libxrx man page on SunOS

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   20652 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
SunOS logo
[printable version]

LIBXRX(1)							     LIBXRX(1)

NAME
       libxrx - RX Netscape Navigator Plug-in

DESCRIPTION
       The  RX	Plug-in	 may be used with Netscape Navigator (3.0 or later) to
       interpret documents in the RX MIME type format and start remote	appli‐
       cations.

       The  RX	Plug-in	 reads	an RX document, from which it gets the list of
       services the application wants to use. Based on this  information,  the
       RX  Plug-in  sets  the  various	requested services, including creating
       authorization keys if your X server supports the SECURITY extension. It
       then  passes  the  relevant  data,  such	 as the X display name, to the
       application through an HTTP GET request of the associated  CGI  script.
       The  Web	 server then executes the CGI script to start the application.
       The client runs on the web server host connected to your X  server.  In
       addition	 when the RX document is used within the EMBED tag (a Netscape
       extension to HTML), the RX Plug-in uses the XC-APPGROUP	extension,  if
       it is supported by your X server, to cause the remote application to be
       embedded within the browser page from which it was launched.

INSTALLATION
       To install the RX Plug-in so that Netscape Navigator can use  it,  find
       the file named libxrx.so.6.3 or libxrx.sl.6.3 (or similar, depending on
       your platform) in <ProjectRoot>/lib (e.g. /usr/X11R6.4/lib) and copy it
       to  either  /usr/local/lib/netscape/plugins or $HOME/.netscape/plugins.
       Do not install the symlinks libxrx.so or libxrx.sl; they would  confuse
       Netscape.

       If  you have configured Netscape Navigator to use the RX helper program
       (xrx), you must reconfigure it. Generally you simply need to remove  or
       comment out the line you may have previously added in your mailcap file
       to use the RX helper  program.	Otherwise  the	plug-in	 will  not  be
       enabled. (The usual comment character for mailcap is ``#''.)

       If  you	are  already  running Netscape Navigator, you need to exit and
       restart it after copying the plug-in library so the new plug-in will be
       found.  Once this is done you can check that Navigator has successfully
       loaded the plug-in by checking the ``About  Plug-ins''  page  from  the
       Help menu. This should show something like:

				   RX Plug-in

	   File name: /usr/local/lib/netscape/plugins/libxrx.sl.6.3

	   X Remote Activation Plug-in

	   Mime Type	     Description		  Suffixes  Enabled
	   application/x-rx  X Remote Activation Plug-in  xrx	    Yes

       Once  correctly	configured,  Netscape  Navigator  will activate the RX
       Plug-in whenever you retrieve any document of the  MIME	type  applica‐
       tion/x-rx.

RESOURCES
       The  RX	Plug-in	 looks	for  resources associated with the widget net‐
       scape.Navigator (class Netscape.TopLevelShell) and understands the fol‐
       lowing resource names and classes:

       xrxHasFirewallProxy (class XrxHasFirewallProxy)
	       Specifies whether an X server firewall proxy (see xfwp) is run‐
	       ning and should be used. Default is ``False.''  The X  firewall
	       proxy  uses  the	 X  Security Extension and this extension will
	       only allow clients to connect to the  X	server	if  host-based
	       authentication is turned on.  See xfwp(1) for more information.

       xrxInternalWebServers (class XrxInternalWebServers)
	       The  web	 servers  for which the X server firewall proxy should
	       not  be	used  (only  relevant  when   xrxHasFirewallProxy   is
	       ``True'').  Its	value  is a comma separated list of mask/value
	       pairs to be used to filter internal web servers, based on their
	       address.	 The mask part specifies which segments of the address
	       are to be considered and the  value  part  specifies  what  the
	       result should match. For instance the following list:

		     255.255.255.0/198.112.45.0, 255.255.255.0/198.112.46.0

	       matches	the  address sets: 198.112.45.* and 198.112.46.*. More
	       precisely, the test is (address & mask) == value.

       xrxFastWebServers (class XrxFastWebServers)
	       The web servers for which LBX should not be used. The  resource
	       value  is  a  list  of  address mask/value pairs, as previously
	       described.

       xrxTrustedWebServers (class XrxTrustedWebServers)
	       The web servers from which remote applications should be run as
	       trusted	clients.  The default is to run remote applications as
	       untrusted clients. The resource value  is  a  list  of  address
	       mask/value pairs, as previously described.

ENVIRONMENT
       If  the	RX document requests X-UI-LBX service and the default X server
       does not advertise the LBX extension, the RX Plug-in will look for  the
       environment  variable ``XREALDISPLAY'' to get a second address for your
       X server and look for  the  LBX	extension  there.  When	 running  your
       browser	through	 lbxproxy  you	will  need  to set XREALDISPLAY to the
       actual address of your server if you wish  remote  applications	to  be
       able to use LBX across the Internet.

       If  the	RX  document requests XPRINT service, RX Plug-in looks for the
       variable ``XPRINTER'' to get  the  printer  name	 and  X	 Print	server
       address	to  use.  If  the  server  address is not specified as part of
       XPRINTER, RX Plug-in uses the first one specified through the  variable
       ``XPSERVERLIST''	 when  it is set. When it is not RX Plug-in then tries
       to use the video server as the print server. If the printer name is not
       specified  via  XPRINTER,  RX  Plug-in  looks  for  it in the variables
       ``PDPRINTER'', then ``LPDEST'', and finally ``PRINTER'',

       Finally, if you are using a firewall proxy, RX Plug-in  will  look  for
       ``PROXY_MANAGER'' to get the address of your proxy manager (see proxym‐
       ngr). When not specified it will use ":6500" as the default.

KNOWN BUG
       When an authorization key is created for a remote  application  to  use
       the X Print service, the RX Plug-in has to create the key with an infi‐
       nite timeout since nobody knows when the application will actually con‐
       nect  to	 the X Print server. It then revokes the key when its instance
       is destroyed (that is when you go to another  page).  However,  if  the
       Plug-in	does  not  get destroyed properly, which happens when Netscape
       Navigator dies unexpectedly, the print authorization key will never get
       revoked.

SEE ALSO
       xrx  (1), xfwp (1), lbxproxy (1), proxymngr (1), The RX Document speci‐
       fication

AUTHORS
       Arnaud Le Hors and Kaleb Keithley, X Consortium

X Version 11			  Release 6.4			     LIBXRX(1)
[top]

List of man pages available for SunOS

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net