/* * Copyright (C) 2007 Tobias Brunner * Copyright (C) 2005-2006 Martin Willi * Copyright (C) 2005 Jan Hutter * Hochschule fuer Technik Rapperswil * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it * under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the * Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your * option) any later version. See . * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY * or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License * for more details. * * $Id: traffic_selector.h 3658 2008-03-26 10:06:45Z martin $ */ /** * @defgroup traffic_selector traffic_selector * @{ @ingroup config */ #ifndef TRAFFIC_SELECTOR_H_ #define TRAFFIC_SELECTOR_H_ typedef enum ts_type_t ts_type_t; typedef struct traffic_selector_t traffic_selector_t; #include #include /** * Traffic selector types. */ enum ts_type_t { /** * A range of IPv4 addresses, represented by two four (4) octet * values. The first value is the beginning IPv4 address * (inclusive) and the second value is the ending IPv4 address * (inclusive). All addresses falling between the two specified * addresses are considered to be within the list. */ TS_IPV4_ADDR_RANGE = 7, /** * A range of IPv6 addresses, represented by two sixteen (16) * octet values. The first value is the beginning IPv6 address * (inclusive) and the second value is the ending IPv6 address * (inclusive). All addresses falling between the two specified * addresses are considered to be within the list. */ TS_IPV6_ADDR_RANGE = 8 }; /** * enum names for ts_type_t */ extern enum_name_t *ts_type_name; /** * Object representing a traffic selector entry. * * A traffic selector defines an range of addresses * and a range of ports. IPv6 is not fully supported yet. */ struct traffic_selector_t { /** * Compare two traffic selectors, and create a new one * which is the largest subset of both (subnet & port). * * Resulting traffic_selector is newly created and must be destroyed. * * @param other traffic selector to compare * @return * - created subset of them * - or NULL if no match between this and other */ traffic_selector_t *(*get_subset) (traffic_selector_t *this, traffic_selector_t *other); /** * Clone a traffic selector. * * @return clone of it */ traffic_selector_t *(*clone) (traffic_selector_t *this); /** * Get starting address of this ts as a chunk. * * Chunk is in network order gets allocated. * * @return chunk containing the address */ chunk_t (*get_from_address) (traffic_selector_t *this); /** * Get ending address of this ts as a chunk. * * Chunk is in network order gets allocated. * * @return chunk containing the address */ chunk_t (*get_to_address) (traffic_selector_t *this); /** * Get starting port of this ts. * * Port is in host order, since the parser converts it. * Size depends on protocol. * * @return port */ u_int16_t (*get_from_port) (traffic_selector_t *this); /** * Get ending port of this ts. * * Port is in host order, since the parser converts it. * Size depends on protocol. * * @return port */ u_int16_t (*get_to_port) (traffic_selector_t *this); /** * Get the type of the traffic selector. * * @return ts_type_t specifying the type */ ts_type_t (*get_type) (traffic_selector_t *this); /** * Get the protocol id of this ts. * * @return protocol id */ u_int8_t (*get_protocol) (traffic_selector_t *this); /** * Check if the traffic selector is for a single host. * * Traffic selector may describe the end of *-to-host tunnel. In this * case, the address range is a single address equal to the hosts * peer address. * If host is NULL, the traffic selector is checked if it is a single host, * but not a specific one. * * @param host host_t specifying the address range */ bool (*is_host) (traffic_selector_t *this, host_t* host); /** * Update the address of a traffic selector. * * Update the address range of a traffic selector, if it is * constructed with the traffic_selector_create_dynamic(). * * @param host host_t specifying the address */ void (*set_address) (traffic_selector_t *this, host_t* host); /** * Compare two traffic selectors for equality. * * @param other ts to compare with this * @return pointer to a string. */ bool (*equals) (traffic_selector_t *this, traffic_selector_t *other); /** * Check if a traffic selector is contained completly in another. * * contains() allows to check if multiple traffic selectors are redundant. * * @param other ts that contains this * @return TRUE if other contains this completly, FALSE otherwise */ bool (*is_contained_in) (traffic_selector_t *this, traffic_selector_t *other); /** * Check if a specific host is included in the address range of * this traffic selector. * * @param host the host to check */ bool (*includes) (traffic_selector_t *this, host_t *host); /** * Destroys the ts object */ void (*destroy) (traffic_selector_t *this); }; /** * Create a new traffic selector using human readable params. * * @param protocol protocol for this ts, such as TCP or UDP * @param type type of following addresses, such as TS_IPV4_ADDR_RANGE * @param from_addr start of address range as string * @param from_port port number in host order * @param to_addr end of address range as string * @param to_port port number in host order * @return * - traffic_selector_t object * - NULL if invalid address strings/protocol */ traffic_selector_t *traffic_selector_create_from_string( u_int8_t protocol, ts_type_t type, char *from_addr, u_int16_t from_port, char *to_addr, u_int16_t to_port); /** * Create a new traffic selector using data read from the net. * * There exists a mix of network and host order in the params. * But the parser gives us this data in this format, so we * don't have to convert twice. * * @param protocol protocol for this ts, such as TCP or UDP * @param type type of following addresses, such as TS_IPV4_ADDR_RANGE * @param from_address start of address range, network order * @param from_port port number, host order * @param to_address end of address range as string, network * @param to_port port number, host order * @return traffic_selector_t object */ traffic_selector_t *traffic_selector_create_from_bytes( u_int8_t protocol, ts_type_t type, chunk_t from_address, u_int16_t from_port, chunk_t to_address, u_int16_t to_port); /** * Create a new traffic selector defining a whole subnet. * * In most cases, definition of a traffic selector for full subnets * is sufficient. This constructor creates a traffic selector for * all protocols, all ports and the address range specified by the * subnet. * Additionally, a protocol and a port may be specified. Port ranges * are not supported via this constructor. * * @param net subnet to use * @param netbits size of the subnet, as used in e.g. 192.168.0.0/24 notation * @return * - traffic_selector_t object * - NULL if address family of net not supported */ traffic_selector_t *traffic_selector_create_from_subnet( host_t *net, u_int8_t netbits, u_int8_t protocol, u_int16_t port); /** * Create a traffic selector for host-to-host cases. * * For host2host or virtual IP setups, the traffic selectors gets * created at runtime using the external/virtual IP. Using this constructor, * a call to set_address() sets this traffic selector to the supplied host. * * * @param protocol upper layer protocl to allow * @param from_port start of allowed port range * @param to_port end of range * @return * - traffic_selector_t object * - NULL if type not supported */ traffic_selector_t *traffic_selector_create_dynamic(u_int8_t protocol, u_int16_t from_port, u_int16_t to_port); /** * Get printf hooks for a traffic selector. * * Arguments are: * traffic_selector_t *ts * With the #-specifier, arguments are: * linked_list_t *list containing traffic_selector_t* */ printf_hook_functions_t traffic_selector_get_printf_hooks(); #endif /* TRAFFIC_SELECTOR_H_ @} */