/* $NetBSD: ipsec_osdep.h,v 1.3 2003/10/06 22:05:15 tls Exp $ */ #ifndef NETIPSEC_OSDEP_H #define NETIPSEC_OSDEP_H /* * Hide porting differences across different 4.4BSD-derived platforms. * * 1. KASSERT() differences: * 2. Kernel Random-number API differences. * 3. Is packet data in an mbuf object writeable? * 4. Packet-header semantics. * 5. Fast mbuf-cluster allocation. * 6. Network packet-output macros. * 7. Elased time, in seconds. * 8. Test if a socket object opened by a privileged (super) user. * 9. Global SLIST of all open raw sockets. * 10. Global SLIST of known interface addresses. * 11. Type of initialization functions. */ /* * 1. KASSERT and spl differences * * FreeBSD takes an expression and parenthesized printf() argument-list. * NetBSD takes one arg: the expression being asserted. * FreeBSD's SPLASSERT() takes an SPL level as 1st arg and a * parenthesized printf-format argument list as the second argument. * * This difference is hidden by two 2-argument macros and one 1-arg macro: * IPSEC_ASSERT(expr, msg) * IPSEC_SPLASSERT(spl, msg) * One further difference is the spl names: * NetBSD splsoftnet equates to FreeBSD splnet; * NetBSD splnet equates to FreeBSD splimp. * which is hidden by the macro IPSEC_SPLASSERT_SOFTNET(msg). */ #ifdef __FreeBSD__ #define IPSEC_SPLASSERT(x,y) SPLASSERT(x, y) #define IPSEC_ASSERT(c,m) KASSERT(c, m) #define IPSEC_SPLASSERT_SOFTNET(m) SPLASSERT(splnet, m) #endif /* __FreeBSD__ */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ #define IPSEC_SPLASSERT(x,y) (void)0 #define IPSEC_ASSERT(c,m) KASSERT(c) #define IPSEC_SPLASSERT_SOFTNET(m) IPSEC_SPLASSERT(softnet, m) #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* * 2. Kernel Randomness API. * FreeBSD uses: * u_int read_random(void *outbuf, int nbytes). */ #ifdef __FreeBSD__ #include /* do nothing, use native random code. */ #endif /* __FreeBSD__ */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ #include static __inline u_int read_random(void *p, u_int len); static __inline u_int read_random(void *bufp, u_int len) { return rnd_extract_data(bufp, len, RND_EXTRACT_ANY /*XXX FIXME */); } #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* * 3. Test for mbuf mutability * FreeBSD 4.x uses: M_EXT_WRITABLE * NetBSD has M_READONLY(). Use !M_READONLY(). * Not an exact match to FreeBSD semantics, but adequate for IPsec purposes. * */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ /* XXX wrong, but close enough for restricted ipsec usage. */ #define M_EXT_WRITABLE(m) (!M_READONLY(m)) #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* * 4. mbuf packet-header/packet-tag semantics. * Sam Leffler explains, in private email, some problems with * M_COPY_PKTHDR(), and why FreeBSD deprecated it and replaced it * with new, explicit macros M_MOVE_PKTHDR()/M_DUP_PKTHDR(). * he original fast-ipsec source uses M_MOVE_PKTHDR. * NetBSD currently still uses M_COPY_PKTHDR(), so we define * M_MOVE_PKTHDR in terms of M_COPY_PKTHDR(). Fast-IPsec * will delete the source mbuf shortly after copying packet tags, * so we are safe for fast-ipsec but not in general.. */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ #define M_MOVE_PKTHDR(_f, _t) M_COPY_PKTHDR(_f, _t) #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* * 5. Fast mbuf-cluster allocation. * FreeBSD 4.6 introduce m_getcl(), which performs `fast' allocation * mbuf clusters from a cache of recently-freed clusters. (If the cache * is empty, new clusters are allocated en-masse). * On NetBSD, for now, implement the `cache' as an inline function *using normal NetBSD mbuf/cluster allocation macros. Replace this * with fast-cache code, if and when NetBSD implements one. */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ static __inline struct mbuf * m_getcl(int how, short type, int flags) { struct mbuf *mp; if (flags & M_PKTHDR) MGETHDR(mp, how, type); else MGET(mp, how, type); if (mp == NULL) return NULL; MCLGET(mp, how); return mp; } #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* * 6. Network output macros * FreeBSD uses the IF_HANDOFF(), which raises SPL, enqueues * a packet, and updates interface counters. NetBSD has IFQ_ENQUE(), * which leaves SPL changes up to the caller. * For now, we provide an emulation of IF_HANOOFF() which works * for protocol input queues. */ #ifdef __FreeBSD__ /* nothing to do */ #endif /* __FreeBSD__ */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ #define IF_HANDOFF(ifq, m, f) if_handoff(ifq, m, f, 0) #include static __inline int if_handoff(struct ifqueue *ifq, struct mbuf *m, struct ifnet *ifp, int adjust) { int need_if_start = 0; int s = splnet(); if (IF_QFULL(ifq)) { IF_DROP(ifq); splx(s); m_freem(m); return (0); } if (ifp != NULL) { ifp->if_obytes += m->m_pkthdr.len + adjust; if (m->m_flags & M_MCAST) ifp->if_omcasts++; need_if_start = !(ifp->if_flags & IFF_OACTIVE); } IF_ENQUEUE(ifq, m); if (need_if_start) (*ifp->if_start)(ifp); splx(s); return (1); } #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* * 7. Elapsed Time: time_second as time in seconds. * Original FreeBSD fast-ipsec code references a FreeBSD kernel global, * time_second(). NetBSD: kludge #define to use time_mono_time.tv_sec. */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ #include #define time_second mono_time.tv_sec #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* protosw glue */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ #include #define ipprotosw protosw #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* * 8. Test for "privileged" socket opened by superuser. * FreeBSD tests ((so)->so_cred && (so)->so_cred.cr_uid == 0), * NetBSD (1.6N) tests (so)->so_uid == 0). * This difference is wrapped inside the IPSEC_PRIVILEGED_SO() macro. * */ #ifdef __FreeBSD__ #define IPSEC_PRIVILEGED_SO(so) ((so)->so_cred && (so)->so_cred.cr_uid == 0) #endif /* __FreeBSD__ */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ /* superuser opened socket? */ #define IPSEC_PRIVILEGED_SO(so) ((so)->so_uid == 0) #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* * 9. Raw socket list * FreeBSD uses: listhead = rawcb_list, SLIST()-next field "list". * NetBSD uses: listhead = rawcb, SLIST()-next field "list" * * This version of fast-ipsec source code uses rawcb_list as the head, * and (to avoid namespace collisions) uses rcb_list as the "next" field. */ #ifdef __FreeBSD__ #define rcb_list list #endif /* __FreeBSD__ */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ #define rawcb_list rawcb #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* * 10. List of all known network interfaces. * FreeBSD has listhead in_ifaddread, with ia_link as link. * NetBSD has listhead in_ifaddr, with ia_list as link. * No name-clahses, so just #define the appropriate names on NetBSD. * NB: Is it worth introducing iterator (find-first-list/find-next-list) * functions or macros to encapsulate these? */ #ifdef __FreeBSD__ /* nothing to do for raw interface list */ #endif /* FreeBSD */ #ifdef __NetBSD__ /* For now, use FreeBSD-compatible names for raw interface list. */ #define in_ifaddrhead in_ifaddr #define ia_link ia_list #endif /* __NetBSD__ */ /* * 11. Type of initialization functions. */ #ifdef __FreeBSD__ #define INITFN static #endif #ifdef __NetBSD__ #define INITFN extern #endif /* * Differences that we don't attempt to hide: * * A. Initialization code. This is the largest difference of all. * * FreeBSD uses compile/link-time perl hackery to generate special * .o files with linker sections that give the moral equivalent of * C++ file-level-object constructors. NetBSD has no such facility. * * Either we implement it (ideally, in a way that can emulate * FreeBSD's SYSINIT() macros), or we must take other means * to have the per-file init functions called at some appropriate time. * * In the absence of SYSINIT(), all the file-level init functions * now have "extern" linkage. There is a new fast-ipsec init() * function which calls each of the per-file in an appropriate order. * init_main will arrange to call the fast-ipsec init function * after the crypto framework has registered its transforms (including * any autoconfigured hardware crypto accelerators) but before * initializing the network stack to send or receive packet. * * B. Protosw() differences. * CSRG-style BSD TCP/IP uses a generic protocol-dispatch-function * where the specific request is identified by an enum argument. * FreeBSD replaced that with an array of request-specific * function pointers. * * These differences affect the handlers for key-protocol user requests * so pervasively that I gave up on the fast-ipsec code, and re-worked the * NetBSD KAME code to match the (relative few) API differences * between NetBSD and FreeBSD's KAME netkey, and Fast-IPsec netkey. * * C. Timeout() versus callout(9): * The FreeBSD 4.x netipsec/ code still uses timeout(). * FreeBSD 4.7 has callout(9), so I just replaced * timeout_*() with the nearest callout_*() equivalents, * and added a callout handle to the ipsec context. * * D. SPL name differences. * FreeBSD splnet() equates directly to NetBSD's splsoftnet(); * FreeBSD uses splimp() where (for networking) NetBSD would use splnet(). */ #endif /* NETIPSEC_OSDEP_H */