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PrefaceThis manual describes the programmatic interfaces to transport services in the Solaris operating system. In this guide, the terms SunOS and Solaris are used interchangeably because the interfaces described in this manual are common to both. Solaris 2.6, SunSoft's distributed computing operating environment, is a superset of SunOS. It consists of SunOS release 5.5 with ONC+TM, OpenWindowsTM, ToolTalkTM, DeskSetTM, OPEN LOOK®, and other utilities. This release of Solaris is fully compatible with System V, Release 4 (SVR4) of UNIX® and conforms to the third edition of the System V Interface Description (SVID). It supports all System V network services. Who Should Use This BookThe guide assists you in developing a networked, distributed application in the Solaris operating system. Use of this guide assumes basic competence in programming, a working familiarity with the C programming language, and a working familiarity with the UNIX operating system. Previous experience in network programming is helpful, but is not required to use this manual. How This Book Is OrganizedChapter 1, Introduction to Network Programming Interfaces gives a high-level introduction to networking concepts and the topics covered in this book. Chapter 2, Programming With Sockets describes the socket interface at the transport layer. Chapter 3, Programming with XTI and TLI describes the X/Open Transport Interface (XTI) and UNIX System V Transport Layer Interface (TLI). Chapter 4, Transport Selection and Name-to-Address Mapping describes the network selection mechanisms used by applications in selecting a network transport and its configuration. Ordering Sun DocumentsThe SunDocsSM program provides more than 250 manuals from Sun Microsystems, Inc. If you live in the United States, Canada, Europe, or Japan, you can purchase documentation sets or individual manuals using this program.
Related BooksThe following online System AnswerBookTM products cover related network programming topics:
The following third-party books are excellent sources on network programming topics:
What Typographic Changes and Symbols MeanTable P-1 describes the typographic changes used in this book. Table P-1 Typographic Conventions
Shell Prompts in Command ExamplesTable P-2 shows the default system prompt and superuser prompt for the C shell, Bourne shell, and Korn shell. Table P-2 Shell Prompts
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