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Copyright 2012, 2013 & 2015 – Noah Mendelsohn COMP 150-IDS Ping Demonstration Programs & Makefile / C++ Hints Noah Mendelsohn Tufts University Email: noah@cs.tufts.edunoah@cs.tufts.edu Web: http://www.cs.tufts.edu/~noah COMP 150-IDS: Internet Scale Distributed Systems (Spring 2015)
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn 2 What you should get from today’s session A quick look at some details you’ll need to do our programming assignment, including: The framework we’re using C++ Exceptions A tiny bit about inheritance Makefiles C/C++ tips and tricks
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn 3 Working through the Demo Client
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Preamble 4 #include "c150dgmsocket.h" #include "c150debug.h" #include using namespace std; // for C++ std library using namespace C150NETWORK; Include Framework and Debug code
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Preamble 5 #include "c150dgmsocket.h" #include "c150debug.h" #include using namespace std; // for C++ std library using namespace C150NETWORK; IMPORTANT! Needed for COMP150IDS Framework!
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn 6 Main pingclient Logic
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Client logic 7 try { C150DgmSocket *sock = new C150DgmSocket(); sock -> setServerName(argv[serverArg]); sock -> write(argv[msgArg], strlen(argv[msgArg])+1); readlen = sock -> read(incomingMessage, sizeof(incomingMessage)); checkAndPrintMessage(readlen, incomingMessage, sizeof(incomingMessage)); } catch (C150NetworkException e) { cerr << argv[0] << ": caught C150NetworkException: " << e.formattedExplanation() << endl; } This is not an ordinary socket…it’s a smart wrapper around a socket Establishes us as a client…and identifies the server…ports set based on login id
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Client logic 8 try { C150DgmSocket *sock = new C150DgmSocket(); sock -> setServerName(argv[serverArg]); sock -> write(argv[msgArg], strlen(argv[msgArg])+1); readlen = sock -> read(incomingMessage, sizeof(incomingMessage)); checkAndPrintMessage(readlen, incomingMessage, sizeof(incomingMessage)); } catch (C150NetworkException e) { cerr << argv[0] << ": caught C150NetworkException: " << e.formattedExplanation() << endl; } Clients write, then read
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn 9 Demo Server
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Server logic 10 try { C150DgmSocket *sock = new C150DgmSocket(); c150debug->printf(C150APPLICATION,"Ready to accept messages"); while(1){ readlen = sock -> read(incomingMessage, sizeof(incomingMessage)-1); // … WORK WITH MESSAGE HERE string response = “SOME RESPONSE HERE”; sock -> write(response.c_str(), response.length()+1); } catch (C150NetworkException e) { c150debug->printf(C150ALWAYSLOG,"Caught C150NetworkException: %s\n", e.formattedExplanation().c_str()); } Servers read, then write
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Server logic 11 try { C150DgmSocket *sock = new C150DgmSocket(); c150debug->printf(C150APPLICATION,"Ready to accept messages"); while(1){ readlen = sock -> read(incomingMessage, sizeof(incomingMessage)-1); // … WORK WITH MESSAGE HERE string response = “SOME RESPONSE HERE”; sock -> write(response.c_str(), response.length()+1); } catch (C150NetworkException e) { c150debug->printf(C150ALWAYSLOG,"Caught C150NetworkException: %s\n", e.formattedExplanation().c_str()); } Framework assumes responses go to server/port from which we read
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Inferring who is a server and who is a client 12 try { C150DgmSocket *sock = new C150NastyDgmSocket(nastiness); c150debug->printf(C150APPLICATION,"Ready to accept messages"); while(1){ readlen = sock -> read(incomingMessage, sizeof(incomingMessage)-1); // … WORK WITH MESSAGE HERE string response = “SOME RESPONSE HERE”; sock -> write(response.c_str(), response.length()+1); } catch (C150NetworkException e) { c150debug->printf(C150ALWAYSLOG,"Caught C150NetworkException: %s\n", e.formattedExplanation().c_str()); } NOTE: The socket class imposes a simple notion of client/server on UDP… It decides whether you’re a server or client based on which methods you call first 1) client calls setServer name then writes 2) server starts by doing a read. Note a very robust approach for production code, but handy for these simple programs.
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn 13 C++ Inheritance
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn A super-simple look at C++ Inheritance 14 class Shape { private: Point position; public: Point getPosition(); virtual void draw() = 0; }; Base class “Shape” has draw() method with no implementation (=0)
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Class Circle : public Shape { public: virtual void draw(); }; Class Square : public Shape { public: virtual void draw(); }; A super-simple look at C++ Inheritance 15 class Shape { private: Point position; public: Point getPosition(); virtual void draw() = 0; }; Each subclass provides its own implementation of draw()
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn A super-simple look at C++ Inheritance 16 Class shape { private: Point position; public: Point getPosition(); virtual void draw() = 0; }; Class Circle : public Shape { public: virtual void draw(); }; Class Square : public Shape { public: virtual void draw(); }; Shape *shapeArray[2]; int i; shapeArray[0] = new Circle(); shapeArray[1] = new Square(); for(i=0; i<2; i++) { cout << shapeArray[i] -> position; shapeArray[i] -> draw(); } Both classes inherit postion() method from parent
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn A super-simple look at C++ Inheritance 17 Class shape { private: Point position; public: Point getPosition(); virtual void draw() = 0; }; Class Circle : public Shape { public: virtual void draw(); }; Class Square : public Shape { public: virtual void draw(); }; Shape *shapeArray[2]; int i; shapeArray[0] = new Circle(); shapeArray[1] = new Square(); for(i=0; i<2; i++) { cout << shapeArray[i] -> position; shapeArray[i] -> draw(); } First time calls Circle::draw, second time calls Square::draw
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Inheritance and nasty sockets logic 18 try { C150DgmSocket *sock = new C150NastyDgmSocket(nastiness); c150debug->printf(C150APPLICATION,"Ready to accept messages"); while(1){ readlen = sock -> read(incomingMessage, sizeof(incomingMessage)-1); // … WORK WITH MESSAGE HERE string response = “SOME RESPONSE HERE”; sock -> write(response.c_str(), response.length()+1); } catch (C150NetworkException e) { c150debug->printf(C150ALWAYSLOG,"Caught C150NetworkException: %s\n", e.formattedExplanation().c_str()); } The C150NastyDgmSocket class inherits from… … C150DgmSocket. You can use either type here, unless you want to call methods specific to the “nasty” class.
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn 19 C++ Exceptions
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn C++ Exceptions 20 try { C150DgmSocket *sock = new C150DgmSocket(); sock -> setServerName(argv[serverArg]); sock -> write(argv[msgArg], strlen(argv[msgArg])+1); readlen = sock -> read(incomingMessage, sizeof(incomingMessage)); checkAndPrintMessage(readlen, incomingMessage, sizeof(incomingMessage)); } catch (C150NetworkException e) { cerr << argv[0] << ": caught C150NetworkException: " << e.formattedExplanation() << endl; } C++ has try/catch/throw for Exceptions try clause runs first Any network exception in try block or methods called by try block takes us here e is of whatever type was “thrown”
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn C++ Exceptions Exceptions are particularly useful for network code… …no need to “percolate” return codes through layers of method calls Standard COMP 150IDS Exception Class: throw throw C150NetworkException("Client received message that was not null terminated"); When an error occurs, throw an Exception (same as “raise” in other langs): throw C150NetworkException (or other class) Exception classes form a hierarchy…based on class inheritance (no need for you to worry about that if you don’t know C++ inheritance) 21
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn 22 Makefiles Dependency –based Command Execution
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Makefile variables 23 # Do all C++ compies with g++ CPP = g++ CPPFLAGS = -g -Wall -Werror -I$(C150LIB) # Where the COMP 150 shared utilities live, including c150ids.a and userports.csv # Note that environment variable COMP150IDS must be set for this to work! C150LIB = $(COMP150IDS)/files/c150Utils/ [… several lines skipped…] pingclient: pingclient.o $(C150AR) $(INCLUDES) $(CPP) -o pingclient pingclient.o Variables defined this way… …used this way …or from environment… (this is one reason you setenv COMP150IDS /comp/150IDS)
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Targets and dependencies 24 # Do all C++ compies with g++ CPP = g++ CPPFLAGS = -g -Wall -Werror -I$(C150LIB) # Where the COMP 150 shared utilities live, including c150ids.a and userports.csv # Note that environment variable COMP150IDS must be set for this to work! C150LIB = $(COMP150IDS)/files/c150Utils/ [… several lines skipped…] pingclient: pingclient.o $(C150AR) $(INCLUDES) $(CPP) -o pingclient pingclient.o The pingclient target …depends on pingclient.o (and include files, etc.)
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn What gets run 25 # Do all C++ compies with g++ CPP = g++ CPPFLAGS = -g -Wall -Werror -I$(C150LIB) # Where the COMP 150 shared utilities live, including c150ids.a and userports.csv # Note that environment variable COMP150IDS must be set for this to work! C150LIB = $(COMP150IDS)/files/c150Utils/ [… several lines skipped…] pingclient: pingclient.o $(C150AR) $(INCLUDES) $(CPP) -o pingclient pingclient.o When pingclient is older than pingclient.o, etc. …..use g++ to relink it
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Fancier dependencies 26 %.o:%.cpp $(INCLUDES) $(CPP) -c $(CPPFLAGS) $< Each xxx.o file …depends on xxx.cpp …and is compiled from that.cpp file
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn 27 C cs. C++ Strings
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn C vs C++ Strings – we use both! C++ provides automatic allocation and useful concatenation operations C char[] arrays needed for formatting message packets File and socket APIs defined in terms of C byte arrays Also…preference –For some purposes, printf/scanf are handier than C++ << –Etc. 28
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Some hints on strings Won’t try a full tutorial here but, remember that you can convert: char cstring[4] = “abc”; // remember the null! string newstring(cstring); // initialize C++ string // from C string char *fromCPlusPlus = newstring.c_str(); // IMPORTANT: fromCPlusPlus // is stable ONLY until // next change to newstring Our focus is on the distributed system design…performance matters some, but do what’s easy and clean 29
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn Stringstreams: useful for formatting and conversions C++ strings do not support // for stringstream include // for cout stringstream ss; // empty stringstream int answer = 25; ss << “The answer is “<< answer << “ pounds” << endl; cout << ss.str(); // get string from stringstream 30
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© 2010 Noah Mendelsohn What I Do (mostly) I mostly use C++ strings: automatic allocation I use or convert to char[] if I’m using APIs that need them I use either printf or stringstreams for formatting or… …concatenate strings with “+” (slower, and edge cases where it doesn’t work) Not all the framework code makes good choices internally…you’ll find some stuff that probably should be cleaned up (e.g. excess conversions) 31
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