| NG_KSOCKET(4) | Device Drivers Manual | NG_KSOCKET(4) |
ng_ksocket —
kernel socket netgraph node type
#include
<sys/types.h>
#include
<netgraph/ng_ksocket.h>
A ksocket node is both a netgraph node and
a BSD socket. The ng_ksocket
node type allows one to open a socket inside the kernel and have it appear
as a Netgraph node. The ng_ksocket node type is the
reverse of the socket node type (see ng_socket(4)):
whereas the socket node type enables the user-level manipulation (via a
socket) of what is normally a kernel-level entity (the associated Netgraph
node), the ng_ksocket node type enables the
kernel-level manipulation (via a Netgraph node) of what is normally a
user-level entity (the associated socket).
A ng_ksocket node allows at most one hook
connection. Connecting to the node is equivalent to opening the associated
socket. The name given to the hook determines what kind of socket the node
will open (see below). When the hook is disconnected and/or the node is
shutdown, the associated socket is closed.
This node type supports a single hook connection at a time. The
name of the hook must be of the form
<family>/<type>/<proto>,
where the
family,
type, and
proto
are the decimal equivalent of the same arguments to
socket(2). Alternately, aliases for the commonly used
values are accepted as well. For example
inet/dgram/udp is a more readable but equivalent
version of 2/2/17.
Data received into socket is sent out via hook. Data received on
hook is sent out from socket, if the latter is connected (an
NGM_KSOCKET_CONNECT was sent to node before). If
socket is not connected, destination struct sockaddr
must be supplied in an mbuf tag with cookie
NGM_KSOCKET_COOKIE and type
NG_KSOCKET_TAG_SOCKADDR attached to data. Otherwise
ng_ksocket will return
ENOTCONN to sender.
This node type supports the generic control messages, plus the following:
NGM_KSOCKET_BIND
(bind)NGM_KSOCKET_LISTEN
(listen)int) should
be supplied as an argument.NGM_KSOCKET_CONNECT
(connect)NGM_KSOCKET_ACCEPT
(accept)A cloned node supports a single hook with an arbitrary name. If not connected, a node disappears when its parent node is destroyed. Once connected, it becomes an independent node.
NGM_KSOCKET_GETNAME
(getname)NGM_KSOCKET_GETPEERNAME
(getpeername)NGM_KSOCKET_SETOPT
(setopt)NGM_KSOCKET_GETOPT
(getopt)value field should
be empty; upon return, it will contain the retrieved value.For control messages that pass a struct
sockaddr in the argument field, the normal ASCII equivalent of the C
structure is an acceptable form. For the PF_INET and
PF_LOCAL address families, a more convenient form is
also used, which is the protocol family name, followed by a slash, followed
by the actual address. For PF_INET, the address is
an IP address followed by an optional colon and port number. For
PF_LOCAL, the address is the pathname as a doubly
quoted string.
Examples:
PF_LOCALPF_INET{ family=16 len=16
data=[0x70 0x00 0x01 0x23] }For control messages that pass a struct ng_ksocket_sockopt, the normal ASCII form for that structure is used. In the future, more convenient encoding of the more common socket options may be supported.
Setting socket options example:
setopt { level=0xffff
name=0x1014 data=[ 2 ] }This node shuts down upon receipt of a
NGM_SHUTDOWN control message, or when the hook is
disconnected. Shutdown of the node closes the associated socket.
socket(2), netgraph(4), ng_socket(4), ngctl(8), mbuf_tags(9), socket(9)
The ng_ksocket node type was implemented
in FreeBSD 4.0.
Archie Cobbs <archie@FreeBSD.org>
| January 9, 2012 | Debian |