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167 lines
5.5 KiB
167 lines
5.5 KiB
/*
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* mcatmcs.h
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*
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* Copyright (c) 1993 - 1995 by DataBeam Corporation, Lexington, KY
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*
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* Abstract:
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* This is the interface file for the MCS DLL. This file defines all
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* macros, types, and functions needed to use the MCS DLL, allowing MCS
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* services to be accessed from user applications.
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*
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* Basically, an application requests services from MCS by making direct
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* calls into the DLL (this includes T.122 requests and responses). MCS
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* sends information back to the application through a callback (this
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* includes T.122 indications and confirms). The callback
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* for a particular user attachment is specified in the call
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* MCS_AttachRequest.
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*
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* Note that this is a "C" language interface in order to prevent any "C++"
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* naming conflicts between different compiler manufacturers. Therefore,
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* if this file is included in a module that is being compiled with a "C++"
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* compiler, it is necessary to use the following syntax:
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*
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* extern "C"
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* {
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* #include "mcatmcs.h"
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* }
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*
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* This disables C++ name mangling on the API entry points defined within
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* this file.
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*
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* Author:
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* James P. Galvin, Jr.
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*/
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#ifndef __MCATMCS_H__
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#define __MCATMCS_H__
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#include "databeam.h"
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#include "mcspdu.h"
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#include <t120type.h>
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/*
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* The following definitions are used to identify various parameters within
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* MCS, and are part of the MCS protocol definition.
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*
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* Priority
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* MCS specifies the use of up to four levels of priority. An application
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* should NOT use TOP_PRIORITY (this level is reserved for MCS traffic).
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* Segmentation
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* This type is used when specifying whether a given data indication is the
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* first or last one in a user data block (or both or neither).
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* TokenStatus
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* This type is returned when testing the current state of a token.
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* Reason
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* When MCS issues an indication to a user application, it often includes a
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* reason parameter informing the user of why the activity is occurring.
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* Result
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* When a user makes a request of MCS, MCS often responds with a result,
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* letting the user know whether or not the request succeeded.
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*/
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typedef PDUPriority Priority;
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typedef PDUSegmentation Segmentation;
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typedef Priority * PPriority;
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typedef Segmentation * PSegmentation;
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#define SEGMENTATION_BEGIN 0x80
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#define SEGMENTATION_END 0x40
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/*
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* The following type is used to indicate what merge state the local provider
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* is in. Note that this is a local implementation feature that is not part
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* of the standard MCS definition.
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*
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* Whenever the former Top Provider of a domain enters the domain merge state,
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* it indicates this to all applications locally attached to that domain by
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* sending an MCS_MERGE_DOMAIN_INDICATION. This type (MergeStatus) is the
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* parameter to that call. It will be called twice, the first time indicating
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* that the domain is entering the merge state. The second time indicates that
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* the domain merger is complete.
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*
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* All T.122 primitives (requests and responses) will be rejected during the
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* time that the domain merger is in progress. It is the repsonsibility of
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* the user application to re-try the primitive once the merge is complete.
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*/
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typedef unsigned short MergeStatus;
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typedef MergeStatus * PMergeStatus;
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#define MERGE_DOMAIN_IN_PROGRESS 0
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#define MERGE_DOMAIN_COMPLETE 1
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/*
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* This type is the signature of an MCS call back function. MCS uses this
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* function to let the application know when an event occurs.
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*
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* Note that an MCS callback routine needs to return a value to MCS. This
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* value should either be MCS_NO_ERROR if the callback was successfully
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* processed, or MCS_CALLBACK_NOT_PROCESSED if the callback was not processed.
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* In the latter case, MCS will hold on to the information contained in the
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* callback message, so that it can try issuing the same callback during the
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* next time slice. It will keep retrying until the user application accepts
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* the callback message (by returning MCS_NO_ERROR). This is how flow control
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* works for information flowing upward from MCS to the application.
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*/
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typedef void (CALLBACK *MCSCallBack) (UINT, LPARAM, LPVOID);
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/*
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typedef struct
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{
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ChannelID channel_id;
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Priority priority;
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UserID sender_id;
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Segmentation segmentation;
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unsigned char * user_data;
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unsigned long user_data_length;
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} SendData;
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*/
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typedef SendDataRequestPDU SendData;
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typedef SendData * PSendData;
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// This constant defines the maximum MCS PDU size for applications
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#define MAX_MCS_DATA_SIZE 4096
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/*
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* This section defines the messages that can be sent to the application
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* through the callback facility. These messages correspond to the indications
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* and confirms that are defined within T.122.
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*/
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typedef T120MessageType MCSMessageType;
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/*
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* The following declaration defines the flags that can be set when
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* calling MCSSendDataRequest.
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*/
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typedef enum {
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APP_ALLOCATION,
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MCS_ALLOCATION
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} SendDataFlags, *PSendDataFlags;
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/*
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* The following type defines whether the SendDataRequest
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* is a normal send or a uniform send.
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*/
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typedef enum {
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NORMAL_SEND_DATA,
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UNIFORM_SEND_DATA
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} DataRequestType, *PDataRequestType;
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typedef enum
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{
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TOP_PRIORITY_MASK =0x0001,
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HIGH_PRIORITY_MASK =0x0002,
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LOW_MEDIUM_MASK =0x0004,
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LOW_PRIORITY_MASK =0x0008,
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UNIFORM_SEND_DATA_MASK =0x0010,
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NORMAL_SEND_DATA_MASK =0x0020,
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MCS_ALLOCATION_MASK =0x0040,
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APP_ALLOCATION_MASK =0x0080
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} MCSSenDataMasks;
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#endif // __MCATMCS_H__
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