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- /*
- * Copyright 2022-2024 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
- *
- * Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
- * this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
- * in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
- * https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
- */
- #ifndef OSSL_QUIC_REACTOR_H
- # define OSSL_QUIC_REACTOR_H
- # include "internal/time.h"
- # include "internal/sockets.h"
- # include "internal/quic_predef.h"
- # include "internal/thread_arch.h"
- # include <openssl/bio.h>
- # ifndef OPENSSL_NO_QUIC
- /*
- * Core I/O Reactor Framework
- * ==========================
- *
- * Manages use of async network I/O which the QUIC stack is built on. The core
- * mechanic looks like this:
- *
- * - There is a pollable FD for both the read and write side respectively.
- * Readability and writeability of these FDs respectively determines when
- * network I/O is available.
- *
- * - The reactor can export these FDs to the user, as well as flags indicating
- * whether the user should listen for readability, writeability, or neither.
- *
- * - The reactor can export a timeout indication to the user, indicating when
- * the reactor should be called (via libssl APIs) regardless of whether
- * the network socket has become ready.
- *
- * The reactor is based around a tick callback which is essentially the mutator
- * function. The mutator attempts to do whatever it can, attempting to perform
- * network I/O to the extent currently feasible. When done, the mutator returns
- * information to the reactor indicating when it should be woken up again:
- *
- * - Should it be woken up when network RX is possible?
- * - Should it be woken up when network TX is possible?
- * - Should it be woken up no later than some deadline X?
- *
- * The intention is that ALL I/O-related SSL_* functions with side effects (e.g.
- * SSL_read/SSL_write) consist of three phases:
- *
- * - Optionally mutate the QUIC machine's state.
- * - Optionally tick the QUIC reactor.
- * - Optionally mutate the QUIC machine's state.
- *
- * For example, SSL_write is a mutation (appending to a stream buffer) followed
- * by an optional tick (generally expected as we may want to send the data
- * immediately, though not strictly needed if transmission is being deferred due
- * to Nagle's algorithm, etc.).
- *
- * SSL_read is also a mutation and in principle does not need to tick the
- * reactor, but it generally will anyway to ensure that the reactor is regularly
- * ticked by an application which is only reading and not writing.
- *
- * If the SSL object is being used in blocking mode, SSL_read may need to block
- * if no data is available yet, and SSL_write may need to block if buffers
- * are full.
- *
- * The internals of the QUIC I/O engine always use asynchronous I/O. If the
- * application desires blocking semantics, we handle this by adding a blocking
- * adaptation layer on top of our internal asynchronous I/O API as exposed by
- * the reactor interface.
- */
- struct quic_tick_result_st {
- char net_read_desired;
- char net_write_desired;
- OSSL_TIME tick_deadline;
- };
- static ossl_inline ossl_unused void
- ossl_quic_tick_result_merge_into(QUIC_TICK_RESULT *r,
- const QUIC_TICK_RESULT *src)
- {
- r->net_read_desired = r->net_read_desired || src->net_read_desired;
- r->net_write_desired = r->net_write_desired || src->net_write_desired;
- r->tick_deadline = ossl_time_min(r->tick_deadline, src->tick_deadline);
- }
- struct quic_reactor_st {
- /*
- * BIO poll descriptors which can be polled. poll_r is a poll descriptor
- * which becomes readable when the QUIC state machine can potentially do
- * work, and poll_w is a poll descriptor which becomes writable when the
- * QUIC state machine can potentially do work. Generally, either of these
- * conditions means that SSL_tick() should be called, or another SSL
- * function which implicitly calls SSL_tick() (e.g. SSL_read/SSL_write()).
- */
- BIO_POLL_DESCRIPTOR poll_r, poll_w;
- OSSL_TIME tick_deadline; /* ossl_time_infinite() if none currently applicable */
- void (*tick_cb)(QUIC_TICK_RESULT *res, void *arg, uint32_t flags);
- void *tick_cb_arg;
- /*
- * These are true if we would like to know when we can read or write from
- * the network respectively.
- */
- unsigned int net_read_desired : 1;
- unsigned int net_write_desired : 1;
- /*
- * Are the read and write poll descriptors we are currently configured with
- * things we can actually poll?
- */
- unsigned int can_poll_r : 1;
- unsigned int can_poll_w : 1;
- };
- void ossl_quic_reactor_init(QUIC_REACTOR *rtor,
- void (*tick_cb)(QUIC_TICK_RESULT *res, void *arg,
- uint32_t flags),
- void *tick_cb_arg,
- OSSL_TIME initial_tick_deadline);
- void ossl_quic_reactor_set_poll_r(QUIC_REACTOR *rtor,
- const BIO_POLL_DESCRIPTOR *r);
- void ossl_quic_reactor_set_poll_w(QUIC_REACTOR *rtor,
- const BIO_POLL_DESCRIPTOR *w);
- const BIO_POLL_DESCRIPTOR *ossl_quic_reactor_get_poll_r(const QUIC_REACTOR *rtor);
- const BIO_POLL_DESCRIPTOR *ossl_quic_reactor_get_poll_w(const QUIC_REACTOR *rtor);
- int ossl_quic_reactor_can_poll_r(const QUIC_REACTOR *rtor);
- int ossl_quic_reactor_can_poll_w(const QUIC_REACTOR *rtor);
- int ossl_quic_reactor_can_support_poll_descriptor(const QUIC_REACTOR *rtor,
- const BIO_POLL_DESCRIPTOR *d);
- int ossl_quic_reactor_net_read_desired(QUIC_REACTOR *rtor);
- int ossl_quic_reactor_net_write_desired(QUIC_REACTOR *rtor);
- OSSL_TIME ossl_quic_reactor_get_tick_deadline(QUIC_REACTOR *rtor);
- /*
- * Do whatever work can be done, and as much work as can be done. This involves
- * e.g. seeing if we can read anything from the network (if we want to), seeing
- * if we can write anything to the network (if we want to), etc.
- *
- * If the CHANNEL_ONLY flag is set, this indicates that we should only
- * touch state which is synchronised by the channel mutex.
- */
- #define QUIC_REACTOR_TICK_FLAG_CHANNEL_ONLY (1U << 0)
- int ossl_quic_reactor_tick(QUIC_REACTOR *rtor, uint32_t flags);
- /*
- * Blocking I/O Adaptation Layer
- * =============================
- *
- * The blocking I/O adaptation layer implements blocking I/O on top of our
- * asynchronous core.
- *
- * The core mechanism is block_until_pred(), which does not return until pred()
- * returns a value other than 0. The blocker uses OS I/O synchronisation
- * primitives (e.g. poll(2)) and ticks the reactor until the predicate is
- * satisfied. The blocker is not required to call pred() more than once between
- * tick calls.
- *
- * When pred returns a non-zero value, that value is returned by this function.
- * This can be used to allow pred() to indicate error conditions and short
- * circuit the blocking process.
- *
- * A return value of -1 is reserved for network polling errors. Therefore this
- * return value should not be used by pred() if ambiguity is not desired. Note
- * that the predicate function can always arrange its own output mechanism, for
- * example by passing a structure of its own as the argument.
- *
- * If the SKIP_FIRST_TICK flag is set, the first call to reactor_tick() before
- * the first call to pred() is skipped. This is useful if it is known that
- * ticking the reactor again will not be useful (e.g. because it has already
- * been done).
- *
- * This function assumes a write lock is held for the entire QUIC_CHANNEL. If
- * mutex is non-NULL, it must be a lock currently held for write; it will be
- * unlocked during any sleep, and then relocked for write afterwards.
- *
- * Precondition: mutex is NULL or is held for write (unchecked)
- * Postcondition: mutex is NULL or is held for write (unless
- * CRYPTO_THREAD_write_lock fails)
- */
- #define SKIP_FIRST_TICK (1U << 0)
- int ossl_quic_reactor_block_until_pred(QUIC_REACTOR *rtor,
- int (*pred)(void *arg), void *pred_arg,
- uint32_t flags,
- CRYPTO_MUTEX *mutex);
- # endif
- #endif
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