glibc/sunrpc/rpc/svc.h

318 lines
9.9 KiB
C

/* @(#)svc.h 2.2 88/07/29 4.0 RPCSRC; from 1.20 88/02/08 SMI */
/*
* Sun RPC is a product of Sun Microsystems, Inc. and is provided for
* unrestricted use provided that this legend is included on all tape
* media and as a part of the software program in whole or part. Users
* may copy or modify Sun RPC without charge, but are not authorized
* to license or distribute it to anyone else except as part of a product or
* program developed by the user.
*
* SUN RPC IS PROVIDED AS IS WITH NO WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND INCLUDING THE
* WARRANTIES OF DESIGN, MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
* PURPOSE, OR ARISING FROM A COURSE OF DEALING, USAGE OR TRADE PRACTICE.
*
* Sun RPC is provided with no support and without any obligation on the
* part of Sun Microsystems, Inc. to assist in its use, correction,
* modification or enhancement.
*
* SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC. SHALL HAVE NO LIABILITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
* INFRINGEMENT OF COPYRIGHTS, TRADE SECRETS OR ANY PATENTS BY SUN RPC
* OR ANY PART THEREOF.
*
* In no event will Sun Microsystems, Inc. be liable for any lost revenue
* or profits or other special, indirect and consequential damages, even if
* Sun has been advised of the possibility of such damages.
*
* Sun Microsystems, Inc.
* 2550 Garcia Avenue
* Mountain View, California 94043
*/
/*
* svc.h, Server-side remote procedure call interface.
*
* Copyright (C) 1984, Sun Microsystems, Inc.
*/
#ifndef _RPC_SVC_H
#define _RPC_SVC_H 1
#include <features.h>
#include <rpc/rpc_msg.h>
__BEGIN_DECLS
/*
* This interface must manage two items concerning remote procedure calling:
*
* 1) An arbitrary number of transport connections upon which rpc requests
* are received. The two most notable transports are TCP and UDP; they are
* created and registered by routines in svc_tcp.c and svc_udp.c, respectively;
* they in turn call xprt_register and xprt_unregister.
*
* 2) An arbitrary number of locally registered services. Services are
* described by the following four data: program number, version number,
* "service dispatch" function, a transport handle, and a boolean that
* indicates whether or not the exported program should be registered with a
* local binder service; if true the program's number and version and the
* port number from the transport handle are registered with the binder.
* These data are registered with the rpc svc system via svc_register.
*
* A service's dispatch function is called whenever an rpc request comes in
* on a transport. The request's program and version numbers must match
* those of the registered service. The dispatch function is passed two
* parameters, struct svc_req * and SVCXPRT *, defined below.
*/
enum xprt_stat {
XPRT_DIED,
XPRT_MOREREQS,
XPRT_IDLE
};
/*
* Server side transport handle
*/
typedef struct SVCXPRT SVCXPRT;
struct SVCXPRT {
int xp_sock;
u_short xp_port; /* associated port number */
const struct xp_ops {
bool_t (*xp_recv) __PMT ((SVCXPRT *__xprt, struct rpc_msg *__msg));
/* receive incoming requests */
enum xprt_stat (*xp_stat) __PMT ((SVCXPRT *__xprt));
/* get transport status */
bool_t (*xp_getargs) __PMT ((SVCXPRT *__xprt, xdrproc_t __xdr_args,
caddr_t args_ptr)); /* get arguments */
bool_t (*xp_reply) __PMT ((SVCXPRT *__xprt, struct rpc_msg *__msg));
/* send reply */
bool_t (*xp_freeargs) __PMT ((SVCXPRT *__xprt, xdrproc_t __xdr_args,
caddr_t args_ptr));
/* free mem allocated for args */
void (*xp_destroy) __PMT ((SVCXPRT *__xprt));
/* destroy this struct */
} *xp_ops;
int xp_addrlen; /* length of remote address */
struct sockaddr_in xp_raddr; /* remote address */
struct opaque_auth xp_verf; /* raw response verifier */
caddr_t xp_p1; /* private */
caddr_t xp_p2; /* private */
};
/*
* Approved way of getting address of caller
*/
#define svc_getcaller(x) (&(x)->xp_raddr)
/*
* Operations defined on an SVCXPRT handle
*
* SVCXPRT *xprt;
* struct rpc_msg *msg;
* xdrproc_t xargs;
* caddr_t argsp;
*/
#define SVC_RECV(xprt, msg) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_recv)((xprt), (msg))
#define svc_recv(xprt, msg) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_recv)((xprt), (msg))
#define SVC_STAT(xprt) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_stat)(xprt)
#define svc_stat(xprt) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_stat)(xprt)
#define SVC_GETARGS(xprt, xargs, argsp) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_getargs)((xprt), (xargs), (argsp))
#define svc_getargs(xprt, xargs, argsp) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_getargs)((xprt), (xargs), (argsp))
#define SVC_REPLY(xprt, msg) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_reply) ((xprt), (msg))
#define svc_reply(xprt, msg) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_reply) ((xprt), (msg))
#define SVC_FREEARGS(xprt, xargs, argsp) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_freeargs)((xprt), (xargs), (argsp))
#define svc_freeargs(xprt, xargs, argsp) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_freeargs)((xprt), (xargs), (argsp))
#define SVC_DESTROY(xprt) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_destroy)(xprt)
#define svc_destroy(xprt) \
(*(xprt)->xp_ops->xp_destroy)(xprt)
/*
* Service request
*/
struct svc_req {
u_long rq_prog; /* service program number */
u_long rq_vers; /* service protocol version */
u_long rq_proc; /* the desired procedure */
struct opaque_auth rq_cred; /* raw creds from the wire */
caddr_t rq_clntcred; /* read only cooked cred */
SVCXPRT *rq_xprt; /* associated transport */
};
#ifndef __DISPATCH_FN_T
#define __DISPATCH_FN_T
typedef void (*__dispatch_fn_t) __PMT ((struct svc_req*, SVCXPRT*));
#endif
/*
* Service registration
*
* svc_register(xprt, prog, vers, dispatch, protocol)
* SVCXPRT *xprt;
* u_long prog;
* u_long vers;
* void (*dispatch)();
* u_long protocol; like TCP or UDP, zero means do not register
*/
extern bool_t svc_register __P ((SVCXPRT *__xprt, u_long __prog,
u_long __vers, __dispatch_fn_t __dispatch,
u_long __protocol));
/*
* Service un-registration
*
* svc_unregister(prog, vers)
* u_long prog;
* u_long vers;
*/
extern void svc_unregister __P ((u_long __prog, u_long __vers));
/*
* Transport registration.
*
* xprt_register(xprt)
* SVCXPRT *xprt;
*/
extern void xprt_register __P ((SVCXPRT *__xprt));
/*
* Transport un-register
*
* xprt_unregister(xprt)
* SVCXPRT *xprt;
*/
extern void xprt_unregister __P ((SVCXPRT *__xprt));
/*
* When the service routine is called, it must first check to see if it
* knows about the procedure; if not, it should call svcerr_noproc
* and return. If so, it should deserialize its arguments via
* SVC_GETARGS (defined above). If the deserialization does not work,
* svcerr_decode should be called followed by a return. Successful
* decoding of the arguments should be followed the execution of the
* procedure's code and a call to svc_sendreply.
*
* Also, if the service refuses to execute the procedure due to too-
* weak authentication parameters, svcerr_weakauth should be called.
* Note: do not confuse access-control failure with weak authentication!
*
* NB: In pure implementations of rpc, the caller always waits for a reply
* msg. This message is sent when svc_sendreply is called.
* Therefore pure service implementations should always call
* svc_sendreply even if the function logically returns void; use
* xdr.h - xdr_void for the xdr routine. HOWEVER, tcp based rpc allows
* for the abuse of pure rpc via batched calling or pipelining. In the
* case of a batched call, svc_sendreply should NOT be called since
* this would send a return message, which is what batching tries to avoid.
* It is the service/protocol writer's responsibility to know which calls are
* batched and which are not. Warning: responding to batch calls may
* deadlock the caller and server processes!
*/
extern bool_t svc_sendreply __P ((SVCXPRT *xprt, xdrproc_t __xdr_results,
caddr_t __xdr_location));
extern void svcerr_decode __P ((SVCXPRT *__xprt));
extern void svcerr_weakauth __P ((SVCXPRT *__xprt));
extern void svcerr_noproc __P ((SVCXPRT *__xprt));
extern void svcerr_progvers __P ((SVCXPRT *__xprt, u_long __low_vers,
u_long __high_vers));
extern void svcerr_auth __P ((SVCXPRT *__xprt, enum auth_stat __why));
extern void svcerr_noprog __P ((SVCXPRT *__xprt));
extern void svcerr_systemerr __P ((SVCXPRT *__xprt));
/*
* Lowest level dispatching -OR- who owns this process anyway.
* Somebody has to wait for incoming requests and then call the correct
* service routine. The routine svc_run does infinite waiting; i.e.,
* svc_run never returns.
* Since another (coexistent) package may wish to selectively wait for
* incoming calls or other events outside of the rpc architecture, the
* routine svc_getreq is provided. It must be passed readfds, the
* "in-place" results of a select system call (see select, section 2).
*/
/*
* Global keeper of rpc service descriptors in use
* dynamic; must be inspected before each call to select
*/
#ifdef FD_SETSIZE
extern fd_set svc_fdset;
#define svc_fds svc_fdset.fds_bits[0] /* compatibility */
#else
extern int svc_fds;
#endif /* def FD_SETSIZE */
/*
* a small program implemented by the svc_rpc implementation itself;
* also see clnt.h for protocol numbers.
*/
extern void svc_getreq __P ((int __rdfds));
extern void svc_getreqset __P ((fd_set *__readfds));
extern void svc_exit __P ((void));
extern void svc_run __P ((void));
/*
* Socket to use on svcxxx_create call to get default socket
*/
#define RPC_ANYSOCK -1
/*
* These are the existing service side transport implementations
*/
/*
* Memory based rpc for testing and timing.
*/
extern SVCXPRT *svcraw_create __P ((void));
/*
* Udp based rpc.
*/
extern SVCXPRT *svcudp_create __P ((int __sock));
extern SVCXPRT *svcudp_bufcreate __P ((int __sock, u_int __sendsz,
u_int __recvsz));
/*
* Tcp based rpc.
*/
extern SVCXPRT *svctcp_create __P ((int __sock, u_int __sendsize,
u_int __recvsize));
/*
* Unix based rpc.
*/
extern SVCXPRT *svcunix_create __P ((int __sock, u_int __sendsize,
u_int __recvsize, char *__path));
__END_DECLS
#endif /* rpc/svc.h */