Skip to content

spencersevilla/mnet

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

mnet

LKM for supporting multiple network protocols simultaneously Currently developed for Linux 3.0.0

Installation and Initialization

./install.sh should compile and install the LKM mobile_host, in particular the function mhost_init in module_hooks.c. This function registers: - struct proto udpmhost_prot - struct net_proto_family mhost_family_ops - struct packet_type mhost_ptype

...as well as our own, internal table type functions.

Debugging Tools

Printk()

So, kernel debugging is a royal pain, there's no getting around it. The best recommendation I can make is to put printk()'s everywhere to figure out what's happening. You can see these printk()'s in /var/log/kern.log or by using dmesg, though personally I prefer tail -f on the logfile itself. This logfile persists across reboots and will dump a stacktrace if an error occurs in the code of the module itself. Thus, if your machine panics, a reboot followed by "tail /var/log/kern.log" will point you in the right direction.

SystemTap

Your other big debugging tool is system tap, a language designed to probe kernel functions without requiring kernel recompilation itself. Essentially, it is the Linux flavor of dtrace or ftrace, if you've used either of these utilities before. I have included some stap scripts (in /stap/) along with a more detailed readme file on how to use them.

Testing

Sample C programs can be found in /tests/. make_tests.sh should compile all the programs fine. inet_client.c uses regular AF_INET sockets to send a string to localhost:8080, inet_server.c listens on this port and prints out strings received. mhost_client.c and mhost_server.c do the exact same thing, but using AF_MHOST sockets.

Packet Flow

App To MNET

After the module is installed, any one of the test programs may be run.

When an AF_MNET socket is created, it uses the mhost_family_ops function to call mhost_create and AUTOMATICALLY sets the protocol to SOCK_STREAM (UDP)

When send*() is called by an application on an AF_MNET socket, it follows the normal Linux Kernel packet-flow up until sock->ops->sendmsg is called (typically demuxes to inet_sendmsg). Here, mhost_sendmsg() is called instead and we start using our own functions

mhost_sendmsg() is generally an error-checking wrapper function (binds if necessary), but MOST IMPORTANTLY it calls mhost_translate_sa to set the proper L3 handler!

mhost_translate_sa() works by demuxing sa->sa_family to see what the application has passed. If AF_UNSPEC then we bail out, if specified (ie AF_INET) then we set mhost_sock ms->proto and leave the address unchanged, if AF_MHOST then we know that the address given is actually a MHOST pointer, so we must 1) translate the address and 2) set ms->proto appropriately.

*** NOTE: I don't think I have found a way for AF_MNET sockets to bind to an address and RECEIVE IP packets. Maybe? Hmph.

MNET To Wire

*** In the cases of INET and INET6, ms->proto->udpsendmsg demuxes to udp_sendmsg

udpmhost_sendmsg() starts by checking for ms->proto->udpsendmsg: if it provides a udp handler, just pass it along and wipe our hands of the whole damn thing! Note: this IS the case for all AF_INET and AF_INET6 addresses. If not, that means that whatever protocol we're using has elected to use OUR udp function instead, so we go through UDP functionality (explicitly NOT setting a cksum, since I couldn't figure out how :-p) and eventually we call ms->proto->sendmsg which delivers it to the appropriate L3 handler...

About

LKM for supporting multiple network protocols simultaneously

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published