diff options
author | Felix Fietkau <nbd@openwrt.org> | 2011-03-28 19:30:09 +0200 |
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committer | Felix Fietkau <nbd@openwrt.org> | 2011-03-28 19:30:09 +0200 |
commit | dfa6ebcb70aada70e4c0d6d2adf84513b313f2b1 (patch) | |
tree | f920f65d6be5b69edb50d66a1bf026e65c7a724a | |
parent | ba53781c4c4f7071e619a697ee922c2033e2fe98 (diff) |
add some preliminary design documentation
-rw-r--r-- | DESIGN | 100 |
1 files changed, 100 insertions, 0 deletions
@@ -0,0 +1,100 @@ +Design of the the network interface daemon (netifd) +---------------------------------------------------- + +The primary elements of netifd's state are devices and interfaces. + +Devices +------- + +A device represents either a physical Linux interface (e.g. eth0), or a +virtual link, bound to a static route, a socket or some other external trigger +(e.g. for VPN links or tunnels). + +Anything that needs to be aware of device state registers a device_user, which +is bound to the device and contains a callback for receiving events on device +changes. As soon as the last device_user is removed, the device itself is freed +immediately. + +Devices can also internally reference other devices, this is used to manage +specific kinds of devices, such as bridges or vlans, which do not require +special treatment from interfaces or other high level data structures, with +the exception of adding more member interfaces via hotplug, which is useful +for bridges or bonding interfaces. + +The device up/down state is managed through refcounting. A device can be +brought up using claim_device(), and its reference released again with +release_device(). As soon as the refcount goes to zero, the device is +immediately brought down. +If the device cannot be brought up, claim_device() will return a non-zero +status and the caller will not have increased the refcount. + +A registered device may not be available immediately, an interface or another +device could also be attached to it, waiting for it to appear in the system, +to support triggering interfaces via hotplug. + +All device state transitions are announced via events to all the device_user +callbacks. The following event types are supported: + +DEV_EVENT_ADD: + The device is now present in the system. When a device_user is being added + to a device and the device was already present, this event is generated + immediately. + +DEV_EVENT_REMOVE: + The device is no longer available. Either it is currently being removed, + or it has already disappeared. All users should drop their references + immediately and clean up their state for this device. + +DEV_EVENT_SETUP: + The device is about to be brought up. This allows device users to apply + some low level configuration parameters if necessary, however this event + may not be emitted in all cases. Externally managed devices added via + hotplug may be already up, and in that case this notification is skipped. + +DEV_EVENT_UP: + The device has been successfully brought up. + +DEV_EVENT_TEARDOWN: + The device is about to be brought down + +DEV_EVENT_DOWN: + The device has been brought down + +The following optional events are supported on some devices: + +DEV_EVENT_LINK_UP: a link has been established on this device +DEV_EVENT_LINK_DOWN: the link has been lost + + + +Interfaces +---------- + +An interface represents a high level configuration applied to one or more +devices. An active interface must always be bound to one main device and +to a layer 3 device. By default, the layer 3 device points at the reference +to the main device, based on how simple protocols like static, dhcp, etc. +are set up. More complex protcol handlers such as ppp/pptp or VPN software +can remap the layer 3 interface to something else, and external modules +such as the firewall can take care of both interfaces if necessary. + +An interface always has the following state information: + +active: + The interface can be brought up (its main device is available) + +up: + The interface has been brought up. + +autostart: + If the interface switches from inactive to active, netifd will attempt + to bring it up immediately. Manually setting an interface to up (regardless + of whether that was successful or not) will set this flag. + +An interface references only one protocol handler state, modular protocol +handlers such as PPP are expected to be written in a way that allows them +to be set up as slave to another protocol handler if necessary (useful for +PPPoE or PPTP). + + +## TODO: Protocol handlers, Configuration management, ubus callbacks |