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Developing a File System Client in C# : 15.2 The C# Client
Copyright © 2003-2010 ZeroC, Inc.

15.2 The C# Client

We now have seen enough of the client-side C# mapping to develop a complete client to access our remote file system. For reference, here is the Slice definition once more:
module Filesystem { 
    interface Node { 
        idempotent string name(); 
    }; 
 
    exception GenericError { 
        string reason; 
    }; 

    sequence<string> Lines; 
 
    interface File extends Node { 
        idempotent Lines read(); 
        idempotent void write(Lines text) throws GenericError; 
    }; 
 
    sequence<Node*> NodeSeq; 
 
    interface Directory extends Node { 
        idempotent NodeSeq list(); 
    }; 
}; 
To exercise the file system, the client does a recursive listing of the file system, starting at the root directory. For each node in the file system, the client shows the name of the node and whether that node is a file or directory. If the node is a file, the client retrieves the contents of the file and prints them.
The body of the client code looks as follows:
using System;
using Filesystem;

public class Client
{
    // Recursively print the contents of directory "dir"
    // in tree fashion. For files, show the contents of
    // each file. The "depth" parameter is the current
    // nesting level (for indentation).

    static void listRecursive(DirectoryPrx dir, int depth)
    {
        string indent = new string('\t', ++depth);

        NodePrx[] contents = dir.list();

        foreach (NodePrx node in contents)
            DirectoryPrx subdir
                = DirectoryPrxHelper.checkedCast(node);
            FilePrx file = FilePrxHelper.uncheckedCast(node);
            Console.WriteLine(indent + node.name() +
                (subdir != null ? " (directory):" : " (file):"));
            if (subdir != null) {
                listRecursive(subdir, depth);
            } else {
                string[] text = file.read();
                for (int j = 0; j < text.Length; ++j)
                    Console.WriteLine(indent + "\t" + text[j]);
            }
        }
    }

    public static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        int status = 0;
        Ice.Communicator ic = null;
        try {
            // Create a communicator
            //
            ic = Ice.Util.initialize(ref args);

            // Create a proxy for the root directory
            //
            Ice.ObjectPrx obj
                = ic.stringToProxy("RootDir:default p 10000");

            // Downcast the proxy to a Directory proxy
            //
            DirectoryPrx rootDir
                = DirectoryPrxHelper.checkedCast(obj);

            // Recursively list the contents of the root directory
            //
            Console.WriteLine("Contents of root directory:");
            listRecursive(rootDir, 0);
        } catch (Exception e) {
            Console.Error.WriteLine(e);
            status = 1;
        }
        if (ic != null) {
            // Clean up
            //
            try {
                ic.destroy();
            } catch (Exception e) {
                Console.Error.WriteLine(e);
                status = 1;
            }
        }
        Environment.Exit(status);
    }
}
The Client class defines two methods: listRecursive, which is a helper function to print the contents of the file system, and Main, which is the main program. Let us look at Main first:
1. The structure of the code in Main follows what we saw in Chapter 3. After initializing the run time, the client creates a proxy to the root directory of the file system. For this example, we assume that the server runs on the local host and listens using the default protocol (TCP/IP) at port 10000. The object iden­tity of the root directory is known to be RootDir.
2. The client down-casts the proxy to DirectoryPrx and passes that proxy to listRecursive, which prints the contents of the file system.
Most of the work happens in listRecursive. The function is passed a proxy to a directory to list, and an indent level. (The indent level increments with each recursive call and allows the code to print the name of each node at an indent level that corresponds to the depth of the tree at that node.) listRecursive calls the list operation on the directory and iterates over the returned sequence of nodes:
1. The code does a checkedCast to narrow the Node proxy to a Directory proxy, as well as an uncheckedCast to narrow the Node proxy to a File proxy. Exactly one of those casts will succeed, so there is no need to call checkedCast twice: if the Node isa Directory, the code uses the Direc­toryPrx returned by the checkedCast; if the checkedCast fails, we know that the Node isa File and, therefore, an uncheckedCast is sufficient to get a FilePrx.
In general, if you know that a down-cast to a specific type will succeed, it is preferable to use an uncheckedCast instead of a checkedCast because an uncheckedCast does not incur any network traffic.
2. The code prints the name of the file or directory and then, depending on which cast succeeded, prints "(directory)" or "(file)" following the name.
3. The code checks the type of the node:
If it is a directory, the code recurses, incrementing the indent level.
If it is a file, the code calls the read operation on the file to retrieve the file contents and then iterates over the returned sequence of lines, printing each line.
Assume that we have a small file system consisting of two files and a directory as follows:
Figure 15.1. A small file system.
The output produced by the client for this file system is:
Contents of root directory:
        README (file):
                This file system contains a collection of poetry.
        Coleridge (directory):
                Kubla_Khan (file):
                        In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
                        A stately pleasuredome decree:
                        Where Alph, the sacred river, ran
                        Through caverns measureless to man
                        Down to a sunless sea.
Note that, so far, our client (and server) are not very sophisticated:
• The protocol and address information are hard-wired into the code.
• The client makes more remote procedure calls than strictly necessary; with minor redesign of the Slice definitions, many of these calls can be avoided.
We will see how to address these shortcomings in Chapter 38 and Chapter 34.

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