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source: downloads/enet-1.1/tutorial.txt @ 63

Last change on this file since 63 was 13, checked in by landauf, 17 years ago

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1* Using ENet
2
3    Before using ENet, you must call enet_initialize() to initialize the
4library. Upon program exit, you should call enet_deinitialize() so that
5the library may clean up any used resources.
6
7i.e.
8
9int
10main (int argc, char ** argv)
11{
12    if (enet_initialize () != 0)
13    {
14        fprintf (stderror, "An error occurred while initializing ENet.\n");
15        return EXIT_FAILURE;
16    }
17    atexit (enet_deinitialize);
18    ...
19    ...
20    ...
21}
22       
23* Creating an ENet server
24
25    Servers in ENet are constructed with enet_host_create(). You must specify
26an address on which to receive data and new connections, as well as the maximum
27allowable numbers of connected peers. You may optionally specify the incoming
28and outgoing bandwidth of the server in bytes per second so that ENet may try
29to statically manage bandwidth resources among connected peers in addition to
30its dynamic throttling algorithm; specifying 0 for these two options will cause
31ENet to rely entirely upon its dynamic throttling algorithm to manage
32bandwidth.
33
34    When done with a host, the host may be destroyed with enet_host_destroy().
35All connected peers to the host will be reset, and the resources used by
36the host will be freed.
37
38i.e.
39
40    ENetAddress address;
41    ENetHost * server;
42
43    /* Bind the server to the default localhost.
44     * A specific host address can be specified by
45     * enet_address_set_host (& address, "x.x.x.x");
46     */
47    address.host = ENET_HOST_ANY;
48    /* Bind the server to port 1234. */
49    address.port = 1234;
50
51    server = enet_host_create (& address /* the address to bind the server host to */,
52                32 /* allow up to 32 clients and/or outgoing connections */,
53                0 /* assume any amount of incoming bandwidth */,
54                0 /* assume any amount of outgoing bandwidth */);
55    if (server == NULL)
56    {
57        fprintf (stderr,
58                 "An error occurred while trying to create an ENet server host.\n");
59        exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
60    }
61    ...
62    ...
63    ...
64    enet_host_destroy(server);
65
66* Creating an ENet client
67
68    Clients in ENet are similarly constructed with enet_host_create() when no
69address is specified to bind the host to. Bandwidth may be specified for the
70client host as in the above example. The peer count controls the maximum number
71of connections to other server hosts that may be simultaneously open.
72
73i.e.
74
75    ENetHost * client;
76
77    clienet = enet_host_create (NULL /* create a client host */,
78                1 /* only allow 1 outgoing connection */,
79                57600 / 8 /* 56K modem with 56 Kbps downstream bandwidth */,
80                14400 / 8 /* 56K modem with 14 Kbps upstream bandwidth */);
81
82    if (client == NULL)
83    {
84        fprintf (stderr,
85                 "An error occurred while trying to create an ENet client host.\n");
86        exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
87    }
88    ...
89    ...
90    ...
91    enet_host_destroy(client);
92
93* Managing an ENet host
94
95    ENet uses a polled event model to notify the programmer of significant
96events. ENet hosts are polled for events with enet_host_service(), where an
97optional timeout value in milliseconds may be specified to control how long
98ENet will poll; if a timeout of 0 is specified, enet_host_service() will
99return immediately if there are no events to dispatch. enet_host_service()
100will return 1 if an event was dispatched within the specified timeout.
101
102    Currently there are only four types of significant events in ENet:
103
104An event of type ENET_EVENT_TYPE_NONE is returned if no event occurred
105within the specified time limit. enet_host_service() will return 0
106with this event.
107
108An event of type ENET_EVENT_TYPE_CONNECT is returned when either a new client
109host has connected to the server host or when an attempt to establish a
110connection with a foreign host has succeeded. Only the "peer" field of the
111event structure is valid for this event and contains the newly connected peer.
112
113An event of type ENET_EVENT_TYPE_RECEIVE is returned when a packet is received
114from a connected peer. The "peer" field contains the peer the packet was
115received from, "channelID" is the channel on which the packet was sent, and
116"packet" is the packet that was sent. The packet contained in the "packet"
117field must be destroyed with enet_packet_destroy() when you are done
118inspecting its contents.
119
120An event of type ENET_EVENT_TYPE_DISCONNECT is returned when a connected peer
121has either explicitly disconnected or timed out. Only the "peer" field of the
122event structure is valid for this event and contains the peer that
123disconnected. Only the "data" field of the peer is still valid on a
124disconnect event and must be explicitly reset.
125
126i.e.
127
128    ENetEvent event;
129   
130    /* Wait up to 1000 milliseconds for an event. */
131    while (enet_host_service (client, & event, 1000) > 0)
132    {
133        switch (event.type)
134        {
135        case ENET_EVENT_TYPE_CONNECT:
136            printf ("A new client connected from %x:%u.\n",
137                    event.peer -> address.host,
138                    event.peer -> address.port);
139
140            /* Store any relevant client information here. */
141            event.peer -> data = "Client information";
142
143            break;
144
145        case ENET_EVENT_TYPE_RECEIVE:
146            printf ("A packet of length %u containing %s was received from %s on channel %u.\n",
147                    event.packet -> dataLength,
148                    event.packet -> data,
149                    event.peer -> data,
150                    event.channelID);
151
152            /* Clean up the packet now that we're done using it. */
153            enet_packet_destroy (event.packet);
154           
155            break;
156           
157        case ENET_EVENT_TYPE_DISCONNECT:
158            printf ("%s disconected.\n", event.peer -> data);
159
160            /* Reset the peer's client information. */
161
162            event.peer -> data = NULL;
163        }
164    }
165    ...
166    ...
167    ...
168
169* Sending a packet to an ENet peer           
170
171    Packets in ENet are created with enet_packet_create(), where the size of
172the packet must be specified. Optionally, initial data may be specified to
173copy into the packet.
174
175    Certain flags may also be supplied to enet_packet_create() to control
176various packet features:
177
178ENET_PACKET_FLAG_RELIABLE specifies that the packet must use reliable delivery.
179A reliable packet is guarenteed to be delivered, and a number of retry attempts
180will be made until an acknowledgement is received from the foreign host the
181packet is sent to. If a certain number of retry attempts is reached without
182any acknowledgement, ENet will assume the peer has disconnected and forcefully
183reset the connection. If this flag is not specified, the packet is assumed
184an unreliable packet, and no retry attempts will be made nor acknowledgements
185generated.
186
187    A packet may be resized (extended or truncated) with enet_packet_resize().
188
189    A packet is sent to a foreign host with enet_peer_send(). enet_peer_send()
190accepts a channel id over which to send the packet to a given peer. Once the
191packet is handed over to ENet with enet_peer_send(), ENet will handle its
192deallocation and enet_packet_destroy() should not be used upon it.
193
194    One may also use enet_host_broadcast() to send a packet to all connected
195peers on a given host over a specified channel id, as with enet_peer_send().
196
197    Queued packets will be sent on a call to enet_host_service().
198Alternatively, enet_host_flush() will send out queued packets without
199dispatching any events.
200
201i.e.
202
203    /* Create a reliable packet of size 7 containing "packet\0" */
204    ENetPacket * packet = enet_packet_create ("packet",
205                                              strlen ("packet") + 1,
206                                              ENET_PACKET_FLAG_RELIABLE);
207
208    /* Extend the packet so and append the string "foo", so it now
209     * contains "packetfoo\0"
210     *
211    enet_packet_resize (packet, strlen ("packetfoo") + 1);
212    strcpy (& packet -> data [strlen ("packet")], "foo");
213   
214    /* Send the packet to the peer over channel id 3.
215     * One could also broadcast the packet by
216     * enet_host_broadcast (host, 3, packet);
217     */
218    enet_peer_send (peer, 3, packet);
219    ...
220    ...
221    ...
222    /* One could just use enet_host_service() instead. */
223    enet_host_flush (host);
224
225* Disconnecting an ENet peer
226
227    Peers may be gently disconnected with enet_peer_disconnect(). A disconnect
228request will be sent to the foreign host, and ENet will wait for an
229acknowledgement from the foreign host before finally disconnecting. An
230event of type ENET_EVENT_TYPE_DISCONNECT will be generated once the
231disconnection succeeds. Normally timeouts apply to the disconnect
232acknowledgement, and so if no acknowledgement is received after a length
233of time the peer will be forcefully disconnected.
234
235    enet_peer_reset() will forcefully disconnect a peer. The foreign host
236will get no notification of a disconnect and will time out on the foreign
237host. No event is generated.
238
239i.e.
240    ENetEvent event;
241   
242    enet_peer_disconnect (& client -> peers [0], 0);
243
244    /* Allow up to 3 seconds for the disconnect to succeed
245     * and drop any packets received packets.
246     */
247    while (enet_host_service (client, & event, 3000) > 0)
248    {
249        switch (event.type)
250        {
251        case ENET_EVENT_TYPE_RECEIVE:
252            enet_packet_destroy (event.packet);
253            break;
254
255        case ENET_EVENT_TYPE_DISCONNECT:
256            puts ("Disconnection succeeded.");
257            return;
258        ...
259        ...
260        ...
261        }
262    }
263   
264    /* We've arrived here, so the disconnect attempt didn't succeed yet.
265     * Force the connection down.
266     */
267    enet_peer_reset (& client -> peers [0]);
268    ...
269    ...
270    ...
271
272* Connecting to an ENet host
273
274    A connection to a foregin host is initiated with enet_host_connect().
275It accepts the address of a foreign host to connect to, and the number of
276channels that should be allocated for communication. If N channels are
277allocated for use, their channel ids will be numbered 0 through N-1.
278A peer representing the connection attempt is returned, or NULL if there
279were no available peers over which to initiate the connection. When the
280connection attempt succeeds, an event of type ENET_EVENT_TYPE_CONNECT will
281be generated. If the connection attempt times out or otherwise fails, an
282event of type ENET_EVENT_TYPE_DISCONNECT will be generated.
283
284i.e.
285    ENetAddress address;
286    ENetEvent event;
287    ENetPeer *peer;
288
289    /* Connect to some.server.net:1234. */
290    enet_address_set_host (& address, "some.server.net");
291    address.port = 1234;
292
293    /* Initiate the connection, allocating the two channels 0 and 1. */
294    peer = enet_host_connect (client, & address, 2);   
295   
296    if (peer == NULL)
297    {
298       fprintf (stderr,
299                "No available peers for initiating an ENet connection.\n");
300       exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
301    }
302   
303    /* Wait up to 5 seconds for the connection attempt to succeed.
304    if (enet_host_service (client, & event, 5000) > 0 &&
305        event.type == ENET_EVENT_TYPE_CONNECT)
306    {
307        puts ("Connection to some.server.net:1234 succeeded.");
308        ...
309        ...
310        ...
311    }
312    else
313    {
314        /* Either the 5 seconds are up or a disconnect event was
315         * received. Reset the peer in the event the 5 seconds
316         * had run out without any significant event.
317         */
318        enet_peer_reset (peer);
319
320        puts ("Connection to some.server.net:1234 failed.");
321    }
322    ...
323    ...
324    ...
325
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