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>NS(3) System Library Functions Manual NS(3)
NAME
ns_addr, ns_ntoa - Xerox NS(tm) address conversion routines
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <netns/ns.h>
struct ns_addr
ns_addr(char *cp);
char *
ns_ntoa(struct ns_addr ns);
DESCRIPTION
The routine ns_addr() interprets character strings representing XNS
addresses, returning binary information suitable for use in system calls.
The routine ns_ntoa() takes XNS addresses and returns ASCII strings rep-
resenting the address in a notation in common use in the Xerox Develop-
ment Environment:
<network number>.<host number>.<port number>
Trailing zero fields are suppressed, and each number is printed in hex-
adecimal, in a format suitable for input to ns_addr(). Any fields lack-
ing super-decimal digits will have a trailing `H' appended.
Unfortunately, no universal standard exists for representing XNS
addresses. An effort has been made to ensure that ns_addr() be compati-
ble with most formats in common use. It will first separate an address
into 1 to 3 fields using a single delimiter chosen from period (`.'),
colon (`:'), or pound-sign `#'. Each field is then examined for byte
separators (colon or period). If there are byte separators, each sub-
field separated is taken to be a small hexadecimal number, and the
entirety is taken as a network-byte-ordered quantity to be zero extended
in the high-network-order bytes. Next, the field is inspected for
hyphens, in which case the field is assumed to be a number in decimal
notation with hyphens separating the millenia. Next, the field is
assumed to be a number: It is interpreted as hexadecimal if there is a
leading `0x' (as in C), a trailing `H' (as in Mesa), or there are any
super-decimal digits present. It is interpreted as octal is there is a
leading `0' and there are no super-octal digits. Otherwise, it is con-
verted as a decimal number.
RETURN VALUES
None. (See BUGS.)
SEE ALSO
hosts(5), networks(5)
HISTORY
The ns_addr() and ns_toa() functions appeared in 4.3BSD.
BUGS
The string returned by ns_ntoa() resides in a static memory area. The
function ns_addr() should diagnose improperly formed input, and there
should be an unambiguous way to recognize this.
BSD June 4, 1993 BSD
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