blob: d997e01aa9c36d0e8d6f3e061b8d94e68d662b0f (
plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
|
Multiplexes arbitrary host names, making access to many different host fast and easy.
For each host accessed via a directory an new translator is started with the hostname as option. Say, /hostmuxdemo should let you access your favourite host with your translator mytranslatorfs.
<code>**ls /hostmuxdemo/mybox/**</code> would give the result of mytranslatorfs applied to host mybox.
## <a name="Usage"> Usage </a>
Hostmux takes translator options as argument and (in the easiest case ) starts the translator with the given arguments and the hostname as the last argument.
### <a name="ftpfs"> ftpfs </a>
ftpfs is a good example, that is even very usefull. With hostmux and ftpfs you can access anonymous ftp via the filesystem, sparing out complicate use of a ftp client.
We assume you want to access the ftp root at all servers. The example host is ftp.yourbox.com.
Usermux is called via <code>**settrans -fgap /ftp /hurd/hostmux /hurd/ftpfs /**</code> .
* <code>**-fg**</code> makes settrans try hard to remove an existing old translator from <code>**/ftp**</code>
* <code>**ap**</code> sets an active translator (starts the translator) and a passive translator (stores translator information in the filesystem with which an active translator can be started on access of this node)
* <code>**/ftp**</code> is where we want to set the translator
* <code>**/hurd/hostmux**</code> is obviously our hostmux translator that will be started at <code>**/ftp**</code> and handle filesystem operations on <code>**/ftp**</code> and everything below (like <code>**/ftp/ftp.yourbox.com/pub/**</code>)
* <code>**/hurd/ftpfs /**</code> is the argument to hostmux.
When <code>**/ftp**</code> is accessed, the first directory is interpreted as hostname and a new translator is set up with the <code>**hostmux**</code> arguments:
<code>**ls /ftp/ftp.yourhost.com/pub/**</code> lets hostmux start a new traslator <code>**/hurd/ftpfs / ftp.yourhost.com**</code> and serve it via <code>**/ftp/ftp.yourhos t.com/**</code> as directory. Subsequent the directory <code>**pub/**</code> on <code>**/ftp.yourhost.com/**</code> can be accessed via the new created translator.
You can see the new created translator in the process list: <code>**ps ax | grep ftpsfs**</code> . You shoud see <code>**/hurd/ftpfs / ftp.yourhost.com**</code> .
-- [[Main/PatrickStrasser]] - 13 Jul 2004
# Open Issues
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-21
[[!tag open_issue_hurd]]
<jproulx> ls /http://<ip>:<port>/
<jproulx> the image came with a global translator though I see it doesn't
grokk the alternate port notation.
<youpi> oh right
<jproulx> I shall return to the fine documentation
<youpi> it's a hostmux, it doesn't understand ports
<youpi> damn, one thus can't url plain urls with that scheme
|