be supplied on a pointer. When it is used
-it declares the pointer as a spoolss style "relative" pointer, which
-means it appears on the wire as an offset within the current
-encapsulating structure. This is not part of normal IDL/NDR, but it is
-a very useful extension as it avoids the manual encoding of many
-complex structures.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term>subcontext(length)</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Specifies that a size of <replaceable>length</replaceable>
- bytes should be read, followed by a blob of that size,
- which will be parsed as NDR.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term>flag</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Specify boolean options, mostly used for
- low-level NDR options. Several options
- can be specified using the | character.
- Note that flags are inherited by substructures!
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term>nodiscriminant</term>
- <listitem><para>
-The [nodiscriminant] property on a union means that the usual uint16
-discriminent field at the start of the union on the wire is
-omitted. This is not normally allowed in IDL/NDR, but is used for some
-spoolss structures.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term>charset(name)</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Specify that the array or string uses the specified
- charset. If this attribute is specified, pidl will
- take care of converting the character data from this format
- to the host format. Commonly used values are UCS2, DOS and UTF8.
- </para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-</variablelist>
-</refsect2>
-
-<refsect2>
- <title>Unsupported MIDL properties</title>
-
-<para>aggregatable, appobject, async_uuid, bindable, control, cpp_quote, defaultbind, defaultcollelem, defaultvalue, defaultvtable, dispinterface, displaybind, dual, entry, first_is, helpcontext, helpfile, helpstringcontext, helpstringdll, hidden, idl_module, idl_quote, id, immediatebind, importlib, import, include, includelib, last_is, lcid, licensed, max_is, module, ms_union, no_injected_text, nonbrowsable, noncreatable, nonextensible, odl, oleautomation, optional, pragma, propget, propputref, propput, readonly, requestedit, restricted, retval, source, transmit_as, uidefault, usesgetlasterror, vararg, vi_progid, wire_marshal. </para>
-
-</refsect2>
-
-</refsect1>
-
-<refsect1>
- <title>ETHEREAL CONFORMANCE FILES</title>
-
-<para>
-Pidl needs additional data for ethereal output. This data is read from
-so-called conformance files. This section describes the format of these
-files.</para>
-
-<para>
-Conformance files are simple text files with a single command on each line.
-Empty lines and lines starting with a '#' character are ignored.
-Arguments to commands are seperated by spaces.
-</para>
-
-<para>
-The following commands are currently supported:
-</para>
-
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry>
- <term>TYPE name dissector ft_type base_type mask valsstring alignment</term>
- <listitem><para>Register new data type with specified name, what dissector function to call and what properties to give header fields for elements of this type.</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry>
- <term>NOEMIT type</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Suppress emitting a dissect_type function for the specified type
- </para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry>
- <term>PARAM_VALUE type param</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Set parameter to specify to dissector function for given type.
- </para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry>
- <term>HF_FIELD hf title filter ft_type base_type valsstring mask description</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Generate a custom header field with specified properties.
- </para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry>
- <term>HF_RENAME old_hf_name new_hf_name</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Force the use of new_hf_name when the parser generator was going to
- use old_hf_name.
- </para>
-
- <para>
- This can be used in conjunction with HF_FIELD in order to make more then
- one element use the same filter name.
- </para>
- </listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry>
- <term>STRIP_PREFIX prefix</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Remove the specified prefix from all function names (if present).
- </para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry>
- <term>PROTOCOL longname shortname filtername</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Change the short-, long- and filter-name for the current interface in
- Ethereal.
- </para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry>
- <term>FIELD_DESCRIPTION field desc</term>
- <listitem><para>Change description for the specified header field. `field' is the hf name of the field.
- </para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry>
- <term>IMPORT dissector code...</term>
- <listitem><para>
- Code to insert when generating the specified dissector. @HF@ and
- @PARAM@ will be substituted.
- </para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-
-</refsect1>
-
-<refsect1>
- <title>EXAMPLES</title>
-
- <programlisting>
- # Generating an ethereal parser
- $ ./pidl --eth-parser -- atsvc.idl
-
- # Generating a TDR parser
- $ ./pidl --tdr-parser --tdr-header --header -- regf.idl
- </programlisting>
-
-</refsect1>
-
-<refsect1>
- <title>VERSION</title>
-
- <para>This man page is correct for version 4.0 of the Samba suite.</para>
-</refsect1>
-
-<refsect1>
- <title>SEE ALSO</title>
-
- <para><ulink url="http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/rpc/rpc/field_attributes.asp">Field Attributes [Remote Procedure Call]</ulink>, <ulink url="http://wiki.ethereal.com/DCE/RPC">Ethereal Wiki on DCE/RPC</ulink>.</para>
-
-</refsect1>
-
-<refsect1>
- <title>AUTHOR</title>
-
- <para>pidl was written by Andrew Tridgell, Stefan Metzmacher, Tim
- Potter and Jelmer Vernooij. </para>
-
- <para>This manpage was written by Jelmer Vernooij, partially based on the original pidl README by Andrew Tridgell. </para>
-
-</refsect1>
-
-</refentry>