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I've got a simple design I'm trying to implement.

A single C++ based server app creates a write-only named pipe. Multiple clients (C++ or C#) connect as read-only and listen for status messages.

I have this working for local processes, but I am unable to connect a client on a different host to the server.

The server is running on XP SP2 (maybe SP3). The client is running on Win7.

	SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR sd;
	SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES sa;
	SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY siaWorldSidAuthority = SECURITY_WORLD_SID_AUTHORITY;
	PSID psidWorldSid = (PSID) LocalAlloc  (LPTR, GetSidLengthRequired(1));
	InitializeSid(psidWorldSid, &siaWorldSidAuthority, 1);
	*(GetSidSubAuthority(psidWorldSid, 0)) = SECURITY_WORLD_RID;
	InitializeSecurityDescriptor(&sd, SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_REVISION);
	SetSecurityDescriptorGroup(&sd, psidWorldSid, TRUE);
	ZeroMemory(&sa, sizeof(SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES));
	sa.nLength = sizeof(SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES);
	sa.lpSecurityDescriptor = &sd;
	sa.bInheritHandle = FALSE;

	HANDLE hPipe = CreateNamedPipe(
		lpszPipename,				// name
		PIPE_ACCESS_OUTBOUND,		// write access 
		PIPE_TYPE_MESSAGE |				// message type pipe 
		PIPE_READMODE_MESSAGE |			// message-read mode 
		PIPE_WAIT,						// blocking mode 
		PIPE_UNLIMITED_INSTANCES,	// max. instances 
		BUFSIZE,					// output buffer size 
		BUFSIZE,					// input buffer size 
		PIPE_TIMEOUT,				// client time-out 
		NULL /*&sa*/);						// no security attribute

replacing the NULL with &sa in the final param has no effect. The C# client code looks like this.

        SafeFileHandle pipeHandle = 
           CreateFile(
              pipeName,
              GENERIC_READ,
              0,
              IntPtr.Zero,
              OPEN_EXISTING,
              0,
              IntPtr.Zero);

What stupidly obvious thing am I missing here?

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1 Answer

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Have you checked your firewall? Is port 445 blocked?

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XP is running in a VM on the Win7 host. I believe that Windows Firewall is disabled both on the host and the VM. I believe the VM networking adapter isn't doing any filtering. Of course, the word "believe" is an important caveat here. – Joshua Muskovitz Nov 6 at 20:44
On the other hand, I was having trouble earlier when both the client and server were on the same machine, but instead of having a pipe named "\\.\pipe\foo" I was using "\\12.34.56.78\pipe\foo" (well, with the actual IP address, of course) -- this seemed to have connection failures even when both processes were local. – Joshua Muskovitz Nov 6 at 20:46
Josh, I found this KB article on using named pipes on XP. There's some setup involved... support.microsoft.com/kb/925890 – flyfishr64 Nov 6 at 21:06

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