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waisserver - serves WAIS requests 
 
waisserver [ -p [ port_number
] ] [ -s ] [ -d directory ] [ -e [ pathname ] ]  [ -l log_level ] [-u user ] [
-v ] 
- waisserver.d 
- [ same arguments ] 
  
Part of the Wide Area Information
Server system. 
waisserver will take WAIS requests from a TCP port or standard-io
and return the appropriate response.  If the name of the command is waisserver.d,
then it is assumed it is running from inetd, and it uses stdio for its
I/O sockets.  See the examples below for inetd.conf. 
 In addition, waisserver
can act like an anonymous FTP server.  When the server is given a document
of type "FTP" as a relevant document, it will build a result list from
the directory of the file.  Subdirectories may be listed using by adding
them to the relevant document list. 
 Note that a minimal level of security
is present in two forms: 
 1.  The server will never present directories
above the default server directory (-d option, described below). 
 2.  The
server will only build a directory listing from a file of type FTP, and
that file must be in the specified database. 
 
- -p [ port ]  
- Listen
to the port.  If the port is supplied, then that port number is used.  If
it is not supplied then the Z39.50 port (210) is used. 
- -s 
- listen to standard
I/O for queries. 
- -d directory 
- Use this directory as the default location
of the indexes.  Therefore if the directory were /usr/local, then the database
foo would be found in /usr/local/foo (see waisindex for how to create an
index) 
- -e [ filename ] 
- Redirect error output to pathname, if supplied, or
to /dev/null. Error output defaults to stderr, unless -s is selected, in
which case it defaults to /dev/null. 
- -l log_level  
- set logging level.  Currently
only levels 0, 1, 5 and 10 are meaningful: Level 0 means log nothing (silent).
 Level 1 logs only errors and warnings (messages of HIGH priority), level
5 logs messages of MEDIUM priority (like client init info).  Level 10 logs
everything. 
- -u user 
- Set the server’s user id to the user specified after attaching
the tcp-port.  This is only used if the server is started as root. 
- -v 
- Print
the current version and date of the server. 
The following are examples
of waisserver usage:
- waisserver -p 8000 -d wais-sources -e server.log 
- Runs waisserver
as a standalone server, using tcp port 8000 on directory wais-sources writing
messages to server.log 
Some example inetd.conf entries (note, these must
be on one line in inted.conf): 
hpux 7.0/800, Interactive/386 2.2.1: 
- z3950 stream tcp nowait root /etc/waisserver waisserver.d
- -d /wais-sources -e /server.log 
Ultrix 4.1: 
- z3950 stream tcp nowait /etc/waisserver waisserver.d
- -d /wais-sources -e /server.log 
Also, add the next line to /etc/services, and
tickle your YP server: 
z3950 210/tcp # wide area information server (wais) 
waissearch(1)
, waisindex(1)
, waissearch-gmacs(1)
, xwais(1)
, xwaisq(1)
,
inetd(8C)
, inetd.conf(5)
 
Wide Area Information Servers Concepts by Brewster
Kahle. 
Brewster@think.com 
The diagnostics produced by the waisserver
are meant to be self-explanatory. 
Malformed protocol packets can cause
the server to dump core (segmentation violation).  These are logged in the
server’s log file. 
 
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