Transport Provider Interface (TPI)
Transport Provider Interface (TPI)
Copyright © 1997 The Open Group

Frontmatter


CAE Specification
Transport Provider Interface (TPI) incorporating Corrigendum U023
X/Open Document Number: C615 with U023
ISBN: 1-85912-102-0


©July 1997, The Open Group All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owners.


Any comments relating to the material contained in this document may be submitted to The Open Group at:

The Open Group
Apex Plaza
Forbury Road
Reading
Berkshire, RG1 1AX
United Kingdom
or by electronic mail to:
OGSpecs@opengroup.org

Preface

The Open Group

The Open Group is the leading vendor-neutral, international consortium for buyers and suppliers of technology. Its mission is to cause the development of a viable global information infrastructure that is ubiquitous, trusted, reliable, and as easy-to-use as the telephone. The essential functionality embedded in this infrastructure is what we term the IT DialTone. The Open Group creates an environment where all elements involved in technology development can cooperate to deliver less costly and more flexible IT solutions.

Formed in 1996 by the merger of the X/Open Company Ltd. (founded in 1984) and the Open Software Foundation (founded in 1988), The Open Group is supported by most of the world's largest user organizations, information systems vendors, and software suppliers. By combining the strengths of open systems specifications and a proven branding scheme with collaborative technology development and advanced research, The Open Group is well positioned to meet its new mission, as well as to assist user organizations, vendors, and suppliers in the development and implementation of products supporting the adoption and proliferation of systems which conform to standard specifications.

With more than 200 member companies, The Open Group helps the IT industry to advance technologically while managing the change caused by innovation. It does this by:

The Open Group operates in all phases of the open systems technology lifecycle including innovation, market adoption, product development, and proliferation. Presently, it focuses on seven strategic areas: open systems application platform development, architecture, distributed systems management, interoperability, distributed computing environment, security, and the information superhighway. The Open Group is also responsible for the management of the UNIX trademark on behalf of the industry.

The Development of Product Standards

This process includes the identification of requirements for open systems and, now, the IT DialTone, development of CAE and Preliminary Specifications through an industry consensus review and adoption procedure (in parallel with formal standards work), and the development of tests and conformance criteria.

This leads to the preparation of a Product Standard which is the name used for the documentation that records the conformance requirements (and other information) to which a vendor may register a product. There are currently two forms of Product Standard, namely the Profile Definition and the Component Definition, although these will eventually be merged into one.

The "X" mark is used by vendors to demonstrate that their products conform to the relevant Product Standard. By use of the Open Brand they guarantee, through the X/Open Trade Mark Licence Agreement (TMLA), to maintain their products in conformance with the Product Standard so that the product works, will continue to work, and that any problems will be fixed by the vendor.

Open Group Publications

The Open Group publishes a wide range of technical documentation, the main part of which is focused on specification development and product documentation, but which also includes Guides, Snapshots, Technical Studies, Branding and Testing documentation, industry surveys, and business titles.

There are several types of specification:


In addition, The Open Group publishes:

Versions and Issues of Specifications

As with all live documents, CAE Specifications require revision to align with new developments and associated international standards. To distinguish between revised specifications which are fully backwards compatible and those which are not:

Corrigenda

Readers should note that Corrigenda may apply to any publication. Corrigenda information is published on the World-Wide Web at http://www.opengroup.org/public/pubs.

Ordering Information

Full catalogue and ordering information on all Open Group publications is available on the World-Wide Web at http://www.opengroup.org/public/pubs.

This Document
The Transport Provider Interface (TPI) defines an interface for drivers that provide transport services. The TPI specifies the set of messages and their formats which the driver must generate or process.

This specification has been developed from the original TPI Specification which was generated by UNIX International (UI). UI intellectual property rights were subsequently acquired by UNIX System Laboratories (USL), who in turn were later acquired by Novell Inc. See also the Acknowledgements page.

As indicated in the title and the document number, this copy of the TPI_CAE specification incorporates the corrections which were published in Corrigendum U023.

Intended Audience
This specification assumes the reader is familiar with OSI Reference Model terminology, OSI transport services and STREAMS.
Structure
The structure of this specifications is:
Typographical Conventions
The following typographical conventions are used throughout this document:

Trade Marks

Motif®, OSF/1®, and UNIX® are registered trademarks and the IT DialToneTM;, The Open GroupTM;, and the "X Device"TM; are trademarks of The Open Group.

Acknowledgements

The original TPI Specification was produced by UNIX International (UI). UI intellectual property rights subsequently passed to UNIX System Laboratories (USL), who in turn were acquired by Novell Inc. The Open Group acknowledges Novell's contribution of their TPI 2.01 specification as the base document from which this TPI specification was developed.

Referenced Documents

The following documents are referenced in this specification:

ISO/IEC 8072

ISO 8072:1986, Information Processing Systems - Open Systems Interconnection - Transport Service Definition.

TPI-SMD

UNIX Press (A Prentice Hall Title) book "STREAMS Modules and Drivers", published 1992, ISBN 0-13-066879-6.

XNS, Issue 5

CAE Specification, February 1997, Networking Services, Issue 5 (ISBN: 1-85912-165-9, C523).


Why not acquire a nicely bound hard copy?
Click here to return to the publication details or order a copy of this publication.

Contents Next section Index