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Revision 1.2, Thu Mar 8 07:09:02 2001 UTC (23 years, 2 months ago) by takayama
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: R_1_3_1-2, RELEASE_1_3_1_13b, RELEASE_1_2_3_12, RELEASE_1_2_3, RELEASE_1_2_2_KNOPPIX_b, RELEASE_1_2_2_KNOPPIX, RELEASE_1_2_2, RELEASE_1_2_1, KNOPPIX_2006, HEAD, DEB_REL_1_2_3-9
Changes since 1.1: +3 -2 lines

Improved wordings.

%%$OpenXM: OpenXM/doc/ascm2001/ox-messages.tex,v 1.2 2001/03/08 07:09:02 takayama Exp $

\section{OX messages}

An OX message for TCP/IP is a byte stream consisting of
a header and a body.
\begin{center}
\begin{tabular}{|c|c|}
\hline
Header	& \hspace{10mm} Body \hspace{10mm} \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\end{center}
The header consists of two signed 32 bit integers.
The first one is an OX tag 
and the second one is a serial number of the OX message.
%Negative numbers are expressed by the two's complement.
Several byte orders including the network byte order
are allowed and the byte order is determined as a part of
the establishment of a connection. See Section \ref{secsession} for details.

The OX messages are classified into three types:
DATA, COMMAND, and SPECIAL.
We have currently the following general tags for the OX messages.
\begin{verbatim}
#define	OX_COMMAND               513  // COMMAND
#define	OX_DATA	                 514  // DATA
#define OX_SYNC_BALL             515  // SPECIAL
#define OX_DATA_WITH_LENGTH      521  // DATA
#define OX_DATA_OPENMATH_XML     523  // DATA
#define OX_DATA_OPENMATH_BINARY  524  // DATA
#define OX_DATA_MP               525  // DATA
\end{verbatim}

A new OX tag may be added.
The new tag should be classified into DATA or COMMAND.
For example, \verb+ OX_DATA_ASIR_LOCAL_BINARY +  was added recently
to send internal serialized objects of Asir via the OpenXM protocol
for efficiency reason.
This is a tag classified to DATA.
See the web page of OpenXM to add a new tag \cite{openxm-web}.

%An OpenXM client admit that its own command sends some OX messages
%sequentially at once.  
%
%For example, the asir command
%{\tt ox\_execute\_string(P, "Print[x+y]")} sends an OX data message
%{\tt (OX\_DATA, (CMO\_STRING, "Print[x+y]"))} and an OX command message
%{\tt (OX\_COMMAND, (SM\_executeStringByLocalParser))} to an OpenXM
%server.