rtfind

search the RTC Tree

Author: Geoffrey Biggs and contributors
Date: 2011-10-24
Copyright: EPL-1.0
Version: 3.0
Manual section:1
Manual group:User commands

Synopsis

rtfind <search path> [options]

Description

Searches the known name servers in the RTC Tree for components, managers and other such objects. Constraints can be placed on the search to limit the results.

Options

-i INAME, --iname=INAME
 Case-insensitive name pattern. This option can be specified multiple times.
-m MAX_DEPTH, --maxdepth=MAX_DEPTH
 Maximum depth to search down to in the tree. The default is to search the entire tree.
-n NAME, --name=NAME
 Case-sensitive name pattern. This option can be specified multiple times.
-t TYPE, --type=TYPE
 Type of object: c (component), d (directory), m (manager), n (name server), z (zombie).
--version Show program's version number and exit
-h, --help Show a help message and exit
-v, --verbose Output verbose information. [Default: False]

Paths

rtshell uses paths to indicate objects in the RTC Tree. A path is the address of object. Name servers and naming contexts on name servers are considered directories. Managers and RT-Components are considered 'files'. As with the POSIX cat command, the path specified as an argument to commands is appended to the current rtshell working directory, which is stored in the RTCSH_CWD environment variable and changeable using the rtcwd command.

The available paths depend on the known name servers at the time the command is executed. This is a combination of the servers listed in the RTCSH_NAMESERVERS environment variable and the servers used in given paths.

For example, /localhost/comp0.rtc refers to the component named comp0.rtc registered on the name server at localhost. /localhost/manager/comp0.rtc refers to the component comp0.rtc in the directory manager on the localhost name server. ./comp0.rtc refers to that component in the current directory.

When specifying a port on an RT-Component, it should be placed after the path, separated by a colon. For example, /localhost/comp0.rtc:data refers to the port data on the component comp0.rtc.

Some commands that create new ports accept extra options in the paths, such as a name for the automatically generated port, or a formatter. The format for specifying these paths is:

path:port.name#formatter

For example:

/localhost/blurg.host_cxt/comp0.rtc:input.stuff#a_printer

This specifies that the automatically generated port should be named stuff, and the data type it handles should be printed using the a_printer function (which must be available, usually it is provided by the user in a loadable module). The port will be connected to the input port of the comp0.rtc component.

The name component is optional. If it is not present, neither should the . character be. For example:

/localhost/blurg.host_cxt/comp0.rtc:input#a_printer

The formatter component is optional. If it is not present, neither should the # character be. For example:

/localhost/blurg.host_cxt/comp0.rtc:input.stuff

Environment

RTCTREE_ORB_ARGS
A list of arguments, separated by semi-colons, to pass to the ORB when creating it. Optional.
RTCTREE_NAMESERVERS
A list of name server addresses, separated by semi-colons, to parse when creating the RTCTree. Each server in the list will be added to the tree, making it available for browsing with rtshell. Optional.
RTSH_CWD
The current working directory in the tree. Do not set this variable; it is set automatically by rtshell.

The only variable that should normally be set by the user is RTCTREE_NAMESERVERS. Set this to a list of name server addresses, separated by semi-colons, that rtshell should interact with. For example, in a Bash shell, the following command will set the known name serves to localhost, 192.168.0.1:65346 and example.com:

$ export RTCTREE_NAMESERVERS=localhost;192.168.0.1:65346;example.com

Diagnostics

Returns zero on success and non-zero on failure.

Verbose output and error messages are printed to stderr.

Examples

$ rtfind / -t c

Find all components in the tree. The search starts at the root directory.

$ rtfind . -t cm

Find all components and managers in or below the current working directory.

$ rtfind . -n 'Conso*' -type c

Find all components in or below the current working directory whose names start with Conso.

$ rtfind . -i 'console?.rtc' -type c

Find all components in or below the current working directory whose names start start with console (case insensitive) and end with .rtc (case insensitive), with only one character in between.

$ for c in `rtfind . -type c -m 1`; do rtact ${c}; done

(POSIX only) Activate all components in the current working directory.

See Also

rtls (1)