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author | Fredrik Gustafsson <[email protected]> | 2012-12-03 10:22:40 +0100 |
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committer | Fredrik Gustafsson <[email protected]> | 2012-12-03 10:22:40 +0100 |
commit | c228ceb941e26a04317bd2f66a2ee64687f0f869 (patch) | |
tree | fb019fce335b6db5b92ce300ee707496a9fe759b /lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml | |
parent | f78daeeccbf6de61b9e5dae4dd70f12fba03a2ff (diff) | |
parent | 26dffbeec17226a25c00d4072cb0f5c29ed48cea (diff) | |
download | otp-c228ceb941e26a04317bd2f66a2ee64687f0f869.tar.gz otp-c228ceb941e26a04317bd2f66a2ee64687f0f869.tar.bz2 otp-c228ceb941e26a04317bd2f66a2ee64687f0f869.zip |
Merge branch 'fredrik/ssh/fix-idle-tests' into fredrik/ssh/rekeying
* fredrik/ssh/fix-idle-tests: (50 commits)
Modifications to idle_time testcase
Teach Win installer to handle redist on w2012/w8
ssl: Receive port EXIT-message so that it does not get mixed up with the protocol-error message we are expecting
ssl: Add and enhance tests
ssl: Consider new server options when resuming a session
Prepare release
ssl: Add dependencies to Makefile
Simplify the code for the generated info/0 function
Don't try to work around a non-loadable NIF library
Fix BER encoding when multiple levels of typedefs are used
Update megaco documentation
Update documentation for the asn1 application
Fix other applications
Fix use of asn1 in megaco
Remove the unused asn1ct_gen_ber module
Fix erroneous skipping for jinterface, erl_interface and ic
kernel: Heart port needs to be unregistered
Update preloaded modules
Update primary bootstrap
Update copyright years
...
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml')
-rw-r--r-- | lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml | 397 |
1 files changed, 33 insertions, 364 deletions
diff --git a/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml b/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml index 1b399fb641..6cb251c3e2 100644 --- a/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml +++ b/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml @@ -186,13 +186,21 @@ END </pre> The following shows how the compiler can be called from the Erlang shell:</p> <pre> -1><input>asn1ct:compile("People",[ber_bin]).</input> +1><input>asn1ct:compile("People", [ber]).</input> +ok +2> </pre> + + <p>The <c>verbose</c> option can be given to have information + about the generated files printed:</p> + <pre> +2><input>asn1ct:compile("People", [ber,verbose]).</input> Erlang ASN.1 compiling "People.asn" --{generated,"People.asn1db"}-- --{generated,"People.hrl"}-- --{generated,"People.erl"}-- ok -2> </pre> +3> </pre> + <p>The ASN.1 module People is now accepted and the abstract syntax tree is saved in the <c>People.asn1db</c> file, the generated Erlang code is compiled using the Erlang compiler and @@ -229,7 +237,7 @@ receive constructed and encoded using <c>'People':encode('Person',Answer)</c> which takes an instance of a defined ASN.1 type and transforms it to a - (possibly) nested list of bytes according to the BER or PER + binary according to the BER or PER encoding-rules. <br></br> The encoder and the decoder can also be run from @@ -239,24 +247,12 @@ The encoder and the decoder can also be run from <pre> 2> <input>Rockstar = {'Person',"Some Name",roving,50}.</input> {'Person',"Some Name",roving,50} -3> <input>{ok,Bytes} = asn1rt:encode('People','Person',Rockstar).</input> -{ok,[<<243>>, - [17], - [19,9,"Some Name"], - [2,1,[2]], - [2,1,"2"]]} -4> <input>Bin = list_to_binary(Bytes).</input> -<<243,17,19,9,83,111,109,101,32,78,97,109,101,2,1,2,2,1,50>> -5> <input>{ok,Person} = asn1rt:decode('People','Person',Bin).</input> +3> <input>{ok,Bin} = asn1rt:encode('People','Person',Rockstar).</input> +{ok,<<243,17,19,9,83,111,109,101,32,78,97,109,101,2,1,2, + 2,1,50>>} +4> <input>{ok,Person} = asn1rt:decode('People','Person',Bin).</input> {ok,{'Person',"Some Name",roving,50}} -6> </pre> - <p>Notice that the result from <c>encode</c> is a nested list which - must be turned into a binary before the call to <c>decode</c>. A - binary is necessary as input to decode since the module was compiled - with the <c>ber_bin</c> option - The reason for returning a nested list is that it is faster to produce - and the <c>list_to_binary</c> operation is - performed automatically when the list is sent via the Erlang port mechanism.</p> +5> </pre> </section> <section> @@ -305,17 +301,15 @@ The encoder and the decoder can also be run from ASN.1 compiler:</p> <pre> erlc Person.asn -erlc -bper_bin Person.asn -erlc -bber_bin +optimize ../Example.asn +erlc -bper Person.asn +erlc -bber ../Example.asn erlc -o ../asnfiles -I ../asnfiles -I /usr/local/standards/asn1 Person.asn </pre> <p>The useful options for the ASN.1 compiler are:</p> <taglist> - <tag><c>-b[ber | per | ber_bin | per_bin | uper_bin]</c></tag> + <tag><c>-b[ber | per | uper]</c></tag> <item> <p>Choice of encoding rules, if omitted <c>ber</c> is the - default. The <c>ber_bin</c> and <c>per_bin</c> options - allows for optimizations and are therefore recommended - instead of the <c>ber</c> and <c>per</c> options.</p> + default.</p> </item> <tag><c>-o OutDirectory</c></tag> <item> @@ -339,42 +333,12 @@ erlc -o ../asnfiles -I ../asnfiles -I /usr/local/standards/asn1 Person.asn </item> <tag><c>+der</c></tag> <item> - <p>DER encoding rule. Only when using <c>-ber</c> or - <c>-ber_bin</c> option.</p> - </item> - <tag><c>+optimize</c></tag> - <item> - <p>This flag has effect only when used together with one of - <c>per_bin</c> or <c>ber_bin</c> flags. It gives time optimized - code in the generated modules and it uses another runtime module. - In the <c>per_bin</c> case a nif is used. The - result from an encode is a binary.</p> - <p><em>When this flag is used you cannot use the old format</em><c>{TypeName,Value}</c> when you encode values. Since it is - an unnecessary construct it has been removed in favor of - performance. It - is neither admitted to construct SEQUENCE or SET component values - with the format <c>{ComponentName,Value}</c> since it also is - unnecessary. The only case were it is necessary is in a CHOICE, - were you have to pass values to the right component by specifying - <c>{ComponentName,Value}</c>. See also about - <seealso marker="#TypeNameValue">{Typename,Value}</seealso> below - and in the sections for each type.</p> - </item> - <tag><c>+driver</c></tag> - <item> - <p>As of R15B this means the same as the <c>nif</c> option. Kept for - backwards compatability reasons.</p> - </item> - <tag><c>+nif</c></tag> - <item> - <p>Together with the flags <c>ber_bin</c> - and <c>optimize</c> you choose to use a nif for considerable - faster encode and decode. </p> + <p>DER encoding rule. Only when using <c>-ber</c> option.</p> </item> <tag><c>+asn1config</c></tag> <item> <p>This functionality works together with the flags - <c>ber_bin</c> and <c>optimize</c>. You enables the + <c>ber</c>. It enables the specialized decodes, see the <seealso marker="asn1_spec">Specialized Decode</seealso> chapter. </p> </item> @@ -413,7 +377,6 @@ erlc -o ../asnfiles -I ../asnfiles -I /usr/local/standards/asn1 Person.asn </item> </taglist> <p>For a complete description of <c>erlc</c> see Erts Reference Manual.</p> - <p>For preferred option use see <seealso marker="#preferred option use">Preferred Option Use</seealso> section.</p> <p>The compiler and other compile-time functions can also be invoked from the Erlang shell. Below follows a brief description of the primary functions, for a @@ -429,9 +392,9 @@ asn1ct:compile("H323-MESSAGES.asn1"). </pre> <p>which equals:</p> <pre> asn1ct:compile("H323-MESSAGES.asn1",[ber]). </pre> - <p>If one wants PER encoding with optimizations:</p> + <p>If one wants PER encoding:</p> <pre> -asn1ct:compile("H323-MESSAGES.asn1",[per_bin,optimize]). </pre> +asn1ct:compile("H323-MESSAGES.asn1",[per]). </pre> <p>The generic encode and decode functions can be invoked like this:</p> <pre> asn1ct:encode('H323-MESSAGES','SomeChoiceType',{call,"octetstring"}). @@ -443,269 +406,6 @@ asn1ct:decode('H323-MESSAGES','SomeChoiceType',Bytes). </pre> </section> <section> - <marker id="preferred option use"></marker> - <title>Preferred Option Use</title> - <p> - It may not be obvious which compile options best fit a - situation. This section describes the format of the result of - encode and decode. It also gives some performance statistics - when using certain options. Finally there is a recommendation - which option combinations should be used. - </p> - <p> - The default option is <c>ber</c>. It is the same backend as - <c>ber_bin</c> except that the result of encode is transformed - to a flat list. Below is a table that gives the different - formats of input and output of encode and decode using the - <em>allowed combinations</em> of coding and optimization - options: (EAVF stands for how ASN1 values are represented in - Erlang which is described in the <seealso - marker="#ASN1Types">ASN1 Types chapter</seealso>) - </p> - <table> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>Encoding Rule</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>Compile options, allowed combinations</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>encode input</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>encode output</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>decode input</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>decode output</em></cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">BER</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[ber] (default)</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">flat list</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">flat list / binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">BER</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[ber_bin]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">iolist</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">BER</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[ber_bin, optimize]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">iolist</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">BER</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[ber_bin, optimize, nif]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">iolist</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">iolist / binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">PER aligned variant</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[per]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">flat list</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">flat list</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">PER aligned variant</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[per_bin]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">iolist / binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">PER aligned variant</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[per_bin, optimize]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">PER unaligned variant</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[uper_bin]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">DER</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[(ber), der]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">flat list</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">flat list / binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">DER</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[ber_bin, der]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">iolist</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">DER</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[ber_bin, optimize, der]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">iolist</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">DER</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[ber_bin, optimize, nif, der]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">iolist</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">binary</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">EAVF</cell> - </row> - - - <tcaption>The output / input formats for different combinations of compile options.</tcaption> - </table> - <p> - Encode / decode speed comparison in one user case for the above - alternatives (except <c>DER</c>) is showed in the table below. The - <c>DER</c> alternatives are slower than their corresponding - <c>BER</c> alternative. - </p> - - <table> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>compile options</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>encode time</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>decode time</em></cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[ber]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">120</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">162</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[ber_bin]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">124</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">154</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[ber_bin, optimize]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">50</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">78</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[ber_bin, optimize, driver]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">50</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">62</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[per]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">141</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">133</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[per_bin]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">125</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">123</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[per_bin, optimize]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">77</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">72</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[uper_bin]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">97</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">104</cell> - </row> - <tcaption> - One example of difference in speed for the compile option alternatives. - </tcaption> - </table> - - <p> - The compile options <c>ber</c>, <c>per</c> and - <c>driver</c> are kept for backwards compatibility and should not be - used in new code. The nif implementation which replaces the linked-in - driver has been shown to be about 5-15% faster. - </p> - <p> - You are strongly recommended to use the appropriate alternative - of the bold typed options. The <c>optimize</c> and - <c>nif</c> options does not affect the encode or decode - result, just the time spent in run-time. When <c>ber_bin</c> and - <c>nif</c> or <c>per_bin</c> and <c>optimize</c> is - combined the C-code nif is used in chosen parts of encode / - decode procedure. - </p> - <table> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>Compile options, allowed combinations</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>use of nif</em></cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[ber]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">no</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[ber_bin]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">no</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[ber_bin, optimize]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">no</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[ber_bin, optimize, nif]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">yes</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[per]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">no</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[per_bin]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">no</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[per_bin, optimize]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">yes</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[uper_bin]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">no</cell> - </row> - - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[(ber), der]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">no</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">[ber_bin, der]</cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">no</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[ber_bin, optimize, der]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">no</cell> - </row> - <row> - <cell align="left" valign="middle"><em>[ber_bin, optimize, nif, der]</em></cell> - <cell align="left" valign="middle">yes</cell> - </row> - - - <tcaption>When the ASN1 nif is used.</tcaption> - </table> - - </section> - <section> <title>Run-time Functions</title> <p>A brief description of the major functions is given here. For a complete description of each function see @@ -719,9 +419,9 @@ asn1rt:decode('H323-MESSAGES','SomeChoiceType',Bytes). </pre> 'H323-MESSAGES':encode('SomeChoiceType',{call,"octetstring"}). 'H323-MESSAGES':decode('SomeChoiceType',Bytes). </pre> <p>The asn1 nif is enabled in two occasions: encoding of - asn1 values when the asn1 spec is compiled with <c>per_bin</c> and - <c>optimize</c> or decode of encoded asn1 values when the asn1 spec is - compiled with <c>ber_bin</c>, <c>optimize</c> and <c>nif</c>. In + asn1 values when the asn1 spec is compiled with <c>per</c> and + or decode of encoded asn1 values when the asn1 spec is + compiled with <c>ber</c>. In those cases the nif will be loaded automatically at the first call to <c>encode</c>/<c>decode</c>. If one doesn't want the performance overhead of the nif being loaded at the first call it is possible @@ -868,26 +568,6 @@ Operational ::= BOOLEAN --ASN.1 definition </pre> <pre> Val = true, {ok,Bytes}=asn1rt:encode(MyModule,'Operational',Val), </pre> - <p>For historical reasons it is also possible to assign ASN.1 values - in Erlang using a tuple notation - with type and value as this</p> - <pre> -Val = {'Operational',true} </pre> - <warning> - <marker id="warning"></marker> - <p>The tuple notation, <c>{Typename, Value}</c> is only kept - because of backward compatibility and may be withdrawn in a - future release. If the notation is used the <c>Typename</c> - element must be spelled correctly, otherwise a run-time error - will occur. - </p> - <p>If the ASN.1 module is compiled with the flags - <c>per_bin</c> or <c>ber_bin</c> and <c>optimize</c> it is not - allowed to use the tuple notation. That possibility has been - removed due to performance reasons. Neither is it allowed to - use the <c>{ComponentName,Value}</c> notation in case of a - SEQUENCE or SET type.</p> - </warning> <p>Below follows a description of how values of each type can be represented in Erlang. </p> @@ -1149,7 +829,7 @@ TextFileVal2 = [88,76,55,44,99,121 .......... a lot of characters here ....] The following example shows how it works:</p> <p>In a file <c>PrimStrings.asn1</c> the type <c>BMP</c> is defined as <br></br> -<c>BMP ::= BMPString</c> then using BER encoding (<c>ber_bin</c> +<c>BMP ::= BMPString</c> then using BER encoding (<c>ber</c> option)the input/output format will be:</p> <pre> 1> <input>{ok,Bytes1} = asn1rt:encode('PrimStrings','BMP',[{0,0,53,53},{0,0,45,56}]).</input> @@ -1174,9 +854,9 @@ TextFileVal2 = [88,76,55,44,99,121 .......... a lot of characters here ....] <c>utf8_list_to_binary</c>, are in the <c>asn1rt</c> module. In the example below we assume an asn1 definition <c>UTF ::= UTF8String</c> in a module <c>UTF.asn</c>:</p> <pre> -1> <input>asn1ct:compile('UTF',[ber_bin]).</input> +1> <input>asn1ct:compile('UTF',[ber]).</input> Erlang ASN.1 version "1.4.3.3" compiling "UTF.asn" -Compiler Options: [ber_bin] +Compiler Options: [ber] --{generated,"UTF.asn1db"}-- --{generated,"UTF.erl"}-- ok @@ -1287,14 +967,6 @@ Pdu ::= SEQUENCE { <p>Values can be assigned in Erlang as shown below:</p> <pre> MyPdu = #'Pdu'{a=22,b=77.99,c={0,1,2,3,4},d='NULL'}. </pre> -<note> - <p> - In very early versions of the asn1 compiler it was also possible to - specify the values of the components in - a SEQUENCE or a SET as a list of tuples <c>{ComponentName,Value}</c>. - This is no longer supported. - </p> -</note> <p>The decode functions will return a record as result when decoding a <c>SEQUENCE</c> or a <c>SET</c>. <marker id="DEFAULT"></marker> @@ -1739,12 +1411,9 @@ SS ::= SET { 1> <input>Val = 'Values':tt().</input> {'TT',77,["kalle","kula"]} 2> <input>{ok,Bytes} = 'Values':encode('TT',Val).</input> -{ok,["0", - [18], - [[[128],[1],"M"],["\\241","\\r",[[[4],[5],"kalle"],[[4],[4],"kula"]]]]]} -3> <input>FlatBytes = lists:flatten(Bytes).</input> -[48,18,128,1,77,161,13,4,5,107,97,108,108,101,4,4,107,117,108,97] -4> <input>'Values':decode('TT',FlatBytes).</input> +{ok,<<48,18,128,1,77,161,13,4,5,107,97,108,108,101,4,4, + 107,117,108,97>>} +4> <input>'Values':decode('TT',Bytes).</input> {ok,{'TT',77,["kalle","kula"]}} 5> </pre> |