freebsd-dev/include/rpc/svc.h
Peter Wemm c447342094 Change #ifdef KERNEL to #ifdef _KERNEL in the public headers. "KERNEL"
is an application space macro and the applications are supposed to be free
to use it as they please (but cannot).  This is consistant with the other
BSD's who made this change quite some time ago.  More commits to come.
1999-12-29 05:07:58 +00:00

325 lines
9.8 KiB
C

/*
* 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, MERCHANTABILITY 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
*
* from: @(#)svc.h 1.20 88/02/08 SMI
* from: @(#)svc.h 2.2 88/07/29 4.0 RPCSRC
* $FreeBSD$
*/
/*
* svc.h, Server-side remote procedure call interface.
*
* Copyright (C) 1984, Sun Microsystems, Inc.
*/
#ifndef _RPC_SVC_H
#define _RPC_SVC_H
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
/*
* 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
};
struct rpc_msg;
/*
* Server side transport handle
*/
typedef struct __rpc_svcxprt {
int xp_sock;
u_short xp_port; /* associated port number */
struct xp_ops {
/* receive incoming requests */
bool_t (*xp_recv) __P((struct __rpc_svcxprt *,
struct rpc_msg *));
/* get transport status */
enum xprt_stat (*xp_stat) __P((struct __rpc_svcxprt *));
/* get arguments */
bool_t (*xp_getargs) __P((struct __rpc_svcxprt *, xdrproc_t,
caddr_t));
/* send reply */
bool_t (*xp_reply) __P((struct __rpc_svcxprt *,
struct rpc_msg *));
/* free mem allocated for args */
bool_t (*xp_freeargs) __P((struct __rpc_svcxprt *, xdrproc_t,
caddr_t));
/* destroy this struct */
void (*xp_destroy) __P((struct __rpc_svcxprt *));
} *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 */
} SVCXPRT;
/*
* 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_int32_t rq_prog; /* service program number */
u_int32_t rq_vers; /* service protocol version */
u_int32_t 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 */
};
/*
* Service registration
*
* svc_register(xprt, prog, vers, dispatch, protocol)
* SVCXPRT *xprt;
* u_long prog;
* u_long vers;
* void (*dispatch)();
* int protocol; (like TCP or UDP, zero means do not register)
*/
__BEGIN_DECLS
extern bool_t svc_register __P((SVCXPRT *, u_long, u_long,
void (*) __P((struct svc_req *, SVCXPRT *)), int));
__END_DECLS
/*
* Service un-registration
*
* svc_unregister(prog, vers)
* u_long prog;
* u_long vers;
*/
__BEGIN_DECLS
extern void svc_unregister __P((u_long, u_long));
__END_DECLS
/*
* Transport registration.
*
* xprt_register(xprt)
* SVCXPRT *xprt;
*/
__BEGIN_DECLS
extern void xprt_register __P((SVCXPRT *));
__END_DECLS
/*
* Transport un-register
*
* xprt_unregister(xprt)
* SVCXPRT *xprt;
*/
__BEGIN_DECLS
extern void xprt_unregister __P((SVCXPRT *));
__END_DECLS
/*
* 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!
*/
__BEGIN_DECLS
extern bool_t svc_sendreply __P((SVCXPRT *, xdrproc_t, char *));
extern void svcerr_decode __P((SVCXPRT *));
extern void svcerr_weakauth __P((SVCXPRT *));
extern void svcerr_noproc __P((SVCXPRT *));
extern void svcerr_progvers __P((SVCXPRT *, u_long, u_long));
extern void svcerr_auth __P((SVCXPRT *, enum auth_stat));
extern void svcerr_noprog __P((SVCXPRT *));
extern void svcerr_systemerr __P((SVCXPRT *));
__END_DECLS
/*
* 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 (co-existant) 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
*/
extern int svc_maxfd;
extern fd_set svc_fdset;
#define svc_fds svc_fdset.fds_bits[0] /* compatibility */
#ifndef _KERNEL
/*
* a small program implemented by the svc_rpc implementation itself;
* also see clnt.h for protocol numbers.
*/
extern void rpctest_service();
#endif
__BEGIN_DECLS
extern void svc_getreq __P((int));
extern void svc_getreqset __P((fd_set *));
extern void svc_getreqset2 __P((fd_set *, int)); /* XXX: nonstd, undoc */
extern void svc_run __P((void));
__END_DECLS
/*
* 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.
*/
__BEGIN_DECLS
extern SVCXPRT *svcraw_create __P((void));
__END_DECLS
/*
* Udp based rpc.
*/
__BEGIN_DECLS
extern SVCXPRT *svcudp_create __P((int));
extern SVCXPRT *svcudp_bufcreate __P((int, u_int, u_int));
__END_DECLS
/*
* Tcp based rpc.
*/
__BEGIN_DECLS
extern SVCXPRT *svctcp_create __P((int, u_int, u_int));
extern SVCXPRT *svcfd_create __P((int, u_int, u_int));
__END_DECLS
/*
* AF_UNIX socket based rpc.
*/
__BEGIN_DECLS
extern SVCXPRT *svcunix_create __P((int, u_int, u_int, char *));
extern SVCXPRT *svcunixfd_create __P((int, u_int, u_int));
__END_DECLS
#endif /* !_RPC_SVC_H */