// // Copyright 2021 Staysail Systems, Inc. // Copyright 2018 Capitar IT Group BV // // This software is supplied under the terms of the MIT License, a // copy of which should be located in the distribution where this // file was obtained (LICENSE.txt). A copy of the license may also be // found online at https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT. // #ifndef CORE_PROTOCOL_H #define CORE_PROTOCOL_H #include "core/options.h" // Protocol implementation details. Protocols must implement the // interfaces in this file. Note that implementing new protocols is // not necessarily intended to be a trivial task. The protocol developer // must understand the nature of nng, as they are responsible for handling // most of the logic. The protocol generally does most of the work for // locking, and calls into the transport's pipe functions to do actual // work, and the pipe functions generally assume no locking is needed. // As a consequence, most of the concurrency in nng exists in the protocol // implementations. // nni_proto_pipe contains protocol-specific per-pipe operations. struct nni_proto_pipe_ops { // pipe_size is the size of a protocol pipe object. The common // code allocates this memory for the protocol private state. size_t pipe_size; // pipe_init initializes the protocol-specific pipe data structure. // The last argument is the per-socket protocol private data. int (*pipe_init)(void *, nni_pipe *, void *); // pipe_fini releases any pipe data structures. This is called after // the pipe has been removed from the protocol, and the generic // pipe threads have been stopped. void (*pipe_fini)(void *); // pipe_start is called to register a pipe with the protocol. The // protocol can reject this, for example if another pipe is already // active on a 1:1 protocol. The protocol may not block during this. int (*pipe_start)(void *); // pipe_close is an idempotent, non-blocking, operation, called // when the pipe is being closed. Any operations pending on the // pipe should be canceled with NNG_ECLOSED. (Best option is to // use nng_aio_close() on them) void (*pipe_close)(void *); // pipe_stop is called during finalization, to ensure that // the protocol is absolutely finished with the pipe. It should // wait if necessary to ensure that the pipe is not referenced // any more by the protocol. It should not destroy resources. void (*pipe_stop)(void *); }; struct nni_proto_ctx_ops { // ctx_size is the size of a protocol context object. The common // code allocates this memory for the protocol private state. size_t ctx_size; // ctx_init initializes a new context. The second argument is the // protocol specific socket structure. void (*ctx_init)(void *, void *); // ctx_fini destroys a context. void (*ctx_fini)(void *); // ctx_recv is an asynchronous recv. void (*ctx_recv)(void *, nni_aio *); // ctx_send is an asynchronous send. void (*ctx_send)(void *, nni_aio *); // ctx_options array. nni_option *ctx_options; }; struct nni_proto_sock_ops { // sock_size is the size of a protocol socket object. The common // code allocates this memory for the protocol private state. size_t sock_size; // sock_init initializes the protocol instance, which will be stored // on the socket. This is run without the sock lock held. void (*sock_init)(void *, nni_sock *); // sock_fini destroys the protocol instance. This is run without the // socket lock held, and is intended to release resources. It may // block as needed. void (*sock_fini)(void *); // Open the protocol instance. This is run with the lock held, // and intended to allow the protocol to start any asynchronous // processing. void (*sock_open)(void *); // Close the protocol instance. This is run with the lock held, // and intended to initiate closure of the socket. For example, // it can signal the socket worker threads to exit. void (*sock_close)(void *); // Send a message. void (*sock_send)(void *, nni_aio *); // Receive a message. void (*sock_recv)(void *, nni_aio *); // Options. Must not be NULL. Final entry should have NULL name. nni_option *sock_options; }; typedef struct nni_proto_id { uint16_t p_id; const char *p_name; } nni_proto_id; struct nni_proto { uint32_t proto_version; // Ops vector version nni_proto_id proto_self; // Our identity nni_proto_id proto_peer; // Peer identity uint32_t proto_flags; // Protocol flags const nni_proto_sock_ops *proto_sock_ops; // Per-socket operations const nni_proto_pipe_ops *proto_pipe_ops; // Per-pipe operations const nni_proto_ctx_ops * proto_ctx_ops; // Context operations }; // We quite intentionally use a signature where the upper word is nonzero, // which ensures that if we get garbage we will reject it. This is more // likely to mismatch than all zero bytes would. The actual version is // stored in the lower word; this is not semver -- the numbers are just // increasing - we doubt it will increase more than a handful of times // during the life of the project. If we add a new version, please keep // the old version around -- it may be possible to automatically convert // older versions in the future. #define NNI_PROTOCOL_V3 0x50520003u // "pr\0\3" #define NNI_PROTOCOL_VERSION NNI_PROTOCOL_V3 // These flags determine which operations make sense. We use them so that // we can reject attempts to create notification fds for operations that make // no sense. Also, we can detect raw mode, thereby providing handling for // that at the socket layer (NNG_PROTO_FLAG_RAW). #define NNI_PROTO_FLAG_RCV 1u // Protocol can receive #define NNI_PROTO_FLAG_SND 2u // Protocol can send #define NNI_PROTO_FLAG_SNDRCV 3u // Protocol can both send & recv #define NNI_PROTO_FLAG_RAW 4u // Protocol is raw // nni_proto_open is called by the protocol to create a socket instance // with its ops vector. The intent is that applications will only see // the single protocol-specific constructor, like nng_pair_v0_open(), // which should just be a thin wrapper around this. If the protocol has // not been initialized yet, this routine will do so. extern int nni_proto_open(nng_socket *, const nni_proto *); // Protocol numbers. // These values are used on the wire, so must not be changed. The major // number of the protocol is shifted left by 4 bits, and a sub-protocol is // assigned in the lower 4 bits. // // There are gaps in the list, which are obsolete or unsupported protocols. // Protocol numbers are never more than 16 bits. Also, there will never be // a valid protocol numbered 0 (NNG_PROTO_NONE). #define NNI_PROTO(major, minor) (((major) *16) + (minor)) // Protocol major numbers. This is here for documentation only, and // to serve as a "registry" for managing new protocol numbers. Consider // updating this table when adding new protocols. // // Protocol Maj Min Name Notes // ------------------------------------------- // NONE 0 0 reserved // PAIRv0 1 0 pair // PAIRv1 1 1 pair1 nng only, experimental // PUBv0 2 0 pub // SUBv0 2 1 sub // REQv0 3 0 req // REPv0 3 1 rep // PUSHv0 5 0 push // PULLv0 5 1 pull // SURVEYORv0 6 2 surveyor minors 0 & 1 retired // RESPONDENTv0 6 3 respondent // BUSv0 7 0 bus // STARv0 100 0 star mangos only, experimental // #endif // CORE_PROTOCOL_H