Create a corba eventchannel and register it in the naming service
eventc [-n channel-name] [-N factory-name] [-c nanoseconds] [-i id] [-p num] [-q num] [-R milliseconds] [-t repository-id] [-vh] [-ORBparameter value] [factory-uri]
eventc contacts the omniEvents server to request an Event Channel. The Event Channel is created within the the omniEvents process. eventc then registers the created Event Channel with the Naming Service, and exits.
factory-uri: The factory may be specified as a URI. This may be an IOR, or a corbaloc::: or corbaname::: URI.
Example: eventc corbaloc::localhost:11169/omniEvents
If the factory-uri argument is not supplied, then the -N factory-name option is used to look up the server in the CORBA Name Service.
-n channel-name
Sets the CORBA Name Service name for the new EventChannel CORBA object.
Format for channel-name: [CONTEXT-ID[.CONTEXT-KIND]/]*OBJECT-ID[.OBJECT-KIND]
Examples: foo, foo.bar, foo.bar/baz/qux, foo/bar/baz.qux.
The default is EventChannel
-N factory-name
The CORBA Name Service name for the EventChannelFactory CORBA object. The default value is EventChannelFactory. This value is only used when the factory-uri argument is not supplied.
-c nanoseconds
Sets the CyclePeriod_ns parameter of the new event channel.
-i id
Set the InsName of new event channel, to enable access via corbaloc.
-p num
Sets the MaxNumProxies parameter of the new event channel.
-q num
Sets the MaxQueueLength parameter of the new event channel.
-R milliseconds
Sets the PullRetryPeriod_ms parameter of the new event channel.
-t repository-id
Sets the FilterId parameter of the new event channel.
-v
Output the CORBA IOR of the new EventChannel CORBA object.
-h
Display a short summary of command-line options.
-ORBparameter value
Standard omniORB options. see omniORB documentation for details. This option is commonly used to set the omniORB traceLevel, in order to get more detailed output.
Example: -ORBtraceLevel 5
OMNIORB_CONFIG
The location of the omniORB configuration file.
Copyright © 2003-2005 Alex Tingle, 1999 Paul Nader.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.