xref: /linux/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/specs.rst (revision 06d07429858317ded2db7986113a9e0129cd599b)
1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
2
3=========================================
4Netlink protocol specifications (in YAML)
5=========================================
6
7Netlink protocol specifications are complete, machine readable descriptions of
8Netlink protocols written in YAML. The goal of the specifications is to allow
9separating Netlink parsing from user space logic and minimize the amount of
10hand written Netlink code for each new family, command, attribute.
11Netlink specs should be complete and not depend on any other spec
12or C header file, making it easy to use in languages which can't include
13kernel headers directly.
14
15Internally kernel uses the YAML specs to generate:
16
17 - the C uAPI header
18 - documentation of the protocol as a ReST file - see :ref:`Documentation/networking/netlink_spec/index.rst <specs>`
19 - policy tables for input attribute validation
20 - operation tables
21
22YAML specifications can be found under ``Documentation/netlink/specs/``
23
24This document describes details of the schema.
25See :doc:`intro-specs` for a practical starting guide.
26
27All specs must be licensed under
28``((GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note) OR BSD-3-Clause)``
29to allow for easy adoption in user space code.
30
31Compatibility levels
32====================
33
34There are four schema levels for Netlink specs, from the simplest used
35by new families to the most complex covering all the quirks of the old ones.
36Each next level inherits the attributes of the previous level, meaning that
37user capable of parsing more complex ``genetlink`` schemas is also compatible
38with simpler ones. The levels are:
39
40 - ``genetlink`` - most streamlined, should be used by all new families
41 - ``genetlink-c`` - superset of ``genetlink`` with extra attributes allowing
42   customization of define and enum type and value names; this schema should
43   be equivalent to ``genetlink`` for all implementations which don't interact
44   directly with C uAPI headers
45 - ``genetlink-legacy`` - Generic Netlink catch all schema supporting quirks of
46   all old genetlink families, strange attribute formats, binary structures etc.
47 - ``netlink-raw`` - catch all schema supporting pre-Generic Netlink protocols
48   such as ``NETLINK_ROUTE``
49
50The definition of the schemas (in ``jsonschema``) can be found
51under ``Documentation/netlink/``.
52
53Schema structure
54================
55
56YAML schema has the following conceptual sections:
57
58 - globals
59 - definitions
60 - attributes
61 - operations
62 - multicast groups
63
64Most properties in the schema accept (or in fact require) a ``doc``
65sub-property documenting the defined object.
66
67The following sections describe the properties of the most modern ``genetlink``
68schema. See the documentation of :doc:`genetlink-c <c-code-gen>`
69for information on how C names are derived from name properties.
70
71See also :ref:`Documentation/core-api/netlink.rst <kernel_netlink>` for
72information on the Netlink specification properties that are only relevant to
73the kernel space and not part of the user space API.
74
75genetlink
76=========
77
78Globals
79-------
80
81Attributes listed directly at the root level of the spec file.
82
83name
84~~~~
85
86Name of the family. Name identifies the family in a unique way, since
87the Family IDs are allocated dynamically.
88
89protocol
90~~~~~~~~
91
92The schema level, default is ``genetlink``, which is the only value
93allowed for new ``genetlink`` families.
94
95definitions
96-----------
97
98Array of type and constant definitions.
99
100name
101~~~~
102
103Name of the type / constant.
104
105type
106~~~~
107
108One of the following types:
109
110 - const - a single, standalone constant
111 - enum - defines an integer enumeration, with values for each entry
112   incrementing by 1, (e.g. 0, 1, 2, 3)
113 - flags - defines an integer enumeration, with values for each entry
114   occupying a bit, starting from bit 0, (e.g. 1, 2, 4, 8)
115
116value
117~~~~~
118
119The value for the ``const``.
120
121value-start
122~~~~~~~~~~~
123
124The first value for ``enum`` and ``flags``, allows overriding the default
125start value of ``0`` (for ``enum``) and starting bit (for ``flags``).
126For ``flags`` ``value-start`` selects the starting bit, not the shifted value.
127
128Sparse enumerations are not supported.
129
130entries
131~~~~~~~
132
133Array of names of the entries for ``enum`` and ``flags``.
134
135header
136~~~~~~
137
138For C-compatible languages, header which already defines this value.
139In case the definition is shared by multiple families (e.g. ``IFNAMSIZ``)
140code generators for C-compatible languages may prefer to add an appropriate
141include instead of rendering a new definition.
142
143attribute-sets
144--------------
145
146This property contains information about netlink attributes of the family.
147All families have at least one attribute set, most have multiple.
148``attribute-sets`` is an array, with each entry describing a single set.
149
150Note that the spec is "flattened" and is not meant to visually resemble
151the format of the netlink messages (unlike certain ad-hoc documentation
152formats seen in kernel comments). In the spec subordinate attribute sets
153are not defined inline as a nest, but defined in a separate attribute set
154referred to with a ``nested-attributes`` property of the container.
155
156Spec may also contain fractional sets - sets which contain a ``subset-of``
157property. Such sets describe a section of a full set, allowing narrowing down
158which attributes are allowed in a nest or refining the validation criteria.
159Fractional sets can only be used in nests. They are not rendered to the uAPI
160in any fashion.
161
162name
163~~~~
164
165Uniquely identifies the attribute set, operations and nested attributes
166refer to the sets by the ``name``.
167
168subset-of
169~~~~~~~~~
170
171Re-defines a portion of another set (a fractional set).
172Allows narrowing down fields and changing validation criteria
173or even types of attributes depending on the nest in which they
174are contained. The ``value`` of each attribute in the fractional
175set is implicitly the same as in the main set.
176
177attributes
178~~~~~~~~~~
179
180List of attributes in the set.
181
182.. _attribute_properties:
183
184Attribute properties
185--------------------
186
187name
188~~~~
189
190Identifies the attribute, unique within the set.
191
192type
193~~~~
194
195Netlink attribute type, see :ref:`attr_types`.
196
197.. _assign_val:
198
199value
200~~~~~
201
202Numerical attribute ID, used in serialized Netlink messages.
203The ``value`` property can be skipped, in which case the attribute ID
204will be the value of the previous attribute plus one (recursively)
205and ``1`` for the first attribute in the attribute set.
206
207Attributes (and operations) use ``1`` as the default value for the first
208entry (unlike enums in definitions which start from ``0``) because
209entry ``0`` is almost always reserved as undefined. Spec can explicitly
210set value to ``0`` if needed.
211
212Note that the ``value`` of an attribute is defined only in its main set
213(not in subsets).
214
215enum
216~~~~
217
218For integer types specifies that values in the attribute belong
219to an ``enum`` or ``flags`` from the ``definitions`` section.
220
221enum-as-flags
222~~~~~~~~~~~~~
223
224Treat ``enum`` as ``flags`` regardless of its type in ``definitions``.
225When both ``enum`` and ``flags`` forms are needed ``definitions`` should
226contain an ``enum`` and attributes which need the ``flags`` form should
227use this attribute.
228
229nested-attributes
230~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
231
232Identifies the attribute space for attributes nested within given attribute.
233Only valid for complex attributes which may have sub-attributes.
234
235multi-attr (arrays)
236~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
237
238Boolean property signifying that the attribute may be present multiple times.
239Allowing an attribute to repeat is the recommended way of implementing arrays
240(no extra nesting).
241
242byte-order
243~~~~~~~~~~
244
245For integer types specifies attribute byte order - ``little-endian``
246or ``big-endian``.
247
248checks
249~~~~~~
250
251Input validation constraints used by the kernel. User space should query
252the policy of the running kernel using Generic Netlink introspection,
253rather than depend on what is specified in the spec file.
254
255The validation policy in the kernel is formed by combining the type
256definition (``type`` and ``nested-attributes``) and the ``checks``.
257
258sub-type
259~~~~~~~~
260
261Legacy families have special ways of expressing arrays. ``sub-type`` can be
262used to define the type of array members in case array members are not
263fully defined as attributes (in a bona fide attribute space). For instance
264a C array of u32 values can be specified with ``type: binary`` and
265``sub-type: u32``. Binary types and legacy array formats are described in
266more detail in :doc:`genetlink-legacy`.
267
268display-hint
269~~~~~~~~~~~~
270
271Optional format indicator that is intended only for choosing the right
272formatting mechanism when displaying values of this type. Currently supported
273hints are ``hex``, ``mac``, ``fddi``, ``ipv4``, ``ipv6`` and ``uuid``.
274
275operations
276----------
277
278This section describes messages passed between the kernel and the user space.
279There are three types of entries in this section - operations, notifications
280and events.
281
282Operations describe the most common request - response communication. User
283sends a request and kernel replies. Each operation may contain any combination
284of the two modes familiar to netlink users - ``do`` and ``dump``.
285``do`` and ``dump`` in turn contain a combination of ``request`` and
286``response`` properties. If no explicit message with attributes is passed
287in a given direction (e.g. a ``dump`` which does not accept filter, or a ``do``
288of a SET operation to which the kernel responds with just the netlink error
289code) ``request`` or ``response`` section can be skipped.
290``request`` and ``response`` sections list the attributes allowed in a message.
291The list contains only the names of attributes from a set referred
292to by the ``attribute-set`` property.
293
294Notifications and events both refer to the asynchronous messages sent by
295the kernel to members of a multicast group. The difference between the
296two is that a notification shares its contents with a GET operation
297(the name of the GET operation is specified in the ``notify`` property).
298This arrangement is commonly used for notifications about
299objects where the notification carries the full object definition.
300
301Events are more focused and carry only a subset of information rather than full
302object state (a made up example would be a link state change event with just
303the interface name and the new link state). Events contain the ``event``
304property. Events are considered less idiomatic for netlink and notifications
305should be preferred.
306
307list
308~~~~
309
310The only property of ``operations`` for ``genetlink``, holds the list of
311operations, notifications etc.
312
313Operation properties
314--------------------
315
316name
317~~~~
318
319Identifies the operation.
320
321value
322~~~~~
323
324Numerical message ID, used in serialized Netlink messages.
325The same enumeration rules are applied as to
326:ref:`attribute values<assign_val>`.
327
328attribute-set
329~~~~~~~~~~~~~
330
331Specifies the attribute set contained within the message.
332
333do
334~~~
335
336Specification for the ``doit`` request. Should contain ``request``, ``reply``
337or both of these properties, each holding a :ref:`attr_list`.
338
339dump
340~~~~
341
342Specification for the ``dumpit`` request. Should contain ``request``, ``reply``
343or both of these properties, each holding a :ref:`attr_list`.
344
345notify
346~~~~~~
347
348Designates the message as a notification. Contains the name of the operation
349(possibly the same as the operation holding this property) which shares
350the contents with the notification (``do``).
351
352event
353~~~~~
354
355Specification of attributes in the event, holds a :ref:`attr_list`.
356``event`` property is mutually exclusive with ``notify``.
357
358mcgrp
359~~~~~
360
361Used with ``event`` and ``notify``, specifies which multicast group
362message belongs to.
363
364.. _attr_list:
365
366Message attribute list
367----------------------
368
369``request``, ``reply`` and ``event`` properties have a single ``attributes``
370property which holds the list of attribute names.
371
372Messages can also define ``pre`` and ``post`` properties which will be rendered
373as ``pre_doit`` and ``post_doit`` calls in the kernel (these properties should
374be ignored by user space).
375
376mcast-groups
377------------
378
379This section lists the multicast groups of the family.
380
381list
382~~~~
383
384The only property of ``mcast-groups`` for ``genetlink``, holds the list
385of groups.
386
387Multicast group properties
388--------------------------
389
390name
391~~~~
392
393Uniquely identifies the multicast group in the family. Similarly to
394Family ID, Multicast Group ID needs to be resolved at runtime, based
395on the name.
396
397.. _attr_types:
398
399Attribute types
400===============
401
402This section describes the attribute types supported by the ``genetlink``
403compatibility level. Refer to documentation of different levels for additional
404attribute types.
405
406Common integer types
407--------------------
408
409``sint`` and ``uint`` represent signed and unsigned 64 bit integers.
410If the value can fit on 32 bits only 32 bits are carried in netlink
411messages, otherwise full 64 bits are carried. Note that the payload
412is only aligned to 4B, so the full 64 bit value may be unaligned!
413
414Common integer types should be preferred over fix-width types in majority
415of cases.
416
417Fix-width integer types
418-----------------------
419
420Fixed-width integer types include:
421``u8``, ``u16``, ``u32``, ``u64``, ``s8``, ``s16``, ``s32``, ``s64``.
422
423Note that types smaller than 32 bit should be avoided as using them
424does not save any memory in Netlink messages (due to alignment).
425See :ref:`pad_type` for padding of 64 bit attributes.
426
427The payload of the attribute is the integer in host order unless ``byte-order``
428specifies otherwise.
429
43064 bit values are usually aligned by the kernel but it is recommended
431that the user space is able to deal with unaligned values.
432
433.. _pad_type:
434
435pad
436---
437
438Special attribute type used for padding attributes which require alignment
439bigger than standard 4B alignment required by netlink (e.g. 64 bit integers).
440There can only be a single attribute of the ``pad`` type in any attribute set
441and it should be automatically used for padding when needed.
442
443flag
444----
445
446Attribute with no payload, its presence is the entire information.
447
448binary
449------
450
451Raw binary data attribute, the contents are opaque to generic code.
452
453string
454------
455
456Character string. Unless ``checks`` has ``unterminated-ok`` set to ``true``
457the string is required to be null terminated.
458``max-len`` in ``checks`` indicates the longest possible string,
459if not present the length of the string is unbounded.
460
461Note that ``max-len`` does not count the terminating character.
462
463nest
464----
465
466Attribute containing other (nested) attributes.
467``nested-attributes`` specifies which attribute set is used inside.
468