| Linux Phonet protocol family |
| ============================ |
| |
| Introduction |
| ------------ |
| |
| Phonet is a packet protocol used by Nokia cellular modems for both IPC |
| and RPC. With the Linux Phonet socket family, Linux host processes can |
| receive and send messages from/to the modem, or any other external |
| device attached to the modem. The modem takes care of routing. |
| |
| Phonet packets can be exchanged through various hardware connections |
| depending on the device, such as: |
| - USB with the CDC Phonet interface, |
| - infrared, |
| - Bluetooth, |
| - an RS232 serial port (with a dedicated "FBUS" line discipline), |
| - the SSI bus with some TI OMAP processors. |
| |
| |
| Packets format |
| -------------- |
| |
| Phonet packets have a common header as follows: |
| |
| struct phonethdr { |
| uint8_t pn_media; /* Media type (link-layer identifier) */ |
| uint8_t pn_rdev; /* Receiver device ID */ |
| uint8_t pn_sdev; /* Sender device ID */ |
| uint8_t pn_res; /* Resource ID or function */ |
| uint16_t pn_length; /* Big-endian message byte length (minus 6) */ |
| uint8_t pn_robj; /* Receiver object ID */ |
| uint8_t pn_sobj; /* Sender object ID */ |
| }; |
| |
| On Linux, the link-layer header includes the pn_media byte (see below). |
| The next 7 bytes are part of the network-layer header. |
| |
| The device ID is split: the 6 higher-order bits constitute the device |
| address, while the 2 lower-order bits are used for multiplexing, as are |
| the 8-bit object identifiers. As such, Phonet can be considered as a |
| network layer with 6 bits of address space and 10 bits for transport |
| protocol (much like port numbers in IP world). |
| |
| The modem always has address number zero. All other device have a their |
| own 6-bit address. |
| |
| |
| Link layer |
| ---------- |
| |
| Phonet links are always point-to-point links. The link layer header |
| consists of a single Phonet media type byte. It uniquely identifies the |
| link through which the packet is transmitted, from the modem's |
| perspective. Each Phonet network device shall prepend and set the media |
| type byte as appropriate. For convenience, a common phonet_header_ops |
| link-layer header operations structure is provided. It sets the |
| media type according to the network device hardware address. |
| |
| Linux Phonet network interfaces support a dedicated link layer packets |
| type (ETH_P_PHONET) which is out of the Ethernet type range. They can |
| only send and receive Phonet packets. |
| |
| The virtual TUN tunnel device driver can also be used for Phonet. This |
| requires IFF_TUN mode, _without_ the IFF_NO_PI flag. In this case, |
| there is no link-layer header, so there is no Phonet media type byte. |
| |
| Note that Phonet interfaces are not allowed to re-order packets, so |
| only the (default) Linux FIFO qdisc should be used with them. |
| |
| |
| Network layer |
| ------------- |
| |
| The Phonet socket address family maps the Phonet packet header: |
| |
| struct sockaddr_pn { |
| sa_family_t spn_family; /* AF_PHONET */ |
| uint8_t spn_obj; /* Object ID */ |
| uint8_t spn_dev; /* Device ID */ |
| uint8_t spn_resource; /* Resource or function */ |
| uint8_t spn_zero[...]; /* Padding */ |
| }; |
| |
| The resource field is only used when sending and receiving; |
| It is ignored by bind() and getsockname(). |
| |
| |
| Low-level datagram protocol |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| Applications can send Phonet messages using the Phonet datagram socket |
| protocol from the PF_PHONET family. Each socket is bound to one of the |
| 2^10 object IDs available, and can send and receive packets with any |
| other peer. |
| |
| struct sockaddr_pn addr = { .spn_family = AF_PHONET, }; |
| ssize_t len; |
| socklen_t addrlen = sizeof(addr); |
| int fd; |
| |
| fd = socket(PF_PHONET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0); |
| bind(fd, (struct sockaddr *)&addr, sizeof(addr)); |
| /* ... */ |
| |
| sendto(fd, msg, msglen, 0, (struct sockaddr *)&addr, sizeof(addr)); |
| len = recvfrom(fd, buf, sizeof(buf), 0, |
| (struct sockaddr *)&addr, &addrlen); |
| |
| This protocol follows the SOCK_DGRAM connection-less semantics. |
| However, connect() and getpeername() are not supported, as they did |
| not seem useful with Phonet usages (could be added easily). |
| |
| |
| Phonet Pipe protocol |
| -------------------- |
| |
| The Phonet Pipe protocol is a simple sequenced packets protocol |
| with end-to-end congestion control. It uses the passive listening |
| socket paradigm. The listening socket is bound to an unique free object |
| ID. Each listening socket can handle up to 255 simultaneous |
| connections, one per accept()'d socket. |
| |
| int lfd, cfd; |
| |
| lfd = socket(PF_PHONET, SOCK_SEQPACKET, PN_PROTO_PIPE); |
| listen (lfd, INT_MAX); |
| |
| /* ... */ |
| cfd = accept(lfd, NULL, NULL); |
| for (;;) |
| { |
| char buf[...]; |
| ssize_t len = read(cfd, buf, sizeof(buf)); |
| |
| /* ... */ |
| |
| write(cfd, msg, msglen); |
| } |
| |
| Connections are established between two endpoints by a "third party" |
| application. This means that both endpoints are passive; so connect() |
| is not possible. |
| |
| WARNING: |
| When polling a connected pipe socket for writability, there is an |
| intrinsic race condition whereby writability might be lost between the |
| polling and the writing system calls. In this case, the socket will |
| block until write becomes possible again, unless non-blocking mode |
| is enabled. |
| |
| |
| The pipe protocol provides two socket options at the SOL_PNPIPE level: |
| |
| PNPIPE_ENCAP accepts one integer value (int) of: |
| |
| PNPIPE_ENCAP_NONE: The socket operates normally (default). |
| |
| PNPIPE_ENCAP_IP: The socket is used as a backend for a virtual IP |
| interface. This requires CAP_NET_ADMIN capability. GPRS data |
| support on Nokia modems can use this. Note that the socket cannot |
| be reliably poll()'d or read() from while in this mode. |
| |
| PNPIPE_IFINDEX is a read-only integer value. It contains the |
| interface index of the network interface created by PNPIPE_ENCAP, |
| or zero if encapsulation is off. |
| |
| |
| Authors |
| ------- |
| |
| Linux Phonet was initially written by Sakari Ailus. |
| Other contributors include Mikä Liljeberg, Andras Domokos, |
| Carlos Chinea and Rémi Denis-Courmont. |
| Copyright (C) 2008 Nokia Corporation. |