Add documentation about the upcoming Netlink protocol specs. Reviewed-by: Nicolas Dichtel <nicolas.dichtel@xxxxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@xxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@xxxxxxxxxx> -- v2: - plenty -> plenty of - type: unspec -> type: unused - ECHO edits from Guillaume --- Documentation/core-api/index.rst | 1 + Documentation/core-api/netlink.rst | 99 +++++ .../userspace-api/netlink/c-code-gen.rst | 104 +++++ .../netlink/genetlink-legacy.rst | 96 ++++ Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/index.rst | 5 + Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/specs.rst | 410 ++++++++++++++++++ MAINTAINERS | 2 + 7 files changed, 717 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/core-api/netlink.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/c-code-gen.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/genetlink-legacy.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/specs.rst diff --git a/Documentation/core-api/index.rst b/Documentation/core-api/index.rst index dc95df462eea..08d1d1da4077 100644 --- a/Documentation/core-api/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/core-api/index.rst @@ -122,6 +122,7 @@ Documents that don't fit elsewhere or which have yet to be categorized. :maxdepth: 1 librs + netlink .. only:: subproject and html diff --git a/Documentation/core-api/netlink.rst b/Documentation/core-api/netlink.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..7b98dd48a6af --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/core-api/netlink.rst @@ -0,0 +1,99 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause + +.. _kernel_netlink: + +=================================== +Netlink notes for kernel developers +=================================== + +General guidance +================ + +Attribute enums +--------------- + +Older families often define "null" attributes and commands with value +of ``0`` and named ``unspec``. This is supported (``type: unused``) +but should be avoided in new families. The ``unspec`` enum values are +not used in practice, so just set the value of the first attribute to ``1``. + +Message enums +------------- + +Use the same command IDs for requests and replies. This makes it easier +to match them up, and we have plenty of ID space. + +Use separate command IDs for notifications. This makes it easier to +sort the notifications from replies (and present them to the user +application via a different API than replies). + +Answer requests +--------------- + +Older families do not reply to all of the commands, especially NEW / ADD +commands. User only gets information whether the operation succeeded or +not via the ACK. Try to find useful data to return. Once the command is +added whether it replies with a full message or only an ACK is uAPI and +cannot be changed. It's better to err on the side of replying. + +Specifically NEW and ADD commands should reply with information identifying +the created object such as the allocated object's ID (without having to +resort to using ``NLM_F_ECHO``). + +NLM_F_ECHO +---------- + +Make sure to pass the request info to genl_notify() to allow ``NLM_F_ECHO`` +to take effect. This is useful for programs that need precise feedback +from the kernel (for example for logging purposes). + +Support dump consistency +------------------------ + +If iterating over objects during dump may skip over objects or repeat +them - make sure to report dump inconsistency with ``NLM_F_DUMP_INTR``. + +Netlink specification +===================== + +Documentation of the Netlink specification parts which are only relevant +to the kernel space. + +Globals +------- + +kernel-policy +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Defines if the kernel validation policy is per operation (``per-op``) +or for the entire family (``global``). New families should use ``per-op`` +(default) to be able to narrow down the attributes accepted by a specific +command. + +checks +------ + +Documentation for the ``checks`` sub-sections of attribute specs. + +unterminated-ok +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Accept strings without the null-termination (for legacy families only). +Switches from the ``NLA_NUL_STRING`` to ``NLA_STRING`` policy type. + +max-len +~~~~~~~ + +Defines max length for a binary or string attribute (corresponding +to the ``len`` member of struct nla_policy). For string attributes terminating +null character is not counted towards ``max-len``. + +The field may either be a literal integer value or a name of a defined +constant. String types may reduce the constant by one +(i.e. specify ``max-len: CONST - 1``) to reserve space for the terminating +character so implementations should recognize such pattern. + +min-len +~~~~~~~ + +Similar to ``max-len`` but defines minimum length. diff --git a/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/c-code-gen.rst b/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/c-code-gen.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..7c6a86f9ceb9 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/c-code-gen.rst @@ -0,0 +1,104 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause + +============================== +Netlink spec C code generation +============================== + +This document describes how Netlink specifications are used to render +C code (uAPI, policies etc.). It also defines the additional properties +allowed in older families by the ``genetlink-c`` protocol level, +to control the naming. + +For brevity this document refers to ``name`` properties of various +objects by the object type. For example ``$attr`` is the value +of ``name`` in an attribute, and ``$family`` is the name of the +family (the global ``name`` property). + +The upper case is used to denote literal values, e.g. ``$family-CMD`` +means the concatenation of ``$family``, a dash character, and the literal +``CMD``. + +The names of ``#defines`` and enum values are always converted to upper case, +and with dashes (``-``) replaced by underscores (``_``). + +If the constructured name is a C keyword, an extra underscore is +appended (``do`` -> ``do_``). + +Globals +======= + +``c-family-name`` controls the name of the ``#define`` for the family +name, default is ``$family-FAMILY-NAME``. + +``c-version-name`` controls the name of the ``#define`` for the version +of the family, default is ``$family-FAMILY-VERSION``. + +``max-by-define`` selects if max values for enums are defined as a +``#define`` rather than inside the enum. + +Definitions +=========== + +Constants +--------- + +Every constant is rendered as a ``#define``. +The name of the constant is ``$family-$constant`` and the value +is rendered as a string or integer according to its type in the spec. + +Enums and flags +--------------- + +Enums are named ``$family-$enum``. The full name can be set directly +or suppressed by specifying the ``enum-name`` property. +Default entry name is ``$family-$enum-$entry``. +If ``name-prefix`` is specified it replaces the ``$family-$enum`` +portion of the entry name. + +Attributes +========== + +Each attribute set (excluding fractional sets) is rendered as an enum. + +Attribute enums are traditionally unnamed in netlink headers. +If naming is desired ``enum-name`` can be used to specify the name. + +The default attribute name prefix is ``$family-A`` if the name of the set +is the same as the name of the family and ``$family-A-$set`` if the names +differ. The prefix can be overridden by the ``name-prefix`` property of a set. +The rest of the section will refer to the prefix as ``$pfx``. + +Attributes are named ``$pfx-$attribute``. + +Attribute enums end with two special values ``__$pfx-MAX`` and ``$pfx-MAX`` +which are used for sizing attribute tables. +These two names can be specified directly with the ``attr-cnt-name`` +and ``attr-max-name`` properties respectively. + +If ``max-by-define`` is set to ``true`` at the global level ``attr-max-name`` +will be specified as a ``#define`` rather than an enum value. + +Operations +========== + +Operations are named ``$family-CMD-$operation``. +If ``name-prefix`` is specified it replaces the ``$family-CMD`` +portion of the name. + +Similarly to attribute enums operation enums end with special count and max +attributes. For operations those attributes can be renamed with +``cmd-cnt-name`` and ``cmd-max-name``. Max will be a define if ``max-by-define`` +is ``true``. + +Multicast groups +================ + +Each multicast group gets a define rendered into the kernel uAPI header. +The name of the define is ``$family-MCGRP-$group``, and can be overwritten +with the ``c-define-name`` property. + +Code generation +=============== + +uAPI header is assumed to come from ``<linux/$family.h>`` in the default header +search path. It can be changed using the ``uapi-header`` global property. diff --git a/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/genetlink-legacy.rst b/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/genetlink-legacy.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..65cbbffee0bf --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/genetlink-legacy.rst @@ -0,0 +1,96 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause + +================================================================= +Netlink specification support for legacy Generic Netlink families +================================================================= + +This document describes the many additional quirks and properties +required to describe older Generic Netlink families which form +the ``genetlink-legacy`` protocol level. + +The spec is a work in progress, some of the quirks are just documented +for future reference. + +Specification (defined) +======================= + +Attribute type nests +-------------------- + +New Netlink families should use ``multi-attr`` to define arrays. +Older families (e.g. ``genetlink`` control family) attempted to +define array types reusing attribute type to carry information. + +For reference the ``multi-attr`` array may look like this:: + + [ARRAY-ATTR] + [INDEX (optionally)] + [MEMBER1] + [MEMBER2] + [SOME-OTHER-ATTR] + [ARRAY-ATTR] + [INDEX (optionally)] + [MEMBER1] + [MEMBER2] + +where ``ARRAY-ATTR`` is the array entry type. + +array-nest +~~~~~~~~~~ + +``array-nest`` creates the following structure:: + + [SOME-OTHER-ATTR] + [ARRAY-ATTR] + [ENTRY] + [MEMBER1] + [MEMBER2] + [ENTRY] + [MEMBER1] + [MEMBER2] + +It wraps the entire array in an extra attribute (hence limiting its size +to 64kB). The ``ENTRY`` nests are special and have the index of the entry +as their type instead of normal attribute type. + +type-value +~~~~~~~~~~ + +``type-value`` is a construct which uses attribute types to carry +information about a single object (often used when array is dumped +entry-by-entry). + +``type-value`` can have multiple levels of nesting, for example +genetlink's policy dumps create the following structures:: + + [POLICY-IDX] + [ATTR-IDX] + [POLICY-INFO-ATTR1] + [POLICY-INFO-ATTR2] + +Where the first level of nest has the policy index as it's attribute +type, it contains a single nest which has the attribute index as its +type. Inside the attr-index nest are the policy attributes. Modern +Netlink families should have instead defined this as a flat structure, +the nesting serves no good purpose here. + +Other quirks (todo) +=================== + +Structures +---------- + +Legacy families can define C structures both to be used as the contents +of an attribute and as a fixed message header. The plan is to define +the structs in ``definitions`` and link the appropriate attrs. + +Multi-message DO +---------------- + +New Netlink families should never respond to a DO operation with multiple +replies, with ``NLM_F_MULTI`` set. Use a filtered dump instead. + +At the spec level we can define a ``dumps`` property for the ``do``, +perhaps with values of ``combine`` and ``multi-object`` depending +on how the parsing should be implemented (parse into a single reply +vs list of objects i.e. pretty much a dump). diff --git a/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/index.rst b/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/index.rst index b0c21538d97d..be250110c8f6 100644 --- a/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/index.rst @@ -10,3 +10,8 @@ Netlink documentation for users. :maxdepth: 2 intro + specs + c-code-gen + genetlink-legacy + +See also :ref:`Documentation/core-api/netlink.rst <kernel_netlink>`. diff --git a/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/specs.rst b/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/specs.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..49f2f782f537 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/specs.rst @@ -0,0 +1,410 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause + +========================================= +Netlink protocol specifications (in YAML) +========================================= + +Netlink protocol specifications are complete, machine readable descriptions of +Netlink protocols written in YAML. The goal of the specifications is to allow +separating Netlink parsing from user space logic and minimize the amount of +hand written Netlink code for each new family, command, attribute. +Netlink specs should be complete and not depend on any other spec +or C header file, making it easy to use in languages which can't include +kernel headers directly. + +Internally kernel uses the YAML specs to generate: + + - the C uAPI header + - documentation of the protocol as a ReST file + - policy tables for input attribute validation + - operation tables + +YAML specifications can be found under ``Documentation/netlink/specs/`` + +Compatibility levels +==================== + +There are four schema levels for Netlink specs, from the simplest used +by new families to the most complex covering all the quirks of the old ones. +Each next level inherits the attributes of the previous level, meaning that +user capable of parsing more complex ``genetlink`` schemas is also compatible +with simpler ones. The levels are: + + - ``genetlink`` - most streamlined, should be used by all new families + - ``genetlink-c`` - superset of ``genetlink`` with extra attributes allowing + customization of define and enum type and value names; this schema should + be equivalent to ``genetlink`` for all implementations which don't interact + directly with C uAPI headers + - ``genetlink-legacy`` - Generic Netlink catch all schema supporting quirks of + all old genetlink families, strange attribute formats, binary structures etc. + - ``netlink-raw`` - catch all schema supporting pre-Generic Netlink protocols + such as ``NETLINK_ROUTE`` + +The definition of the schemas (in ``jsonschema``) can be found +under ``Documentation/netlink/``. + +Schema structure +================ + +YAML schema has the following conceptual sections: + + - globals + - definitions + - attributes + - operations + - multicast groups + +Most properties in the schema accept (or in fact require) a ``doc`` +sub-property documenting the defined object. + +The following sections describe the properties of the most modern ``genetlink`` +schema. See the documentation of :doc:`genetlink-c <c-code-gen>` +for information on how C names are derived from name properties. + +genetlink +========= + +Globals +------- + +Attributes listed directly at the root level of the spec file. + +name +~~~~ + +Name of the family. Name identifies the family in a unique way, since +the Family IDs are allocated dynamically. + +version +~~~~~~~ + +Generic Netlink family version, default is 1. + +protocol +~~~~~~~~ + +The schema level, default is ``genetlink``, which is the only value +allowed for new ``genetlink`` families. + +definitions +----------- + +Array of type and constant definitions. + +name +~~~~ + +Name of the type / constant. + +type +~~~~ + +One of the following types: + + - const - a single, standalone constant + - enum - defines an integer enumeration, with values for each entry + incrementing by 1, (e.g. 0, 1, 2, 3) + - flags - defines an integer enumeration, with values for each entry + occupying a bit, starting from bit 0, (e.g. 1, 2, 4, 8) + +value +~~~~~ + +The value for the ``const``. + +value-start +~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The first value for ``enum`` and ``flags``, allows overriding the default +start value of ``0`` (for ``enum``) and starting bit (for ``flags``). +For ``flags`` ``value-start`` selects the starting bit, not the shifted value. + +Sparse enumerations are not supported. + +entries +~~~~~~~ + +Array of names of the entries for ``enum`` and ``flags``. + +header +~~~~~~ + +For C-compatible languages, header which already defines this value. +In case the definition is shared by multiple families (e.g. ``IFNAMSIZ``) +code generators for C-compabile languages may prefer to add an appropriate +include instead of rendering a new definition. + +attribute-sets +-------------- + +This property contains information about netlink attributes of the family. +All families have at least one attribute set, most have multiple. +``attribute-sets`` is an array, with each entry describing a single set. + +Note that the spec is "flattened" and is not meant to visually resemble +the format of the netlink messages (unlike certain ad-hoc documentation +formats seen in kernel comments). In the spec subordinate attribute sets +are not defined inline as a nest, but defined in a separate attribute set +referred to with a ``nested-attributes`` property of the container. + +Spec may also contain fractional sets - sets which contain a ``subset-of`` +property. Such sets describe a section of a full set, allowing narrowing down +which attributes are allowed in a nest or refining the validation criteria. +Fractional sets can only be used in nests. They are not rendered to the uAPI +in any fashion. + +name +~~~~ + +Uniquely identifies the attribute set, operations and nested attributes +refer to the sets by the ``name``. + +subset-of +~~~~~~~~~ + +Re-defines a portion of another set (a fractional set). +Allows narrowing down fields and changing validation criteria +or even types of attributes depending on the nest in which they +are contained. The ``value`` of each attribute in the fractional +set is implicitly the same as in the main set. + +attributes +~~~~~~~~~~ + +List of attributes in the set. + +Attribute properties +-------------------- + +name +~~~~ + +Identifies the attribute, unique within the set. + +type +~~~~ + +Netlink attribute type, see :ref:`attr_types`. + +.. _assign_val: + +value +~~~~~ + +Numerical attribute ID, used in serialized Netlink messages. +The ``value`` property can be skipped, in which case the attribute ID +will be the value of the previous attribute plus one (recursively) +and ``0`` for the first attribute in the attribute set. + +Note that the ``value`` of an attribute is defined only in its main set. + +enum +~~~~ + +For integer types specifies that values in the attribute belong to a defined +``enum``. Note that in case of ``flags`` the values may be combined. + +nested-attributes +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Identifies the attribute space for attributes nested within given attribute. +Only valid for complex attributes which may have sub-attributes. + +multi-attr (arrays) +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Boolean property signifying that the attribute may be present multiple times. +Allowing an attribute to repeat is the recommended way of implementing arrays +(no extra nesting). + +byte-order +~~~~~~~~~~ + +For integer types specifies attribute byte order - ``little-endian`` +or ``big-endian``. + +checks +~~~~~~ + +Input validation constraints used by the kernel. User space should query +the policy of the running kernel using Generic Netlink introspection, +rather than depend on what is specified in the spec file. + +The validation policy in the kernel is formed by combining the type +definition (``type`` and ``nested-attributes``) and the ``checks``. + +operations +---------- + +This section describes messages passed between the kernel and the user space. +There are three types of entries in this section - operations, notifications +and events. + +Operations describe the most common request - response communication. User +sends a request and kernel replies. Each operation may contain any combination +of the two modes familiar to netlink users - ``do`` and ``dump``. +``do`` and ``dump`` in turn contain a combination of ``request`` and +``response`` properties. If no explicit message with attributes is passed +in a given direction (e.g. a ``dump`` which does not accept filter, or a ``do`` +of a SET operation to which the kernel responds with just the netlink error +code) ``request`` or ``response`` section can be skipped. +``request`` and ``response`` sections list the attributes allowed in a message. +The list contains only the names of attributes from a set referred +to by the ``attribute-set`` property. + +Notifications and events both refer to the asynchronous messages sent by +the kernel to members of a multicast group. The difference between the +two is that a notification shares its contents with a GET operation +(the name of the GET operation is specified in the ``notify`` property). +This arrangement is commonly used for notifications about +objects where the notification carries the full object definition. + +Events are more focused and carry only a subset of information rather than full +object state (a made up example would be a link state change event with just +the interface name and the new link state). Events contain the ``event`` +property. Events are considered less idiomatic for netlink and notifications +should be preferred. + +list +~~~~ + +The only property of ``operations`` for ``genetlink``, holds the list of +operations, notifications etc. + +Operation properties +-------------------- + +name +~~~~ + +Identifies the operation. + +value +~~~~~ + +Numerical message ID, used in serialized Netlink messages. +The same enumeration rules are applied as to +:ref:`attribute values<assign_val>`. + +attribute-set +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Specifies the attribute set contained within the message. + +do +~~~ + +Specification for the ``doit`` request. Should contain ``request``, ``reply`` +or both of these properties, each holding a :ref:`attr_list`. + +dump +~~~~ + +Specification for the ``dumpit`` request. Should contain ``request``, ``reply`` +or both of these properties, each holding a :ref:`attr_list`. + +notify +~~~~~~ + +Designates the message as a notification. Contains the name of the operation +(possibly the same as the operation holding this property) which shares +the contents with the notification (``do``). + +event +~~~~~ + +Specification of attributes in the event, holds a :ref:`attr_list`. +``event`` property is mutually exclusive with ``notify``. + +mcgrp +~~~~~ + +Used with ``event`` and ``notify``, specifies which multicast group +message belongs to. + +.. _attr_list: + +Message attribute list +---------------------- + +``request``, ``reply`` and ``event`` properties have a single ``attributes`` +property which holds the list of attribute names. + +mcast-groups +------------ + +This section lists the multicast groups of the family. + +list +~~~~ + +The only property of ``mcast-groups`` for ``genetlink``, holds the list +of groups. + +Multicast group properties +-------------------------- + +name +~~~~ + +Uniquely identifies the multicast group in the family. Similarly to +Family ID, Multicast Group ID needs to be resolved at runtime, based +on the name. + +.. _attr_types: + +Attribute types +=============== + +This section describes the attribute types supported by the ``genetlink`` +compatibility level. Refer to documentation of different levels for additional +attribute types. + +Scalar integer types +-------------------- + +Fixed-width integer types: +``u8``, ``u16``, ``u32``, ``u64``, ``s8``, ``s16``, ``s32``, ``s64``. + +Note that types smaller than 32 bit should be avoided as using them +does not save any memory in Netlink messages (due to alignment). +See :ref:`pad_type` for padding of 64 bit attributes. + +The payload of the attribute is the integer in host order unless ``byte-order`` +specifies otherwise. + +.. _pad_type: + +pad +--- + +Special attribute type used for padding attributes which require alignment +bigger than standard 4B alignment required by netlink (e.g. 64 bit integers). +There can only be a single attribute of the ``pad`` type in any attribute set +and it should be automatically used for padding when needed. + +flag +---- + +Attribute with no payload, its presence is the entire information. + +binary +------ + +Raw binary data attribute, the contents are opaque to generic code. + +string +------ + +Character string. Unless ``checks`` has ``unterminated-ok`` set to ``true`` +the string is required to be null terminated. +``max-len`` in ``checks`` indicates the longest possible string, +if not present the length of the string is unbounded. + +Note that ``max-len`` does not count the terminating character. + +nest +---- + +Attribute containing other (nested) attributes. +``nested-attributes`` specifies which attribute set is used inside. diff --git a/MAINTAINERS b/MAINTAINERS index eb8776f2f061..ea19dd4155d7 100644 --- a/MAINTAINERS +++ b/MAINTAINERS @@ -14188,8 +14188,10 @@ Q: https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/netdevbpf/list/ B: mailto:netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx T: git git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net.git T: git git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next.git +F: Documentation/core-api/netlink.rst F: Documentation/networking/ F: Documentation/process/maintainer-netdev.rst +F: Documentation/userspace-api/netlink/ F: include/linux/in.h F: include/linux/net.h F: include/linux/netdevice.h -- 2.37.3