Common Programming Interface for Communications
Common Programming Interface for Communications (CPI-C) is an application programming interface developed by IBM in 1987 to provide a platform-independent communications interface for the IBM Systems Application Architecture based network, and standardising programming access to SNA LU 6.2.[1]
It was adopted in 1992 by X/Open as an open systems standard, identified as standard C210, and documented in X/Open Developers Specification: CPI-C.[2][3]
See also
References
- ↑ Systems application architecture: common programming interface C reference. IBM. 1988.
- ↑ Michael Cooney (6 December 1993). "New features for CPI-C spec set for approval". Network World.
- ↑ X/Open Document Number: XO/DEV/90/050. ISBN 1-872630-02-2.
External links
- CPIC Reference Manual
- CPI-C for MVS
- Chapter 21. Using CPIC-C for Java, IBM SecureWay Communications Server
- Programming with the CPI-C API, John Lyons, 31 May 1997
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