1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause 2 3 ================================================================= 4 Netlink specification support for legacy Generic Netlink families 5 ================================================================= 6 7 This document describes the many additional quirks and properties 8 required to describe older Generic Netlink families which form 9 the ``genetlink-legacy`` protocol level. 10 11 Specification 12 ============= 13 14 Globals 15 ------- 16 17 Attributes listed directly at the root level of the spec file. 18 19 version 20 ~~~~~~~ 21 22 Generic Netlink family version, default is 1. 23 24 ``version`` has historically been used to introduce family changes 25 which may break backwards compatibility. Since compatibility breaking changes 26 are generally not allowed ``version`` is very rarely used. 27 28 Attribute type nests 29 -------------------- 30 31 New Netlink families should use ``multi-attr`` to define arrays. 32 Older families (e.g. ``genetlink`` control family) attempted to 33 define array types reusing attribute type to carry information. 34 35 For reference the ``multi-attr`` array may look like this:: 36 37 [ARRAY-ATTR] 38 [INDEX (optionally)] 39 [MEMBER1] 40 [MEMBER2] 41 [SOME-OTHER-ATTR] 42 [ARRAY-ATTR] 43 [INDEX (optionally)] 44 [MEMBER1] 45 [MEMBER2] 46 47 where ``ARRAY-ATTR`` is the array entry type. 48 49 indexed-array 50 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 51 52 ``indexed-array`` wraps the entire array in an extra attribute (hence 53 limiting its size to 64kB). The ``ENTRY`` nests are special and have the 54 index of the entry as their type instead of normal attribute type. 55 56 A ``sub-type`` is needed to describe what type in the ``ENTRY``. A ``nest`` 57 ``sub-type`` means there are nest arrays in the ``ENTRY``, with the structure 58 looks like:: 59 60 [SOME-OTHER-ATTR] 61 [ARRAY-ATTR] 62 [ENTRY] 63 [MEMBER1] 64 [MEMBER2] 65 [ENTRY] 66 [MEMBER1] 67 [MEMBER2] 68 69 Other ``sub-type`` like ``u32`` means there is only one member as described 70 in ``sub-type`` in the ``ENTRY``. The structure looks like:: 71 72 [SOME-OTHER-ATTR] 73 [ARRAY-ATTR] 74 [ENTRY u32] 75 [ENTRY u32] 76 77 type-value 78 ~~~~~~~~~~ 79 80 ``type-value`` is a construct which uses attribute types to carry 81 information about a single object (often used when array is dumped 82 entry-by-entry). 83 84 ``type-value`` can have multiple levels of nesting, for example 85 genetlink's policy dumps create the following structures:: 86 87 [POLICY-IDX] 88 [ATTR-IDX] 89 [POLICY-INFO-ATTR1] 90 [POLICY-INFO-ATTR2] 91 92 Where the first level of nest has the policy index as it's attribute 93 type, it contains a single nest which has the attribute index as its 94 type. Inside the attr-index nest are the policy attributes. Modern 95 Netlink families should have instead defined this as a flat structure, 96 the nesting serves no good purpose here. 97 98 Operations 99 ========== 100 101 Enum (message ID) model 102 ----------------------- 103 104 unified 105 ~~~~~~~ 106 107 Modern families use the ``unified`` message ID model, which uses 108 a single enumeration for all messages within family. Requests and 109 responses share the same message ID. Notifications have separate 110 IDs from the same space. For example given the following list 111 of operations: 112 113 .. code-block:: yaml 114 115 - 116 name: a 117 value: 1 118 do: ... 119 - 120 name: b 121 do: ... 122 - 123 name: c 124 value: 4 125 notify: a 126 - 127 name: d 128 do: ... 129 130 Requests and responses for operation ``a`` will have the ID of 1, 131 the requests and responses of ``b`` - 2 (since there is no explicit 132 ``value`` it's previous operation ``+ 1``). Notification ``c`` will 133 use the ID of 4, operation ``d`` 5 etc. 134 135 directional 136 ~~~~~~~~~~~ 137 138 The ``directional`` model splits the ID assignment by the direction of 139 the message. Messages from and to the kernel can't be confused with 140 each other so this conserves the ID space (at the cost of making 141 the programming more cumbersome). 142 143 In this case ``value`` attribute should be specified in the ``request`` 144 ``reply`` sections of the operations (if an operation has both ``do`` 145 and ``dump`` the IDs are shared, ``value`` should be set in ``do``). 146 For notifications the ``value`` is provided at the op level but it 147 only allocates a ``reply`` (i.e. a "from-kernel" ID). Let's look 148 at an example: 149 150 .. code-block:: yaml 151 152 - 153 name: a 154 do: 155 request: 156 value: 2 157 attributes: ... 158 reply: 159 value: 1 160 attributes: ... 161 - 162 name: b 163 notify: a 164 - 165 name: c 166 notify: a 167 value: 7 168 - 169 name: d 170 do: ... 171 172 In this case ``a`` will use 2 when sending the message to the kernel 173 and expects message with ID 1 in response. Notification ``b`` allocates 174 a "from-kernel" ID which is 2. ``c`` allocates "from-kernel" ID of 7. 175 If operation ``d`` does not set ``values`` explicitly in the spec 176 it will be allocated 3 for the request (``a`` is the previous operation 177 with a request section and the value of 2) and 8 for response (``c`` is 178 the previous operation in the "from-kernel" direction). 179 180 Other quirks 181 ============ 182 183 Structures 184 ---------- 185 186 Legacy families can define C structures both to be used as the contents of 187 an attribute and as a fixed message header. Structures are defined in 188 ``definitions`` and referenced in operations or attributes. 189 190 members 191 ~~~~~~~ 192 193 - ``name`` - The attribute name of the struct member 194 - ``type`` - One of the scalar types ``u8``, ``u16``, ``u32``, ``u64``, ``s8``, 195 ``s16``, ``s32``, ``s64``, ``string``, ``binary`` or ``bitfield32``. 196 - ``byte-order`` - ``big-endian`` or ``little-endian`` 197 - ``doc``, ``enum``, ``enum-as-flags``, ``display-hint`` - Same as for 198 :ref:`attribute definitions <attribute_properties>` 199 200 Note that structures defined in YAML are implicitly packed according to C 201 conventions. For example, the following struct is 4 bytes, not 6 bytes: 202 203 .. code-block:: c 204 205 struct { 206 u8 a; 207 u16 b; 208 u8 c; 209 } 210 211 Any padding must be explicitly added and C-like languages should infer the 212 need for explicit padding from whether the members are naturally aligned. 213 214 Here is the struct definition from above, declared in YAML: 215 216 .. code-block:: yaml 217 218 definitions: 219 - 220 name: message-header 221 type: struct 222 members: 223 - 224 name: a 225 type: u8 226 - 227 name: b 228 type: u16 229 - 230 name: c 231 type: u8 232 233 Fixed Headers 234 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 235 236 Fixed message headers can be added to operations using ``fixed-header``. 237 The default ``fixed-header`` can be set in ``operations`` and it can be set 238 or overridden for each operation. 239 240 .. code-block:: yaml 241 242 operations: 243 fixed-header: message-header 244 list: 245 - 246 name: get 247 fixed-header: custom-header 248 attribute-set: message-attrs 249 250 Attributes 251 ~~~~~~~~~~ 252 253 A ``binary`` attribute can be interpreted as a C structure using a 254 ``struct`` property with the name of the structure definition. The 255 ``struct`` property implies ``sub-type: struct`` so it is not necessary to 256 specify a sub-type. 257 258 .. code-block:: yaml 259 260 attribute-sets: 261 - 262 name: stats-attrs 263 attributes: 264 - 265 name: stats 266 type: binary 267 struct: vport-stats 268 269 C Arrays 270 -------- 271 272 Legacy families also use ``binary`` attributes to encapsulate C arrays. The 273 ``sub-type`` is used to identify the type of scalar to extract. 274 275 .. code-block:: yaml 276 277 attributes: 278 - 279 name: ports 280 type: binary 281 sub-type: u32 282 283 Multi-message DO 284 ---------------- 285 286 New Netlink families should never respond to a DO operation with multiple 287 replies, with ``NLM_F_MULTI`` set. Use a filtered dump instead. 288 289 At the spec level we can define a ``dumps`` property for the ``do``, 290 perhaps with values of ``combine`` and ``multi-object`` depending 291 on how the parsing should be implemented (parse into a single reply 292 vs list of objects i.e. pretty much a dump).
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