freebsd-dev/contrib/isc-dhcp/common/dispatch.c
1999-05-02 09:03:51 +00:00

868 lines
23 KiB
C

/* dispatch.c
Network input dispatcher... */
/*
* Copyright (c) 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999
* The Internet Software Consortium. All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
*
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. Neither the name of The Internet Software Consortium nor the names
* of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
* from this software without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE INTERNET SOFTWARE CONSORTIUM AND
* CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES,
* INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
* DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE INTERNET SOFTWARE CONSORTIUM OR
* CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
* SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
* LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF
* USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND
* ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
* OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT
* OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* This software has been written for the Internet Software Consortium
* by Ted Lemon <mellon@fugue.com> in cooperation with Vixie
* Enterprises. To learn more about the Internet Software Consortium,
* see ``http://www.vix.com/isc''. To learn more about Vixie
* Enterprises, see ``http://www.vix.com''.
*/
#ifndef lint
static char copyright[] =
"$Id: dispatch.c,v 1.47.2.14 1999/03/29 22:16:36 mellon Exp $ Copyright (c) 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999 The Internet Software Consortium. All rights reserved.\n";
#endif /* not lint */
#include "dhcpd.h"
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
struct interface_info *interfaces, *dummy_interfaces, *fallback_interface;
struct protocol *protocols;
struct timeout *timeouts;
static struct timeout *free_timeouts;
static int interfaces_invalidated;
void (*bootp_packet_handler) PROTO ((struct interface_info *,
struct dhcp_packet *, int, unsigned int,
struct iaddr, struct hardware *));
int quiet_interface_discovery;
/* Use the SIOCGIFCONF ioctl to get a list of all the attached interfaces.
For each interface that's of type INET and not the loopback interface,
register that interface with the network I/O software, figure out what
subnet it's on, and add it to the list of interfaces. */
void discover_interfaces (state)
int state;
{
struct interface_info *tmp;
struct interface_info *last, *next;
char buf [8192];
struct ifconf ic;
struct ifreq ifr;
int i;
int sock;
struct subnet *subnet;
struct shared_network *share;
struct sockaddr_in foo;
int ir;
struct ifreq *tif;
#ifdef ALIAS_NAMES_PERMUTED
char *s;
#endif
/* Create an unbound datagram socket to do the SIOCGIFADDR ioctl on. */
if ((sock = socket (AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, IPPROTO_UDP)) < 0)
error ("Can't create addrlist socket");
/* Get the interface configuration information... */
ic.ifc_len = sizeof buf;
ic.ifc_ifcu.ifcu_buf = (caddr_t)buf;
i = ioctl(sock, SIOCGIFCONF, &ic);
if (i < 0)
error ("ioctl: SIOCGIFCONF: %m");
/* If we already have a list of interfaces, and we're running as
a DHCP server, the interfaces were requested. */
if (interfaces && (state == DISCOVER_SERVER ||
state == DISCOVER_RELAY ||
state == DISCOVER_REQUESTED))
ir = 0;
else if (state == DISCOVER_UNCONFIGURED)
ir = INTERFACE_REQUESTED | INTERFACE_AUTOMATIC;
else
ir = INTERFACE_REQUESTED;
/* Cycle through the list of interfaces looking for IP addresses. */
for (i = 0; i < ic.ifc_len;) {
struct ifreq *ifp = (struct ifreq *)((caddr_t)ic.ifc_req + i);
#ifdef HAVE_SA_LEN
if (ifp -> ifr_addr.sa_len > sizeof (struct sockaddr))
i += (sizeof ifp -> ifr_name) + ifp -> ifr_addr.sa_len;
else
#endif
i += sizeof *ifp;
#ifdef ALIAS_NAMES_PERMUTED
if ((s = strrchr (ifp -> ifr_name, ':'))) {
*s = 0;
}
#endif
#ifdef SKIP_DUMMY_INTERFACES
if (!strncmp (ifp -> ifr_name, "dummy", 5))
continue;
#endif
/* See if this is the sort of interface we want to
deal with. */
strcpy (ifr.ifr_name, ifp -> ifr_name);
if (ioctl (sock, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) < 0)
error ("Can't get interface flags for %s: %m",
ifr.ifr_name);
/* Skip loopback, point-to-point and down interfaces,
except don't skip down interfaces if we're trying to
get a list of configurable interfaces. */
if ((ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_LOOPBACK) ||
#ifdef HAVE_IFF_POINTOPOINT
(ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_POINTOPOINT) ||
#endif
(!(ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_UP) &&
state != DISCOVER_UNCONFIGURED))
continue;
/* See if we've seen an interface that matches this one. */
for (tmp = interfaces; tmp; tmp = tmp -> next)
if (!strcmp (tmp -> name, ifp -> ifr_name))
break;
/* If there isn't already an interface by this name,
allocate one. */
if (!tmp) {
tmp = ((struct interface_info *)
dmalloc (sizeof *tmp, "discover_interfaces"));
if (!tmp)
error ("Insufficient memory to %s %s",
"record interface", ifp -> ifr_name);
strcpy (tmp -> name, ifp -> ifr_name);
tmp -> next = interfaces;
tmp -> flags = ir;
interfaces = tmp;
}
/* If we have the capability, extract link information
and record it in a linked list. */
#ifdef HAVE_AF_LINK
if (ifp -> ifr_addr.sa_family == AF_LINK) {
struct sockaddr_dl *foo = ((struct sockaddr_dl *)
(&ifp -> ifr_addr));
tmp -> hw_address.hlen = foo -> sdl_alen;
tmp -> hw_address.htype = HTYPE_ETHER; /* XXX */
memcpy (tmp -> hw_address.haddr,
LLADDR (foo), foo -> sdl_alen);
} else
#endif /* AF_LINK */
if (ifp -> ifr_addr.sa_family == AF_INET) {
struct iaddr addr;
/* Get a pointer to the address... */
memcpy (&foo, &ifp -> ifr_addr,
sizeof ifp -> ifr_addr);
/* We don't want the loopback interface. */
if (foo.sin_addr.s_addr == htonl (INADDR_LOOPBACK))
continue;
/* If this is the first real IP address we've
found, keep a pointer to ifreq structure in
which we found it. */
if (!tmp -> ifp) {
#ifdef HAVE_SA_LEN
int len = ((sizeof ifp -> ifr_name) +
ifp -> ifr_addr.sa_len);
#else
int len = sizeof *ifp;
#endif
tif = (struct ifreq *)malloc (len);
if (!tif)
error ("no space to remember ifp.");
memcpy (tif, ifp, len);
tmp -> ifp = tif;
tmp -> primary_address = foo.sin_addr;
}
/* Grab the address... */
addr.len = 4;
memcpy (addr.iabuf, &foo.sin_addr.s_addr,
addr.len);
/* If there's a registered subnet for this address,
connect it together... */
if ((subnet = find_subnet (addr))) {
/* If this interface has multiple aliases
on the same subnet, ignore all but the
first we encounter. */
if (!subnet -> interface) {
subnet -> interface = tmp;
subnet -> interface_address = addr;
} else if (subnet -> interface != tmp) {
warn ("Multiple %s %s: %s %s",
"interfaces match the",
"same subnet",
subnet -> interface -> name,
tmp -> name);
}
share = subnet -> shared_network;
if (tmp -> shared_network &&
tmp -> shared_network != share) {
warn ("Interface %s matches %s",
tmp -> name,
"multiple shared networks");
} else {
tmp -> shared_network = share;
}
if (!share -> interface) {
share -> interface = tmp;
} else if (share -> interface != tmp) {
warn ("Multiple %s %s: %s %s",
"interfaces match the",
"same shared network",
share -> interface -> name,
tmp -> name);
}
}
}
}
#if defined (LINUX_SLASHPROC_DISCOVERY)
/* On Linux, interfaces that don't have IP addresses don't show up
in the SIOCGIFCONF syscall. We got away with this prior to
Linux 2.1 because we would give each interface an IP address of
0.0.0.0 before trying to boot, but that doesn't work after 2.1
because we're using LPF, because we can't configure interfaces
with IP addresses of 0.0.0.0 anymore (grumble). This only
matters for the DHCP client, of course - the relay agent and
server should only care about interfaces that are configured
with IP addresses anyway.
The PROCDEV_DEVICE (/proc/net/dev) is a kernel-supplied file
that, when read, prints a human readable network status. We
extract the names of the network devices by skipping the first
two lines (which are header) and then parsing off everything
up to the colon in each subsequent line - these lines start
with the interface name, then a colon, then a bunch of
statistics. Yes, Virgina, this is a kludge, but you work
with what you have. */
if (state == DISCOVER_UNCONFIGURED) {
FILE *proc_dev;
char buffer [256];
int skip = 2;
proc_dev = fopen (PROCDEV_DEVICE, "r");
if (!proc_dev)
error ("%s: %m", PROCDEV_DEVICE);
while (fgets (buffer, sizeof buffer, proc_dev)) {
char *name = buffer;
char *sep;
/* Skip the first two blocks, which are header
lines. */
if (skip) {
--skip;
continue;
}
sep = strrchr (buffer, ':');
if (sep)
*sep = '\0';
while (*name == ' ')
name++;
/* See if we've seen an interface that matches
this one. */
for (tmp = interfaces; tmp; tmp = tmp -> next)
if (!strcmp (tmp -> name, name))
break;
/* If we found one, nothing more to do.. */
if (tmp)
continue;
/* Otherwise, allocate one. */
tmp = ((struct interface_info *)
dmalloc (sizeof *tmp, "discover_interfaces"));
if (!tmp)
error ("Insufficient memory to %s %s",
"record interface", name);
memset (tmp, 0, sizeof *tmp);
strcpy (tmp -> name, name);
tmp -> flags = ir;
tmp -> next = interfaces;
interfaces = tmp;
}
fclose (proc_dev);
}
#endif
/* Now cycle through all the interfaces we found, looking for
hardware addresses. */
#if defined (HAVE_SIOCGIFHWADDR) && !defined (HAVE_AF_LINK)
for (tmp = interfaces; tmp; tmp = tmp -> next) {
struct ifreq ifr;
struct sockaddr sa;
int b, sk;
if (!tmp -> ifp) {
/* Make up an ifreq structure. */
tif = (struct ifreq *)malloc (sizeof (struct ifreq));
if (!tif)
error ("no space to remember ifp.");
memset (tif, 0, sizeof (struct ifreq));
strcpy (tif -> ifr_name, tmp -> name);
tmp -> ifp = tif;
}
/* Read the hardware address from this interface. */
ifr = *tmp -> ifp;
if (ioctl (sock, SIOCGIFHWADDR, &ifr) < 0)
continue;
sa = *(struct sockaddr *)&ifr.ifr_hwaddr;
switch (sa.sa_family) {
#ifdef HAVE_ARPHRD_TUNNEL
case ARPHRD_TUNNEL:
/* ignore tunnel interfaces. */
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_ARPHRD_ROSE
case ARPHRD_ROSE:
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_ARPHRD_LOOPBACK
case ARPHRD_LOOPBACK:
/* ignore loopback interface */
break;
#endif
case ARPHRD_ETHER:
tmp -> hw_address.hlen = 6;
tmp -> hw_address.htype = ARPHRD_ETHER;
memcpy (tmp -> hw_address.haddr, sa.sa_data, 6);
break;
#ifndef HAVE_ARPHRD_IEEE802
# define ARPHRD_IEEE802 HTYPE_IEEE802
#endif
case ARPHRD_IEEE802:
tmp -> hw_address.hlen = 6;
tmp -> hw_address.htype = ARPHRD_IEEE802;
memcpy (tmp -> hw_address.haddr, sa.sa_data, 6);
break;
#ifndef HAVE_ARPHRD_FDDI
# define ARPHRD_FDDI HTYPE_FDDI
#endif
case ARPHRD_FDDI:
tmp -> hw_address.hlen = 16;
tmp -> hw_address.htype = HTYPE_FDDI; /* XXX */
memcpy (tmp -> hw_address.haddr, sa.sa_data, 16);
break;
#ifdef HAVE_ARPHRD_METRICOM
case ARPHRD_METRICOM:
tmp -> hw_address.hlen = 6;
tmp -> hw_address.htype = ARPHRD_METRICOM;
memcpy (tmp -> hw_address.haddr, sa.sa_data, 6);
break;
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_ARPHRD_AX25
case ARPHRD_AX25:
tmp -> hw_address.hlen = 6;
tmp -> hw_address.htype = ARPHRD_AX25;
memcpy (tmp -> hw_address.haddr, sa.sa_data, 6);
break;
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_ARPHRD_NETROM
case ARPHRD_NETROM:
tmp -> hw_address.hlen = 6;
tmp -> hw_address.htype = ARPHRD_NETROM;
memcpy (tmp -> hw_address.haddr, sa.sa_data, 6);
break;
#endif
default:
warn ("%s: unknown hardware address type %d",
ifr.ifr_name, sa.sa_family);
break;
}
}
#endif /* defined (HAVE_SIOCGIFHWADDR) && !defined (HAVE_AF_LINK) */
/* If we're just trying to get a list of interfaces that we might
be able to configure, we can quit now. */
if (state == DISCOVER_UNCONFIGURED)
return;
/* Weed out the interfaces that did not have IP addresses. */
last = (struct interface_info *)0;
for (tmp = interfaces; tmp; tmp = next) {
next = tmp -> next;
if ((tmp -> flags & INTERFACE_AUTOMATIC) &&
state == DISCOVER_REQUESTED)
tmp -> flags &= ~(INTERFACE_AUTOMATIC |
INTERFACE_REQUESTED);
if (!tmp -> ifp || !(tmp -> flags & INTERFACE_REQUESTED)) {
if ((tmp -> flags & INTERFACE_REQUESTED) != ir)
error ("%s: not found", tmp -> name);
if (!last)
interfaces = interfaces -> next;
else
last -> next = tmp -> next;
/* Remember the interface in case we need to know
about it later. */
tmp -> next = dummy_interfaces;
dummy_interfaces = tmp;
continue;
}
last = tmp;
memcpy (&foo, &tmp -> ifp -> ifr_addr,
sizeof tmp -> ifp -> ifr_addr);
/* We must have a subnet declaration for each interface. */
if (!tmp -> shared_network && (state == DISCOVER_SERVER)) {
warn ("No subnet declaration for %s (%s).",
tmp -> name, inet_ntoa (foo.sin_addr));
warn ("Please write a subnet declaration for the %s",
"network segment to");
error ("which interface %s is attached.", tmp -> name);
}
/* Find subnets that don't have valid interface
addresses... */
for (subnet = (tmp -> shared_network
? tmp -> shared_network -> subnets
: (struct subnet *)0);
subnet; subnet = subnet -> next_sibling) {
if (!subnet -> interface_address.len) {
/* Set the interface address for this subnet
to the first address we found. */
subnet -> interface_address.len = 4;
memcpy (subnet -> interface_address.iabuf,
&foo.sin_addr.s_addr, 4);
}
}
/* Register the interface... */
if_register_receive (tmp);
if_register_send (tmp);
}
/* Now register all the remaining interfaces as protocols. */
for (tmp = interfaces; tmp; tmp = tmp -> next)
add_protocol (tmp -> name, tmp -> rfdesc, got_one, tmp);
close (sock);
maybe_setup_fallback ();
}
struct interface_info *setup_fallback ()
{
fallback_interface =
((struct interface_info *)
dmalloc (sizeof *fallback_interface, "discover_interfaces"));
if (!fallback_interface)
error ("Insufficient memory to record fallback interface.");
memset (fallback_interface, 0, sizeof *fallback_interface);
strcpy (fallback_interface -> name, "fallback");
fallback_interface -> shared_network =
new_shared_network ("parse_statement");
if (!fallback_interface -> shared_network)
error ("No memory for shared subnet");
memset (fallback_interface -> shared_network, 0,
sizeof (struct shared_network));
fallback_interface -> shared_network -> name = "fallback-net";
return fallback_interface;
}
void reinitialize_interfaces ()
{
struct interface_info *ip;
for (ip = interfaces; ip; ip = ip -> next) {
if_reinitialize_receive (ip);
if_reinitialize_send (ip);
}
if (fallback_interface)
if_reinitialize_send (fallback_interface);
interfaces_invalidated = 1;
}
#ifdef USE_POLL
/* Wait for packets to come in using poll(). When a packet comes in,
call receive_packet to receive the packet and possibly strip hardware
addressing information from it, and then call through the
bootp_packet_handler hook to try to do something with it. */
void dispatch ()
{
struct protocol *l;
int nfds = 0;
struct pollfd *fds;
int count;
int i;
int to_msec;
nfds = 0;
for (l = protocols; l; l = l -> next) {
++nfds;
}
fds = (struct pollfd *)malloc ((nfds) * sizeof (struct pollfd));
if (!fds)
error ("Can't allocate poll structures.");
do {
/* Call any expired timeouts, and then if there's
still a timeout registered, time out the select
call then. */
another:
if (timeouts) {
struct timeout *t;
if (timeouts -> when <= cur_time) {
t = timeouts;
timeouts = timeouts -> next;
(*(t -> func)) (t -> what);
t -> next = free_timeouts;
free_timeouts = t;
goto another;
}
/* Figure timeout in milliseconds, and check for
potential overflow. We assume that integers
are 32 bits, which is harmless if they're 64
bits - we'll just get extra timeouts in that
case. Lease times would have to be quite
long in order for a 32-bit integer to overflow,
anyway. */
to_msec = timeouts -> when - cur_time;
if (to_msec > 2147483)
to_msec = 2147483;
to_msec *= 1000;
} else
to_msec = -1;
/* Set up the descriptors to be polled. */
i = 0;
for (l = protocols; l; l = l -> next) {
fds [i].fd = l -> fd;
fds [i].events = POLLIN;
fds [i].revents = 0;
++i;
}
/* Wait for a packet or a timeout... XXX */
count = poll (fds, nfds, to_msec);
/* Get the current time... */
GET_TIME (&cur_time);
/* Not likely to be transitory... */
if (count < 0) {
if (errno == EAGAIN || errno == EINTR)
continue;
else
error ("poll: %m");
}
i = 0;
for (l = protocols; l; l = l -> next) {
if ((fds [i].revents & POLLIN)) {
fds [i].revents = 0;
if (l -> handler)
(*(l -> handler)) (l);
if (interfaces_invalidated)
break;
}
++i;
}
interfaces_invalidated = 0;
} while (1);
}
#else
/* Wait for packets to come in using select(). When one does, call
receive_packet to receive the packet and possibly strip hardware
addressing information from it, and then call through the
bootp_packet_handler hook to try to do something with it. */
void dispatch ()
{
fd_set r, w, x;
struct protocol *l;
int max = 0;
int count;
struct timeval tv, *tvp;
FD_ZERO (&w);
FD_ZERO (&x);
do {
/* Call any expired timeouts, and then if there's
still a timeout registered, time out the select
call then. */
another:
if (timeouts) {
struct timeout *t;
if (timeouts -> when <= cur_time) {
t = timeouts;
timeouts = timeouts -> next;
(*(t -> func)) (t -> what);
t -> next = free_timeouts;
free_timeouts = t;
goto another;
}
tv.tv_sec = timeouts -> when - cur_time;
tv.tv_usec = 0;
tvp = &tv;
} else
tvp = (struct timeval *)0;
/* Set up the read mask. */
FD_ZERO (&r);
for (l = protocols; l; l = l -> next) {
FD_SET (l -> fd, &r);
if (l -> fd > max)
max = l -> fd;
}
/* Wait for a packet or a timeout... XXX */
count = select (max + 1, &r, &w, &x, tvp);
/* Get the current time... */
GET_TIME (&cur_time);
/* Not likely to be transitory... */
if (count < 0)
error ("select: %m");
for (l = protocols; l; l = l -> next) {
if (!FD_ISSET (l -> fd, &r))
continue;
if (l -> handler)
(*(l -> handler)) (l);
if (interfaces_invalidated)
break;
}
interfaces_invalidated = 0;
} while (1);
}
#endif /* USE_POLL */
void got_one (l)
struct protocol *l;
{
struct sockaddr_in from;
struct hardware hfrom;
struct iaddr ifrom;
int result;
union {
unsigned char packbuf [4095]; /* Packet input buffer.
Must be as large as largest
possible MTU. */
struct dhcp_packet packet;
} u;
struct interface_info *ip = l -> local;
if ((result =
receive_packet (ip, u.packbuf, sizeof u, &from, &hfrom)) < 0) {
warn ("receive_packet failed on %s: %m", ip -> name);
return;
}
if (result == 0)
return;
if (bootp_packet_handler) {
ifrom.len = 4;
memcpy (ifrom.iabuf, &from.sin_addr, ifrom.len);
(*bootp_packet_handler) (ip, &u.packet, result,
from.sin_port, ifrom, &hfrom);
}
}
int locate_network (packet)
struct packet *packet;
{
struct iaddr ia;
/* If this came through a gateway, find the corresponding subnet... */
if (packet -> raw -> giaddr.s_addr) {
struct subnet *subnet;
ia.len = 4;
memcpy (ia.iabuf, &packet -> raw -> giaddr, 4);
subnet = find_subnet (ia);
if (subnet)
packet -> shared_network = subnet -> shared_network;
else
packet -> shared_network = (struct shared_network *)0;
} else {
packet -> shared_network =
packet -> interface -> shared_network;
}
if (packet -> shared_network)
return 1;
return 0;
}
void add_timeout (when, where, what)
TIME when;
void (*where) PROTO ((void *));
void *what;
{
struct timeout *t, *q;
/* See if this timeout supersedes an existing timeout. */
t = (struct timeout *)0;
for (q = timeouts; q; q = q -> next) {
if (q -> func == where && q -> what == what) {
if (t)
t -> next = q -> next;
else
timeouts = q -> next;
break;
}
t = q;
}
/* If we didn't supersede a timeout, allocate a timeout
structure now. */
if (!q) {
if (free_timeouts) {
q = free_timeouts;
free_timeouts = q -> next;
q -> func = where;
q -> what = what;
} else {
q = (struct timeout *)malloc (sizeof (struct timeout));
if (!q)
error ("Can't allocate timeout structure!");
q -> func = where;
q -> what = what;
}
}
q -> when = when;
/* Now sort this timeout into the timeout list. */
/* Beginning of list? */
if (!timeouts || timeouts -> when > q -> when) {
q -> next = timeouts;
timeouts = q;
return;
}
/* Middle of list? */
for (t = timeouts; t -> next; t = t -> next) {
if (t -> next -> when > q -> when) {
q -> next = t -> next;
t -> next = q;
return;
}
}
/* End of list. */
t -> next = q;
q -> next = (struct timeout *)0;
}
void cancel_timeout (where, what)
void (*where) PROTO ((void *));
void *what;
{
struct timeout *t, *q;
/* Look for this timeout on the list, and unlink it if we find it. */
t = (struct timeout *)0;
for (q = timeouts; q; q = q -> next) {
if (q -> func == where && q -> what == what) {
if (t)
t -> next = q -> next;
else
timeouts = q -> next;
break;
}
t = q;
}
/* If we found the timeout, put it on the free list. */
if (q) {
q -> next = free_timeouts;
free_timeouts = q;
}
}
/* Add a protocol to the list of protocols... */
void add_protocol (name, fd, handler, local)
char *name;
int fd;
void (*handler) PROTO ((struct protocol *));
void *local;
{
struct protocol *p;
p = (struct protocol *)malloc (sizeof *p);
if (!p)
error ("can't allocate protocol struct for %s", name);
p -> fd = fd;
p -> handler = handler;
p -> local = local;
p -> next = protocols;
protocols = p;
}
void remove_protocol (proto)
struct protocol *proto;
{
struct protocol *p, *next, *prev;
prev = (struct protocol *)0;
for (p = protocols; p; p = next) {
next = p -> next;
if (p == proto) {
if (prev)
prev -> next = p -> next;
else
protocols = p -> next;
free (p);
}
}
}