Systemd/src/libsystemd-network/sd-lldp.c

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/* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later */
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <linux/sockios.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#include "sd-lldp.h"
#include "alloc-util.h"
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#include "ether-addr-util.h"
#include "event-util.h"
#include "fd-util.h"
#include "lldp-internal.h"
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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#include "lldp-neighbor.h"
#include "lldp-network.h"
#include "memory-util.h"
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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#include "socket-util.h"
#include "sort-util.h"
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#include "string-table.h"
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sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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#define LLDP_DEFAULT_NEIGHBORS_MAX 128U
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static const char * const lldp_event_table[_SD_LLDP_EVENT_MAX] = {
[SD_LLDP_EVENT_ADDED] = "added",
[SD_LLDP_EVENT_REMOVED] = "removed",
[SD_LLDP_EVENT_UPDATED] = "updated",
[SD_LLDP_EVENT_REFRESHED] = "refreshed",
};
DEFINE_STRING_TABLE_LOOKUP(lldp_event, sd_lldp_event);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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static void lldp_flush_neighbors(sd_lldp *lldp) {
assert(lldp);
hashmap_clear(lldp->neighbor_by_id);
}
static void lldp_callback(sd_lldp *lldp, sd_lldp_event event, sd_lldp_neighbor *n) {
assert(lldp);
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assert(event >= 0 && event < _SD_LLDP_EVENT_MAX);
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if (!lldp->callback) {
log_lldp("Received '%s' event.", lldp_event_to_string(event));
return;
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}
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log_lldp("Invoking callback for '%s' event.", lldp_event_to_string(event));
lldp->callback(lldp, event, n, lldp->userdata);
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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static int lldp_make_space(sd_lldp *lldp, size_t extra) {
usec_t t = USEC_INFINITY;
bool changed = false;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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assert(lldp);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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/* Remove all entries that are past their TTL, and more until at least the specified number of extra entries
* are free. */
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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for (;;) {
_cleanup_(sd_lldp_neighbor_unrefp) sd_lldp_neighbor *n = NULL;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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n = prioq_peek(lldp->neighbor_by_expiry);
if (!n)
break;
sd_lldp_neighbor_ref(n);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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if (hashmap_size(lldp->neighbor_by_id) > LESS_BY(lldp->neighbors_max, extra))
goto remove_one;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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if (t == USEC_INFINITY)
t = now(clock_boottime_or_monotonic());
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
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if (n->until > t)
break;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
remove_one:
lldp_neighbor_unlink(n);
lldp_callback(lldp, SD_LLDP_EVENT_REMOVED, n);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
changed = true;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
return changed;
}
static bool lldp_keep_neighbor(sd_lldp *lldp, sd_lldp_neighbor *n) {
assert(lldp);
assert(n);
/* Don't keep data with a zero TTL */
if (n->ttl <= 0)
return false;
/* Filter out data from the filter address */
if (!ether_addr_is_null(&lldp->filter_address) &&
ether_addr_equal(&lldp->filter_address, &n->source_address))
return false;
/* Only add if the neighbor has a capability we are interested in. Note that we also store all neighbors with
* no caps field set. */
if (n->has_capabilities &&
(n->enabled_capabilities & lldp->capability_mask) == 0)
return false;
/* Keep everything else */
return true;
}
static int lldp_start_timer(sd_lldp *lldp, sd_lldp_neighbor *neighbor);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
static int lldp_add_neighbor(sd_lldp *lldp, sd_lldp_neighbor *n) {
_cleanup_(sd_lldp_neighbor_unrefp) sd_lldp_neighbor *old = NULL;
bool keep;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
int r;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
assert(lldp);
assert(n);
assert(!n->lldp);
keep = lldp_keep_neighbor(lldp, n);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
/* First retrieve the old entry for this MSAP */
old = hashmap_get(lldp->neighbor_by_id, &n->id);
if (old) {
sd_lldp_neighbor_ref(old);
if (!keep) {
lldp_neighbor_unlink(old);
lldp_callback(lldp, SD_LLDP_EVENT_REMOVED, old);
return 0;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
if (lldp_neighbor_equal(n, old)) {
/* Is this equal, then restart the TTL counter, but don't do anything else. */
old->timestamp = n->timestamp;
lldp_start_timer(lldp, old);
lldp_callback(lldp, SD_LLDP_EVENT_REFRESHED, old);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
return 0;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
/* Data changed, remove the old entry, and add a new one */
lldp_neighbor_unlink(old);
} else if (!keep)
return 0;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
/* Then, make room for at least one new neighbor */
lldp_make_space(lldp, 1);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
r = hashmap_put(lldp->neighbor_by_id, &n->id, n);
if (r < 0)
goto finish;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
r = prioq_put(lldp->neighbor_by_expiry, n, &n->prioq_idx);
if (r < 0) {
assert_se(hashmap_remove(lldp->neighbor_by_id, &n->id) == n);
goto finish;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
n->lldp = lldp;
lldp_start_timer(lldp, n);
lldp_callback(lldp, old ? SD_LLDP_EVENT_UPDATED : SD_LLDP_EVENT_ADDED, n);
return 1;
finish:
if (old)
lldp_callback(lldp, SD_LLDP_EVENT_REMOVED, old);
return r;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
static int lldp_handle_datagram(sd_lldp *lldp, sd_lldp_neighbor *n) {
int r;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
assert(lldp);
assert(n);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
r = lldp_neighbor_parse(n);
if (r == -EBADMSG) /* Ignore bad messages */
return 0;
if (r < 0)
return r;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
r = lldp_add_neighbor(lldp, n);
if (r < 0) {
log_lldp_errno(r, "Failed to add datagram. Ignoring.");
return 0;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
log_lldp("Successfully processed LLDP datagram.");
return 0;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
static int lldp_receive_datagram(sd_event_source *s, int fd, uint32_t revents, void *userdata) {
_cleanup_(sd_lldp_neighbor_unrefp) sd_lldp_neighbor *n = NULL;
ssize_t space, length;
sd_lldp *lldp = userdata;
struct timespec ts;
2014-12-11 05:29:55 +01:00
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
assert(fd >= 0);
2014-12-11 05:29:55 +01:00
assert(lldp);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
space = next_datagram_size_fd(fd);
if (space < 0)
return log_lldp_errno(space, "Failed to determine datagram size to read: %m");
2014-12-11 05:29:55 +01:00
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
n = lldp_neighbor_new(space);
if (!n)
return -ENOMEM;
2014-12-11 05:29:55 +01:00
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
length = recv(fd, LLDP_NEIGHBOR_RAW(n), n->raw_size, MSG_DONTWAIT);
if (length < 0) {
2017-10-04 16:01:32 +02:00
if (IN_SET(errno, EAGAIN, EINTR))
return 0;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
return log_lldp_errno(errno, "Failed to read LLDP datagram: %m");
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
if ((size_t) length != n->raw_size) {
log_lldp("Packet size mismatch.");
return -EINVAL;
}
2014-12-11 05:29:55 +01:00
/* Try to get the timestamp of this packet if it is known */
if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGSTAMPNS, &ts) >= 0)
triple_timestamp_from_realtime(&n->timestamp, timespec_load(&ts));
else
triple_timestamp_get(&n->timestamp);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
return lldp_handle_datagram(lldp, n);
2014-12-11 05:29:55 +01:00
}
static void lldp_reset(sd_lldp *lldp) {
assert(lldp);
(void) event_source_disable(lldp->timer_event_source);
lldp->io_event_source = sd_event_source_unref(lldp->io_event_source);
lldp->fd = safe_close(lldp->fd);
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
_public_ int sd_lldp_start(sd_lldp *lldp) {
int r;
assert_return(lldp, -EINVAL);
assert_return(lldp->event, -EINVAL);
assert_return(lldp->ifindex > 0, -EINVAL);
if (lldp->fd >= 0)
return 0;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
assert(!lldp->io_event_source);
2014-12-11 05:29:55 +01:00
lldp->fd = lldp_network_bind_raw_socket(lldp->ifindex);
if (lldp->fd < 0)
return lldp->fd;
r = sd_event_add_io(lldp->event, &lldp->io_event_source, lldp->fd, EPOLLIN, lldp_receive_datagram, lldp);
if (r < 0)
goto fail;
r = sd_event_source_set_priority(lldp->io_event_source, lldp->event_priority);
if (r < 0)
goto fail;
(void) sd_event_source_set_description(lldp->io_event_source, "lldp-io");
log_lldp("Started LLDP client");
return 1;
fail:
lldp_reset(lldp);
return r;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
_public_ int sd_lldp_stop(sd_lldp *lldp) {
if (!lldp)
return 0;
if (lldp->fd < 0)
return 0;
log_lldp("Stopping LLDP client");
lldp_reset(lldp);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
lldp_flush_neighbors(lldp);
return 1;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
_public_ int sd_lldp_attach_event(sd_lldp *lldp, sd_event *event, int64_t priority) {
int r;
assert_return(lldp, -EINVAL);
assert_return(lldp->fd < 0, -EBUSY);
assert_return(!lldp->event, -EBUSY);
if (event)
lldp->event = sd_event_ref(event);
else {
r = sd_event_default(&lldp->event);
if (r < 0)
return r;
}
lldp->event_priority = priority;
return 0;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
_public_ int sd_lldp_detach_event(sd_lldp *lldp) {
assert_return(lldp, -EINVAL);
assert_return(lldp->fd < 0, -EBUSY);
lldp->event = sd_event_unref(lldp->event);
return 0;
}
_public_ sd_event* sd_lldp_get_event(sd_lldp *lldp) {
assert_return(lldp, NULL);
return lldp->event;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
_public_ int sd_lldp_set_callback(sd_lldp *lldp, sd_lldp_callback_t cb, void *userdata) {
2014-12-11 05:29:55 +01:00
assert_return(lldp, -EINVAL);
lldp->callback = cb;
2014-12-11 05:29:55 +01:00
lldp->userdata = userdata;
return 0;
}
_public_ int sd_lldp_set_ifindex(sd_lldp *lldp, int ifindex) {
assert_return(lldp, -EINVAL);
assert_return(ifindex > 0, -EINVAL);
assert_return(lldp->fd < 0, -EBUSY);
lldp->ifindex = ifindex;
return 0;
}
static sd_lldp* lldp_free(sd_lldp *lldp) {
assert(lldp);
lldp->timer_event_source = sd_event_source_unref(lldp->timer_event_source);
lldp_reset(lldp);
sd_lldp_detach_event(lldp);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
lldp_flush_neighbors(lldp);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
hashmap_free(lldp->neighbor_by_id);
prioq_free(lldp->neighbor_by_expiry);
2016-10-17 00:28:30 +02:00
return mfree(lldp);
}
DEFINE_PUBLIC_TRIVIAL_REF_UNREF_FUNC(sd_lldp, sd_lldp, lldp_free);
_public_ int sd_lldp_new(sd_lldp **ret) {
_cleanup_(sd_lldp_unrefp) sd_lldp *lldp = NULL;
int r;
assert_return(ret, -EINVAL);
lldp = new(sd_lldp, 1);
if (!lldp)
return -ENOMEM;
*lldp = (sd_lldp) {
.n_ref = 1,
.fd = -1,
.neighbors_max = LLDP_DEFAULT_NEIGHBORS_MAX,
.capability_mask = (uint16_t) -1,
};
lldp->neighbor_by_id = hashmap_new(&lldp_neighbor_hash_ops);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
if (!lldp->neighbor_by_id)
return -ENOMEM;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
r = prioq_ensure_allocated(&lldp->neighbor_by_expiry, lldp_neighbor_prioq_compare_func);
if (r < 0)
return r;
*ret = TAKE_PTR(lldp);
return 0;
}
2018-09-18 01:39:24 +02:00
static int neighbor_compare_func(sd_lldp_neighbor * const *a, sd_lldp_neighbor * const *b) {
return lldp_neighbor_id_compare_func(&(*a)->id, &(*b)->id);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
}
static int on_timer_event(sd_event_source *s, uint64_t usec, void *userdata) {
sd_lldp *lldp = userdata;
int r;
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
r = lldp_make_space(lldp, 0);
if (r < 0)
return log_lldp_errno(r, "Failed to make space: %m");
r = lldp_start_timer(lldp, NULL);
if (r < 0)
return log_lldp_errno(r, "Failed to restart timer: %m");
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
return 0;
}
static int lldp_start_timer(sd_lldp *lldp, sd_lldp_neighbor *neighbor) {
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
sd_lldp_neighbor *n;
assert(lldp);
if (neighbor)
lldp_neighbor_start_ttl(neighbor);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
n = prioq_peek(lldp->neighbor_by_expiry);
if (!n)
return event_source_disable(lldp->timer_event_source);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
if (!lldp->event)
return 0;
return event_reset_time(lldp->event, &lldp->timer_event_source,
clock_boottime_or_monotonic(),
n->until, 0,
on_timer_event, lldp,
lldp->event_priority, "lldp-timer", true);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
}
_public_ int sd_lldp_get_neighbors(sd_lldp *lldp, sd_lldp_neighbor ***ret) {
sd_lldp_neighbor **l = NULL, *n;
int k = 0, r;
assert_return(lldp, -EINVAL);
assert_return(ret, -EINVAL);
if (hashmap_isempty(lldp->neighbor_by_id)) { /* Special shortcut */
*ret = NULL;
return 0;
}
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
l = new0(sd_lldp_neighbor*, hashmap_size(lldp->neighbor_by_id));
if (!l)
return -ENOMEM;
r = lldp_start_timer(lldp, NULL);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
if (r < 0) {
free(l);
return r;
}
HASHMAP_FOREACH(n, lldp->neighbor_by_id)
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
l[k++] = sd_lldp_neighbor_ref(n);
assert((size_t) k == hashmap_size(lldp->neighbor_by_id));
/* Return things in a stable order */
2018-09-18 01:39:24 +02:00
typesafe_qsort(l, k, neighbor_compare_func);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
*ret = l;
return k;
}
_public_ int sd_lldp_set_neighbors_max(sd_lldp *lldp, uint64_t m) {
assert_return(lldp, -EINVAL);
assert_return(m > 0, -EINVAL);
sd-lldp: rework sd-lldp API This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and extending the logic a bit on the other. Specifically: - Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now, sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major simplification. - The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through. - The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable during runtime. - The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted: callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed. - The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event. - Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to guarantee stability. - A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via networkd's LLDP= setting. - sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed. Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the client side can simply parse the information. - support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs. Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly instead of relying on our APIs for that. - A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed. - APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been added. - lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't actually use ourselves have eben removed.
2016-02-19 17:58:52 +01:00
lldp->neighbors_max = m;
lldp_make_space(lldp, 0);
return 0;
}
_public_ int sd_lldp_match_capabilities(sd_lldp *lldp, uint16_t mask) {
assert_return(lldp, -EINVAL);
assert_return(mask != 0, -EINVAL);
lldp->capability_mask = mask;
return 0;
}
_public_ int sd_lldp_set_filter_address(sd_lldp *lldp, const struct ether_addr *addr) {
assert_return(lldp, -EINVAL);
/* In order to deal nicely with bridges that send back our own packets, allow one address to be filtered, so
* that our own can be filtered out here. */
2016-06-02 17:52:32 +02:00
if (addr)
lldp->filter_address = *addr;
else
zero(lldp->filter_address);
return 0;
}