/**************************************************************************** * net/tcp/tcp_callback.c * * Copyright (C) 2007-2009, 2014 Gregory Nutt. All rights reserved. * Author: Gregory Nutt * * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions * are met: * * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in * the documentation and/or other materials provided with the * distribution. * 3. Neither the name NuttX nor the names of its contributors may be * used to endorse or promote products derived from this software * without specific prior written permission. * * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS * "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS * FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE * COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, * BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS * OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED * AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN * ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE * POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. * ****************************************************************************/ /**************************************************************************** * Included Files ****************************************************************************/ #include #if defined(CONFIG_NET) && defined(CONFIG_NET_TCP) #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "devif/devif.h" #include "iob/iob.h" #include "tcp/tcp.h" /**************************************************************************** * Private Data ****************************************************************************/ /**************************************************************************** * Private Functions ****************************************************************************/ /**************************************************************************** * Function: tcp_data_event * * Description: * Handle data that is not accepted by the application because there is no * listener in place ready to receive the data. * * Assumptions: * - The caller has checked that TCP_NEWDATA is set in flags and that is no * other handler available to process the incoming data. * - This function is called at the interrupt level with interrupts disabled. * ****************************************************************************/ static inline uint16_t tcp_data_event(FAR struct net_driver_s *dev, FAR struct tcp_conn_s *conn, uint16_t flags) { uint16_t ret; /* Assume that we will ACK the data. The data will be ACKed if it is * placed in the read-ahead buffer -OR- if it zero length */ ret = (flags & ~TCP_NEWDATA) | TCP_SNDACK; /* Is there new data? With non-zero length? (Certain connection events * can have zero-length with TCP_NEWDATA set just to cause an ACK). */ if (dev->d_len > 0) { #ifdef CONFIG_NET_TCP_READAHEAD uint8_t *buffer = dev->d_appdata; int buflen = dev->d_len; uint16_t recvlen; #endif nllvdbg("No listener on connection\n"); #ifdef CONFIG_NET_TCP_READAHEAD /* Save as the packet data as in the read-ahead buffer. NOTE that * partial packets will not be buffered. */ recvlen = tcp_datahandler(conn, buffer, buflen); if (recvlen < buflen) #endif { /* There is no handler to receive new data and there are no free * read-ahead buffers to retain the data -- drop the packet. */ nllvdbg("Dropped %d bytes\n", dev->d_len); #ifdef CONFIG_NET_STATISTICS g_netstats.tcp.syndrop++; g_netstats.tcp.drop++; #endif /* Clear the TCP_SNDACK bit so that no ACK will be sent */ ret &= ~TCP_SNDACK; } } /* In any event, the new data has now been handled */ dev->d_len = 0; return ret; } /**************************************************************************** * Public Functions ****************************************************************************/ /**************************************************************************** * Function: tcp_callback * * Description: * Inform the application holding the TCP socket of a change in state. * * Assumptions: * This function is called at the interrupt level with interrupts disabled. * ****************************************************************************/ uint16_t tcp_callback(FAR struct net_driver_s *dev, FAR struct tcp_conn_s *conn, uint16_t flags) { /* Preserve the TCP_ACKDATA, TCP_CLOSE, and TCP_ABORT in the response. * These is needed by uIP to handle responses and buffer state. The * TCP_NEWDATA indication will trigger the ACK response, but must be * explicitly set in the callback. */ nllvdbg("flags: %04x\n", flags); /* Perform the data callback. When a data callback is executed from 'list', * the input flags are normally returned, however, the implementation * may set one of the following: * * TCP_CLOSE - Gracefully close the current connection * TCP_ABORT - Abort (reset) the current connection on an error that * prevents TCP_CLOSE from working. * * And/Or set/clear the following: * * TCP_NEWDATA - May be cleared to indicate that the data was consumed * and that no further process of the new data should be * attempted. * TCP_SNDACK - If TCP_NEWDATA is cleared, then TCP_SNDACK may be set * to indicate that an ACK should be included in the response. * (In TCP_NEWDATA is cleared but TCP_SNDACK is not set, then * dev->d_len should also be cleared). */ flags = devif_conn_event(dev, conn, flags, conn->list); /* There may be no new data handler in place at them moment that the new * incoming data is received. If the new incoming data was not handled, then * either (1) put the unhandled incoming data in the read-ahead buffer (if * enabled) or (2) suppress the ACK to the data in the hope that it will * be re-transmitted at a better time. */ if ((flags & TCP_NEWDATA) != 0) { /* Data was not handled.. dispose of it appropriately */ flags = tcp_data_event(dev, conn, flags); } /* Check if there is a connection-related event and a connection * callback. */ if (((flags & TCP_CONN_EVENTS) != 0) && conn->connection_event) { /* Perform the callback */ flags = conn->connection_event(dev, conn, conn->connection_private, flags); } return flags; } /**************************************************************************** * Function: tcp_datahandler * * Description: * Handle data that is not accepted by the application. This may be called * either (1) from the data receive logic if it cannot buffer the data, or * (2) from the TCP event logic is there is no listener in place ready to * receive the data. * * Input Parameters: * conn - A pointer to the TCP connection structure * buffer - A pointer to the buffer to be copied to the read-ahead * buffers * buflen - The number of bytes to copy to the read-ahead buffer. * * Returned value: * The number of bytes actually buffered is returned. This will be either * zero or equal to buflen; partial packets are not buffered. * * Assumptions: * - The caller has checked that TCP_NEWDATA is set in flags and that is no * other handler available to process the incoming data. * - This function is called at the interrupt level with interrupts disabled. * ****************************************************************************/ #ifdef CONFIG_NET_TCP_READAHEAD uint16_t tcp_datahandler(FAR struct tcp_conn_s *conn, FAR uint8_t *buffer, uint16_t buflen) { FAR struct iob_s *iob; int ret; /* Try to allocate on I/O buffer to start the chain without waiting (and * throttling as necessary). If we would have to wait, then drop the * packet. */ iob = iob_tryalloc(true); if (iob == NULL) { nlldbg("ERROR: Failed to create new I/O buffer chain\n"); return 0; } /* Copy the new appdata into the I/O buffer chain (without waiting) */ ret = iob_trycopyin(iob, buffer, buflen, 0, true); if (ret < 0) { /* On a failure, iob_copyin return a negated error value but does * not free any I/O buffers. */ nlldbg("ERROR: Failed to add data to the I/O buffer chain: %d\n", ret); (void)iob_free_chain(iob); return 0; } /* Add the new I/O buffer chain to the tail of the read-ahead queue (again * without waiting). */ ret = iob_tryadd_queue(iob, &conn->readahead); if (ret < 0) { nlldbg("ERROR: Failed to queue the I/O buffer chain: %d\n", ret); (void)iob_free_chain(iob); return 0; } nllvdbg("Buffered %d bytes\n", buflen); return buflen; } #endif /* CONFIG_NET_TCP_READAHEAD */ #endif /* CONFIG_NET && CONFIG_NET_TCP */