NetBSD/dist/pppd/PLUGINS

267 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext

Starting with version 2.3.10, pppd includes support for `plugins' -
pieces of code which can be loaded into pppd at runtime and which can
affect its behaviour in various ways. The idea of plugins is to
provide a way for people to customize the behaviour of pppd without
having to either apply local patches to each version or get their
patches accepted into the standard distribution.
A plugin is a standard shared library object, typically with a name
ending in .so. They are loaded using the standard dlopen() library
call, so plugins are only supported on systems which support shared
libraries and the dlopen call. At present pppd is compiled with
plugin support only under Linux and Solaris.
Plugins are loaded into pppd using the `plugin' option, which takes
one argument, the name of a shared object file. The plugin option is
a privileged option. If the name given does not contain a slash, pppd
will look in the /usr/lib/pppd/<version> directory for the file, where
<version> is the version number of pppd, for example, 2.4.2. I
suggest that you either give the full path name of the shared object
file or just the base name; if you don't, it may be possible for
unscrupulous users to substitute another shared object file for the
one you mean to load, e.g. by setting the LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable.
Plugins are usually written in C and compiled and linked to a shared
object file in the appropriate manner for your platform. Using gcc
under Linux, a plugin called `xyz' could be compiled and linked with
the following commands:
gcc -c -O xyz.c
gcc -shared -o xyz.so xyz.o
There are some example plugins in the pppd/plugins directory in the
ppp distribution. Currently there is one example, minconn.c, which
implements a `minconnect' option, which specifies a minimum connect
time before the idle timeout applies.
Plugins can access global variables within pppd, so it is useful for
them to #include "pppd.h" from the pppd source directory.
Every plugin must contain a global procedure called `plugin_init'.
This procedure will get called (with no arguments) immediately after
the plugin is loaded. Every plugin should also contain a variable
called pppd_version declared as follows:
char pppd_version[] = VERSION;
If this declaration is included, pppd will not load the module if its
version number differs from that compiled into the plugin binary.
Plugins can affect the behaviour of pppd in at least four ways:
1. They can add extra options which pppd will then recognize. This is
done by calling the add_options() procedure with a pointer to an
array of option_t structures. The last entry in the array must
have its name field set to NULL.
2. Pppd contains `hook' variables which are procedure pointers. If a
given hook is not NULL, pppd will call the procedure it points to
at the appropriate point in its processing. The plugin can set any
of these hooks to point to its own procedures. See below for a
description of the hooks which are currently implemented.
3. Plugin code can call any global procedures and access any global
variables in pppd.
4. Plugins can register procedures to be called when particular events
occur, using the `notifier' mechanism in pppd. The differences
between hooks and notifiers are that a hook will only call one
function, whereas a notifier can call an arbitrary number, and that
a hook usually returns some value to pppd, whereas a notifier
function returns nothing.
Here is a list of the currently implemented hooks in pppd.
int (*idle_time_hook)(struct ppp_idle *idlep);
The idle_time_hook is called when the link first comes up (i.e. when
the first network protocol comes up) and at intervals thereafter. On
the first call, the idlep parameter is NULL, and the return value is
the number of seconds before pppd should check the link activity, or 0
if there is to be no idle timeout.
On subsequent calls, idlep points to a structure giving the number of
seconds since the last packets were sent and received. If the return
value is > 0, pppd will wait that many seconds before checking again.
If it is <= 0, that indicates that the link should be terminated due
to lack of activity.
int (*holdoff_hook)(void);
The holdoff_hook is called when an attempt to bring up the link fails,
or the link is terminated, and the persist or demand option was used.
It returns the number of seconds that pppd should wait before trying
to reestablish the link (0 means immediately).
int (*pap_check_hook)(void);
int (*pap_passwd_hook)(char *user, char *passwd);
int (*pap_auth_hook)(char *user, char *passwd, char **msgp,
struct wordlist **paddrs,
struct wordlist **popts);
void (*pap_logout_hook)(void);
These hooks are designed to allow a plugin to replace the normal PAP
password processing in pppd with something different (e.g. contacting
an external server).
The pap_check_hook is called to check whether there is any possibility
that the peer could authenticate itself to us. If it returns 1, pppd
will ask the peer to authenticate itself. If it returns 0, pppd will
not ask the peer to authenticate itself (but if authentication is
required, pppd may exit, or terminate the link before network protocol
negotiation). If it returns -1, pppd will look in the pap-secrets
file as it would normally.
The pap_passwd_hook is called to determine what username and password
pppd should use in authenticating itself to the peer with PAP. The
user string will already be initialized, by the `user' option, the
`name' option, or from the hostname, but can be changed if necessary.
MAXNAMELEN bytes of space are available at *user, and MAXSECRETLEN
bytes of space at *passwd. If this hook returns 0, pppd will use the
values at *user and *passwd; if it returns -1, pppd will look in the
pap-secrets file, or use the value from the +ua or password option, as
it would normally.
The pap_auth_hook is called to determine whether the username and
password supplied by the peer are valid. user and passwd point to
null-terminated strings containing the username and password supplied
by the peer, with non-printable characters converted to a printable
form. The pap_auth_hook function should set msg to a string to be
returned to the peer and return 1 if the username/password was valid
and 0 if not. If the hook returns -1, pppd will look in the
pap-secrets file as usual.
If the username/password was valid, the hook can set *paddrs to point
to a wordlist containing the IP address(es) which the peer is
permitted to use, formatted as in the pap-secrets file. It can also
set *popts to a wordlist containing any extra options for this user
which pppd should apply at this point.
The pap_logout_hook is called when the link is terminated, instead of
pppd's internal `plogout' function. It can be used for accounting
purposes. This hook is deprecated and will be replaced by a notifier.
int (*chap_check_hook)(void);
int (*chap_passwd_hook)(char *user, char *passwd);
int (*chap_auth_hook)(char *user, u_char *remmd,
int remmd_len, chap_state *cstate);
These hooks are designed to allow a plugin to replace the normal CHAP
password processing in pppd with something different (e.g. contacting
an external server).
The chap_check_hook is called to check whether there is any possibility
that the peer could authenticate itself to us. If it returns 1, pppd
will ask the peer to authenticate itself. If it returns 0, pppd will
not ask the peer to authenticate itself (but if authentication is
required, pppd may exit, or terminate the link before network protocol
negotiation). If it returns -1, pppd will look in the chap-secrets
file as it would normally.
The chap_passwd_hook is called to determine what password
pppd should use in authenticating itself to the peer with CHAP. The
user string will already be initialized, by the `user' option, the
`name' option, or from the hostname, but can be changed if necessary.
This hook is called only if pppd is a client, not if it is a server.
MAXSECRETLEN bytes of space are available at *passwd. If this hook
returns 0, pppd will use the value *passwd; if it returns -1, pppd
will fail to authenticate.
The chap_auth_hook is called to determine whether the response
to a CHAP challenge provided by the peer is valid. user points to
a null-terminated string containing the username supplied
by the peer. remmd points to the response provided by the peer, of
length remmd_len bytes. cstate is the internal CHAP state structure
maintained by pppd. chap_auth_hook is expected to return one of
CHAP_SUCCESS or CHAP_FAILURE.
int (*null_auth_hook)(struct wordlist **paddrs,
struct wordlist **popts);
This hook allows a plugin to determine what the policy should be if
the peer refuses to authenticate when it is requested to. If the
return value is 0, the link will be terminated; if it is 1, the
connection is allowed to proceed, and in this case *paddrs and *popts
can be set as for pap_auth_hook, to specify what IP addresses are
permitted and any extra options to be applied. If the return value is
-1, pppd will look in the pap-secrets file as usual.
void (*ip_choose_hook)(u_int32_t *addrp);
This hook is called at the beginning of IPCP negotiation. It gives a
plugin the opportunity to set the IP address for the peer; the address
should be stored in *addrp. If nothing is stored in *addrp, pppd will
determine the peer's address in the usual manner.
int (*allowed_address_hook)(u_int32_t addr)
This hook is called to see if a peer is allowed to use the specified
address. If the hook returns 1, the address is accepted. If it returns
0, the address is rejected. If it returns -1, the address is verified
in the normal away against the appropriate options and secrets files.
void (*snoop_recv_hook)(unsigned char *p, int len)
void (*snoop_send_hook)(unsigned char *p, int len)
These hooks are called whenever pppd receives or sends a packet. The
packet is in p; its length is len. This allows plugins to "snoop in"
on the pppd conversation. The hooks may prove useful in implmenting
L2TP.
A plugin registers itself with a notifier by declaring a procedure of
the form:
void my_notify_proc(void *opaque, int arg);
and then registering the procedure with the appropriate notifier with
a call of the form
add_notifier(&interesting_notifier, my_notify_proc, opaque);
The `opaque' parameter in the add_notifier call will be passed to
my_notify_proc every time it is called. The `arg' parameter to
my_notify_proc depends on the notifier.
A notify procedure can be removed from the list for a notifier with a
call of the form
remove_notifier(&interesting_notifier, my_notify_proc, opaque);
Here is a list of the currently-implemented notifiers in pppd.
* pidchange. This notifier is called in the parent when pppd has
forked and the child is continuing pppd's processing, i.e. when pppd
detaches from its controlling terminal. The argument is the pid of
the child.
* phasechange. This is called when pppd moves from one phase of
operation to another. The argument is the new phase number.
* exitnotify. This is called just before pppd exits. The argument is
the status with which pppd will exit (i.e. the argument to exit()).
* sigreceived. This is called when a signal is received, from within
the signal handler. The argument is the signal number.
* ip_up_notifier. This is called when IPCP has come up.
* ip_down_notifier. This is called when IPCP goes down.
* auth_up_notifier. This is called when the peer has successfully
authenticated itself.
* link_down_notifier. This is called when the link goes down.
## Id: PLUGINS,v 1.6 2003/02/25 07:43:09 fcusack Exp ##