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drb/drb.rb
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Module managing the underlying network protocol(s) used by drb.
By default, drb uses the DRbTCPSocket protocol. Other protocols can be defined. A protocol must define the following class methods:
[open(uri, config)] Open a client connection to the server at +uri+, using configuration +config+. Return a protocol instance for this connection. [open_server(uri, config)] Open a server listening at +uri+, using configuration +config+. Return a protocol instance for this listener. [uri_option(uri, config)] Take a URI, possibly containing an option component (e.g. a trailing '?param=val'), and return a [uri, option] tuple.
All of these methods should raise a DRbBadScheme error if the URI does not identify the protocol they support (e.g. "druby:" for the standard Ruby protocol). This is how the DRbProtocol module, given a URI, determines which protocol implementation serves that protocol.
The protocol instance returned by open_server must have the following methods:
The protocol instance returned by open must have the following methods:
The protocol instance returned by open_server().accept() must have the following methods:
A new protocol is registered with the DRbProtocol module using the add_protocol method.
For examples of other protocols, see DRbUNIXSocket in drb/unix.rb, and HTTP0 in sample/http0.rb and sample/http0serv.rb in the full drb distribution.
Add a new protocol to the DRbProtocol module.
# File drb/drb.rb, line 686 def add_protocol(prot) @protocol.push(prot) end
Open a client connection to uri with the configuration config.
The DRbProtocol module asks each registered protocol in turn to try to open the URI. Each protocol signals that it does not handle that URI by raising a DRbBadScheme error. If no protocol recognises the URI, then a DRbBadURI error is raised. If a protocol accepts the URI, but an error occurs in opening it, a DRbConnError is raised.
# File drb/drb.rb, line 698 def open(uri, config, first=true) @protocol.each do |prot| begin return prot.open(uri, config) rescue DRbBadScheme rescue DRbConnError raise($!) rescue raise(DRbConnError, "#{uri} - #{$!.inspect}") end end if first && (config[:auto_load] != false) auto_load(uri, config) return open(uri, config, false) end raise DRbBadURI, 'can\'t parse uri:' + uri end
Open a server listening for connections at uri with configuration config.
The DRbProtocol module asks each registered protocol in turn to try to open a server at the URI. Each protocol signals that it does not handle that URI by raising a DRbBadScheme error. If no protocol recognises the URI, then a DRbBadURI error is raised. If a protocol accepts the URI, but an error occurs in opening it, the underlying error is passed on to the caller.
# File drb/drb.rb, line 726 def open_server(uri, config, first=true) @protocol.each do |prot| begin return prot.open_server(uri, config) rescue DRbBadScheme end end if first && (config[:auto_load] != false) auto_load(uri, config) return open_server(uri, config, false) end raise DRbBadURI, 'can\'t parse uri:' + uri end
Parse uri into a [uri, option] pair.
The DRbProtocol module asks each registered protocol in turn to try to parse the URI. Each protocol signals that it does not handle that URI by raising a DRbBadScheme error. If no protocol recognises the URI, then a DRbBadURI error is raised.
# File drb/drb.rb, line 747 def uri_option(uri, config, first=true) @protocol.each do |prot| begin uri, opt = prot.uri_option(uri, config) # opt = nil if opt == '' return uri, opt rescue DRbBadScheme end end if first && (config[:auto_load] != false) auto_load(uri, config) return uri_option(uri, config, false) end raise DRbBadURI, 'can\'t parse uri:' + uri end