smoltcp/phy/
mod.rs

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/*! Access to networking hardware.

The `phy` module deals with the *network devices*. It provides a trait
for transmitting and receiving frames, [Device](trait.Device.html)
and implementations of it:

  * the [_loopback_](struct.Loopback.html), for zero dependency testing;
  * _middleware_ [Tracer](struct.Tracer.html) and
    [FaultInjector](struct.FaultInjector.html), to facilitate debugging;
  * _adapters_ [RawSocket](struct.RawSocket.html) and
    [TunTapInterface](struct.TunTapInterface.html), to transmit and receive frames
    on the host OS.
*/
#![cfg_attr(
    feature = "medium-ethernet",
    doc = r##"
# Examples

An implementation of the [Device](trait.Device.html) trait for a simple hardware
Ethernet controller could look as follows:

```rust
use smoltcp::phy::{self, DeviceCapabilities, Device, Medium};
use smoltcp::time::Instant;

struct StmPhy {
    rx_buffer: [u8; 1536],
    tx_buffer: [u8; 1536],
}

impl<'a> StmPhy {
    fn new() -> StmPhy {
        StmPhy {
            rx_buffer: [0; 1536],
            tx_buffer: [0; 1536],
        }
    }
}

impl phy::Device for StmPhy {
    type RxToken<'a> = StmPhyRxToken<'a> where Self: 'a;
    type TxToken<'a> = StmPhyTxToken<'a> where Self: 'a;

    fn receive(&mut self, _timestamp: Instant) -> Option<(Self::RxToken<'_>, Self::TxToken<'_>)> {
        Some((StmPhyRxToken(&mut self.rx_buffer[..]),
              StmPhyTxToken(&mut self.tx_buffer[..])))
    }

    fn transmit(&mut self, _timestamp: Instant) -> Option<Self::TxToken<'_>> {
        Some(StmPhyTxToken(&mut self.tx_buffer[..]))
    }

    fn capabilities(&self) -> DeviceCapabilities {
        let mut caps = DeviceCapabilities::default();
        caps.max_transmission_unit = 1536;
        caps.max_burst_size = Some(1);
        caps.medium = Medium::Ethernet;
        caps
    }
}

struct StmPhyRxToken<'a>(&'a mut [u8]);

impl<'a> phy::RxToken for StmPhyRxToken<'a> {
    fn consume<R, F>(mut self, f: F) -> R
        where F: FnOnce(&mut [u8]) -> R
    {
        // TODO: receive packet into buffer
        let result = f(&mut self.0);
        println!("rx called");
        result
    }
}

struct StmPhyTxToken<'a>(&'a mut [u8]);

impl<'a> phy::TxToken for StmPhyTxToken<'a> {
    fn consume<R, F>(self, len: usize, f: F) -> R
        where F: FnOnce(&mut [u8]) -> R
    {
        let result = f(&mut self.0[..len]);
        println!("tx called {}", len);
        // TODO: send packet out
        result
    }
}
```
"##
)]

use crate::time::Instant;

#[cfg(all(
    any(feature = "phy-raw_socket", feature = "phy-tuntap_interface"),
    unix
))]
mod sys;

mod fault_injector;
mod fuzz_injector;
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
mod loopback;
mod pcap_writer;
#[cfg(all(feature = "phy-raw_socket", unix))]
mod raw_socket;
mod tracer;
#[cfg(all(
    feature = "phy-tuntap_interface",
    any(target_os = "linux", target_os = "android")
))]
mod tuntap_interface;

#[cfg(all(
    any(feature = "phy-raw_socket", feature = "phy-tuntap_interface"),
    unix
))]
pub use self::sys::wait;

pub use self::fault_injector::FaultInjector;
pub use self::fuzz_injector::{FuzzInjector, Fuzzer};
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
pub use self::loopback::Loopback;
pub use self::pcap_writer::{PcapLinkType, PcapMode, PcapSink, PcapWriter};
#[cfg(all(feature = "phy-raw_socket", unix))]
pub use self::raw_socket::RawSocket;
pub use self::tracer::Tracer;
#[cfg(all(
    feature = "phy-tuntap_interface",
    any(target_os = "linux", target_os = "android")
))]
pub use self::tuntap_interface::TunTapInterface;

/// Metadata associated to a packet.
///
/// The packet metadata is a set of attributes associated to network packets
/// as they travel up or down the stack. The metadata is get/set by the
/// [`Device`] implementations or by the user when sending/receiving packets from a
/// socket.
///
/// Metadata fields are enabled via Cargo features. If no field is enabled, this
/// struct becomes zero-sized, which allows the compiler to optimize it out as if
/// the packet metadata mechanism didn't exist at all.
///
/// Currently only UDP sockets allow setting/retrieving packet metadata. The metadata
/// for packets emitted with other sockets will be all default values.
///
/// This struct is marked as `#[non_exhaustive]`. This means it is not possible to
/// create it directly by specifying all fields. You have to instead create it with
/// default values and then set the fields you want. This makes adding metadata
/// fields a non-breaking change.
///
/// ```rust
/// let mut meta = smoltcp::phy::PacketMeta::default();
/// #[cfg(feature = "packetmeta-id")]
/// {
///     meta.id = 15;
/// }
/// ```
#[cfg_attr(feature = "defmt", derive(defmt::Format))]
#[derive(Debug, PartialEq, Eq, Hash, Clone, Copy, Default)]
#[non_exhaustive]
pub struct PacketMeta {
    #[cfg(feature = "packetmeta-id")]
    pub id: u32,
}

/// A description of checksum behavior for a particular protocol.
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, Default)]
#[cfg_attr(feature = "defmt", derive(defmt::Format))]
pub enum Checksum {
    /// Verify checksum when receiving and compute checksum when sending.
    #[default]
    Both,
    /// Verify checksum when receiving.
    Rx,
    /// Compute checksum before sending.
    Tx,
    /// Ignore checksum completely.
    None,
}

impl Checksum {
    /// Returns whether checksum should be verified when receiving.
    pub fn rx(&self) -> bool {
        match *self {
            Checksum::Both | Checksum::Rx => true,
            _ => false,
        }
    }

    /// Returns whether checksum should be verified when sending.
    pub fn tx(&self) -> bool {
        match *self {
            Checksum::Both | Checksum::Tx => true,
            _ => false,
        }
    }
}

/// A description of checksum behavior for every supported protocol.
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Default)]
#[cfg_attr(feature = "defmt", derive(defmt::Format))]
#[non_exhaustive]
pub struct ChecksumCapabilities {
    pub ipv4: Checksum,
    pub udp: Checksum,
    pub tcp: Checksum,
    #[cfg(feature = "proto-ipv4")]
    pub icmpv4: Checksum,
    #[cfg(feature = "proto-ipv6")]
    pub icmpv6: Checksum,
}

impl ChecksumCapabilities {
    /// Checksum behavior that results in not computing or verifying checksums
    /// for any of the supported protocols.
    pub fn ignored() -> Self {
        ChecksumCapabilities {
            ipv4: Checksum::None,
            udp: Checksum::None,
            tcp: Checksum::None,
            #[cfg(feature = "proto-ipv4")]
            icmpv4: Checksum::None,
            #[cfg(feature = "proto-ipv6")]
            icmpv6: Checksum::None,
        }
    }
}

/// A description of device capabilities.
///
/// Higher-level protocols may achieve higher throughput or lower latency if they consider
/// the bandwidth or packet size limitations.
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Default)]
#[cfg_attr(feature = "defmt", derive(defmt::Format))]
#[non_exhaustive]
pub struct DeviceCapabilities {
    /// Medium of the device.
    ///
    /// This indicates what kind of packet the sent/received bytes are, and determines
    /// some behaviors of Interface. For example, ARP/NDISC address resolution is only done
    /// for Ethernet mediums.
    pub medium: Medium,

    /// Maximum transmission unit.
    ///
    /// The network device is unable to send or receive frames larger than the value returned
    /// by this function.
    ///
    /// For Ethernet devices, this is the maximum Ethernet frame size, including the Ethernet header (14 octets), but
    /// *not* including the Ethernet FCS (4 octets). Therefore, Ethernet MTU = IP MTU + 14.
    ///
    /// Note that in Linux and other OSes, "MTU" is the IP MTU, not the Ethernet MTU, even for Ethernet
    /// devices. This is a common source of confusion.
    ///
    /// Most common IP MTU is 1500. Minimum is 576 (for IPv4) or 1280 (for IPv6). Maximum is 9216 octets.
    pub max_transmission_unit: usize,

    /// Maximum burst size, in terms of MTU.
    ///
    /// The network device is unable to send or receive bursts large than the value returned
    /// by this function.
    ///
    /// If `None`, there is no fixed limit on burst size, e.g. if network buffers are
    /// dynamically allocated.
    pub max_burst_size: Option<usize>,

    /// Checksum behavior.
    ///
    /// If the network device is capable of verifying or computing checksums for some protocols,
    /// it can request that the stack not do so in software to improve performance.
    pub checksum: ChecksumCapabilities,
}

impl DeviceCapabilities {
    pub fn ip_mtu(&self) -> usize {
        match self.medium {
            #[cfg(feature = "medium-ethernet")]
            Medium::Ethernet => {
                self.max_transmission_unit - crate::wire::EthernetFrame::<&[u8]>::header_len()
            }
            #[cfg(feature = "medium-ip")]
            Medium::Ip => self.max_transmission_unit,
            #[cfg(feature = "medium-ieee802154")]
            Medium::Ieee802154 => self.max_transmission_unit, // TODO(thvdveld): what is the MTU for Medium::IEEE802
        }
    }
}

/// Type of medium of a device.
#[derive(Debug, Eq, PartialEq, Copy, Clone)]
#[cfg_attr(feature = "defmt", derive(defmt::Format))]
pub enum Medium {
    /// Ethernet medium. Devices of this type send and receive Ethernet frames,
    /// and interfaces using it must do neighbor discovery via ARP or NDISC.
    ///
    /// Examples of devices of this type are Ethernet, WiFi (802.11), Linux `tap`, and VPNs in tap (layer 2) mode.
    #[cfg(feature = "medium-ethernet")]
    Ethernet,

    /// IP medium. Devices of this type send and receive IP frames, without an
    /// Ethernet header. MAC addresses are not used, and no neighbor discovery (ARP, NDISC) is done.
    ///
    /// Examples of devices of this type are the Linux `tun`, PPP interfaces, VPNs in tun (layer 3) mode.
    #[cfg(feature = "medium-ip")]
    Ip,

    #[cfg(feature = "medium-ieee802154")]
    Ieee802154,
}

impl Default for Medium {
    fn default() -> Medium {
        #[cfg(feature = "medium-ethernet")]
        return Medium::Ethernet;
        #[cfg(all(feature = "medium-ip", not(feature = "medium-ethernet")))]
        return Medium::Ip;
        #[cfg(all(
            feature = "medium-ieee802154",
            not(feature = "medium-ip"),
            not(feature = "medium-ethernet")
        ))]
        return Medium::Ieee802154;
        #[cfg(all(
            not(feature = "medium-ip"),
            not(feature = "medium-ethernet"),
            not(feature = "medium-ieee802154")
        ))]
        return panic!("No medium enabled");
    }
}

/// An interface for sending and receiving raw network frames.
///
/// The interface is based on _tokens_, which are types that allow to receive/transmit a
/// single packet. The `receive` and `transmit` functions only construct such tokens, the
/// real sending/receiving operation are performed when the tokens are consumed.
pub trait Device {
    type RxToken<'a>: RxToken
    where
        Self: 'a;
    type TxToken<'a>: TxToken
    where
        Self: 'a;

    /// Construct a token pair consisting of one receive token and one transmit token.
    ///
    /// The additional transmit token makes it possible to generate a reply packet based
    /// on the contents of the received packet. For example, this makes it possible to
    /// handle arbitrarily large ICMP echo ("ping") requests, where the all received bytes
    /// need to be sent back, without heap allocation.
    ///
    /// The timestamp must be a number of milliseconds, monotonically increasing since an
    /// arbitrary moment in time, such as system startup.
    fn receive(&mut self, timestamp: Instant) -> Option<(Self::RxToken<'_>, Self::TxToken<'_>)>;

    /// Construct a transmit token.
    ///
    /// The timestamp must be a number of milliseconds, monotonically increasing since an
    /// arbitrary moment in time, such as system startup.
    fn transmit(&mut self, timestamp: Instant) -> Option<Self::TxToken<'_>>;

    /// Get a description of device capabilities.
    fn capabilities(&self) -> DeviceCapabilities;
}

/// A token to receive a single network packet.
pub trait RxToken {
    /// Consumes the token to receive a single network packet.
    ///
    /// This method receives a packet and then calls the given closure `f` with the raw
    /// packet bytes as argument.
    fn consume<R, F>(self, f: F) -> R
    where
        F: FnOnce(&mut [u8]) -> R;

    /// The Packet ID associated with the frame received by this [`RxToken`]
    fn meta(&self) -> PacketMeta {
        PacketMeta::default()
    }
}

/// A token to transmit a single network packet.
pub trait TxToken {
    /// Consumes the token to send a single network packet.
    ///
    /// This method constructs a transmit buffer of size `len` and calls the passed
    /// closure `f` with a mutable reference to that buffer. The closure should construct
    /// a valid network packet (e.g. an ethernet packet) in the buffer. When the closure
    /// returns, the transmit buffer is sent out.
    fn consume<R, F>(self, len: usize, f: F) -> R
    where
        F: FnOnce(&mut [u8]) -> R;

    /// The Packet ID to be associated with the frame to be transmitted by this [`TxToken`].
    #[allow(unused_variables)]
    fn set_meta(&mut self, meta: PacketMeta) {}
}