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332 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
332 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
.NC "The Design of Unix IPC"
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.sh 1 "General"
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.pp
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The ARGO implementation of
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TP and CLNP was designed to fit into the AOS
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kernel
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as easily as possible.
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All the standard protocol hooks are used.
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To understand the design, it is useful to have
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read
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Leffler, Joy, and Fabry:
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\*(lq4.2 BSD Networking Implementation Notes\*(rq July 1983.
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This section describes the
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design of the IPC support in the AOS kernel.
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.sh 1 "Functional Unit Overview"
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.pp
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The
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AOS
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kernel
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is a monolithic program of considerable size and complexity.
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The code can be separated into parts of distinct function,
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but there are no kernel processes per se.
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The kernel code is either executed on behalf of a user
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process, in which case the kernel was entered by a system call,
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or it is executed on behalf of a hardware or software interrupt.
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The following sections describe briefly the major functional units
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of the kernel.
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.\" FIGURE
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.so ../wisc/figs/func_units.nr
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.CF
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shows the arrangement of these kernel units and
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their interactions.
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.sh 2 "The file system."
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.pp
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.sh 2 "Virtual memory support."
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.pp
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This includes protection, swapping, paging, and
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text sharing.
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.sh 2 "Blocked device drivers (disks, tapes)."
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.pp
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All these drivers share some minor functional units,
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such as buffer management and bus support
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for the various types of busses on the machine.
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.sh 2 "Interprocess communication (IPC)."
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.pp
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This includes
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support for various protocols,
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buffer management, and a standard interface for inter-protocol
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communication.
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.sh 2 "Network interface drivers."
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.pp
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These drivers are closely tied to the IPC support.
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They use the IPC's buffer management unit rather
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than the buffers used by the blocked device drivers.
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The interface between these drivers and the rest of the kernel
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differs from the interface used by the blocked devices.
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.sh 2 "Tty driver"
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.pp
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This is terminal support, including the user interface
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and the device drivers.
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.sh 2 "System call interface."
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.pp
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This handles signals, traps, and system calls.
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.sh 2 "Clock."
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.pp
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The clock is used in various forms by many
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other units.
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.sh 2 "User process support (the rest)."
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.pp
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This includes support for accounting, process creation,
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control, scheduling, and destruction.
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.pp
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.sh 2 "IPC"
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.pp
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The major functional unit that supports IPC
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can be divided into the following smaller functional
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units.
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.sh 3 "Buffer management."
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.pp
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All protocols share a pool of buffers called \fImbufs\fR.
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The internal structure has changed considerably since 4.3:
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.(b
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\fC
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.TS
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tab(+);
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l s s s.
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struct mbuf {
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.T&
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l l l l.
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+struct mbuf+*m_next;+/* next buffer in chain */
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+struct mbuf+*m_act;+/* link in 2-d structure */
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+u_long+m_len;+/* amount of data */
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+char *+m_data;+/* location of data */
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+short+m_type;+/* type of data */
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+short+m_flags;+/* note if EOR, Packet HDR, Ext. stored */
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+++/* If packet header add: */
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int+m_pkthdr.len;+/* total packet length */
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struct ifnet+*m_pkthdr.recvif;+/* rcv interface*/
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+++/* If external storage add: */
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+char +*m_ext.ext_buf;+/* start of buffer */
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+void+(*m_ext.ext_free)();+/* free routine if not the usual */
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+u_int+m_ext.ext_size;+/* size of buffer, for ext_free */
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+++/* For non external */
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+char+m_dat[depending];+/* done by unions, etc. */
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};
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.TE
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\fR
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.)b
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.pp
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There are two forms of mbufs - with and without external storage.
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Small ones are 128 octets in 4.4BSD.
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The data in these mbufs are located
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in the mbuf structure itself.
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Large mbufs, called \fIclusters\fR, are page-sized
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and page-aligned.
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They may be \*(lqcopied\*(rq by multiply mapping the pages they occupy.
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They consist of a page of memory plus a small mbuf structure
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whose fields are used
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to link clusters into chains, but whose \fIm_dat\fR array is
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not used.
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The \fIm_data\fR field of the structure
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is a pointer to the active data in all cases.
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The remainder of the description in the argo document
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is generally obsolete, and I am merely deleting the
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rest of it at this point.
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.sh 3 "Routing."
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.pp
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Routing decisions in the kernel are made by the procedure \fIrtalloc()\fR.
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This procedure will scan the kernel routing tables (stored in mbufs)
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looking for a route.
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The argo document here also is quite obsolete.
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We know keep a tree structure routing table,
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and do matching under masks.
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The structure for the routing entry contains tree related
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stuff pointers (parent, l-r child for internal nodes, mask and address
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for external nodes), and may be completely revised again
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to make use of patricia trees.
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.pp
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If a route is not found, then a default route is used (if present).
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.pp
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If a route is found, the entity which called \fIrtalloc()\fR can use information
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from the \fIrtentry\fR structure to dispatch the datagram. Specifically, the
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datagram is queued on the interface identified by the interface
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pointer \fIrt_ifp\fR.
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.sh 3 "Socket code."
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.pp
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This is the protocol-independent part of the IPC support.
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Each communication endpoint (which may or may not be associated
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with a connection) is represented by the following structure:
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.(b
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\fC
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.TS
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tab(+);
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l s s s.
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struct socket {
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.T&
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l l l l.
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+short+so_type;+/* type, e.g. SOCK_DGRAM */
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+short+so_options;+/* from socket call */
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+short+so_linger;+/* time to linger @ close */
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+short+so_state;+/* internal state flags */
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+caddr_t+so_pcb;+/* network layer pcb */
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+struct protosw+*so_proto;+/* protocol handle */
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+struct socket+*so_head;+/* ptr to accept socket */
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+struct socket+*so_q0;+/* queue of partial connX */
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+short+so_q0len;+/* # partials on so_q0 */
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+struct socket+*so_q;+/* queue of incoming connX */
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+short+so_qlen;+/* # connections on so_q */
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+short+so_qlimit;+/* max # queued connX */
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+struct sockbuf+{
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++short+sb_cc;+/* actual chars in buffer */
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++short+sb_hiwat;+/* max actual char count */
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++short+sb_mbcnt;+/* chars of mbufs used */
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++short+sb_mbmax;+/* max chars of mbufs to use */
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++short+sb_lowat;+/* low water mark (not used yet) */
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++short+sb_timeo;+/* timeout (not used ) */
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++struct mbuf+*sb_mb;+/* the mbuf chain */
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++struct proc+*sb_sel;+/* process selecting */
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++short+sb_flags;+/* flags, see below */
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+} so_rcv, so_snd;
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+short+so_timeo;+/* connection timeout */
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+u_short+so_error;+/* error affecting connX */
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+short+so_oobmark;+/* oob mark (TCP only) */
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+short+so_pgrp;+/* pgrp for signals */
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}
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.TE
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\fR
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.)b
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.pp
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The socket code maintains a pair of queues for each socket,
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\fIso_rcv\fR and \fIso_snd\fR.
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Each queue is associated with a count of the number of characters
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in the queue, the maximum number of characters allowed to be put
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in the queue, some status information (\fIsb_flags\fR), and
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several unused fields.
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For a send operation, data are copied from the user's address space
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into chains of mbufs.
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This is done by the socket module, which then calls the underlying
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transport protocol module to place the data
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on the send queue.
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This is generally done by
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appending to the chain beginning at \fIsb_mb\fR.
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The socket module copies data from the \fIso_rcv\fR queue
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to the user's address space to effect a receive operation.
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The underlying transport layer is expected to have put incoming
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data into \fIso_rcv\fR by calling procedures in this module.
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.in -5
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.sh 3 "Transport protocol management."
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.pp
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All protocols and address types must be \*(lqregistered\*(rq in a
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common way in order to use the IPC user interface.
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Each protocol must have an entry in a protocol switch table.
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Each entry takes the form:
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.(b
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\fC
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.TS
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tab(+);
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l s s s.
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struct protosw {
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.T&
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l l l l.
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+short+pr_type;+/* socket type used for */
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+short+pr_family;+/* protocol family */
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+short+pr_protocol;+/* protocol # from the database */
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+short+pr_flags;+/* status information */
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+++/* protocol-protocol hooks */
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+int+(*pr_input)();+/* input (from below) */
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+int+(*pr_output)();+/* output (from above) */
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+int+(*pr_ctlinput)();+/* control input */
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+int+(*pr_ctloutput)();+/* control output */
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+++/* user-protocol hook */
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+int+(*pr_usrreq)();+/* user request: see list below */
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+++/* utility hooks */
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+int+(*pr_init)();+/* initialization hook */
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+int+(*pr_fasttimo)();+/* fast timeout (200ms) */
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+int+(*pr_slowtimo)();+/* slow timeout (500ms) */
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+int+(*pr_drain)();+/* free some space (not used) */
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}
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.TE
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\fR
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.)b
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.pp
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Associated with each protocol are the types of socket
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abstractions supported by the protocol (\fIpr_type\fR), the
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format of the addresses used by the protocol (\fIpr_family\fR),
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the routines to be called to perform
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a standard set of protocol functions (\fIpr_input\fR,...,\fIpr_drain\fR),
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and some status information (\fIpr_flags\fR).
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The field pr_flags keeps such information as
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SS_ISCONNECTED (this socket has a peer),
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SS_ISCONNECTING (this socket is in the process of establishing
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a connection),
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SS_ISDISCONNECTING (this socket is in the process of being disconnected),
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SS_CANTSENDMORE (this socket is half-closed and cannot send),
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SS_CANTRCVMORE (this socket is half-closed and cannot receive).
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There are some flags that are specific to the TCP concept
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of out-of-band data.
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A flag SS_OOBAVAIL was added for the ARGO implementation, to support
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the TP concept of out-of-band data (expedited data).
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.sh 3 "Network Interface Drivers"
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.pp
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The drivers for the devices attaching a Unix machine to a network
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medium share a common interface to the protocol
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software.
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There is a common data structure for managing queues,
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not surprisingly, a chain of mbufs.
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There is a set of macros that are used to enqueue and
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dequeue mbuf chains at high priority.
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A driver
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delivers an indication to a protocol entity when
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an incoming packet has been placed on a queue by
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issuing a
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software
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interrupt.
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.sh 3 "Support for individual protocols."
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.pp
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Each protocol is written as a separate functional unit.
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Because all protocols share the clock and the mbuf pool, they
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are not entirely insulated from each other.
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The details of TP are described in a section that
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follows.
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.\"*****************************************************
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.\" FIGURE
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.so ../wisc/figs/unix_ipc.nr
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.pp
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.CF
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shows the arrangement of the IPC support.
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.pp
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The AOS
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IPC was designed for DoD Internet protocols, all of
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which run over DoD IP.
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The assumptions that DoD Internet is the domain
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and that DoD IP is the network layer
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appear in the code and data structures in numerous places.
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An example is that the transport protocols all directly call
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IP routines.
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There are no hooks in the data structures through
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which the transport layer can choose a network level protocol.
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Another example is that headers are assumed to
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fit in one small mbuf (112 bytes for data in AOS).
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Another example is this:
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It is assumed in many places that buffer space is managed
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in units of characters or octets.
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The user data are copied from user address space into the kernel mbufs
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amorphously
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by the socket code, a protocol-independent part of the kernel.
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This is fine for a stream protocol, but it means that a
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packet protocol, in order to \*(lqpacketize\*(rq the data,
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must perform a memory-to-memory copy
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that might have been avoided had the protocol layer done the original
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copy from user address space.
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Furthermore, protocols that count credit in terms of packets or
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buffers rather than characters do not work efficiently because
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the computation of buffer space is not in the protocol module,
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but rather it is in the socket code module.
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This list of examples is not complete.
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.pp
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To summarize, adding a new transport protocol to the kernel consists of
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adding entries to the tables in the protocol management
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unit,
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modifying the network interface driver(s) to recognize
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new network protocol identifiers,
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adding the
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new system calls to the kernel and to the user library,
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and
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adding code modules for each of the protocols,
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and correcting deficiencies in the socket code,
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where the assumptions made about the nature of
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transport protocols do not apply.
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.i
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(Touchy touchy, aren't we!?! -- Sklower)
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