xref: /linux/Documentation/networking/strparser.rst (revision 9e56ff53b4115875667760445b028357848b4748)
1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3=========================
4Stream Parser (strparser)
5=========================
6
7Introduction
8============
9
10The stream parser (strparser) is a utility that parses messages of an
11application layer protocol running over a data stream. The stream
12parser works in conjunction with an upper layer in the kernel to provide
13kernel support for application layer messages. For instance, Kernel
14Connection Multiplexor (KCM) uses the Stream Parser to parse messages
15using a BPF program.
16
17The strparser works in one of two modes: receive callback or general
18mode.
19
20In receive callback mode, the strparser is called from the data_ready
21callback of a TCP socket. Messages are parsed and delivered as they are
22received on the socket.
23
24In general mode, a sequence of skbs are fed to strparser from an
25outside source. Message are parsed and delivered as the sequence is
26processed. This modes allows strparser to be applied to arbitrary
27streams of data.
28
29Interface
30=========
31
32The API includes a context structure, a set of callbacks, utility
33functions, and a data_ready function for receive callback mode. The
34callbacks include a parse_msg function that is called to perform
35parsing (e.g.  BPF parsing in case of KCM), and a rcv_msg function
36that is called when a full message has been completed.
37
38Functions
39=========
40
41     ::
42
43	strp_init(struct strparser *strp, struct sock *sk,
44		const struct strp_callbacks *cb)
45
46     Called to initialize a stream parser. strp is a struct of type
47     strparser that is allocated by the upper layer. sk is the TCP
48     socket associated with the stream parser for use with receive
49     callback mode; in general mode this is set to NULL. Callbacks
50     are called by the stream parser (the callbacks are listed below).
51
52     ::
53
54	void strp_pause(struct strparser *strp)
55
56     Temporarily pause a stream parser. Message parsing is suspended
57     and no new messages are delivered to the upper layer.
58
59     ::
60
61	void strp_unpause(struct strparser *strp)
62
63     Unpause a paused stream parser.
64
65     ::
66
67	void strp_stop(struct strparser *strp);
68
69     strp_stop is called to completely stop stream parser operations.
70     This is called internally when the stream parser encounters an
71     error, and it is called from the upper layer to stop parsing
72     operations.
73
74     ::
75
76	void strp_done(struct strparser *strp);
77
78     strp_done is called to release any resources held by the stream
79     parser instance. This must be called after the stream processor
80     has been stopped.
81
82     ::
83
84	int strp_process(struct strparser *strp, struct sk_buff *orig_skb,
85			 unsigned int orig_offset, size_t orig_len,
86			 size_t max_msg_size, long timeo)
87
88    strp_process is called in general mode for a stream parser to
89    parse an sk_buff. The number of bytes processed or a negative
90    error number is returned. Note that strp_process does not
91    consume the sk_buff. max_msg_size is maximum size the stream
92    parser will parse. timeo is timeout for completing a message.
93
94    ::
95
96	void strp_data_ready(struct strparser *strp);
97
98    The upper layer calls strp_tcp_data_ready when data is ready on
99    the lower socket for strparser to process. This should be called
100    from a data_ready callback that is set on the socket. Note that
101    maximum messages size is the limit of the receive socket
102    buffer and message timeout is the receive timeout for the socket.
103
104    ::
105
106	void strp_check_rcv(struct strparser *strp);
107
108    strp_check_rcv is called to check for new messages on the socket.
109    This is normally called at initialization of a stream parser
110    instance or after strp_unpause.
111
112Callbacks
113=========
114
115There are six callbacks:
116
117    ::
118
119	int (*parse_msg)(struct strparser *strp, struct sk_buff *skb);
120
121    parse_msg is called to determine the length of the next message
122    in the stream. The upper layer must implement this function. It
123    should parse the sk_buff as containing the headers for the
124    next application layer message in the stream.
125
126    The skb->cb in the input skb is a struct strp_msg. Only
127    the offset field is relevant in parse_msg and gives the offset
128    where the message starts in the skb.
129
130    The return values of this function are:
131
132    =========    ===========================================================
133    >0           indicates length of successfully parsed message
134    0            indicates more data must be received to parse the message
135    -ESTRPIPE    current message should not be processed by the
136		 kernel, return control of the socket to userspace which
137		 can proceed to read the messages itself
138    other < 0    Error in parsing, give control back to userspace
139		 assuming that synchronization is lost and the stream
140		 is unrecoverable (application expected to close TCP socket)
141    =========    ===========================================================
142
143    In the case that an error is returned (return value is less than
144    zero) and the parser is in receive callback mode, then it will set
145    the error on TCP socket and wake it up. If parse_msg returned
146    -ESTRPIPE and the stream parser had previously read some bytes for
147    the current message, then the error set on the attached socket is
148    ENODATA since the stream is unrecoverable in that case.
149
150    ::
151
152	void (*lock)(struct strparser *strp)
153
154    The lock callback is called to lock the strp structure when
155    the strparser is performing an asynchronous operation (such as
156    processing a timeout). In receive callback mode the default
157    function is to lock_sock for the associated socket. In general
158    mode the callback must be set appropriately.
159
160    ::
161
162	void (*unlock)(struct strparser *strp)
163
164    The unlock callback is called to release the lock obtained
165    by the lock callback. In receive callback mode the default
166    function is release_sock for the associated socket. In general
167    mode the callback must be set appropriately.
168
169    ::
170
171	void (*rcv_msg)(struct strparser *strp, struct sk_buff *skb);
172
173    rcv_msg is called when a full message has been received and
174    is queued. The callee must consume the sk_buff; it can
175    call strp_pause to prevent any further messages from being
176    received in rcv_msg (see strp_pause above). This callback
177    must be set.
178
179    The skb->cb in the input skb is a struct strp_msg. This
180    struct contains two fields: offset and full_len. Offset is
181    where the message starts in the skb, and full_len is the
182    the length of the message. skb->len - offset may be greater
183    then full_len since strparser does not trim the skb.
184
185    ::
186
187	int (*read_sock_done)(struct strparser *strp, int err);
188
189     read_sock_done is called when the stream parser is done reading
190     the TCP socket in receive callback mode. The stream parser may
191     read multiple messages in a loop and this function allows cleanup
192     to occur when exiting the loop. If the callback is not set (NULL
193     in strp_init) a default function is used.
194
195     ::
196
197	void (*abort_parser)(struct strparser *strp, int err);
198
199     This function is called when stream parser encounters an error
200     in parsing. The default function stops the stream parser and
201     sets the error in the socket if the parser is in receive callback
202     mode. The default function can be changed by setting the callback
203     to non-NULL in strp_init.
204
205Statistics
206==========
207
208Various counters are kept for each stream parser instance. These are in
209the strp_stats structure. strp_aggr_stats is a convenience structure for
210accumulating statistics for multiple stream parser instances.
211save_strp_stats and aggregate_strp_stats are helper functions to save
212and aggregate statistics.
213
214Message assembly limits
215=======================
216
217The stream parser provide mechanisms to limit the resources consumed by
218message assembly.
219
220A timer is set when assembly starts for a new message. In receive
221callback mode the message timeout is taken from rcvtime for the
222associated TCP socket. In general mode, the timeout is passed as an
223argument in strp_process. If the timer fires before assembly completes
224the stream parser is aborted and the ETIMEDOUT error is set on the TCP
225socket if in receive callback mode.
226
227In receive callback mode, message length is limited to the receive
228buffer size of the associated TCP socket. If the length returned by
229parse_msg is greater than the socket buffer size then the stream parser
230is aborted with EMSGSIZE error set on the TCP socket. Note that this
231makes the maximum size of receive skbuffs for a socket with a stream
232parser to be 2*sk_rcvbuf of the TCP socket.
233
234In general mode the message length limit is passed in as an argument
235to strp_process.
236
237Author
238======
239
240Tom Herbert (tom@quantonium.net)
241