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What is a tdeioslave you ask yourself?
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A tdeioslave is a program designed to be intimately familiar with a certian
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protocol, so that a standardized interface can be used to get at data from
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any number of places. A few examples are the http and ftp tdeioslaves,
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which using nearly identical methods will retrieve data from an http or
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ftp server respectively.
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Well, that's nice. How do they work?
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To understand it, you'll need two ice cubes, a pair of handcuffs, and a
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ferret. Some Crisco (or other shortening) is optional. Well, that aside,
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this document focuses on the business end of the whole tdeio library. The
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ioslave. See the documentation of the SlaveBase class for the methods
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you need to reimplement, and see
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http://developer.kde.org/documentation/design/kde/ioslaves/ for more docu
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online.
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That's nice, but how can I use it?
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Any time you'd like to use non blocking IO over a high level protocol
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(such as HTTP or FTP) a tdeioslave is for you.
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That's nice, but how do I use it?
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Basically, you create "jobs" by calling a public TDEIO::blah method
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(the correct prototypes, etc, are in tdeio/job.h). Once this is done, you
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connect to the result() signal, and wait for the result. There are
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other signals emitted by jobs, see tdeio/jobclasses.h. Once again,
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see the online documentation for more.
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If you are interested in working on an ioslave,
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the following slaves are severely lacking in functionality:
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SMTP
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SMB
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-------------
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Original document by Rich.
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Updated for KDE 2 by David.
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