send - Execute a command in a different application
send ?options? app cmd ?arg arg ...?
This command arranges for cmd (and args) to be executed in the
application named by app. It returns the result or error from that
command execution. App may be the name of any application whose main
window is on the display containing the sender's main window; it need not be
within the same process. If no arg arguments are present, then the
command to be executed is contained entirely within the cmd argument.
If one or more args are present, they are concatenated to form the
command to be executed, just as for the eval command.
If the initial arguments of the command begin with
“-” they are treated as options. The following options are
currently defined:
- -async
- Requests asynchronous invocation. In this case the send command
will complete immediately without waiting for cmd to complete in
the target application; no result will be available and errors in the sent
command will be ignored. If the target application is in the same process
as the sending application then the -async option is ignored.
- -displayof pathName
- Specifies that the target application's main window is on the display of
the window given by pathName, instead of the display containing the
application's main window.
- --
- Serves no purpose except to terminate the list of options. This option is
needed only if app could contain a leading “-”
character.
The name of an application is set initially from the name of the program or
script that created the application. You can query and change the name of an
application with the tk appname command.
If the send command is removed from an application (e.g. with the command
rename send {}) then the application will not respond to incoming send
requests anymore, nor will it be able to issue outgoing requests.
Communication can be reenabled by invoking the tk appname command.
The send command is potentially a serious security loophole. On Unix, any
application that can connect to your X server can send scripts to your
applications. These incoming scripts can use Tcl to read and write your files
and invoke subprocesses under your name. Host-based access control such as
that provided by xhost is particularly insecure, since it allows anyone
with an account on particular hosts to connect to your server, and if disabled
it allows anyone anywhere to connect to your server. In order to provide at
least a small amount of security, Tk checks the access control being used by
the server and rejects incoming sends unless (a) xhost-style access
control is enabled (i.e. only certain hosts can establish connections) and (b)
the list of enabled hosts is empty. This means that applications cannot
connect to your server unless they use some other form of authorization such
as that provide by xauth. Under Windows, send is currently
disabled. Most of the functionality is provided by the dde command
instead.
This script fragment can be used to make an application that only runs once on a
particular display.
if {[tk appname FoobarApp] ne "FoobarApp"} {
send -async FoobarApp RemoteStart $argv
exit
}
# The command that will be called remotely, which raises
# the application main window and opens the requested files
proc RemoteStart args {
raise .
foreach filename $args {
OpenFile $filename
}
}
application, dde, name, remote execution, security, send