| Description of the "concap" encapsulation protocol interface |
| ============================================================ |
| |
| The "concap" interface is intended to be used by network device |
| drivers that need to process an encapsulation protocol. |
| It is assumed that the protocol interacts with a linux network device by |
| - data transmission |
| - connection control (establish, release) |
| Thus, the mnemonic: "CONnection CONtrolling eNCAPsulation Protocol". |
| |
| This is currently only used inside the isdn subsystem. But it might |
| also be useful to other kinds of network devices. Thus, if you want |
| to suggest changes that improve usability or performance of the |
| interface, please let me know. I'm willing to include them in future |
| releases (even if I needed to adapt the current isdn code to the |
| changed interface). |
| |
| |
| Why is this useful? |
| =================== |
| |
| The encapsulation protocol used on top of WAN connections or permanent |
| point-to-point links are frequently chosen upon bilateral agreement. |
| Thus, a device driver for a certain type of hardware must support |
| several different encapsulation protocols at once. |
| |
| The isdn device driver did already support several different |
| encapsulation protocols. The encapsulation protocol is configured by a |
| user space utility (isdnctrl). The isdn network interface code then |
| uses several case statements which select appropriate actions |
| depending on the currently configured encapsulation protocol. |
| |
| In contrast, LAN network interfaces always used a single encapsulation |
| protocol which is unique to the hardware type of the interface. The LAN |
| encapsulation is usually done by just sticking a header on the data. Thus, |
| traditional linux network device drivers used to process the |
| encapsulation protocol directly (usually by just providing a hard_header() |
| method in the device structure) using some hardware type specific support |
| functions. This is simple, direct and efficient. But it doesn't fit all |
| the requirements for complex WAN encapsulations. |
| |
| |
| The configurability of the encapsulation protocol to be used |
| makes isdn network interfaces more flexible, but also much more |
| complex than traditional lan network interfaces. |
| |
| |
| Many Encapsulation protocols used on top of WAN connections will not just |
| stick a header on the data. They also might need to set up or release |
| the WAN connection. They also might want to send other data for their |
| private purpose over the wire, e.g. ppp does a lot of link level |
| negotiation before the first piece of user data can be transmitted. |
| Such encapsulation protocols for WAN devices are typically more complex |
| than encapsulation protocols for lan devices. Thus, network interface |
| code for typical WAN devices also tends to be more complex. |
| |
| |
| In order to support Linux' x25 PLP implementation on top of |
| isdn network interfaces I could have introduced yet another branch to |
| the various case statements inside drivers/isdn/isdn_net.c. |
| This eventually made isdn_net.c even more complex. In addition, it made |
| isdn_net.c harder to maintain. Thus, by identifying an abstract |
| interface between the network interface code and the encapsulation |
| protocol, complexity could be reduced and maintainability could be |
| increased. |
| |
| |
| Likewise, a similar encapsulation protocol will frequently be needed by |
| several different interfaces of even different hardware type, e.g. the |
| synchronous ppp implementation used by the isdn driver and the |
| asynchronous ppp implementation used by the ppp driver have a lot of |
| similar code in them. By cleanly separating the encapsulation protocol |
| from the hardware specific interface stuff such code could be shared |
| better in future. |
| |
| |
| When operating over dial-up-connections (e.g. telephone lines via modem, |
| non-permanent virtual circuits of wide area networks, ISDN) many |
| encapsulation protocols will need to control the connection. Therefore, |
| some basic connection control primitives are supported. The type and |
| semantics of the connection (i.e the ISO layer where connection service |
| is provided) is outside our scope and might be different depending on |
| the encapsulation protocol used, e.g. for a ppp module using our service |
| on top of a modem connection a connect_request will result in dialing |
| a (somewhere else configured) remote phone number. For an X25-interface |
| module (LAPB semantics, as defined in Documentation/networking/x25-iface.txt) |
| a connect_request will ask for establishing a reliable lapb |
| datalink connection. |
| |
| |
| The encapsulation protocol currently provides the following |
| service primitives to the network device. |
| |
| - create a new encapsulation protocol instance |
| - delete encapsulation protocol instance and free all its resources |
| - initialize (open) the encapsulation protocol instance for use. |
| - deactivate (close) an encapsulation protocol instance. |
| - process (xmit) data handed down by upper protocol layer |
| - receive data from lower (hardware) layer |
| - process connect indication from lower (hardware) layer |
| - process disconnect indication from lower (hardware) layer |
| |
| |
| The network interface driver accesses those primitives via callbacks |
| provided by the encapsulation protocol instance within a |
| struct concap_proto_ops. |
| |
| struct concap_proto_ops{ |
| |
| /* create a new encapsulation protocol instance of same type */ |
| struct concap_proto * (*proto_new) (void); |
| |
| /* delete encapsulation protocol instance and free all its resources. |
| cprot may no loger be referenced after calling this */ |
| void (*proto_del)(struct concap_proto *cprot); |
| |
| /* initialize the protocol's data. To be called at interface startup |
| or when the device driver resets the interface. All services of the |
| encapsulation protocol may be used after this*/ |
| int (*restart)(struct concap_proto *cprot, |
| struct net_device *ndev, |
| struct concap_device_ops *dops); |
| |
| /* deactivate an encapsulation protocol instance. The encapsulation |
| protocol may not call any *dops methods after this. */ |
| int (*close)(struct concap_proto *cprot); |
| |
| /* process a frame handed down to us by upper layer */ |
| int (*encap_and_xmit)(struct concap_proto *cprot, struct sk_buff *skb); |
| |
| /* to be called for each data entity received from lower layer*/ |
| int (*data_ind)(struct concap_proto *cprot, struct sk_buff *skb); |
| |
| /* to be called when a connection was set up/down. |
| Protocols that don't process these primitives might fill in |
| dummy methods here */ |
| int (*connect_ind)(struct concap_proto *cprot); |
| int (*disconn_ind)(struct concap_proto *cprot); |
| }; |
| |
| |
| The data structures are defined in the header file include/linux/concap.h. |
| |
| |
| A Network interface using encapsulation protocols must also provide |
| some service primitives to the encapsulation protocol: |
| |
| - request data being submitted by lower layer (device hardware) |
| - request a connection being set up by lower layer |
| - request a connection being released by lower layer |
| |
| The encapsulation protocol accesses those primitives via callbacks |
| provided by the network interface within a struct concap_device_ops. |
| |
| struct concap_device_ops{ |
| |
| /* to request data be submitted by device */ |
| int (*data_req)(struct concap_proto *, struct sk_buff *); |
| |
| /* Control methods must be set to NULL by devices which do not |
| support connection control. */ |
| /* to request a connection be set up */ |
| int (*connect_req)(struct concap_proto *); |
| |
| /* to request a connection be released */ |
| int (*disconn_req)(struct concap_proto *); |
| }; |
| |
| The network interface does not explicitly provide a receive service |
| because the encapsulation protocol directly calls netif_rx(). |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| An encapsulation protocol itself is actually the |
| struct concap_proto{ |
| struct net_device *net_dev; /* net device using our service */ |
| struct concap_device_ops *dops; /* callbacks provided by device */ |
| struct concap_proto_ops *pops; /* callbacks provided by us */ |
| int flags; |
| void *proto_data; /* protocol specific private data, to |
| be accessed via *pops methods only*/ |
| /* |
| : |
| whatever |
| : |
| */ |
| }; |
| |
| Most of this is filled in when the device requests the protocol to |
| be reset (opend). The network interface must provide the net_dev and |
| dops pointers. Other concap_proto members should be considered private |
| data that are only accessed by the pops callback functions. Likewise, |
| a concap proto should access the network device's private data |
| only by means of the callbacks referred to by the dops pointer. |
| |
| |
| A possible extended device structure which uses the connection controlling |
| encapsulation services could look like this: |
| |
| struct concap_device{ |
| struct net_device net_dev; |
| struct my_priv /* device->local stuff */ |
| /* the my_priv struct might contain a |
| struct concap_device_ops *dops; |
| to provide the device specific callbacks |
| */ |
| struct concap_proto *cprot; /* callbacks provided by protocol */ |
| }; |
| |
| |
| |
| Misc Thoughts |
| ============= |
| |
| The concept of the concap proto might help to reuse protocol code and |
| reduce the complexity of certain network interface implementations. |
| The trade off is that it introduces yet another procedure call layer |
| when processing the protocol. This has of course some impact on |
| performance. However, typically the concap interface will be used by |
| devices attached to slow lines (like telephone, isdn, leased synchronous |
| lines). For such slow lines, the overhead is probably negligible. |
| This might no longer hold for certain high speed WAN links (like |
| ATM). |
| |
| |
| If general linux network interfaces explicitly supported concap |
| protocols (e.g. by a member struct concap_proto* in struct net_device) |
| then the interface of the service function could be changed |
| by passing a pointer of type (struct net_device*) instead of |
| type (struct concap_proto*). Doing so would make many of the service |
| functions compatible to network device support functions. |
| |
| e.g. instead of the concap protocol's service function |
| |
| int (*encap_and_xmit)(struct concap_proto *cprot, struct sk_buff *skb); |
| |
| we could have |
| |
| int (*encap_and_xmit)(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff *skb); |
| |
| As this is compatible to the dev->hard_start_xmit() method, the device |
| driver could directly register the concap protocol's encap_and_xmit() |
| function as its hard_start_xmit() method. This would eliminate one |
| procedure call layer. |
| |
| |
| The device's data request function could also be defined as |
| |
| int (*data_req)(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff *skb); |
| |
| This might even allow for some protocol stacking. And the network |
| interface might even register the same data_req() function directly |
| as its hard_start_xmit() method when a zero layer encapsulation |
| protocol is configured. Thus, eliminating the performance penalty |
| of the concap interface when a trivial concap protocol is used. |
| Nevertheless, the device remains able to support encapsulation |
| protocol configuration. |
| |