xs_msg_init_data(3) =================== NAME ---- xs_msg_init_data - initialise Crossroads message from a supplied buffer SYNOPSIS -------- *typedef void (xs_free_fn) (void '*data', void '*hint');* *int xs_msg_init_data (xs_msg_t '*msg', void '*data', size_t 'size', xs_free_fn '*ffn', void '*hint');* DESCRIPTION ----------- The _xs_msg_init_data()_ function shall initialise the message object referenced by 'msg' to represent the content referenced by the buffer located at address 'data', 'size' bytes long. No copy of 'data' shall be performed and the library shall take ownership of the supplied buffer. If provided, the deallocation function 'ffn' shall be called once the data buffer is no longer required by the library, with the 'data' and 'hint' arguments supplied to _xs_msg_init_data()_. CAUTION: Never access 'xs_msg_t' members directly, instead always use the _xs_msg_ family of functions. CAUTION: The deallocation function 'ffn' needs to be thread-safe, since it will be called from an arbitrary thread. CAUTION: The functions _xs_msg_init()_, _xs_msg_init_data()_ and _xs_msg_init_size()_ are mutually exclusive. Never initialize the same 'xs_msg_t' twice. RETURN VALUE ------------ The _xs_msg_init_data()_ function shall return zero if successful. Otherwise it shall return `-1` and set 'errno' to one of the values defined below. ERRORS ------ *ENOMEM*:: Insufficient storage space is available. EXAMPLE ------- .Initialising a message from a supplied buffer ---- void my_free (void *data, void *hint) { free (data); } /* ... */ void *data = malloc (6); assert (data); memcpy (data, "ABCDEF", 6); xs_msg_t msg; rc = xs_msg_init_data (&msg, data, 6, my_free, NULL); assert (rc == 0); ---- SEE ALSO -------- linkxs:xs_msg_init_size[3] linkxs:xs_msg_init[3] linkxs:xs_msg_close[3] linkxs:xs_msg_data[3] linkxs:xs_msg_size[3] linkxs:xs[7] AUTHORS ------- The Crossroads documentation was written by Martin Sustrik and Martin Lucina .