xref: /dragonfly/sys/netgraph/ng_parse.h (revision a4da4a90)
1 
2 /*
3  * ng_parse.h
4  *
5  * Copyright (c) 1999 Whistle Communications, Inc.
6  * All rights reserved.
7  *
8  * Subject to the following obligations and disclaimer of warranty, use and
9  * redistribution of this software, in source or object code forms, with or
10  * without modifications are expressly permitted by Whistle Communications;
11  * provided, however, that:
12  * 1. Any and all reproductions of the source or object code must include the
13  *    copyright notice above and the following disclaimer of warranties; and
14  * 2. No rights are granted, in any manner or form, to use Whistle
15  *    Communications, Inc. trademarks, including the mark "WHISTLE
16  *    COMMUNICATIONS" on advertising, endorsements, or otherwise except as
17  *    such appears in the above copyright notice or in the software.
18  *
19  * THIS SOFTWARE IS BEING PROVIDED BY WHISTLE COMMUNICATIONS "AS IS", AND
20  * TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY LAW, WHISTLE COMMUNICATIONS MAKES NO
21  * REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, REGARDING THIS SOFTWARE,
22  * INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY AND ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
23  * MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, OR NON-INFRINGEMENT.
24  * WHISTLE COMMUNICATIONS DOES NOT WARRANT, GUARANTEE, OR MAKE ANY
25  * REPRESENTATIONS REGARDING THE USE OF, OR THE RESULTS OF THE USE OF THIS
26  * SOFTWARE IN TERMS OF ITS CORRECTNESS, ACCURACY, RELIABILITY OR OTHERWISE.
27  * IN NO EVENT SHALL WHISTLE COMMUNICATIONS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES
28  * RESULTING FROM OR ARISING OUT OF ANY USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING
29  * WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY,
30  * PUNITIVE, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
31  * SERVICES, LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, HOWEVER CAUSED AND UNDER ANY
32  * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
33  * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
34  * THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF WHISTLE COMMUNICATIONS IS ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY
35  * OF SUCH DAMAGE.
36  *
37  * Author: Archie Cobbs <archie@freebsd.org>
38  *
39  * $Whistle: ng_parse.h,v 1.2 1999/11/29 01:43:48 archie Exp $
40  * $FreeBSD: src/sys/netgraph/ng_parse.h,v 1.2.4.4 2002/07/02 23:44:03 archie Exp $
41  * $DragonFly: src/sys/netgraph/ng_parse.h,v 1.4 2007/06/03 20:51:10 dillon Exp $
42  */
43 
44 #ifndef _NETGRAPH_PARSE_H_
45 #define _NETGRAPH_PARSE_H_
46 
47 #ifndef _SYS_TYPES_H_
48 #include <sys/types.h>
49 #endif
50 
51 /*
52 
53   This defines a library of routines for converting between various C
54   language types in binary form and ASCII strings.  Types are user
55   definable.  Several pre-defined types are supplied, for some common
56   C types: structures, variable and fixed length arrays, integer types,
57   variable and fixed length strings, IP addresses, etc.
58 
59   A netgraph node type may provide a list of types that correspond to
60   the structures it expects to send and receive in the arguments field
61   of a control message.  This allows these messages to be converted
62   between their native binary form and the corresponding ASCII form.
63 
64   A future use of the ASCII form may be for inter-machine communication
65   of control messages, because the ASCII form is machine independent
66   whereas the native binary form is not.
67 
68   Syntax
69   ------
70 
71     Structures:
72 
73       '{' [ <name>=<value> ... ] '}'
74 
75       Omitted fields have their default values by implication.
76       The order in which the fields are specified does not matter.
77 
78     Arrays:
79 
80       '[' [ [index=]<value> ... ] ']'
81 
82       Element value may be specified with or without the "<index>=" prefix;
83       If omitted, the index after the previous element is used.
84       Omitted fields have their default values by implication.
85 
86     Strings:
87 
88       "foo bar blah\r\n"
89 
90       That is, strings are specified just like C strings. The usual
91       backslash escapes are accepted.
92 
93     Other simple types (integers, IP addresses) have their obvious forms.
94 
95   Example
96   -------
97 
98     Suppose we have a netgraph command that takes as an argument
99     a 'struct foo' shown below.  Here is an example of a possible
100     value for the structure, and the corresponding ASCII encoding
101     of that value:
102 
103 	Structure			Binary value
104 	---------			------------
105 
106 	struct foo {
107 	    struct in_addr ip;  	01 02 03 04
108 	    int bar;			00 00 00 00
109 	    char label[8];		61 62 63 0a 00 00 00 00
110 	    u_char alen;		03 00
111 	    short ary[0];	  	05 00 00 00 0a 00
112 	};
113 
114 	ASCII value
115 	-----------
116 
117 	{ ip=1.2.3.4 label="abc\n" alen=3 ary=[ 5 2=10 ] }
118 
119     Note that omitted fields and array elements get their default
120     values ("bar" and ary[2]), and that the alignment is handled
121     automatically (the extra 00 byte after "num").  Also, since byte
122     order and alignment are inherently machine dependent, so is this
123     conversion process.  The above example shows an x86 (little
124     endian) encoding.  Also the above example is tricky because the
125     structure is variable length, depending on 'alen', the number of
126     elements in the array 'ary'.
127 
128     Here is how one would define a parse type for the above structure,
129     subclassing the pre-defined types below.  We construct the type in
130     a 'bottom up' fashion, defining each field's type first, then the
131     type for the whole structure ('//' comments used to avoid breakage).
132 
133     // Super-type info for 'label' field
134     struct ng_parse_fixedstring_info foo_label_info = { 8 };
135 
136     // Parse type for 'label' field
137     struct ng_parse_type foo_label_type = {
138 	    &ng_parse_fixedstring_type		// super-type
139 	    &foo_label_info			// super-type info
140     };
141 
142     #define OFFSETOF(s, e) ((char *)&((s *)0)->e - (char *)((s *)0))
143 
144     // Function to compute the length of the array 'ary', which
145     // is variable length, depending on the previous field 'alen'.
146     // Upon entry 'buf' will be pointing at &ary[0].
147     int
148     foo_ary_getLength(const struct ng_parse_type *type,
149 	    const u_char *start, const u_char *buf)
150     {
151 	    const struct foo *f;
152 
153 	    f = (const struct foo *)(buf - OFFSETOF(struct foo, ary));
154 	    return f->alen;
155     }
156 
157     // Super-type info for 'ary' field
158     struct ng_parse_array_info foo_ary_info = {
159 	    &ng_parse_int16_type,		// element type
160 	    &foo_ary_getLength			// func to get array length
161     }
162 
163     // Parse type for 'ary' field
164     struct ng_parse_type foo_ary_type = {
165 	    &ng_parse_array_type,		// super-type
166 	    &foo_ary_info			// super-type info
167     };
168 
169     // Super-type info for struct foo
170     struct ng_parse_struct_field foo_fields[] = {
171 	    { "ip",	&ng_parse_ipaddr_type	},
172 	    { "bar",	&ng_parse_int32_type	},
173 	    { "label",	&foo_label_type		},
174 	    { "alen",	&ng_parse_uint8_type	},
175 	    { "ary",	&foo_ary_type		},
176 	    { NULL }
177     };
178 
179     // Parse type for struct foo
180     struct ng_parse_type foo_type = {
181 	    &ng_parse_struct_type,		// super-type
182 	    &foo_fields				// super-type info
183     };
184 
185   To define a type, you can define it as a sub-type of a predefined
186   type as shown above, possibly overriding some of the predefined
187   type's methods, or define an entirely new syntax, with the restriction
188   that the ASCII representation of your type's value must not contain
189   any whitespace or any of these characters: { } [ ] = "
190 
191   See ng_ksocket.c for an example of how to do this for 'struct sockaddr'.
192   See ng_parse.c to see implementations of the pre-defined types below.
193 
194 */
195 
196 /************************************************************************
197 			METHODS REQUIRED BY A TYPE
198  ************************************************************************/
199 
200 /*
201  * Three methods are required for a type. These may be given explicitly
202  * or, if NULL, inherited from the super-type.  The 'getDefault' method
203  * is always optional; the others are required if there is no super-type.
204  */
205 
206 struct ng_parse_type;
207 
208 /*
209  * Convert ASCII to binary according to the supplied type.
210  *
211  * The ASCII characters begin at offset *off in 'string'.  The binary
212  * representation is put into 'buf', which has at least *buflen bytes.
213  * 'start' points to the first byte output by ng_parse() (ie, start <= buf).
214  *
215  * Upon return, *buflen contains the length of the new binary data, and
216  * *off is updated to point just past the end of the parsed range of
217  * characters, or, in the case of an error, to the offending character(s).
218  *
219  * Return values:
220  *	0		Success; *buflen holds the length of the data
221  *			and *off points just past the last char parsed.
222  *	EALREADY	Field specified twice
223  *	ENOENT		Unknown field
224  *	E2BIG		Array or character string overflow
225  *	ERANGE		Output was longer than *buflen bytes
226  *	EINVAL		Parse failure or other invalid content
227  *	ENOMEM		Out of memory
228  *	EOPNOTSUPP	Mandatory array/structure element missing
229  */
230 typedef	int	ng_parse_t(const struct ng_parse_type *type, const char *string,
231 			int *off, const u_char *start,
232 			u_char *buf, int *buflen);
233 
234 /*
235  * Convert binary to ASCII according to the supplied type.
236  *
237  * The results are put into 'buf', which is at least buflen bytes long.
238  * *off points to the current byte in 'data' and should be updated
239  * before return to point just past the last byte unparsed.
240  *
241  * Returns:
242  *	0		Success
243  *	ERANGE		Output was longer than buflen bytes
244  */
245 typedef	int	ng_unparse_t(const struct ng_parse_type *type,
246 			const u_char *data, int *off, char *buf, int buflen);
247 
248 /*
249  * Compute the default value according to the supplied type.
250  *
251  * Store the result in 'buf', which is at least *buflen bytes long.
252  * Upon return *buflen contains the length of the output.
253  *
254  * Returns:
255  *	0		Success
256  *	ERANGE		Output was longer than *buflen bytes
257  *	EOPNOTSUPP	Default value is not specified for this type
258  */
259 typedef	int	ng_getDefault_t(const struct ng_parse_type *type,
260 			const u_char *start, u_char *buf, int *buflen);
261 
262 /*
263  * Return the alignment requirement of this type.  Zero is same as one.
264  */
265 typedef	int	ng_getAlign_t(const struct ng_parse_type *type);
266 
267 /************************************************************************
268 			TYPE DEFINITION
269  ************************************************************************/
270 
271 /*
272  * This structure describes a type, which may be a sub-type of another
273  * type by pointing to it with 'supertype' and possibly omitting methods.
274  * Typically the super-type requires some type-specific info, which is
275  * supplied by the 'info' field.
276  *
277  * The 'private' field is ignored by all of the pre-defined types.
278  * Sub-types may use it as they see fit.
279  *
280  * The 'getDefault' method may always be omitted (even if there is no
281  * super-type), which means the value for any item of this type must
282  * always be explicitly given.
283  */
284 struct ng_parse_type {
285 	const struct ng_parse_type *supertype;	/* super-type, if any */
286 	const void		*info;		/* type-specific info */
287 	void			*private;	/* client private info */
288 	ng_parse_t		*parse;		/* parse method */
289 	ng_unparse_t		*unparse;	/* unparse method */
290 	ng_getDefault_t		*getDefault;	/* get default value method */
291 	ng_getAlign_t		*getAlign;	/* get alignment */
292 };
293 
294 /************************************************************************
295 			PRE-DEFINED TYPES
296  ************************************************************************/
297 
298 /*
299  * STRUCTURE TYPE
300  *
301  * This type supports arbitrary C structures.  The normal field alignment
302  * rules for the local machine are applied.  Fields are always parsed in
303  * field order, no matter what order they are listed in the ASCII string.
304  *
305  *   Default value:		Determined on a per-field basis
306  *   Additional info:		struct ng_parse_struct_field *
307  */
308 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_struct_type;
309 
310 /* Each field has a name, type, and optional alignment override. If the
311    override is non-zero, the alignment is determined from the field type.
312    Note: add an extra struct ng_parse_struct_field with name == NULL
313    to indicate the end of the list. */
314 struct ng_parse_struct_field {
315 	const char			*name;		/* field name */
316 	const struct ng_parse_type	*type;		/* field type */
317 	int				alignment;	/* override alignment */
318 };
319 
320 /*
321  * FIXED LENGTH ARRAY TYPE
322  *
323  * This type supports fixed length arrays, having any element type.
324  *
325  *   Default value:		As returned by getDefault for each index
326  *   Additional info:		struct ng_parse_fixedarray_info *
327  */
328 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_fixedarray_type;
329 
330 /*
331  * Get the default value for the element at index 'index'.  This method
332  * may be NULL, in which case the default value is computed from the
333  * element type.  Otherwise, it should fill in the default value at *buf
334  * (having size *buflen) and update *buflen to the length of the filled-in
335  * value before return.  If there is not enough routine return ERANGE.
336  */
337 typedef	int	ng_parse_array_getDefault_t(const struct ng_parse_type *type,
338 				int index, const u_char *start,
339 				u_char *buf, int *buflen);
340 
341 struct ng_parse_fixedarray_info {
342 	const struct ng_parse_type	*elementType;
343 	int				length;
344 	ng_parse_array_getDefault_t	*getDefault;
345 };
346 
347 /*
348  * VARIABLE LENGTH ARRAY TYPE
349  *
350  * Same as fixed length arrays, except that the length is determined
351  * by a function instead of a constant value.
352  *
353  *   Default value:		Same as with fixed length arrays
354  *   Additional info:		struct ng_parse_array_info *
355  */
356 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_array_type;
357 
358 /*
359  * Return the length of the array.  If the array is a field in a structure,
360  * all prior fields are guaranteed to be filled in already.  Upon entry,
361  * 'start' is equal to the first byte parsed in this run, while 'buf' points
362  * to the first element of the array to be filled in.
363  */
364 typedef int	ng_parse_array_getLength_t(const struct ng_parse_type *type,
365 				const u_char *start, const u_char *buf);
366 
367 struct ng_parse_array_info {
368 	const struct ng_parse_type	*elementType;
369 	ng_parse_array_getLength_t	*getLength;
370 	ng_parse_array_getDefault_t	*getDefault;
371 };
372 
373 /*
374  * ARBITRARY LENGTH STRING TYPE
375  *
376  * For arbirary length, NUL-terminated strings.
377  *
378  *   Default value:		Empty string
379  *   Additional info:		None required
380  */
381 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_string_type;
382 
383 /*
384  * BOUNDED LENGTH STRING TYPE
385  *
386  * These are strings that have a fixed-size buffer, and always include
387  * a terminating NUL character.
388  *
389  *   Default value:		Empty string
390  *   Additional info:		struct ng_parse_fixedstring_info *
391  */
392 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_fixedstring_type;
393 
394 struct ng_parse_fixedstring_info {
395 	int	bufSize;	/* size of buffer (including NUL) */
396 };
397 
398 /*
399  * COMMONLY USED BOUNDED LENGTH STRING TYPES
400  */
401 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_nodebuf_type;  /* NG_NODESIZ */
402 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_hookbuf_type;  /* NG_HOOKSIZ */
403 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_pathbuf_type;  /* NG_PATHSIZ */
404 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_typebuf_type;  /* NG_TYPESIZ */
405 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_cmdbuf_type;   /* NG_CMDSTRSIZ */
406 
407 /*
408  * INTEGER TYPES
409  *
410  *   Default value:		0
411  *   Additional info:		None required
412  */
413 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_int8_type;
414 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_int16_type;
415 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_int32_type;
416 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_int64_type;
417 
418 /* Same thing but unparse as unsigned quantities */
419 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_uint8_type;
420 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_uint16_type;
421 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_uint32_type;
422 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_uint64_type;
423 
424 /* Same thing but unparse as hex quantities, e.g., "0xe7" */
425 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_hint8_type;
426 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_hint16_type;
427 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_hint32_type;
428 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_hint64_type;
429 
430 /*
431  * IP ADDRESS TYPE
432  *
433  *   Default value:		0.0.0.0
434  *   Additional info:		None required
435  */
436 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_ipaddr_type;
437 
438 /*
439  * VARIABLE LENGTH BYTE ARRAY TYPE
440  *
441  * The bytes are displayed in hex.  The ASCII form may be either an
442  * array of bytes or a string constant, in which case the array is
443  * zero-filled after the string bytes.
444  *
445  *   Default value:		All bytes are zero
446  *   Additional info:		ng_parse_array_getLength_t *
447  */
448 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_bytearray_type;
449 
450 /*
451  * NETGRAPH CONTROL MESSAGE TYPE
452  *
453  * This is the parse type for a struct ng_mesg.
454  *
455  *   Default value:		All fields zero
456  *   Additional info:		None required
457  */
458 extern const struct ng_parse_type ng_parse_ng_mesg_type;
459 
460 /************************************************************************
461 		CONVERSTION AND PARSING ROUTINES
462  ************************************************************************/
463 
464 /* Tokens for parsing structs and arrays */
465 enum ng_parse_token {
466 	T_LBRACE,		/* '{' */
467 	T_RBRACE,		/* '}' */
468 	T_LBRACKET,		/* '[' */
469 	T_RBRACKET,		/* ']' */
470 	T_EQUALS,		/* '=' */
471 	T_STRING,		/* string in double quotes */
472 	T_ERROR,		/* error parsing string in double quotes */
473 	T_WORD,			/* anything else containing no whitespace */
474 	T_EOF,			/* end of string reached */
475 };
476 
477 /*
478  * See typedef ng_parse_t for definition
479  */
480 extern int	ng_parse(const struct ng_parse_type *type, const char *string,
481 			int *off, u_char *buf, int *buflen);
482 
483 /*
484  * See typedef ng_unparse_t for definition (*off assumed to be zero).
485  */
486 extern int	ng_unparse(const struct ng_parse_type *type,
487 			const u_char *data, char *buf, int buflen);
488 
489 /*
490  * See typedef ng_getDefault_t for definition
491  */
492 extern int	ng_parse_getDefault(const struct ng_parse_type *type,
493 			u_char *buf, int *buflen);
494 
495 /*
496  * Parse a token: '*startp' is the offset to start looking.  Upon
497  * successful return, '*startp' equals the beginning of the token
498  * and '*lenp' the length.  If error, '*startp' points at the
499  * offending character(s).
500  */
501 extern enum	ng_parse_token ng_parse_get_token(const char *s,
502 			int *startp, int *lenp);
503 
504 /*
505  * Like above, but specifically for getting a string token and returning
506  * the string value.  The string token must be enclosed in double quotes
507  * and the normal C backslash escapes are recognized.  The caller must
508  * eventually free() the returned result.  Returns NULL if token is
509  * not a string token, or parse or other error.
510  */
511 extern char	*ng_get_string_token(const char *s, int *startp, int *lenp);
512 
513 /*
514  * Convert a raw string into a doubly-quoted string including any
515  * necessary backslash escapes.  Caller must free the result.
516  * Returns NULL if ENOMEM.
517  */
518 extern char	*ng_encode_string(const char *s);
519 
520 #endif /* _NETGRAPH_PARSE_H_ */
521 
522