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authorMartin Mares <mj@ucw.cz>1999-11-17 13:14:44 +0100
committerMartin Mares <mj@ucw.cz>1999-11-17 13:14:44 +0100
commit62a463954815748d0d82da0e30651e6eea7bc9cf (patch)
tree4df691d34dc346791f56cd04e71dacc9979d5cd0 /nest/rt-attr.c
parent30770df2ab33ffbfd75a9478265ac5e1a1db98d9 (diff)
downloadbird-62a463954815748d0d82da0e30651e6eea7bc9cf.tar
bird-62a463954815748d0d82da0e30651e6eea7bc9cf.zip
Added some temporary examples of how to define CLI commands (search for CF_CLI).
To define a new command, just add a new rule to the gramar: CF_CLI(COMMAND NAME, arguments, help-args, help-text) { what-should-the-command-do } ; where <arguments> are appended to the RHS of the rule, <help-args> is the argument list as shown in the help and <help-text> is description of the command for the help. <what-should-the-command-do> is a C code snippet to be executed. It should not take too much time to execute. If you want to print out a lot of information, you can schedule a routine to be called after the current buffer is flushed by making cli->cont point to the routine (see the TEST LONG command definition for an example); if the connection is closed in the meantime, cli->cleanup gets called. You can access `struct cli' belonging to the connection you're currently servicing as this_cli, but only during parse time, not from routines scheduled for deferred execution. Functions to call inside command handlers: cli_printf(cli, code, printf-args) -- print text to CLI connection, <code> is message code as assigned in doc/reply_codes or a negative one if it's a continuation line. cli_msg(code, printf-args) -- the same for this_cli. Use 'sock -x bird.ctl' for connecting to the CLI until a client is written.
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