Revert d88dca79d3852a3623f606f781e013d61486828a
[linux/fpc-iii.git] / net / tipc / net.c
blobf61b7694138b5f7c0a208cfd2ce883d7a6c88d4b
1 /*
2 * net/tipc/net.c: TIPC network routing code
4 * Copyright (c) 1995-2006, Ericsson AB
5 * Copyright (c) 2005, Wind River Systems
6 * All rights reserved.
8 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
9 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
11 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
12 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
13 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
14 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
15 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
16 * 3. Neither the names of the copyright holders nor the names of its
17 * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
18 * this software without specific prior written permission.
20 * Alternatively, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
21 * GNU General Public License ("GPL") version 2 as published by the Free
22 * Software Foundation.
24 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
25 * AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
26 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
27 * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
28 * LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
29 * CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
30 * SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
31 * INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
32 * CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
33 * ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
34 * POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
37 #include "core.h"
38 #include "bearer.h"
39 #include "net.h"
40 #include "zone.h"
41 #include "addr.h"
42 #include "name_table.h"
43 #include "name_distr.h"
44 #include "subscr.h"
45 #include "link.h"
46 #include "msg.h"
47 #include "port.h"
48 #include "bcast.h"
49 #include "discover.h"
50 #include "config.h"
53 * The TIPC locking policy is designed to ensure a very fine locking
54 * granularity, permitting complete parallel access to individual
55 * port and node/link instances. The code consists of three major
56 * locking domains, each protected with their own disjunct set of locks.
58 * 1: The routing hierarchy.
59 * Comprises the structures 'zone', 'cluster', 'node', 'link'
60 * and 'bearer'. The whole hierarchy is protected by a big
61 * read/write lock, tipc_net_lock, to enssure that nothing is added
62 * or removed while code is accessing any of these structures.
63 * This layer must not be called from the two others while they
64 * hold any of their own locks.
65 * Neither must it itself do any upcalls to the other two before
66 * it has released tipc_net_lock and other protective locks.
68 * Within the tipc_net_lock domain there are two sub-domains;'node' and
69 * 'bearer', where local write operations are permitted,
70 * provided that those are protected by individual spin_locks
71 * per instance. Code holding tipc_net_lock(read) and a node spin_lock
72 * is permitted to poke around in both the node itself and its
73 * subordinate links. I.e, it can update link counters and queues,
74 * change link state, send protocol messages, and alter the
75 * "active_links" array in the node; but it can _not_ remove a link
76 * or a node from the overall structure.
77 * Correspondingly, individual bearers may change status within a
78 * tipc_net_lock(read), protected by an individual spin_lock ber bearer
79 * instance, but it needs tipc_net_lock(write) to remove/add any bearers.
82 * 2: The transport level of the protocol.
83 * This consists of the structures port, (and its user level
84 * representations, such as user_port and tipc_sock), reference and
85 * tipc_user (port.c, reg.c, socket.c).
87 * This layer has four different locks:
88 * - The tipc_port spin_lock. This is protecting each port instance
89 * from parallel data access and removal. Since we can not place
90 * this lock in the port itself, it has been placed in the
91 * corresponding reference table entry, which has the same life
92 * cycle as the module. This entry is difficult to access from
93 * outside the TIPC core, however, so a pointer to the lock has
94 * been added in the port instance, -to be used for unlocking
95 * only.
96 * - A read/write lock to protect the reference table itself (teg.c).
97 * (Nobody is using read-only access to this, so it can just as
98 * well be changed to a spin_lock)
99 * - A spin lock to protect the registry of kernel/driver users (reg.c)
100 * - A global spin_lock (tipc_port_lock), which only task is to ensure
101 * consistency where more than one port is involved in an operation,
102 * i.e., whe a port is part of a linked list of ports.
103 * There are two such lists; 'port_list', which is used for management,
104 * and 'wait_list', which is used to queue ports during congestion.
106 * 3: The name table (name_table.c, name_distr.c, subscription.c)
107 * - There is one big read/write-lock (tipc_nametbl_lock) protecting the
108 * overall name table structure. Nothing must be added/removed to
109 * this structure without holding write access to it.
110 * - There is one local spin_lock per sub_sequence, which can be seen
111 * as a sub-domain to the tipc_nametbl_lock domain. It is used only
112 * for translation operations, and is needed because a translation
113 * steps the root of the 'publication' linked list between each lookup.
114 * This is always used within the scope of a tipc_nametbl_lock(read).
115 * - A local spin_lock protecting the queue of subscriber events.
118 DEFINE_RWLOCK(tipc_net_lock);
119 static struct _zone *tipc_zones[256] = { NULL, };
120 struct network tipc_net = { tipc_zones };
122 struct tipc_node *tipc_net_select_remote_node(u32 addr, u32 ref)
124 return tipc_zone_select_remote_node(tipc_net.zones[tipc_zone(addr)], addr, ref);
127 u32 tipc_net_select_router(u32 addr, u32 ref)
129 return tipc_zone_select_router(tipc_net.zones[tipc_zone(addr)], addr, ref);
132 #if 0
133 u32 tipc_net_next_node(u32 a)
135 if (tipc_net.zones[tipc_zone(a)])
136 return tipc_zone_next_node(a);
137 return 0;
139 #endif
141 void tipc_net_remove_as_router(u32 router)
143 u32 z_num;
145 for (z_num = 1; z_num <= tipc_max_zones; z_num++) {
146 if (!tipc_net.zones[z_num])
147 continue;
148 tipc_zone_remove_as_router(tipc_net.zones[z_num], router);
152 void tipc_net_send_external_routes(u32 dest)
154 u32 z_num;
156 for (z_num = 1; z_num <= tipc_max_zones; z_num++) {
157 if (tipc_net.zones[z_num])
158 tipc_zone_send_external_routes(tipc_net.zones[z_num], dest);
162 static void net_stop(void)
164 u32 z_num;
166 for (z_num = 1; z_num <= tipc_max_zones; z_num++)
167 tipc_zone_delete(tipc_net.zones[z_num]);
170 static void net_route_named_msg(struct sk_buff *buf)
172 struct tipc_msg *msg = buf_msg(buf);
173 u32 dnode;
174 u32 dport;
176 if (!msg_named(msg)) {
177 msg_dbg(msg, "tipc_net->drop_nam:");
178 buf_discard(buf);
179 return;
182 dnode = addr_domain(msg_lookup_scope(msg));
183 dport = tipc_nametbl_translate(msg_nametype(msg), msg_nameinst(msg), &dnode);
184 dbg("tipc_net->lookup<%u,%u>-><%u,%x>\n",
185 msg_nametype(msg), msg_nameinst(msg), dport, dnode);
186 if (dport) {
187 msg_set_destnode(msg, dnode);
188 msg_set_destport(msg, dport);
189 tipc_net_route_msg(buf);
190 return;
192 msg_dbg(msg, "tipc_net->rej:NO NAME: ");
193 tipc_reject_msg(buf, TIPC_ERR_NO_NAME);
196 void tipc_net_route_msg(struct sk_buff *buf)
198 struct tipc_msg *msg;
199 u32 dnode;
201 if (!buf)
202 return;
203 msg = buf_msg(buf);
205 msg_incr_reroute_cnt(msg);
206 if (msg_reroute_cnt(msg) > 6) {
207 if (msg_errcode(msg)) {
208 msg_dbg(msg, "NET>DISC>:");
209 buf_discard(buf);
210 } else {
211 msg_dbg(msg, "NET>REJ>:");
212 tipc_reject_msg(buf, msg_destport(msg) ?
213 TIPC_ERR_NO_PORT : TIPC_ERR_NO_NAME);
215 return;
218 msg_dbg(msg, "tipc_net->rout: ");
220 /* Handle message for this node */
221 dnode = msg_short(msg) ? tipc_own_addr : msg_destnode(msg);
222 if (tipc_in_scope(dnode, tipc_own_addr)) {
223 if (msg_isdata(msg)) {
224 if (msg_mcast(msg))
225 tipc_port_recv_mcast(buf, NULL);
226 else if (msg_destport(msg))
227 tipc_port_recv_msg(buf);
228 else
229 net_route_named_msg(buf);
230 return;
232 switch (msg_user(msg)) {
233 case ROUTE_DISTRIBUTOR:
234 tipc_cltr_recv_routing_table(buf);
235 break;
236 case NAME_DISTRIBUTOR:
237 tipc_named_recv(buf);
238 break;
239 case CONN_MANAGER:
240 tipc_port_recv_proto_msg(buf);
241 break;
242 default:
243 msg_dbg(msg,"DROP/NET/<REC<");
244 buf_discard(buf);
246 return;
249 /* Handle message for another node */
250 msg_dbg(msg, "NET>SEND>: ");
251 tipc_link_send(buf, dnode, msg_link_selector(msg));
254 int tipc_net_start(u32 addr)
256 char addr_string[16];
257 int res;
259 if (tipc_mode != TIPC_NODE_MODE)
260 return -ENOPROTOOPT;
262 tipc_subscr_stop();
263 tipc_cfg_stop();
265 tipc_own_addr = addr;
266 tipc_mode = TIPC_NET_MODE;
267 tipc_named_reinit();
268 tipc_port_reinit();
270 if ((res = tipc_cltr_init()) ||
271 (res = tipc_bclink_init())) {
272 return res;
275 tipc_k_signal((Handler)tipc_subscr_start, 0);
276 tipc_k_signal((Handler)tipc_cfg_init, 0);
278 info("Started in network mode\n");
279 info("Own node address %s, network identity %u\n",
280 tipc_addr_string_fill(addr_string, tipc_own_addr), tipc_net_id);
281 return 0;
284 void tipc_net_stop(void)
286 if (tipc_mode != TIPC_NET_MODE)
287 return;
288 write_lock_bh(&tipc_net_lock);
289 tipc_bearer_stop();
290 tipc_mode = TIPC_NODE_MODE;
291 tipc_bclink_stop();
292 net_stop();
293 write_unlock_bh(&tipc_net_lock);
294 info("Left network mode\n");