pure-avahi: Pure Avahi Interface

Version 0.4, April 11, 2018

Albert Gräf <aggraef@gmail.com>

This is a simple interface to Avahi, a Zeroconf implementation for Linux and other Un*x systems. The module lets you publish and query Zeroconf network services using Avahi, allowing you to establish connections for various kinds of TCP and UDP network services without having to manually configure network addresses. It is typically used along with the sockets module which lets you create the network connections discovered with avahi.

To keep things simple and easy to use, the module only exposes the most essential functionality of Ahavi right now, but the provided functions should hopefully be sufficient for most programs which require interoperability with other Avahi or Apple Bonjour applications. One known limitation is that the module allows you to publish and discover services in the default Avahi domain only. Typically this is the local domain, limiting you to services in the local network. However, this should cover most common uses of Zeroconf.

There’s a companion bonjour module which implements the same API for Bonjour, Apple’s Zeroconf implementation. Since both modules implement the same functions, albeit in different namespaces, they can be used as drop-in replacements for each other. We also offer a compatibility module named zeroconf which can be used with either pure-avahi or pure-bonjour in a transparent fashion, so that no source changes are needed when switching the underlying implementation; please check the zeroconf.pure script included in the sources for details.

This module is in its early stages, so it may still contain bugs or lack some features. Please report bugs on the issue tracker at the Pure Bitbucket site, and use the Pure mailing list for general discussion of the module.

Copying

Copyright (c) 2014 by Albert Graef.

pure-avahi is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

pure-avahi is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

Installation

Get the latest source from https://bitbucket.org/purelang/pure-lang/downloads/pure-avahi-0.4.tar.gz.

Run make to compile the module and make install (as root) to install it in the Pure library directory. This requires GNU make, and of course you need to have Pure and Avahi installed. The latter should be readily available on most Linux systems, and ports are available for BSD systems as well.

make tries to guess your Pure installation directory and platform-specific setup. If it gets this wrong, you can set some variables manually, please check the Makefile for details.

Please note that the zeroconf.pure compatibility module is not installed by default, so you may want to copy it to the Pure library directory if needed.

Usage

To use the operations of this module, you need to have Avahi installed and the Avahi daemon running on your system. The details of this depend on the particular system that you use, so please consult the documentation of your Linux or BSD distribution for instructions.

The following import declaration loads the functions of the avahi module in your Pure script:

using avahi;

All operations are in the avahi namespace, so you might want to add the following declaration to access the functions using their unqualified identifiers:

using namespace avahi;

Publishing Services

These functions allow you to advertise a network service using Avahi, so that the service can be discovered by other applications participating in the Zeroconf protocol. Each service has a name (a string which uniquely identifies the service), a type (indicating the application and transport protocols utilized by the service) and a port number (TCP or UDP port number, depending on the service type). The service type normally takes the form _app._tcp (for TCP services) or _app._udp (for UDP), where _app specifies the protocol of the particular application (such as _ipp for network-connected printers, or _osc for applications speaking the OSC a.k.a. Open Sound Control protocol).

avahi::publish name stype port

Advertise a service in the local domain, given by its name (a string), service type (a string) and (TCP or UDP) port number (an integer). Note that this operation is actually carried out asynchronously. Use avahi::check below to wait for and report the result of the operation. The returned result is a pointer to the service object which can be passed to the following operations, or NULL in case of error. (A NULL pointer can be passed safely to avahi::check; it will fail in this case.) The service will be unpublished automatically when the service object is garbage-collected.

avahi::check service

Check for the result of a avahi::publish operation. This blocks until a result is available. A negative integer value indicates failure (in this case the result is the Avahi error code). Otherwise the result is a triple with the actual service name, type and port. Note that the name may be different from the one passed to avahi::publish if there was a name collision with another service. Such collisions are resolved automatically by tacking on a suffix of the form #n to the service name.

Discovering Services

These functions let you discover services of a given service type. For each (resolvable) service you’ll be able to retrieve the corresponding network address and port, which is what you’ll need to actually open a network connection to communicate with the service.

avahi::browse stype

Browse available services of a given type in the local domain. This operation is carried out asynchronously; use avahi::avail below to check whether new information is available, and avahi::get to retrieve the actual service list. The result returned by avahi::browse is a pointer to the browser object which can be passed to the following operations, or NULL in case of error. (A NULL pointer can be passed safely to the other operations; they will fail in this case.) Any resources allocated to the browser will be released automatically when the browser object is garbage-collected.

avahi::avail browser

Check whether the service information was updated since the last invocation of avahi::get. Returns an integer (truth value), which may also be negative (indicating the Avahi error code) in case of error.

avahi::get browser

Retrieve the current list of services. Each list entry is a tuple with the name, type, domain, IP address (all string values) and port number (an integer) of a service. The entries are in the same order as returned by Avahi, but only include services whose network addresses can actually be resolved using Avahi. Note that this information may change over time, as new services are announced on the network or removed from it. An application will typically call avahi::avail from time to time to check whether new information is available and then retrieve the updated service list using avahi::get. The result may also be a negative integer (indicating the Avahi error code) in case of error.

Example

Here’s an example showing how to publish an UDP OSC (Open Sound Control) service which might be used to connect to mobile OSC applications such as hexler’s TouchOSC:

using avahi;
using namespace avahi;

let s = publish "OSC Server" "_osc._udp" 8000;
check s;

The last line checks for the result of the operation and returns the actual service name, type and port number if all went well. A TouchOSC instance running on the local network will then offer you to connect to the service.

Continuing the example, here’s how you can obtain a list of OSC services currently available on your local network:

let t = browse "_osc._udp";
avail t;
get t;

If you’re running TouchOSC somewhere on your local network, it will be listed there, along with our own service which we published above. The call in the second line can be used to check whether any new information is available. Applications typically invoke these two from time to time to update their service list, using code like the following:

avail t && get t;

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