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Linux/tools/net/sunrpc/xdrgen/README

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Differences between /tools/net/sunrpc/xdrgen/README (Architecture alpha) and /tools/net/sunrpc/xdrgen/README (Architecture i386)


  1 xdrgen - Linux Kernel XDR code generator            1 xdrgen - Linux Kernel XDR code generator
  2                                                     2 
  3 Introduction                                        3 Introduction
  4 ------------                                        4 ------------
  5                                                     5 
  6 SunRPC programs are typically specified using       6 SunRPC programs are typically specified using a language defined by
  7 RFC 4506. In fact, all IETF-published NFS spec      7 RFC 4506. In fact, all IETF-published NFS specifications provide a
  8 description of the specified protocol using th      8 description of the specified protocol using this language.
  9                                                     9 
 10 Since the 1990's, user space consumers of SunR     10 Since the 1990's, user space consumers of SunRPC have had access to
 11 a tool that could read such XDR specifications     11 a tool that could read such XDR specifications and then generate C
 12 code that implements the RPC portions of that      12 code that implements the RPC portions of that protocol. This tool is
 13 called rpcgen.                                     13 called rpcgen.
 14                                                    14 
 15 This RPC-level code is code that handles input     15 This RPC-level code is code that handles input directly from the
 16 network, and thus a high degree of memory safe     16 network, and thus a high degree of memory safety and sanity checking
 17 is needed to help ensure proper levels of secu     17 is needed to help ensure proper levels of security. Bugs in this
 18 code can have significant impact on security a     18 code can have significant impact on security and performance.
 19                                                    19 
 20 However, it is code that is repetitive and ted     20 However, it is code that is repetitive and tedious to write by hand.
 21                                                    21 
 22 The C code generated by rpcgen makes extensive     22 The C code generated by rpcgen makes extensive use of the facilities
 23 of the user space TI-RPC library and libc. Fur     23 of the user space TI-RPC library and libc. Furthermore, the dialect
 24 of the generated code is very traditional K&R      24 of the generated code is very traditional K&R C.
 25                                                    25 
 26 The Linux kernel's implementation of SunRPC-ba     26 The Linux kernel's implementation of SunRPC-based protocols hand-roll
 27 their XDR implementation. There are two main r     27 their XDR implementation. There are two main reasons for this:
 28                                                    28 
 29 1. libtirpc (and its predecessors) operate onl     29 1. libtirpc (and its predecessors) operate only in user space. The
 30    kernel's RPC implementation and its API are     30    kernel's RPC implementation and its API are significantly
 31    different than libtirpc.                        31    different than libtirpc.
 32                                                    32 
 33 2. rpcgen-generated code is believed to be les     33 2. rpcgen-generated code is believed to be less efficient than code
 34    that is hand-written.                           34    that is hand-written.
 35                                                    35 
 36 These days, gcc and its kin are capable of opt     36 These days, gcc and its kin are capable of optimizing code better
 37 than human authors. There are only a few insta     37 than human authors. There are only a few instances where writing
 38 XDR code by hand will make a measurable perfor     38 XDR code by hand will make a measurable performance different.
 39                                                    39 
 40 In addition, the current hand-written code in      40 In addition, the current hand-written code in the Linux kernel is
 41 difficult to audit and prove that it implement     41 difficult to audit and prove that it implements exactly what is in
 42 the protocol specification.                        42 the protocol specification.
 43                                                    43 
 44 In order to accrue the benefits of machine-gen     44 In order to accrue the benefits of machine-generated XDR code in the
 45 kernel, a tool is needed that will output C co     45 kernel, a tool is needed that will output C code that works against
 46 the kernel's SunRPC implementation rather than     46 the kernel's SunRPC implementation rather than libtirpc.
 47                                                    47 
 48 Enter xdrgen.                                      48 Enter xdrgen.
 49                                                    49 
 50                                                    50 
 51 Dependencies                                       51 Dependencies
 52 ------------                                       52 ------------
 53                                                    53 
 54 These dependencies are typically packaged by L     54 These dependencies are typically packaged by Linux distributions:
 55                                                    55 
 56 - python3                                          56 - python3
 57 - python3-lark                                     57 - python3-lark
 58 - python3-jinja2                                   58 - python3-jinja2
 59                                                    59 
 60 These dependencies are available via PyPi:         60 These dependencies are available via PyPi:
 61                                                    61 
 62 - pip install 'lark[interegular]'                  62 - pip install 'lark[interegular]'
 63                                                    63 
 64                                                    64 
 65 XDR Specifications                                 65 XDR Specifications
 66 ------------------                                 66 ------------------
 67                                                    67 
 68 When adding a new protocol implementation to t     68 When adding a new protocol implementation to the kernel, the XDR
 69 specification can be derived by feeding a .txt     69 specification can be derived by feeding a .txt copy of the RFC to
 70 the script located in tools/net/sunrpc/extract     70 the script located in tools/net/sunrpc/extract.sh.
 71                                                    71 
 72    $ extract.sh < rfc0001.txt > new2.x             72    $ extract.sh < rfc0001.txt > new2.x
 73                                                    73 
 74                                                    74 
 75 Operation                                          75 Operation
 76 ---------                                          76 ---------
 77                                                    77 
 78 Once a .x file is available, use xdrgen to gen     78 Once a .x file is available, use xdrgen to generate source and
 79 header files containing an implementation of X     79 header files containing an implementation of XDR encoding and
 80 decoding functions for the specified protocol.     80 decoding functions for the specified protocol.
 81                                                    81 
 82    $ ./xdrgen definitions new2.x > include/lin     82    $ ./xdrgen definitions new2.x > include/linux/sunrpc/xdrgen/new2.h
 83    $ ./xdrgen declarations new2.x > new2xdr_ge     83    $ ./xdrgen declarations new2.x > new2xdr_gen.h
 84                                                    84 
 85 and                                                85 and
 86                                                    86 
 87    $ ./xdrgen source new2.x > new2xdr_gen.c        87    $ ./xdrgen source new2.x > new2xdr_gen.c
 88                                                    88 
 89 The files are ready to use for a server-side p     89 The files are ready to use for a server-side protocol implementation,
 90 or may be used as a guide for implementing the     90 or may be used as a guide for implementing these routines by hand.
 91                                                    91 
 92 By default, the only comments added to this co     92 By default, the only comments added to this code are kdoc comments
 93 that appear directly in front of the public pe     93 that appear directly in front of the public per-procedure APIs. For
 94 deeper introspection, specifying the "--annota     94 deeper introspection, specifying the "--annotate" flag will insert
 95 additional comments in the generated code to h     95 additional comments in the generated code to help readers match the
 96 generated code to specific parts of the XDR sp     96 generated code to specific parts of the XDR specification.
 97                                                    97 
 98 Because the generated code is targeted for the     98 Because the generated code is targeted for the Linux kernel, it
 99 is tagged with a GPLv2-only license.               99 is tagged with a GPLv2-only license.
100                                                   100 
101 The xdrgen tool can also provide lexical and s    101 The xdrgen tool can also provide lexical and syntax checking of
102 an XDR specification:                             102 an XDR specification:
103                                                   103 
104    $ ./xdrgen lint xdr/new.x                      104    $ ./xdrgen lint xdr/new.x
105                                                   105 
106                                                   106 
107 How It Works                                      107 How It Works
108 ------------                                      108 ------------
109                                                   109 
110 xdrgen does not use machine learning to genera    110 xdrgen does not use machine learning to generate source code. The
111 translation is entirely deterministic.            111 translation is entirely deterministic.
112                                                   112 
113 RFC 4506 Section 6 contains a BNF grammar of t    113 RFC 4506 Section 6 contains a BNF grammar of the XDR specification
114 language. The grammar has been adapted for use    114 language. The grammar has been adapted for use by the Python Lark
115 module.                                           115 module.
116                                                   116 
117 The xdr.ebnf file in this directory contains t    117 The xdr.ebnf file in this directory contains the grammar used to
118 parse XDR specifications. xdrgen configures La    118 parse XDR specifications. xdrgen configures Lark using the grammar
119 in xdr.ebnf. Lark parses the target XDR specif    119 in xdr.ebnf. Lark parses the target XDR specification using this
120 grammar, creating a parse tree.                   120 grammar, creating a parse tree.
121                                                   121 
122 xdrgen then transforms the parse tree into an     122 xdrgen then transforms the parse tree into an abstract syntax tree.
123 This tree is passed to a series of code genera    123 This tree is passed to a series of code generators.
124                                                   124 
125 The generators are implemented as Python class    125 The generators are implemented as Python classes residing in the
126 generators/ directory. Each generator emits co    126 generators/ directory. Each generator emits code created from Jinja2
127 templates stored in the templates/ directory.     127 templates stored in the templates/ directory.
128                                                   128 
129 The source code is generated in the same order    129 The source code is generated in the same order in which they appear
130 in the specification to ensure the generated c    130 in the specification to ensure the generated code compiles. This
131 conforms with the behavior of rpcgen.             131 conforms with the behavior of rpcgen.
132                                                   132 
133 xdrgen assumes that the generated source code     133 xdrgen assumes that the generated source code is further compiled by
134 a compiler that can optimize in a number of wa    134 a compiler that can optimize in a number of ways, including:
135                                                   135 
136  - Unused functions are discarded (ie, not add    136  - Unused functions are discarded (ie, not added to the executable)
137                                                   137 
138  - Aggressive function inlining removes unnece    138  - Aggressive function inlining removes unnecessary stack frames
139                                                   139 
140  - Single-arm switch statements are replaced b    140  - Single-arm switch statements are replaced by a single conditional
141    branch                                         141    branch
142                                                   142 
143 And so on.                                        143 And so on.
144                                                   144 
145                                                   145 
146 Pragmas                                           146 Pragmas
147 -------                                           147 -------
148                                                   148 
149 Pragma directives specify exceptions to the no    149 Pragma directives specify exceptions to the normal generation of
150 encoding and decoding functions. Currently one    150 encoding and decoding functions. Currently one directive is
151 implemented: "public".                            151 implemented: "public".
152                                                   152 
153 Pragma exclude                                    153 Pragma exclude
154 ------ -------                                    154 ------ -------
155                                                   155 
156   pragma exclude <RPC procedure> ;                156   pragma exclude <RPC procedure> ;
157                                                   157 
158 In some cases, a procedure encoder or decoder     158 In some cases, a procedure encoder or decoder function might need
159 special processing that cannot be automaticall    159 special processing that cannot be automatically generated. The
160 automatically-generated functions might confli    160 automatically-generated functions might conflict or interfere with
161 the hand-rolled function. To avoid editing the    161 the hand-rolled function. To avoid editing the generated source code
162 by hand, a pragma can specify that the procedu    162 by hand, a pragma can specify that the procedure's encoder and
163 decoder functions are not included in the gene    163 decoder functions are not included in the generated header and
164 source.                                           164 source.
165                                                   165 
166 For example:                                      166 For example:
167                                                   167 
168   pragma exclude NFSPROC3_READDIRPLUS;            168   pragma exclude NFSPROC3_READDIRPLUS;
169                                                   169 
170 Excludes the decoder function for the READDIRP    170 Excludes the decoder function for the READDIRPLUS argument and the
171 encoder function for the READDIRPLUS result.      171 encoder function for the READDIRPLUS result.
172                                                   172 
173 Note that because data item encoder and decode    173 Note that because data item encoder and decoder functions are
174 defined "static __maybe_unused", subsequent co    174 defined "static __maybe_unused", subsequent compilation
175 automatically excludes data item encoder and d    175 automatically excludes data item encoder and decoder functions that
176 are used only by excluded procedure.              176 are used only by excluded procedure.
177                                                   177 
178 Pragma header                                     178 Pragma header
179 ------ ------                                     179 ------ ------
180                                                   180 
181   pragma header <string> ;                        181   pragma header <string> ;
182                                                   182 
183 Provide a name to use for the header file. For    183 Provide a name to use for the header file. For example:
184                                                   184 
185   pragma header nlm4;                             185   pragma header nlm4;
186                                                   186 
187 Adds                                              187 Adds
188                                                   188 
189   #include "nlm4xdr_gen.h"                        189   #include "nlm4xdr_gen.h"
190                                                   190 
191 to the generated source file.                     191 to the generated source file.
192                                                   192 
193 Pragma public                                     193 Pragma public
194 ------ ------                                     194 ------ ------
195                                                   195 
196   pragma public <XDR data item> ;                 196   pragma public <XDR data item> ;
197                                                   197 
198 Normally XDR encoder and decoder functions are    198 Normally XDR encoder and decoder functions are "static". In case an
199 implementer wants to call these functions from    199 implementer wants to call these functions from other source code,
200 s/he can add a public pragma in the input .x f    200 s/he can add a public pragma in the input .x file to indicate a set
201 of functions that should get a prototype in th    201 of functions that should get a prototype in the generated header,
202 and the function definitions will not be decla    202 and the function definitions will not be declared static.
203                                                   203 
204 For example:                                      204 For example:
205                                                   205 
206   pragma public nfsstat3;                         206   pragma public nfsstat3;
207                                                   207 
208 Adds these prototypes in the generated header:    208 Adds these prototypes in the generated header:
209                                                   209 
210   bool xdrgen_decode_nfsstat3(struct xdr_strea    210   bool xdrgen_decode_nfsstat3(struct xdr_stream *xdr, enum nfsstat3 *ptr);
211   bool xdrgen_encode_nfsstat3(struct xdr_strea    211   bool xdrgen_encode_nfsstat3(struct xdr_stream *xdr, enum nfsstat3 value);
212                                                   212 
213 And, in the generated source code, both of the    213 And, in the generated source code, both of these functions appear
214 without the "static __maybe_unused" modifiers.    214 without the "static __maybe_unused" modifiers.
215                                                   215 
216                                                   216 
217 Future Work                                       217 Future Work
218 -----------                                       218 -----------
219                                                   219 
220 Finish implementing XDR pointer and list types    220 Finish implementing XDR pointer and list types.
221                                                   221 
222 Generate client-side procedure functions          222 Generate client-side procedure functions
223                                                   223 
224 Expand the README into a user guide similar to    224 Expand the README into a user guide similar to rpcgen(1)
225                                                   225 
226 Add more pragma directives:                       226 Add more pragma directives:
227                                                   227 
228   * @pages -- use xdr_read/write_pages() for t    228   * @pages -- use xdr_read/write_pages() for the specified opaque
229     field                                         229     field
230   * @skip -- do not decode, but rather skip, t    230   * @skip -- do not decode, but rather skip, the specified argument
231     field                                         231     field
232                                                   232 
233 Enable something like a #include to dynamicall    233 Enable something like a #include to dynamically insert the content
234 of other specification files                      234 of other specification files
235                                                   235 
236 Properly support line-by-line pass-through via    236 Properly support line-by-line pass-through via the "%" decorator
237                                                   237 
238 Build a unit test suite for verifying translat    238 Build a unit test suite for verifying translation of XDR language
239 into compilable code                              239 into compilable code
240                                                   240 
241 Add a command-line option to insert trace_prin    241 Add a command-line option to insert trace_printk call sites in the
242 generated source code, for improved (temporary    242 generated source code, for improved (temporary) observability
243                                                   243 
244 Generate kernel Rust code as well as C code       244 Generate kernel Rust code as well as C code
                                                      

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