xref: /titanic_44/usr/src/lib/libsldap/common/ns_connmgmt.h (revision 349b53dd4e695e3d833b5380540385145b2d3ae8)
1 /*
2  * CDDL HEADER START
3  *
4  * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the
5  * Common Development and Distribution License (the "License").
6  * You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
7  *
8  * You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE
9  * or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing.
10  * See the License for the specific language governing permissions
11  * and limitations under the License.
12  *
13  * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each
14  * file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE.
15  * If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the
16  * fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying
17  * information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
18  *
19  * CDDL HEADER END
20  */
21 /*
22  * Copyright 2008 Sun Microsystems, Inc.  All rights reserved.
23  * Use is subject to license terms.
24  */
25 
26 
27 #ifndef	_NS_CONNMGMT_H
28 #define	_NS_CONNMGMT_H
29 
30 #pragma ident	"%Z%%M%	%I%	%E% SMI"
31 
32 #ifdef __cplusplus
33 extern "C" {
34 #endif
35 
36 #include <thread.h>
37 #include "ns_sldap.h"
38 #include "ns_internal.h"
39 #include "ns_cache_door.h"
40 
41 struct ns_conn_user; /* connection user, forward definition */
42 struct ns_conn_mt;   /* multi-threaded (MT) connection, forward definition */
43 struct ns_conn_mgmt; /* connection management, forward definition */
44 
45 #define	NS_CONN_MT_USER_NO_MAX	-1
46 #define	NS_CONN_MT_USER_MAX	NS_CONN_MT_USER_NO_MAX
47 #define	NS_LIST_TRY_MAX		3
48 
49 /*
50  * Structure for handling the waiter of a pending multi-threaded (MT) connection
51  */
52 typedef struct ns_conn_waiter {
53 	cond_t			waitcv;
54 	uint8_t			signaled;
55 	struct ns_conn_user	*key;
56 	struct ns_conn_waiter	*next, *prev;
57 } ns_conn_waiter_t;
58 
59 /*
60  * type of a connection user
61  */
62 typedef enum {
63 	NS_CONN_USER_SEARCH	= 1,
64 	NS_CONN_USER_WRITE	= 2,
65 	NS_CONN_USER_AUTH	= 3,
66 	NS_CONN_USER_GETENT	= 4
67 } ns_conn_user_type_t;
68 
69 /*
70  * state of a connection user
71  */
72 typedef enum {
73 	NS_CONN_USER_UNINITED		= 0,
74 	NS_CONN_USER_ALLOCATED		= 1,
75 	NS_CONN_USER_FINDING		= 2, /* looking for an MT connection */
76 	NS_CONN_USER_WAITING		= 3, /* waiting for an MT connection */
77 	NS_CONN_USER_WOKEUP		= 4,
78 	NS_CONN_USER_CONNECT_ERROR	= 5,
79 	NS_CONN_USER_CONNECTED  	= 6,
80 	NS_CONN_USER_DISCONNECTED	= 7,
81 	NS_CONN_USER_FREED		= 8
82 } ns_conn_user_state_t;
83 
84 /*
85  * A connection user represents a request processed by libsldap. It
86  * usually is a thread using the same connection from start to end.
87  * Different connection users of the same type can share the same
88  * connection opened for that type. But search and getent users can
89  * share the same connection opened for either search or getent. AUTH
90  * connection are not shareable.
91  *
92  * A getent user may have a longer lifespan and live outside of libsldap.
93  * This is because the associated search cookie is passed back to the caller
94  * via the firstEntry call and used in the subsequent nextEntry or endEntry
95  * calls. Even though the firstEntry and the nextEntry/endEntry calls may
96  * be running in a different thread, the connection being used will be the
97  * same. It is the one assigend during the firstEntry call.
98  */
99 struct ns_conn_user {
100 	ns_conn_user_type_t	type; /* search, write, auth, getent, ... */
101 	ns_conn_user_state_t	state;
102 	thread_t		tid;   /* id of the thread starts the request */
103 	struct ns_conn_user	*next; /* next conn_user in the linked list */
104 	struct ns_conn_mt	*conn_mt; /* the MT connection being used */
105 	struct ns_conn_mgmt	*conn_mgmt; /* ref counted conn management */
106 	void			*userinfo; /* private data of the request */
107 	ns_ldap_return_code	ns_rc; /* error return code */
108 	ns_ldap_error_t		*ns_error; /* error info */
109 	boolean_t		referral; /* using a referred server ? */
110 	boolean_t		retry; /* retry the request on certain error? */
111 	boolean_t		keep_conn; /* keep the conn for reuse ? */
112 	boolean_t		use_mt_conn; /* using/used an MT connection ? */
113 	boolean_t		bad_mt_conn; /* MT connection is not usable ? */
114 };
115 
116 /*
117  * state of an MT connection
118  */
119 typedef enum {
120 	NS_CONN_MT_UNINITED		= 0,
121 	NS_CONN_MT_CONNECTING		= 1,
122 	NS_CONN_MT_CONNECT_ERROR	= 2,
123 	NS_CONN_MT_CONNECTED		= 3,
124 	NS_CONN_MT_CLOSING		= 4
125 } ns_conn_mt_state_t;
126 
127 /*
128  * An ns_conn_mt (or MT connection) represents an ldap connection
129  * that can be shared among multiple threads. It also represents
130  * the set of connection users using the ldap connection. It contains
131  * a pointer to the Connection structure that has the physical info
132  * of the connection (server name, address, ldap handle, etc). It
133  * also contains a linked list of all the conn_user using the ldap
134  * connection. The connection users can wait on an MT connection
135  * to become available or be told to abort and clean up when one of
136  * the connection user detects an error and knows that the connection
137  * is no longer usable. The error info is then saved in the structure
138  * for other users to consume.
139  *
140  * An MT connection is meant to be shared concurrently and persistent.
141  * Even when there's no current user, it will be kept by the connection
142  * management, waiting for the next user. It will be closed when
143  * a connection error is detected, when a better server should be
144  * used, when the Native LDAP configuration change, or when the libsldap
145  * is being unloaded.
146  */
147 typedef struct ns_conn_mt {
148 	mutex_t			lock;
149 	ns_conn_mt_state_t	state;
150 	pid_t			pid; /* process creates the connection */
151 	thread_t		tid; /* thread creates the connection */
152 	struct ns_conn_mt	*next; /* next conn_mt in the linked list */
153 	ns_conn_user_t		*cu_head; /* head of conn_user linked list */
154 	ns_conn_user_t		*cu_tail; /* tail of conn_user linked list */
155 	struct ns_conn_mgmt	*conn_mgmt; /* ref counted conn management */
156 	ns_conn_waiter_t	waiter; /* first of the connection waiters */
157 	uint_t			cu_cnt; /* number of the using conn_user */
158 	int32_t			cu_max; /* max. allowed number of conn_user */
159 	uint_t			waiter_cnt; /* number of waiters */
160 	ns_conn_user_type_t	opened_for; /* type of conn_user opened for */
161 	Connection		*conn; /* name, IP address, ldap handle, etc */
162 	time_t			create_time; /* time when connection created */
163 	time_t			access_time; /* time when last used */
164 	ns_ldap_return_code	ns_rc; /* saved error code */
165 	ns_ldap_error_t		*ns_error; /* saved error info */
166 	boolean_t		close_when_nouser;  /* close connection when */
167 						    /* last user is done ? */
168 	boolean_t		detached; /* no longer in connection pool? */
169 	boolean_t		referral; /* using a referred server ? */
170 } ns_conn_mt_t;
171 
172 /*
173  * state of a connection management
174  * (a connection pool sharing the same native LDAP configuration)
175  */
176 typedef enum {
177 	NS_CONN_MGMT_UNINITED	= 0,
178 	NS_CONN_MGMT_INACTIVE	= 1, /* conn sharing not yet requested */
179 	NS_CONN_MGMT_ACTIVE	= 2, /* connection sharing required/requested */
180 	NS_CONN_MGMT_DETACHED	= 3  /* on the way down, no new user allowed */
181 } ns_conn_mgmt_state_t;
182 
183 /*
184  * An ns_conn_mgmt (or connection management) represents the set of MT
185  * connections using the same native LDAP configuration. It is a connection
186  * pool that can adjust the MT connection status and usage based on the
187  * change notifications it receives from the ldap_cachemgr daemon, OR When
188  * the change is detected at config refresh time. When a server status
189  * change (up or down) notification is received or detected, it will
190  * close the MT connections using the server. Or mark them as to-be-closed
191  * and close them when all users are done using them. When a config change
192  * notice is received, it will detach itself and allow a new ns_conn_mgmt be
193  * created for the new configuration. The old config would still be used
194  * by the detached ns_conn_mgmt. Both will be destroyed when all existing
195  * conn_user are done. Any conn_user and MT connection created after the
196  * configuration switch will use the new configuration.
197  *
198  * Note that there's always just one current ns_conn_mgmt. Its usage is
199  * reference counted. Any new conn_user or MT connection referencing
200  * the ns_conn_mgmt adds 1 to the count, any release of the ns_conn_mgmt
201  * decrement the count by 1. The ns_conn_mgmt can not be freed until
202  * the reference count becomes zero.
203  *
204  * Each ns_conn_mgmt references a native LDAP configuration. The config
205  * component of this library always maintains a global configuration. It is
206  * referred to as the current global config. The current ns_conn_mgmt
207  * uses that global config. When an ns_conn_mgmt is detached, or not
208  * longer active/current, the config it uses is no longer the current global
209  * one, which is referred as the per connection management config. When
210  * the ns_conn_mgmt is freed, the config will also be destroyed.
211  */
212 
213 typedef struct ns_conn_mgmt {
214 	mutex_t		lock;
215 	ns_conn_mgmt_state_t state;
216 	pid_t		pid; /* process creates the conn_mgmt */
217 	thread_t	procchg_tid; /* id of the change monitor thread */
218 	ns_conn_mt_t	*cm_head; /* head of the conn_mt linked list */
219 	ns_conn_mt_t	*cm_tail; /* tail of the conn_mt linked list */
220 	mutex_t		cfg_lock; /* lock serializes access to config */
221 	ldap_get_chg_cookie_t cfg_cookie; /* used to detect if config changes */
222 	ns_config_t	*config; /* the native LDAP config being used */
223 	char		**pservers; /* preferred servers defined in config */
224 	uint_t		cm_cnt;  /* number of MT connection in the pool */
225 	uint_t		ref_cnt; /* number of reference by conn_MT/conn_user */
226 	boolean_t	is_nscd; /* running in a nscd ? */
227 	boolean_t	is_peruser_nscd; /* running in a per-user nscd ? */
228 	boolean_t	ldap_mt; /* libldap supports multi-threaded client ? */
229 	boolean_t	do_mt_conn;	/* need and able to do MT conn ? */
230 	boolean_t	shutting_down;  /* on the way down ? */
231 	boolean_t	cfg_reloaded;   /* config is not current ? */
232 	boolean_t	procchg_started; /* change monitor thread started ? */
233 	boolean_t	procchg_door_call; /* in door call and waiting ? */
234 	boolean_t	pservers_loaded; /* pservers array is set ? */
235 } ns_conn_mgmt_t;
236 
237 /*
238  * For a connection management and the conn_mt connections it manages, it is
239  * very helpful to know exactly when the Native LDAP configuration changes
240  * and when the status of the configured servers change. If the config
241  * changes, new connection management will be created. If servers go up
242  * or down, conn_mt connections being used need to be dropped or switched.
243  * For processes other than the main nscd, the changes has to be detected
244  * in a less efficient way by libsldap. For the main nscd (not including
245  * peruser nscd), the connection management which has active conn_mt
246  * connections can rely on the ldap_cachemgr daemon to report if there's any
247  * change in servers' status or if the native LDAP configuration has changed.
248  *
249  * The mechanism for reporting of the changes is a door call sent from
250  * libsldap to ldap_cachemgr. The call will not be returned until changes
251  * detected by ldap_cachemgr. When the change info is passed back to
252  * libsldap, the change monitor thread will wake up from the door call
253  * and process the notification. For servers went from up to down, the
254  * associated MT connections will be closed, and then all conn_users'
255  * state will be marked as closing. When a conn_user notices it, the
256  * operations represented by that conn_user will be ended with error
257  * info. When a more preferred server is up, MT connections using
258  * less preferred servers will be marked as closed-when-all-user-done,
259  * so that new connection will be opened and using the preferred server.
260  * A configuration change causes the current connection management and
261  * the configuration it uses to become detached but continually being
262  * used by the old MT connections. Any new MT connection opened will
263  * be put in a new connection management and uses the new configuration
264  * immediately.
265  */
266 typedef enum {
267 	NS_SERVER_UP	= 1,
268 	NS_SERVER_DOWN	= 2
269 } ns_server_status_t;
270 
271 typedef struct ns_server_status_change {
272 	int			num_server;
273 	boolean_t		config_changed;
274 	ns_server_status_t	*changes;	/* array of status change */
275 	char			**servers;	/* array of server */
276 } ns_server_status_change_t;
277 
278 /*
279  * connection management functions
280  */
281 ns_conn_mgmt_t *__s_api_conn_mgmt_init();
282 int __s_api_setup_mt_ld(LDAP *ld);
283 int __s_api_check_mtckey();
284 void __s_api_use_prev_conn_mgmt(int, ns_config_t *);
285 ns_conn_user_t *__s_api_conn_user_init(int, void *, boolean_t);
286 void __s_api_conn_mt_return(ns_conn_user_t *);
287 void __s_api_conn_user_free(ns_conn_user_t *);
288 int __s_api_conn_mt_add(Connection *con, ns_conn_user_t *, ns_ldap_error_t **);
289 int __s_api_conn_mt_get(const char *, const int, const ns_cred_t *,
290 	Connection **, ns_ldap_error_t **, ns_conn_user_t *);
291 void __s_api_conn_mt_remove(ns_conn_user_t *, int, ns_ldap_error_t **);
292 int __s_api_check_libldap_MT_conn_support(ns_conn_user_t *, LDAP *ld,
293 	ns_ldap_error_t **);
294 void __s_api_conn_mt_close(ns_conn_user_t *, int, ns_ldap_error_t **);
295 void __s_api_reinit_conn_mgmt_new_config(ns_config_t *);
296 int __s_api_setup_retry_search(ns_conn_user_t **, ns_conn_user_type_t, int *,
297 	int *, ns_ldap_error_t **);
298 int __s_api_setup_getnext(ns_conn_user_t *, int *, ns_ldap_error_t **);
299 void __s_api_shutdown_conn_mgmt();
300 
301 #ifdef __cplusplus
302 }
303 #endif
304 
305 #endif /* _NS_CONNMGMT_H */
306