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YAZPROXY(8)		  System management commands		   YAZPROXY(8)

NAME
       yazproxy	- The YAZ toolkit's transparent	Z39.50/SRU proxy

SYNOPSIS

       yazproxy	[-a filename] [-c config] [-D] [-i seconds] [-l	filename]
		[-m num] [-n num] [-o level] [-t target] [-p pidfile]
		[-T seconds] [-u userid] [-v level] [-V] [-X] {host:port}

DESCRIPTION
       yazproxy	is a proxy that	accepts	connections from Z39.50/SRU clients
       and contacts a Z39.50 backend. The listening port must be specified on
       the command-line.  inetd	operation is not supported. The	host:port
       argument	specifies host address to listen to, and the port to listen
       on. Use the host	@ to listen for	connections coming from	any address.

       yazproxy	can be configured using	command-line options or	a
       configuration file. Configuration file options override values
       specified on the	command-line.

       yazproxy	rereads	its configuration file and reopens log files when it
       receives	the hangup signal, SIGHUP.

OPTIONS
       -a filename
	   Specifies the name of a file	to which to write a log	of the APDUs
	   (protocol packets) that pass	through	the proxy. The special
	   filename - may be used to indicate standard output.

       -c config
	   Specifies config filename. Configuration is in XML and is only
	   supported if	the YAZ	proxy is compiled with libxml2.

       -D
	   Puts	YAZ proxy in the background after startup. This	is similar to
	   using shell's & operator but	often better since it allows the start
	   / stop script to capture startup errors.

       -i seconds
	   Specifies in	seconds	the idle time for communication	between	client
	   and proxy. If a connection is inactive for this long	it will	be
	   closed. Default: 600	seconds	(10 minutes).

       -l filename
	   Specifies the name of a file	to which to write a log	of the YAZ
	   proxy activity. This	uses the logging facility as provided by the
	   YAZ toolkit.	If this	options	is omitted, the	output directed	to
	   stderr.

       -m num
	   Specifies the maximum number	of client connections to be offered
	   [default 150].

       -n num
	   Sets	maximum	number of open files to	num. This is only available on
	   systems that	offers the setrlimit(2)	call.

       -o level
	   Sets	level for optimization.	Use zero to disable; non-zero to
	   enable. Handling for	this is	not fully implemented; we will
	   probably use	a bit mask to enable/disable specific features.	By
	   default optimization	is enabled (value 1).

       -p pidfile
	   When	specified, yazproxy will create	pidfile	with the process ID of
	   the proxy. The pidfile will be generated before the process changes
	   identity (see option	-u).

       -t target
	   Specifies the default backend target	to use when a client connects
	   that	does not explicitly specify a target in	its initRequest.

       -T seconds
	   Specifies in	seconds	the idle time for communication	between	proxy
	   and backend target. If a connection is inactive for this long it
	   will	be closed. Default: 600	seconds	(10 minutes).

       -u userid
	   When	specified, yazproxy will change	identity to the	user ID
	   specified, just after the proxy has started listening to a possibly
	   privileged port and after the PID file has been created if
	   specified by	option -u.

       -v level
	   Sets	the logging level.  level is a comma-separated list of members
	   of the set {fatal,debug,warn,log,malloc,all,none}.

       -V
	   Displays yazproxy version and exits with status code	0. Should not
	   be used in conjunction with other options.

       -X
	   Enables debugging mode for the proxy. When specified, the proxy
	   will	not fork itself, thus any violations becomes fatal. Useful if
	   you run yazproxy inside gdb.	Don't run this in production.

EXAMPLES
       The following command starts the	proxy, listening on port 9000, with
       its default backend target set to Index Data's test server:

	     $ yazproxy	-t indexdata.dk:210 @:9000

       You can connect to the proxy via	yaz-client as follows:

	     $ ./yaz-client  localhost:9000/gils
	     Connecting...OK.
	     Sent initrequest.
	     Connection	accepted by v3 target.
	     ID	    : 81
	     Name   : Zebra Information	Server/GFS/YAZ (YAZ Proxy)
	     Version: Zebra 1.3.15/1.23/2.0.19
	     Options: search present delSet scan sort extendedServices namedResultSets
	     Elapsed: 0.152108
	     Z>	f computer
	     Sent searchRequest.
	     Received SearchResponse.
	     Search was	a success.
	     Number of hits: 3,	setno 1
	     SearchResult-1: computer(3)
	     records returned: 0
	     Elapsed: 0.172533

       The YAZ command-line client, yaz-client,	allows you to set the proxy
       address by specifying option -p.	In that	case, the actual backend
       target is specified as part of the Initialize Request.

       Suppose the proxy running on localhost, port 9000. To connect to
       British Library's server	at blpcz.bl.uk:21021 use:

	      yaz-client -p localhost:9000 blpcz.bl.uk:21021/BLPC-ALL

SEE ALSO
       yaz(7) yaz-client(1)

yazproxy			  10/16/2013			   YAZPROXY(8)

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