openssl/include/internal/quic_stream.h
Tomas Mraz a17c713a7a Plug the QUIC_RSTREAM to the RX depacketizer
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Hugo Landau <hlandau@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/19351)
2022-11-14 08:01:57 +00:00

342 lines
14 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright 2022 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_INTERNAL_QUIC_STREAM_H
# define OSSL_INTERNAL_QUIC_STREAM_H
# pragma once
#include "internal/e_os.h"
#include "internal/time.h"
#include "internal/quic_types.h"
#include "internal/quic_wire.h"
#include "internal/quic_record_tx.h"
#include "internal/quic_record_rx.h"
#include "internal/quic_record_rx_wrap.h"
#include "internal/quic_fc.h"
#include "internal/quic_statm.h"
/*
* QUIC Send Stream
* ================
*
* The QUIC Send Stream Manager (QUIC_SSTREAM) is responsible for:
*
* - accepting octet strings of stream data;
*
* - generating corresponding STREAM frames;
*
* - receiving notifications of lost frames, in order to generate new STREAM
* frames for the lost data;
*
* - receiving notifications of acknowledged frames, in order to internally
* reuse memory used to store acknowledged stream data;
*
* - informing the caller of how much more stream data it can accept into
* its internal buffers, so as to ensure that the amount of unacknowledged
* data which can be written to a stream is not infinite and to allow the
* caller to manifest backpressure conditions to the user.
*
* The QUIC_SSTREAM is instantiated once for every stream with a send component
* (i.e., for a unidirectional send stream or for the send component of a
* bidirectional stream).
*
* Note: The terms 'TX' and 'RX' are used when referring to frames, packets and
* datagrams. The terms 'send' and 'receive' are used when referring to the
* stream abstraction. Applications send; we transmit.
*/
typedef struct quic_sstream_st QUIC_SSTREAM;
/*
* Instantiates a new QUIC_SSTREAM. init_buf_size specifies the initial size of
* the stream data buffer in bytes, which must be positive.
*/
QUIC_SSTREAM *ossl_quic_sstream_new(size_t init_buf_size);
/*
* Frees a QUIC_SSTREAM and associated stream data storage.
*
* Any iovecs returned by ossl_quic_sstream_get_stream_frame cease to be valid after
* calling this function.
*/
void ossl_quic_sstream_free(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss);
/*
* (For TX packetizer use.) Retrieves information about application stream data
* which is ready for transmission.
*
* *hdr is filled with the logical offset, maximum possible length of stream
* data which can be transmitted, and a pointer to the stream data to be
* transmitted. is_fin is set to 1 if hdr->offset + hdr->len is the final size
* of the stream and 0 otherwise. hdr->stream_id is not set; the caller must set
* it.
*
* The caller is not obligated to send all of the data. If the caller does not
* send all of the data, the caller must reduce hdr->len before serializing the
* header structure and must ensure that hdr->is_fin is cleared.
*
* hdr->has_explicit_len is always set. It is the caller's responsibility to
* clear this if it wants to use the optimization of omitting the length field,
* as only the caller can know when this optimization can be performed.
*
* *num_iov must be set to the size of the iov array at call time. When this
* function returns successfully, it is updated to the number of iov entries
* which have been written.
*
* The stream data may be split across up to two IOVs due to internal ring
* buffer organisation. The sum of the lengths of the IOVs and the value written
* to hdr->len will always match. If the caller decides to send less than
* hdr->len of stream data, it must adjust the IOVs accordingly. This may be
* done by updating hdr->len and then calling the utility function
* ossl_quic_sstream_adjust_iov().
*
* After committing one or more bytes returned by ossl_quic_sstream_get_stream_frame to a
* packet, call ossl_quic_sstream_mark_transmitted with the inclusive range of logical
* byte numbers of the transmitted bytes (i.e., hdr->offset, hdr->offset +
* hdr->len - 1). If you do not call ossl_quic_sstream_mark_transmitted, the next call to
* ossl_quic_sstream_get_stream_frame will return the same data (or potentially the same
* and more, if more data has been appended by the application).
*
* It is the caller's responsibility to clamp the length of data which this
* function indicates is available according to other concerns, such as
* stream-level flow control, connection-level flow control, or the applicable
* maximum datagram payload length (MDPL) for a packet under construction.
*
* The skip argument can usually be given as zero. If it is non-zero, this
* function outputs a range which would be output if it were called again after
* calling ossl_quic_sstream_mark_transmitted() with the returned range, repeated 'skip'
* times, and so on. This may be useful for callers which wish to enumerate
* available stream frames and batch their calls to ossl_quic_sstream_mark_transmitted at
* a later time.
*
* On success, this function will never write *num_iov with a value other than
* 0, 1 or 2. A *num_iov value of 0 can only occurs when hdr->is_fin is set (for
* example, when a stream is closed after all existing data has been sent, and
* without sending any more data); otherwise the function returns 0 as there is
* nothing useful to report.
*
* Returns 1 on success and 0 if there is no stream data available for
* transmission, or on other error (such as if the caller provides fewer
* than two IOVs.)
*/
int ossl_quic_sstream_get_stream_frame(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss,
size_t skip,
OSSL_QUIC_FRAME_STREAM *hdr,
OSSL_QTX_IOVEC *iov,
size_t *num_iov);
/*
* (For TX packetizer use.) Marks a logical range of the send stream as having
* been transmitted.
*
* 0 denotes the first byte ever sent on the stream. The start and end values
* are both inclusive, therefore all calls to this function always mark at least
* one byte as being transmitted; if no bytes have been transmitted, do not call
* this function.
*
* If the STREAM frame sent had the FIN bit set, you must also call
* ossl_quic_sstream_mark_transmitted_fin() after calling this function.
*
* If you sent a zero-length STREAM frame with the FIN bit set, you need only
* call ossl_quic_sstream_mark_transmitted_fin() and must not call this function.
*
* Returns 1 on success and 0 on error (e.g. if end < start).
*/
int ossl_quic_sstream_mark_transmitted(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss,
uint64_t start,
uint64_t end);
/*
* (For TX packetizer use.) Marks a STREAM frame with the FIN bit set as having
* been transmitted. final_size is the final size of the stream (i.e., the value
* offset + len of the transmitted STREAM frame).
*
* This function fails returning 0 if ossl_quic_sstream_fin() has not been called or if
* final_size is not correct. The final_size argument is not strictly needed by
* the QUIC_SSTREAM but is required as a sanity check.
*/
int ossl_quic_sstream_mark_transmitted_fin(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss,
uint64_t final_size);
/*
* (RX/ACKM use.) Marks a logical range of the send stream as having been lost.
* The send stream will return the lost data for retransmission on a future call
* to ossl_quic_sstream_get_stream_frame. The start and end values denote logical byte
* numbers and are inclusive.
*
* If the lost frame had the FIN bit set, you must also call
* ossl_quic_sstream_mark_lost_fin() after calling this function.
*
* Returns 1 on success and 0 on error (e.g. if end < start).
*/
int ossl_quic_sstream_mark_lost(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss,
uint64_t start,
uint64_t end);
/*
* (RX/ACKM use.) Informs the QUIC_SSTREAM that a STREAM frame with the FIN bit
* set was lost.
*
* Returns 1 on success and 0 on error.
*/
int ossl_quic_sstream_mark_lost_fin(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss);
/*
* (RX/ACKM use.) Marks a logical range of the send stream as having been
* acknowledged, meaning that the storage for the data in that range of the
* stream can be now recycled and neither that logical range of the stream nor
* any subset of it can be retransmitted again. The start and end values are
* inclusive.
*
* If the acknowledged frame had the FIN bit set, you must also call
* ossl_quic_sstream_mark_acked_fin() after calling this function.
*
* Returns 1 on success and 0 on error (e.g. if end < start).
*/
int ossl_quic_sstream_mark_acked(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss,
uint64_t start,
uint64_t end);
/*
* (RX/ACKM use.) Informs the QUIC_SSTREAM that a STREAM frame with the FIN bit
* set was acknowledged.
*
* Returns 1 on success and 0 on error.
*/
int ossl_quic_sstream_mark_acked_fin(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss);
/*
* (Front end use.) Appends user data to the stream. The data is copied into the
* stream. The amount of data consumed from buf is written to *consumed on
* success (short writes are possible). The amount of data which can be written
* can be determined in advance by calling the ossl_quic_sstream_get_buffer_avail()
* function; data is copied into an internal ring buffer of finite size.
*
* If the buffer is full, this should be materialised as a backpressure
* condition by the front end. This is not considered a failure condition;
* *consumed is written as 0 and the function returns 1.
*
* Returns 1 on success or 0 on failure.
*/
int ossl_quic_sstream_append(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss,
const unsigned char *buf,
size_t buf_len,
size_t *consumed);
/*
* Marks a stream as finished. ossl_quic_sstream_append() may not be called anymore
* after calling this.
*/
void ossl_quic_sstream_fin(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss);
/*
* Resizes the internal ring buffer. All stream data is preserved safely.
*
* This can be used to expand or contract the ring buffer, but not to contract
* the ring buffer below the amount of stream data currently stored in it.
* Returns 1 on success and 0 on failure.
*
* IMPORTANT: Any buffers referenced by iovecs output by
* ossl_quic_sstream_get_stream_frame() cease to be valid after calling this function.
*/
int ossl_quic_sstream_set_buffer_size(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss, size_t num_bytes);
/*
* Gets the internal ring buffer size in bytes.
*/
size_t ossl_quic_sstream_get_buffer_size(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss);
/*
* Gets the number of bytes used in the internal ring buffer.
*/
size_t ossl_quic_sstream_get_buffer_used(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss);
/*
* Gets the number of bytes free in the internal ring buffer.
*/
size_t ossl_quic_sstream_get_buffer_avail(QUIC_SSTREAM *qss);
/*
* Utility function to ensure the length of an array of iovecs matches the
* length given as len. Trailing iovecs have their length values reduced or set
* to 0 as necessary.
*/
void ossl_quic_sstream_adjust_iov(size_t len,
OSSL_QTX_IOVEC *iov,
size_t num_iov);
/*
* QUIC Receive Stream Manager
* ===========================
*
* The QUIC Receive Stream Manager (QUIC_RSTREAM) is responsible for
* storing the received stream data frames until the application
* is able to read the data.
*
* The QUIC_RSTREAM is instantiated once for every stream that can receive data.
* (i.e., for a unidirectional receiving stream or for the receiving component
* of a bidirectional stream).
*/
typedef struct quic_rstream_st QUIC_RSTREAM;
/*
* Create a new instance of QUIC_RSTREAM with pointers to the flow
* controller and statistics module. They can be NULL for unit testing.
* If they are non-NULL, the `rxfc` is called when receive stream data
* is read by application. `statm` is queried for current rtt.
*/
QUIC_RSTREAM *ossl_quic_rstream_new(OSSL_QRX *qrx, QUIC_RXFC *rxfc,
OSSL_STATM *statm);
/*
* Frees a QUIC_RSTREAM and any associated storage.
*/
void ossl_quic_rstream_free(QUIC_RSTREAM *qrs);
/*
* Adds received stream frame data to `qrs`. The `pkt_wrap` refcount is
* incremented if the `data` is queued directly without copying.
* It can be NULL for unit-testing purposes, i.e. if `data` is static or
* never released before calling ossl_quic_rstream_free().
* The `offset` is the absolute offset of the data in the stream.
* `data_len` can be 0 - can be useful for indicating `fin` for empty stream.
* Or to indicate `fin` without any further data added to the stream.
*/
int ossl_quic_rstream_queue_data(QUIC_RSTREAM *qrs, OSSL_QRX_PKT_WRAP *pkt_wrap,
uint64_t offset,
const unsigned char *data, uint64_t data_len,
int fin);
/*
* Copies the data from the stream storage to buffer `buf` of size `size`.
* `readbytes` is set to the number of bytes actually copied.
* `fin` is set to 1 if all the data from the stream were read so the
* stream is finished. It is set to 0 otherwise.
*/
int ossl_quic_rstream_read(QUIC_RSTREAM *qrs, unsigned char *buf, size_t size,
size_t *readbytes, int *fin);
/*
* Peeks at the data in the stream storage. It copies them to buffer `buf`
* of size `size` and sets `readbytes` to the number of bytes actually copied.
* `fin` is set to 1 if the copied data reach end of the stream.
* It is set to 0 otherwise.
*/
int ossl_quic_rstream_peek(QUIC_RSTREAM *qrs, unsigned char *buf, size_t size,
size_t *readbytes, int *fin);
/*
* Returns the size of the data available for reading. `fin` is set to 1 if
* after reading all the available data the stream will be finished,
* set to 0 otherwise.
*/
int ossl_quic_rstream_available(QUIC_RSTREAM *qrs, size_t *avail, int *fin);
#endif