| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| ================ |
| Kernel Connector |
| ================ |
| |
| Kernel connector - new netlink based userspace <-> kernel space easy |
| to use communication module. |
| |
| The Connector driver makes it easy to connect various agents using a |
| netlink based network. One must register a callback and an identifier. |
| When the driver receives a special netlink message with the appropriate |
| identifier, the appropriate callback will be called. |
| |
| From the userspace point of view it's quite straightforward: |
| |
| - socket(); |
| - bind(); |
| - send(); |
| - recv(); |
| |
| But if kernelspace wants to use the full power of such connections, the |
| driver writer must create special sockets, must know about struct sk_buff |
| handling, etc... The Connector driver allows any kernelspace agents to use |
| netlink based networking for inter-process communication in a significantly |
| easier way:: |
| |
| int cn_add_callback(const struct cb_id *id, char *name, void (*callback) (struct cn_msg *, struct netlink_skb_parms *)); |
| void cn_netlink_send_mult(struct cn_msg *msg, u16 len, u32 portid, u32 __group, int gfp_mask); |
| void cn_netlink_send(struct cn_msg *msg, u32 portid, u32 __group, int gfp_mask); |
| |
| struct cb_id |
| { |
| __u32 idx; |
| __u32 val; |
| }; |
| |
| idx and val are unique identifiers which must be registered in the |
| connector.h header for in-kernel usage. `void (*callback) (void *)` is a |
| callback function which will be called when a message with above idx.val |
| is received by the connector core. The argument for that function must |
| be dereferenced to `struct cn_msg *`:: |
| |
| struct cn_msg |
| { |
| struct cb_id id; |
| |
| __u32 seq; |
| __u32 ack; |
| |
| __u16 len; /* Length of the following data */ |
| __u16 flags; |
| __u8 data[0]; |
| }; |
| |
| Connector interfaces |
| ==================== |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/connector.h |
| |
| Note: |
| When registering new callback user, connector core assigns |
| netlink group to the user which is equal to its id.idx. |
| |
| Protocol description |
| ==================== |
| |
| The current framework offers a transport layer with fixed headers. The |
| recommended protocol which uses such a header is as following: |
| |
| msg->seq and msg->ack are used to determine message genealogy. When |
| someone sends a message, they use a locally unique sequence and random |
| acknowledge number. The sequence number may be copied into |
| nlmsghdr->nlmsg_seq too. |
| |
| The sequence number is incremented with each message sent. |
| |
| If you expect a reply to the message, then the sequence number in the |
| received message MUST be the same as in the original message, and the |
| acknowledge number MUST be the same + 1. |
| |
| If we receive a message and its sequence number is not equal to one we |
| are expecting, then it is a new message. If we receive a message and |
| its sequence number is the same as one we are expecting, but its |
| acknowledge is not equal to the sequence number in the original |
| message + 1, then it is a new message. |
| |
| Obviously, the protocol header contains the above id. |
| |
| The connector allows event notification in the following form: kernel |
| driver or userspace process can ask connector to notify it when |
| selected ids will be turned on or off (registered or unregistered its |
| callback). It is done by sending a special command to the connector |
| driver (it also registers itself with id={-1, -1}). |
| |
| As example of this usage can be found in the cn_test.c module which |
| uses the connector to request notification and to send messages. |
| |
| Reliability |
| =========== |
| |
| Netlink itself is not a reliable protocol. That means that messages can |
| be lost due to memory pressure or process' receiving queue overflowed, |
| so caller is warned that it must be prepared. That is why the struct |
| cn_msg [main connector's message header] contains u32 seq and u32 ack |
| fields. |
| |
| Userspace usage |
| =============== |
| |
| 2.6.14 has a new netlink socket implementation, which by default does not |
| allow people to send data to netlink groups other than 1. |
| So, if you wish to use a netlink socket (for example using connector) |
| with a different group number, the userspace application must subscribe to |
| that group first. It can be achieved by the following pseudocode:: |
| |
| s = socket(PF_NETLINK, SOCK_DGRAM, NETLINK_CONNECTOR); |
| |
| l_local.nl_family = AF_NETLINK; |
| l_local.nl_groups = 12345; |
| l_local.nl_pid = 0; |
| |
| if (bind(s, (struct sockaddr *)&l_local, sizeof(struct sockaddr_nl)) == -1) { |
| perror("bind"); |
| close(s); |
| return -1; |
| } |
| |
| { |
| int on = l_local.nl_groups; |
| setsockopt(s, 270, 1, &on, sizeof(on)); |
| } |
| |
| Where 270 above is SOL_NETLINK, and 1 is a NETLINK_ADD_MEMBERSHIP socket |
| option. To drop a multicast subscription, one should call the above socket |
| option with the NETLINK_DROP_MEMBERSHIP parameter which is defined as 0. |
| |
| 2.6.14 netlink code only allows to select a group which is less or equal to |
| the maximum group number, which is used at netlink_kernel_create() time. |
| In case of connector it is CN_NETLINK_USERS + 0xf, so if you want to use |
| group number 12345, you must increment CN_NETLINK_USERS to that number. |
| Additional 0xf numbers are allocated to be used by non-in-kernel users. |
| |
| Due to this limitation, group 0xffffffff does not work now, so one can |
| not use add/remove connector's group notifications, but as far as I know, |
| only cn_test.c test module used it. |
| |
| Some work in netlink area is still being done, so things can be changed in |
| 2.6.15 timeframe, if it will happen, documentation will be updated for that |
| kernel. |
| |
| Code samples |
| ============ |
| |
| Sample code for a connector test module and user space can be found |
| in samples/connector/. To build this code, enable CONFIG_CONNECTOR |
| and CONFIG_SAMPLES. |