freebsd-nq/usr.sbin/ppp/udp.c

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Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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/*-
* Copyright (c) 1999 Brian Somers <brian@Awfulhak.org>
* 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.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR 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 AUTHOR 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.
*
1999-08-28 01:35:59 +00:00
* $FreeBSD$
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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*/
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <netdb.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sysexits.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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#include <sys/uio.h>
#include <termios.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include "layer.h"
#include "defs.h"
#include "mbuf.h"
#include "log.h"
#include "timer.h"
#include "lqr.h"
#include "hdlc.h"
#include "throughput.h"
#include "fsm.h"
#include "lcp.h"
#include "ccp.h"
#include "link.h"
#include "async.h"
#include "descriptor.h"
#include "physical.h"
#include "main.h"
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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#include "udp.h"
#define UDP_CONNECTED 1
#define UDP_UNCONNECTED 2
#define UDP_MAYBEUNCONNECTED 3
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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struct udpdevice {
struct device dev; /* What struct physical knows about */
struct sockaddr_in sock; /* peer address */
unsigned connected : 2; /* Have we connect()d ? */
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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};
#define device2udp(d) ((d)->type == UDP_DEVICE ? (struct udpdevice *)d : NULL)
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unsigned
udp_DeviceSize(void)
{
return sizeof(struct udpdevice);
}
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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static ssize_t
udp_Sendto(struct physical *p, const void *v, size_t n)
{
struct udpdevice *dev = device2udp(p->handler);
int ret;
switch (dev->connected) {
case UDP_CONNECTED:
ret = write(p->fd, v, n);
break;
case UDP_UNCONNECTED:
default:
ret = sendto(p->fd, v, n, 0, (struct sockaddr *)&dev->sock,
sizeof dev->sock);
break;
}
if (dev->connected == UDP_MAYBEUNCONNECTED) {
if (ret == -1 && errno == EISCONN) {
dev->connected = UDP_CONNECTED;
ret = write(p->fd, v, n);
} else
dev->connected = UDP_UNCONNECTED;
}
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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return ret;
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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}
static ssize_t
udp_Recvfrom(struct physical *p, void *v, size_t n)
{
struct udpdevice *dev = device2udp(p->handler);
int sz, ret;
if (dev->connected == UDP_CONNECTED)
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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return read(p->fd, v, n);
sz = sizeof dev->sock;
ret = recvfrom(p->fd, v, n, 0, (struct sockaddr *)&dev->sock, &sz);
if (*p->name.full == '\0') {
snprintf(p->name.full, sizeof p->name.full, "%s:%d/udp",
inet_ntoa(dev->sock.sin_addr), ntohs(dev->sock.sin_port));
p->name.base = p->name.full;
}
return ret;
}
static void
udp_Free(struct physical *p)
{
struct udpdevice *dev = device2udp(p->handler);
free(dev);
}
static void
udp_device2iov(struct device *d, struct iovec *iov, int *niov,
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int maxiov __unused, int *auxfd __unused, int *nauxfd __unused)
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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{
int sz = physical_MaxDeviceSize();
iov[*niov].iov_base = realloc(d, sz);
if (iov[*niov].iov_base == NULL) {
log_Printf(LogALERT, "Failed to allocate memory: %d\n", sz);
AbortProgram(EX_OSERR);
}
iov[*niov].iov_len = sz;
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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(*niov)++;
}
static const struct device baseudpdevice = {
UDP_DEVICE,
"udp",
0,
{ CD_NOTREQUIRED, 0 },
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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NULL,
NULL,
NULL,
NULL,
NULL,
NULL,
NULL,
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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udp_Free,
udp_Recvfrom,
udp_Sendto,
udp_device2iov,
NULL,
NULL,
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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NULL
};
struct device *
udp_iov2device(int type, struct physical *p, struct iovec *iov, int *niov,
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int maxiov __unused, int *auxfd __unused, int *nauxfd __unused)
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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{
if (type == UDP_DEVICE) {
struct udpdevice *dev = (struct udpdevice *)iov[(*niov)++].iov_base;
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
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dev = realloc(dev, sizeof *dev); /* Reduce to the correct size */
if (dev == NULL) {
log_Printf(LogALERT, "Failed to allocate memory: %d\n",
(int)(sizeof *dev));
AbortProgram(EX_OSERR);
}
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
/* Refresh function pointers etc */
memcpy(&dev->dev, &baseudpdevice, sizeof dev->dev);
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
physical_SetupStack(p, dev->dev.name, PHYSICAL_FORCE_SYNC);
return &dev->dev;
}
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
return NULL;
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
}
static struct udpdevice *
udp_CreateDevice(struct physical *p, char *host, char *port)
{
struct udpdevice *dev;
struct servent *sp;
if ((dev = malloc(sizeof *dev)) == NULL) {
log_Printf(LogWARN, "%s: Cannot allocate a udp device: %s\n",
p->link.name, strerror(errno));
return NULL;
}
dev->sock.sin_family = AF_INET;
dev->sock.sin_addr = GetIpAddr(host);
if (dev->sock.sin_addr.s_addr == INADDR_NONE) {
log_Printf(LogWARN, "%s: %s: unknown host\n", p->link.name, host);
free(dev);
return NULL;
}
dev->sock.sin_port = htons(atoi(port));
if (dev->sock.sin_port == 0) {
sp = getservbyname(port, "udp");
if (sp)
dev->sock.sin_port = sp->s_port;
else {
log_Printf(LogWARN, "%s: %s: unknown service\n", p->link.name, port);
free(dev);
return NULL;
}
}
log_Printf(LogPHASE, "%s: Connecting to %s:%s/udp\n", p->link.name,
host, port);
p->fd = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0);
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
if (p->fd >= 0) {
log_Printf(LogDEBUG, "%s: Opened udp socket %s\n", p->link.name,
p->name.full);
if (connect(p->fd, (struct sockaddr *)&dev->sock, sizeof dev->sock) == 0) {
dev->connected = UDP_CONNECTED;
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
return dev;
} else
log_Printf(LogWARN, "%s: connect: %s\n", p->name.full, strerror(errno));
} else
log_Printf(LogWARN, "%s: socket: %s\n", p->name.full, strerror(errno));
close(p->fd);
p->fd = -1;
free(dev);
return NULL;
}
struct device *
udp_Create(struct physical *p)
{
char *cp, *host, *port, *svc;
struct udpdevice *dev;
dev = NULL;
if (p->fd < 0) {
if ((cp = strchr(p->name.full, ':')) != NULL && !strchr(cp + 1, ':')) {
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
*cp = '\0';
host = p->name.full;
port = cp + 1;
svc = strchr(port, '/');
if (svc && strcasecmp(svc, "/udp")) {
*cp = ':';
return NULL;
}
if (svc) {
p->fd--; /* We own the device but maybe can't use it - change fd */
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
*svc = '\0';
}
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
if (*host && *port)
dev = udp_CreateDevice(p, host, port);
*cp = ':';
if (svc)
*svc = '/';
}
} else {
/* See if we're a connected udp socket */
struct stat st;
if (fstat(p->fd, &st) != -1 && (st.st_mode & S_IFSOCK)) {
int type, sz;
sz = sizeof type;
if (getsockopt(p->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_TYPE, &type, &sz) == -1) {
log_Printf(LogPHASE, "%s: Link is a closed socket !\n", p->link.name);
close(p->fd);
p->fd = -1;
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
return NULL;
}
if (sz == sizeof type && type == SOCK_DGRAM) {
struct sockaddr_in sock;
struct sockaddr *sockp = (struct sockaddr *)&sock;
if ((dev = malloc(sizeof *dev)) == NULL) {
log_Printf(LogWARN, "%s: Cannot allocate a udp device: %s\n",
p->link.name, strerror(errno));
return NULL;
}
if (getpeername(p->fd, sockp, &sz) == 0) {
log_Printf(LogPHASE, "%s: Link is a connected udp socket\n",
p->link.name);
dev->connected = UDP_CONNECTED;
} else {
log_Printf(LogPHASE, "%s: Link is a disconnected udp socket\n",
p->link.name);
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
dev->connected = UDP_MAYBEUNCONNECTED;
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
if (p->link.lcp.cfg.openmode != OPEN_PASSIVE) {
log_Printf(LogPHASE, "%s: Changing openmode to PASSIVE\n",
p->link.name);
p->link.lcp.cfg.openmode = OPEN_PASSIVE;
}
}
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
}
}
}
if (dev) {
memcpy(&dev->dev, &baseudpdevice, sizeof dev->dev);
physical_SetupStack(p, dev->dev.name, PHYSICAL_FORCE_SYNC);
if (p->cfg.cd.necessity != CD_DEFAULT)
log_Printf(LogWARN, "Carrier settings ignored\n");
Allow ``host:port/udp'' devices and support ``host:port/tcp'' as being the same as the previous (still supported) ``host:port'' syntax for tcp socket devices. A udp device uses synchronous ppp rather than async, and avoids the double-retransmit overhead that comes with ppp over tcp (it's usually a bad idea to transport IP over a reliable transport that itself is using an unreliable transport). PPP over UDP provides througput of ** 1.5Mb per second ** with all compression disabled, maxing out a PPro/200 when running ppp twice, back-to-back. This proves that PPPoE is plausable in userland.... This change adds a few more handler functions to struct device and allows derivations of struct device (which may contain their own data etc) to pass themselves through the unix domain socket for MP. ** At last **, struct physical has lost all the tty crud ! iov2physical() is now smart enough to restore the correct stack of layers so that MP servers will work again. The version number has bumped as our MP link transfer contents have changed (they now may contain a `struct device'). Don't extract the protocol twice in MP mode (resulting in protocol rejects for every MP packet). This was broken with my original layering changes. Add ``Physical'' and ``Sync'' log levels for logging the relevent raw packets and add protocol-tracking LogDEBUG stuff in various LayerPush & LayerPull functions. Assign our physical device name for incoming tcp connections by calling getpeername(). Assign our physical device name for incoming udp connections from the address retrieved by the first recvfrom().
1999-05-12 09:49:12 +00:00
return &dev->dev;
}
return NULL;
}