Inter-process Communication
Inter-process communication (IPC) allows communication between different processes. A process is one or more threads running inside its own, isolated address space.
Threads running inside the same process communicate easily with each other; they read and write the same data inside their shared address space.
Threads running inside two different processes can't access each other's data; they need IPC to communicate.
Legato's Low-level Messaging API and API Files provide IPC services without all the coding, packing/unpacking, and security headaches that come with using other methods directly (e.g., network sockets or named pipes).
Legato has built-in IPC features. The language-independent, function-call-oriented IPC approach is automatically handled with the ifgen tool and the buildTools.
By default, each app runs in its own sandbox. When an app is constructed, all the IPC services it needs are declared. At runtime, the Supervisor and the Service Directory enforce that only those approved IPC services are accessed by the app. Approval is specified through "bindings".
Client-side interfaces are "bound" to server-side interfaces through system configuration files. This allows reconfiguration of systems into new systems just by rerouting bindings, without having to modify the client or server software. Bindings make code more reusable. For example, if an app controls an LED, but the LED is connected to a different GPIO pin on different target devices, that same app can be used on both devices, with its LED control interface bound to different GPIO pin control services in each device.
Using language-independent IPC makes components inherently more reusable, creates opportunities for function isolation in different processes or different app sandboxes, and automatically creates potential debugging trace points.
Another approach Legato provides for IPC is low-level messaging APIs: C Runtime Library. This let's you custom build IPC to suit your needs, but may make it harder to interact with code written in other languages.
Related info
Interfaces
API Files
Use IPC
Definition Files
Services APIs
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