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v3.15
 
  1/* SCTP kernel implementation
  2 * (C) Copyright IBM Corp. 2001, 2004
  3 * Copyright (c) 1999-2000 Cisco, Inc.
  4 * Copyright (c) 1999-2001 Motorola, Inc.
  5 * Copyright (c) 2001 Intel Corp.
  6 *
  7 * This file is part of the SCTP kernel implementation
  8 *
  9 * This SCTP implementation is free software;
 10 * you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
 11 * the GNU General Public License as published by
 12 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
 13 * any later version.
 14 *
 15 * This SCTP implementation is distributed in the hope that it
 16 * will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied
 17 *                 ************************
 18 * warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
 19 * See the GNU General Public License for more details.
 20 *
 21 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
 22 * along with GNU CC; see the file COPYING.  If not, see
 23 * <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
 24 *
 25 * Please send any bug reports or fixes you make to the
 26 * email address(es):
 27 *    lksctp developers <linux-sctp@vger.kernel.org>
 28 *
 29 * Written or modified by:
 30 *   La Monte H.P. Yarroll <piggy@acm.org>
 31 *   Karl Knutson          <karl@athena.chicago.il.us>
 32 *   Randall Stewart       <randall@stewart.chicago.il.us>
 33 *   Ken Morneau           <kmorneau@cisco.com>
 34 *   Qiaobing Xie          <qxie1@motorola.com>
 35 *   Xingang Guo           <xingang.guo@intel.com>
 36 *   Sridhar Samudrala     <samudrala@us.ibm.com>
 37 *   Daisy Chang           <daisyc@us.ibm.com>
 38 */
 39
 40#ifndef __sctp_constants_h__
 41#define __sctp_constants_h__
 42
 43#include <linux/sctp.h>
 44#include <linux/ipv6.h> /* For ipv6hdr. */
 45#include <net/tcp_states.h>  /* For TCP states used in sctp_sock_state_t */
 46
 47/* Value used for stream negotiation. */
 48enum { SCTP_MAX_STREAM = 0xffff };
 49enum { SCTP_DEFAULT_OUTSTREAMS = 10 };
 50enum { SCTP_DEFAULT_INSTREAMS = SCTP_MAX_STREAM };
 51
 52/* Since CIDs are sparse, we need all four of the following
 53 * symbols.  CIDs are dense through SCTP_CID_BASE_MAX.
 54 */
 55#define SCTP_CID_BASE_MAX		SCTP_CID_SHUTDOWN_COMPLETE
 56
 57#define SCTP_NUM_BASE_CHUNK_TYPES	(SCTP_CID_BASE_MAX + 1)
 58
 59#define SCTP_NUM_ADDIP_CHUNK_TYPES	2
 60
 61#define SCTP_NUM_PRSCTP_CHUNK_TYPES	1
 62
 
 
 63#define SCTP_NUM_AUTH_CHUNK_TYPES	1
 64
 65#define SCTP_NUM_CHUNK_TYPES		(SCTP_NUM_BASE_CHUNK_TYPES + \
 66					 SCTP_NUM_ADDIP_CHUNK_TYPES +\
 67					 SCTP_NUM_PRSCTP_CHUNK_TYPES +\
 
 68					 SCTP_NUM_AUTH_CHUNK_TYPES)
 69
 70/* These are the different flavours of event.  */
 71typedef enum {
 72
 73	SCTP_EVENT_T_CHUNK = 1,
 74	SCTP_EVENT_T_TIMEOUT,
 75	SCTP_EVENT_T_OTHER,
 76	SCTP_EVENT_T_PRIMITIVE
 77
 78} sctp_event_t;
 79
 80/* As a convenience for the state machine, we append SCTP_EVENT_* and
 81 * SCTP_ULP_* to the list of possible chunks.
 82 */
 83
 84typedef enum {
 85	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_NONE = 0,
 86	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T1_COOKIE,
 87	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T1_INIT,
 88	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T2_SHUTDOWN,
 89	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T3_RTX,
 90	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T4_RTO,
 91	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T5_SHUTDOWN_GUARD,
 92	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_HEARTBEAT,
 
 93	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_SACK,
 94	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_AUTOCLOSE,
 95} sctp_event_timeout_t;
 96
 97#define SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_MAX		SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_AUTOCLOSE
 98#define SCTP_NUM_TIMEOUT_TYPES		(SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_MAX + 1)
 99
100typedef enum {
101	SCTP_EVENT_NO_PENDING_TSN = 0,
102	SCTP_EVENT_ICMP_PROTO_UNREACH,
103} sctp_event_other_t;
104
105#define SCTP_EVENT_OTHER_MAX		SCTP_EVENT_ICMP_PROTO_UNREACH
106#define SCTP_NUM_OTHER_TYPES		(SCTP_EVENT_OTHER_MAX + 1)
107
108/* These are primitive requests from the ULP.  */
109typedef enum {
110	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_ASSOCIATE = 0,
111	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_SHUTDOWN,
112	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_ABORT,
113	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_SEND,
114	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_REQUESTHEARTBEAT,
115	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_ASCONF,
116} sctp_event_primitive_t;
 
117
118#define SCTP_EVENT_PRIMITIVE_MAX	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_ASCONF
119#define SCTP_NUM_PRIMITIVE_TYPES	(SCTP_EVENT_PRIMITIVE_MAX + 1)
120
121/* We define here a utility type for manipulating subtypes.
122 * The subtype constructors all work like this:
123 *
124 * 	sctp_subtype_t foo = SCTP_ST_CHUNK(SCTP_CID_INIT);
125 */
126
127typedef union {
128	sctp_cid_t chunk;
129	sctp_event_timeout_t timeout;
130	sctp_event_other_t other;
131	sctp_event_primitive_t primitive;
132} sctp_subtype_t;
133
134#define SCTP_SUBTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR(_name, _type, _elt) \
135static inline sctp_subtype_t	\
136SCTP_ST_## _name (_type _arg)		\
137{ sctp_subtype_t _retval; _retval._elt = _arg; return _retval; }
138
139SCTP_SUBTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR(CHUNK,		sctp_cid_t,		chunk)
140SCTP_SUBTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR(TIMEOUT,	sctp_event_timeout_t,	timeout)
141SCTP_SUBTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR(OTHER,		sctp_event_other_t,	other)
142SCTP_SUBTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR(PRIMITIVE,	sctp_event_primitive_t,	primitive)
143
 
 
 
 
144
145#define sctp_chunk_is_data(a) (a->chunk_hdr->type == SCTP_CID_DATA)
146
147/* Calculate the actual data size in a data chunk */
148#define SCTP_DATA_SNDSIZE(c) ((int)((unsigned long)(c->chunk_end)\
149		       		- (unsigned long)(c->chunk_hdr)\
150				- sizeof(sctp_data_chunk_t)))
151
152/* Internal error codes */
153typedef enum {
154
155	SCTP_IERROR_NO_ERROR	        = 0,
156	SCTP_IERROR_BASE		= 1000,
157	SCTP_IERROR_NO_COOKIE,
158	SCTP_IERROR_BAD_SIG,
159	SCTP_IERROR_STALE_COOKIE,
160	SCTP_IERROR_NOMEM,
161	SCTP_IERROR_MALFORMED,
162	SCTP_IERROR_BAD_TAG,
163	SCTP_IERROR_BIG_GAP,
164	SCTP_IERROR_DUP_TSN,
165	SCTP_IERROR_HIGH_TSN,
166	SCTP_IERROR_IGNORE_TSN,
167	SCTP_IERROR_NO_DATA,
168	SCTP_IERROR_BAD_STREAM,
169	SCTP_IERROR_BAD_PORTS,
170	SCTP_IERROR_AUTH_BAD_HMAC,
171	SCTP_IERROR_AUTH_BAD_KEYID,
172	SCTP_IERROR_PROTO_VIOLATION,
173	SCTP_IERROR_ERROR,
174	SCTP_IERROR_ABORT,
175} sctp_ierror_t;
176
177
178
179/* SCTP state defines for internal state machine */
180typedef enum {
181
182	SCTP_STATE_CLOSED		= 0,
183	SCTP_STATE_COOKIE_WAIT		= 1,
184	SCTP_STATE_COOKIE_ECHOED	= 2,
185	SCTP_STATE_ESTABLISHED		= 3,
186	SCTP_STATE_SHUTDOWN_PENDING	= 4,
187	SCTP_STATE_SHUTDOWN_SENT	= 5,
188	SCTP_STATE_SHUTDOWN_RECEIVED	= 6,
189	SCTP_STATE_SHUTDOWN_ACK_SENT	= 7,
190
191} sctp_state_t;
192
193#define SCTP_STATE_MAX			SCTP_STATE_SHUTDOWN_ACK_SENT
194#define SCTP_STATE_NUM_STATES		(SCTP_STATE_MAX + 1)
195
196/* These are values for sk->state.
197 * For a UDP-style SCTP socket, the states are defined as follows
198 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_CLOSED state indicates that it is not willing to
199 *   accept new associations, but it can initiate the creation of new ones.
200 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_LISTENING state indicates that it is willing to
201 *   accept new  associations and can initiate the creation of new ones.
202 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_ESTABLISHED state indicates that it is a peeled off
203 *   socket with one association.
204 * For a TCP-style SCTP socket, the states are defined as follows
205 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_CLOSED state indicates that it is not willing to
206 *   accept new associations, but it can initiate the creation of new ones.
207 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_LISTENING state indicates that it is willing to
208 *   accept new associations, but cannot initiate the creation of new ones.
209 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_ESTABLISHED state indicates that it has a single 
210 *   association.
211 */
212typedef enum {
213	SCTP_SS_CLOSED         = TCP_CLOSE,
214	SCTP_SS_LISTENING      = TCP_LISTEN,
215	SCTP_SS_ESTABLISHING   = TCP_SYN_SENT,
216	SCTP_SS_ESTABLISHED    = TCP_ESTABLISHED,
217	SCTP_SS_CLOSING        = TCP_CLOSING,
218} sctp_sock_state_t;
219
220/* These functions map various type to printable names.  */
221const char *sctp_cname(const sctp_subtype_t);	/* chunk types */
222const char *sctp_oname(const sctp_subtype_t);	/* other events */
223const char *sctp_tname(const sctp_subtype_t);	/* timeouts */
224const char *sctp_pname(const sctp_subtype_t);	/* primitives */
225
226/* This is a table of printable names of sctp_state_t's.  */
227extern const char *const sctp_state_tbl[];
228extern const char *const sctp_evttype_tbl[];
229extern const char *const sctp_status_tbl[];
230
231/* Maximum chunk length considering padding requirements. */
232enum { SCTP_MAX_CHUNK_LEN = ((1<<16) - sizeof(__u32)) };
233
234/* Encourage Cookie-Echo bundling by pre-fragmenting chunks a little
235 * harder (until reaching ESTABLISHED state).
236 */
237enum { SCTP_ARBITRARY_COOKIE_ECHO_LEN = 200 };
238
239/* Guess at how big to make the TSN mapping array.
240 * We guarantee that we can handle at least this big a gap between the
241 * cumulative ACK and the highest TSN.  In practice, we can often
242 * handle up to twice this value.
243 *
244 * NEVER make this more than 32767 (2^15-1).  The Gap Ack Blocks in a
245 * SACK (see  section 3.3.4) are only 16 bits, so 2*SCTP_TSN_MAP_SIZE
246 * must be less than 65535 (2^16 - 1), or we will have overflow
247 * problems creating SACK's.
248 */
249#define SCTP_TSN_MAP_INITIAL BITS_PER_LONG
250#define SCTP_TSN_MAP_INCREMENT SCTP_TSN_MAP_INITIAL
251#define SCTP_TSN_MAP_SIZE 4096
252
253/* We will not record more than this many duplicate TSNs between two
254 * SACKs.  The minimum PMTU is 576.  Remove all the headers and there
255 * is enough room for 131 duplicate reports.  Round down to the
256 * nearest power of 2.
257 */
258enum { SCTP_MIN_PMTU = 576 };
259enum { SCTP_MAX_DUP_TSNS = 16 };
260enum { SCTP_MAX_GABS = 16 };
261
262/* Heartbeat interval - 30 secs */
263#define SCTP_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT_HEARTBEAT	(30*1000)
264
265/* Delayed sack timer - 200ms */
266#define SCTP_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT_SACK	(200)
267
268/* RTO.Initial              - 3  seconds
269 * RTO.Min                  - 1  second
270 * RTO.Max                  - 60 seconds
271 * RTO.Alpha                - 1/8
272 * RTO.Beta                 - 1/4
273 */
274#define SCTP_RTO_INITIAL	(3 * 1000)
275#define SCTP_RTO_MIN		(1 * 1000)
276#define SCTP_RTO_MAX		(60 * 1000)
277
278#define SCTP_RTO_ALPHA          3   /* 1/8 when converted to right shifts. */
279#define SCTP_RTO_BETA           2   /* 1/4 when converted to right shifts. */
280
281/* Maximum number of new data packets that can be sent in a burst.  */
282#define SCTP_DEFAULT_MAX_BURST		4
283
284#define SCTP_CLOCK_GRANULARITY	1	/* 1 jiffy */
285
286#define SCTP_DEFAULT_COOKIE_LIFE	(60 * 1000) /* 60 seconds */
287
288#define SCTP_DEFAULT_MINWINDOW	1500	/* default minimum rwnd size */
289#define SCTP_DEFAULT_MAXWINDOW	65535	/* default rwnd size */
290#define SCTP_DEFAULT_RWND_SHIFT  4	/* by default, update on 1/16 of
291					 * rcvbuf, which is 1/8 of initial
292					 * window
293					 */
294#define SCTP_DEFAULT_MAXSEGMENT 1500	/* MTU size, this is the limit
295                                         * to which we will raise the P-MTU.
296					 */
297#define SCTP_DEFAULT_MINSEGMENT 512	/* MTU size ... if no mtu disc */
298
299#define SCTP_SECRET_SIZE 32		/* Number of octets in a 256 bits. */
300
301#define SCTP_SIGNATURE_SIZE 20	        /* size of a SLA-1 signature */
302
303#define SCTP_COOKIE_MULTIPLE 32 /* Pad out our cookie to make our hash
304				 * functions simpler to write.
305				 */
306
307/* These return values describe the success or failure of a number of
308 * routines which form the lower interface to SCTP_outqueue.
309 */
310typedef enum {
311	SCTP_XMIT_OK,
312	SCTP_XMIT_PMTU_FULL,
313	SCTP_XMIT_RWND_FULL,
314	SCTP_XMIT_NAGLE_DELAY,
315} sctp_xmit_t;
316
317/* These are the commands for manipulating transports.  */
318typedef enum {
319	SCTP_TRANSPORT_UP,
320	SCTP_TRANSPORT_DOWN,
321	SCTP_TRANSPORT_PF,
322} sctp_transport_cmd_t;
323
324/* These are the address scopes defined mainly for IPv4 addresses
325 * based on draft of SCTP IPv4 scoping <draft-stewart-tsvwg-sctp-ipv4-00.txt>.
326 * These scopes are hopefully generic enough to be used on scoping both
327 * IPv4 and IPv6 addresses in SCTP.
328 * At this point, the IPv6 scopes will be mapped to these internal scopes
329 * as much as possible.
330 */
331typedef enum {
332	SCTP_SCOPE_GLOBAL,		/* IPv4 global addresses */
333	SCTP_SCOPE_PRIVATE,		/* IPv4 private addresses */
334	SCTP_SCOPE_LINK,		/* IPv4 link local address */
335	SCTP_SCOPE_LOOPBACK,		/* IPv4 loopback address */
336	SCTP_SCOPE_UNUSABLE,		/* IPv4 unusable addresses */
337} sctp_scope_t;
338
339typedef enum {
340	SCTP_SCOPE_POLICY_DISABLE,	/* Disable IPv4 address scoping */
341	SCTP_SCOPE_POLICY_ENABLE,	/* Enable IPv4 address scoping */
342	SCTP_SCOPE_POLICY_PRIVATE,	/* Follow draft but allow IPv4 private addresses */
343	SCTP_SCOPE_POLICY_LINK,		/* Follow draft but allow IPv4 link local addresses */
344} sctp_scope_policy_t;
 
 
345
346/* Based on IPv4 scoping <draft-stewart-tsvwg-sctp-ipv4-00.txt>,
347 * SCTP IPv4 unusable addresses: 0.0.0.0/8, 224.0.0.0/4, 198.18.0.0/24,
348 * 192.88.99.0/24.
349 * Also, RFC 8.4, non-unicast addresses are not considered valid SCTP
350 * addresses.
351 */
352#define IS_IPV4_UNUSABLE_ADDRESS(a)	    \
353	((htonl(INADDR_BROADCAST) == a) ||  \
354	 ipv4_is_multicast(a) ||	    \
355	 ipv4_is_zeronet(a) ||		    \
356	 ipv4_is_test_198(a) ||		    \
357	 ipv4_is_anycast_6to4(a))
358
359/* Flags used for the bind address copy functions.  */
360#define SCTP_ADDR6_ALLOWED	0x00000001	/* IPv6 address is allowed by
361						   local sock family */
362#define SCTP_ADDR4_PEERSUPP	0x00000002	/* IPv4 address is supported by
363						   peer */
364#define SCTP_ADDR6_PEERSUPP	0x00000004	/* IPv6 address is supported by
365						   peer */
366
367/* Reasons to retransmit. */
368typedef enum {
369	SCTP_RTXR_T3_RTX,
370	SCTP_RTXR_FAST_RTX,
371	SCTP_RTXR_PMTUD,
372	SCTP_RTXR_T1_RTX,
373} sctp_retransmit_reason_t;
374
375/* Reasons to lower cwnd. */
376typedef enum {
377	SCTP_LOWER_CWND_T3_RTX,
378	SCTP_LOWER_CWND_FAST_RTX,
379	SCTP_LOWER_CWND_ECNE,
380	SCTP_LOWER_CWND_INACTIVE,
381} sctp_lower_cwnd_t;
382
383
384/* SCTP-AUTH Necessary constants */
385
386/* SCTP-AUTH, Section 3.3
387 *
388 *  The following Table 2 shows the currently defined values for HMAC
389 *  identifiers.
390 *
391 *  +-----------------+--------------------------+
392 *  | HMAC Identifier | Message Digest Algorithm |
393 *  +-----------------+--------------------------+
394 *  | 0               | Reserved                 |
395 *  | 1               | SHA-1 defined in [8]     |
396 *  | 2               | Reserved                 |
397 *  | 3               | SHA-256 defined in [8]   |
398 *  +-----------------+--------------------------+
399 */
400enum {
401	SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_ID_RESERVED_0,
402	SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_ID_SHA1,
403	SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_ID_RESERVED_2,
404#if defined (CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA256) || defined (CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA256_MODULE)
405	SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_ID_SHA256,
406#endif
407	__SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_MAX
408};
409
410#define SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_ID_MAX	__SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_MAX - 1
411#define SCTP_AUTH_NUM_HMACS 	__SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_MAX
412#define SCTP_SHA1_SIG_SIZE 20
413#define SCTP_SHA256_SIG_SIZE 32
414
415/*  SCTP-AUTH, Section 3.2
416 *     The chunk types for INIT, INIT-ACK, SHUTDOWN-COMPLETE and AUTH chunks
417 *     MUST NOT be listed in the CHUNKS parameter
418 */
419#define SCTP_NUM_NOAUTH_CHUNKS	4
420#define SCTP_AUTH_MAX_CHUNKS	(SCTP_NUM_CHUNK_TYPES - SCTP_NUM_NOAUTH_CHUNKS)
421
422/* SCTP-AUTH Section 6.1
423 * The RANDOM parameter MUST contain a 32 byte random number.
424 */
425#define SCTP_AUTH_RANDOM_LENGTH 32
426
427#endif /* __sctp_constants_h__ */
v5.4
  1/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later */
  2/* SCTP kernel implementation
  3 * (C) Copyright IBM Corp. 2001, 2004
  4 * Copyright (c) 1999-2000 Cisco, Inc.
  5 * Copyright (c) 1999-2001 Motorola, Inc.
  6 * Copyright (c) 2001 Intel Corp.
  7 *
  8 * This file is part of the SCTP kernel implementation
  9 *
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 10 * Please send any bug reports or fixes you make to the
 11 * email address(es):
 12 *    lksctp developers <linux-sctp@vger.kernel.org>
 13 *
 14 * Written or modified by:
 15 *   La Monte H.P. Yarroll <piggy@acm.org>
 16 *   Karl Knutson          <karl@athena.chicago.il.us>
 17 *   Randall Stewart       <randall@stewart.chicago.il.us>
 18 *   Ken Morneau           <kmorneau@cisco.com>
 19 *   Qiaobing Xie          <qxie1@motorola.com>
 20 *   Xingang Guo           <xingang.guo@intel.com>
 21 *   Sridhar Samudrala     <samudrala@us.ibm.com>
 22 *   Daisy Chang           <daisyc@us.ibm.com>
 23 */
 24
 25#ifndef __sctp_constants_h__
 26#define __sctp_constants_h__
 27
 28#include <linux/sctp.h>
 29#include <linux/ipv6.h> /* For ipv6hdr. */
 30#include <net/tcp_states.h>  /* For TCP states used in enum sctp_sock_state */
 31
 32/* Value used for stream negotiation. */
 33enum { SCTP_MAX_STREAM = 0xffff };
 34enum { SCTP_DEFAULT_OUTSTREAMS = 10 };
 35enum { SCTP_DEFAULT_INSTREAMS = SCTP_MAX_STREAM };
 36
 37/* Since CIDs are sparse, we need all four of the following
 38 * symbols.  CIDs are dense through SCTP_CID_BASE_MAX.
 39 */
 40#define SCTP_CID_BASE_MAX		SCTP_CID_SHUTDOWN_COMPLETE
 41
 42#define SCTP_NUM_BASE_CHUNK_TYPES	(SCTP_CID_BASE_MAX + 1)
 43
 44#define SCTP_NUM_ADDIP_CHUNK_TYPES	2
 45
 46#define SCTP_NUM_PRSCTP_CHUNK_TYPES	1
 47
 48#define SCTP_NUM_RECONF_CHUNK_TYPES	1
 49
 50#define SCTP_NUM_AUTH_CHUNK_TYPES	1
 51
 52#define SCTP_NUM_CHUNK_TYPES		(SCTP_NUM_BASE_CHUNK_TYPES + \
 53					 SCTP_NUM_ADDIP_CHUNK_TYPES +\
 54					 SCTP_NUM_PRSCTP_CHUNK_TYPES +\
 55					 SCTP_NUM_RECONF_CHUNK_TYPES +\
 56					 SCTP_NUM_AUTH_CHUNK_TYPES)
 57
 58/* These are the different flavours of event.  */
 59enum sctp_event_type {
 
 60	SCTP_EVENT_T_CHUNK = 1,
 61	SCTP_EVENT_T_TIMEOUT,
 62	SCTP_EVENT_T_OTHER,
 63	SCTP_EVENT_T_PRIMITIVE
 64};
 
 65
 66/* As a convenience for the state machine, we append SCTP_EVENT_* and
 67 * SCTP_ULP_* to the list of possible chunks.
 68 */
 69
 70enum sctp_event_timeout {
 71	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_NONE = 0,
 72	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T1_COOKIE,
 73	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T1_INIT,
 74	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T2_SHUTDOWN,
 75	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T3_RTX,
 76	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T4_RTO,
 77	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_T5_SHUTDOWN_GUARD,
 78	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_HEARTBEAT,
 79	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_RECONF,
 80	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_SACK,
 81	SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_AUTOCLOSE,
 82};
 83
 84#define SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_MAX		SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_AUTOCLOSE
 85#define SCTP_NUM_TIMEOUT_TYPES		(SCTP_EVENT_TIMEOUT_MAX + 1)
 86
 87enum sctp_event_other {
 88	SCTP_EVENT_NO_PENDING_TSN = 0,
 89	SCTP_EVENT_ICMP_PROTO_UNREACH,
 90};
 91
 92#define SCTP_EVENT_OTHER_MAX		SCTP_EVENT_ICMP_PROTO_UNREACH
 93#define SCTP_NUM_OTHER_TYPES		(SCTP_EVENT_OTHER_MAX + 1)
 94
 95/* These are primitive requests from the ULP.  */
 96enum sctp_event_primitive {
 97	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_ASSOCIATE = 0,
 98	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_SHUTDOWN,
 99	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_ABORT,
100	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_SEND,
101	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_REQUESTHEARTBEAT,
102	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_ASCONF,
103	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_RECONF,
104};
105
106#define SCTP_EVENT_PRIMITIVE_MAX	SCTP_PRIMITIVE_RECONF
107#define SCTP_NUM_PRIMITIVE_TYPES	(SCTP_EVENT_PRIMITIVE_MAX + 1)
108
109/* We define here a utility type for manipulating subtypes.
110 * The subtype constructors all work like this:
111 *
112 *   union sctp_subtype foo = SCTP_ST_CHUNK(SCTP_CID_INIT);
113 */
114
115union sctp_subtype {
116	enum sctp_cid chunk;
117	enum sctp_event_timeout timeout;
118	enum sctp_event_other other;
119	enum sctp_event_primitive primitive;
120};
121
122#define SCTP_SUBTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR(_name, _type, _elt) \
123static inline union sctp_subtype	\
124SCTP_ST_## _name (_type _arg)		\
125{ union sctp_subtype _retval; _retval._elt = _arg; return _retval; }
 
 
 
 
 
126
127SCTP_SUBTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR(CHUNK,		enum sctp_cid,		chunk)
128SCTP_SUBTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR(TIMEOUT,	enum sctp_event_timeout, timeout)
129SCTP_SUBTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR(OTHER,		enum sctp_event_other,	other)
130SCTP_SUBTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR(PRIMITIVE,	enum sctp_event_primitive, primitive)
131
 
132
133#define sctp_chunk_is_data(a) (a->chunk_hdr->type == SCTP_CID_DATA || \
134			       a->chunk_hdr->type == SCTP_CID_I_DATA)
 
 
135
136/* Internal error codes */
137enum sctp_ierror {
 
138	SCTP_IERROR_NO_ERROR	        = 0,
139	SCTP_IERROR_BASE		= 1000,
140	SCTP_IERROR_NO_COOKIE,
141	SCTP_IERROR_BAD_SIG,
142	SCTP_IERROR_STALE_COOKIE,
143	SCTP_IERROR_NOMEM,
144	SCTP_IERROR_MALFORMED,
145	SCTP_IERROR_BAD_TAG,
146	SCTP_IERROR_BIG_GAP,
147	SCTP_IERROR_DUP_TSN,
148	SCTP_IERROR_HIGH_TSN,
149	SCTP_IERROR_IGNORE_TSN,
150	SCTP_IERROR_NO_DATA,
151	SCTP_IERROR_BAD_STREAM,
152	SCTP_IERROR_BAD_PORTS,
153	SCTP_IERROR_AUTH_BAD_HMAC,
154	SCTP_IERROR_AUTH_BAD_KEYID,
155	SCTP_IERROR_PROTO_VIOLATION,
156	SCTP_IERROR_ERROR,
157	SCTP_IERROR_ABORT,
158};
159
160
161
162/* SCTP state defines for internal state machine */
163enum sctp_state {
164
165	SCTP_STATE_CLOSED		= 0,
166	SCTP_STATE_COOKIE_WAIT		= 1,
167	SCTP_STATE_COOKIE_ECHOED	= 2,
168	SCTP_STATE_ESTABLISHED		= 3,
169	SCTP_STATE_SHUTDOWN_PENDING	= 4,
170	SCTP_STATE_SHUTDOWN_SENT	= 5,
171	SCTP_STATE_SHUTDOWN_RECEIVED	= 6,
172	SCTP_STATE_SHUTDOWN_ACK_SENT	= 7,
173
174};
175
176#define SCTP_STATE_MAX			SCTP_STATE_SHUTDOWN_ACK_SENT
177#define SCTP_STATE_NUM_STATES		(SCTP_STATE_MAX + 1)
178
179/* These are values for sk->state.
180 * For a UDP-style SCTP socket, the states are defined as follows
181 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_CLOSED state indicates that it is not willing to
182 *   accept new associations, but it can initiate the creation of new ones.
183 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_LISTENING state indicates that it is willing to
184 *   accept new  associations and can initiate the creation of new ones.
185 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_ESTABLISHED state indicates that it is a peeled off
186 *   socket with one association.
187 * For a TCP-style SCTP socket, the states are defined as follows
188 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_CLOSED state indicates that it is not willing to
189 *   accept new associations, but it can initiate the creation of new ones.
190 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_LISTENING state indicates that it is willing to
191 *   accept new associations, but cannot initiate the creation of new ones.
192 * - A socket in SCTP_SS_ESTABLISHED state indicates that it has a single 
193 *   association.
194 */
195enum sctp_sock_state {
196	SCTP_SS_CLOSED         = TCP_CLOSE,
197	SCTP_SS_LISTENING      = TCP_LISTEN,
198	SCTP_SS_ESTABLISHING   = TCP_SYN_SENT,
199	SCTP_SS_ESTABLISHED    = TCP_ESTABLISHED,
200	SCTP_SS_CLOSING        = TCP_CLOSE_WAIT,
201};
202
203/* These functions map various type to printable names.  */
204const char *sctp_cname(const union sctp_subtype id);	/* chunk types */
205const char *sctp_oname(const union sctp_subtype id);	/* other events */
206const char *sctp_tname(const union sctp_subtype id);	/* timeouts */
207const char *sctp_pname(const union sctp_subtype id);	/* primitives */
208
209/* This is a table of printable names of sctp_state_t's.  */
210extern const char *const sctp_state_tbl[];
211extern const char *const sctp_evttype_tbl[];
212extern const char *const sctp_status_tbl[];
213
214/* Maximum chunk length considering padding requirements. */
215enum { SCTP_MAX_CHUNK_LEN = ((1<<16) - sizeof(__u32)) };
216
217/* Encourage Cookie-Echo bundling by pre-fragmenting chunks a little
218 * harder (until reaching ESTABLISHED state).
219 */
220enum { SCTP_ARBITRARY_COOKIE_ECHO_LEN = 200 };
221
222/* Guess at how big to make the TSN mapping array.
223 * We guarantee that we can handle at least this big a gap between the
224 * cumulative ACK and the highest TSN.  In practice, we can often
225 * handle up to twice this value.
226 *
227 * NEVER make this more than 32767 (2^15-1).  The Gap Ack Blocks in a
228 * SACK (see  section 3.3.4) are only 16 bits, so 2*SCTP_TSN_MAP_SIZE
229 * must be less than 65535 (2^16 - 1), or we will have overflow
230 * problems creating SACK's.
231 */
232#define SCTP_TSN_MAP_INITIAL BITS_PER_LONG
233#define SCTP_TSN_MAP_INCREMENT SCTP_TSN_MAP_INITIAL
234#define SCTP_TSN_MAP_SIZE 4096
235
236/* We will not record more than this many duplicate TSNs between two
237 * SACKs.  The minimum PMTU is 512.  Remove all the headers and there
238 * is enough room for 117 duplicate reports.  Round down to the
239 * nearest power of 2.
240 */
 
241enum { SCTP_MAX_DUP_TSNS = 16 };
242enum { SCTP_MAX_GABS = 16 };
243
244/* Heartbeat interval - 30 secs */
245#define SCTP_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT_HEARTBEAT	(30*1000)
246
247/* Delayed sack timer - 200ms */
248#define SCTP_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT_SACK	(200)
249
250/* RTO.Initial              - 3  seconds
251 * RTO.Min                  - 1  second
252 * RTO.Max                  - 60 seconds
253 * RTO.Alpha                - 1/8
254 * RTO.Beta                 - 1/4
255 */
256#define SCTP_RTO_INITIAL	(3 * 1000)
257#define SCTP_RTO_MIN		(1 * 1000)
258#define SCTP_RTO_MAX		(60 * 1000)
259
260#define SCTP_RTO_ALPHA          3   /* 1/8 when converted to right shifts. */
261#define SCTP_RTO_BETA           2   /* 1/4 when converted to right shifts. */
262
263/* Maximum number of new data packets that can be sent in a burst.  */
264#define SCTP_DEFAULT_MAX_BURST		4
265
266#define SCTP_CLOCK_GRANULARITY	1	/* 1 jiffy */
267
268#define SCTP_DEFAULT_COOKIE_LIFE	(60 * 1000) /* 60 seconds */
269
270#define SCTP_DEFAULT_MINWINDOW	1500	/* default minimum rwnd size */
271#define SCTP_DEFAULT_MAXWINDOW	65535	/* default rwnd size */
272#define SCTP_DEFAULT_RWND_SHIFT  4	/* by default, update on 1/16 of
273					 * rcvbuf, which is 1/8 of initial
274					 * window
275					 */
276#define SCTP_DEFAULT_MAXSEGMENT 1500	/* MTU size, this is the limit
277                                         * to which we will raise the P-MTU.
278					 */
279#define SCTP_DEFAULT_MINSEGMENT 512	/* MTU size ... if no mtu disc */
280
281#define SCTP_SECRET_SIZE 32		/* Number of octets in a 256 bits. */
282
283#define SCTP_SIGNATURE_SIZE 20	        /* size of a SLA-1 signature */
284
285#define SCTP_COOKIE_MULTIPLE 32 /* Pad out our cookie to make our hash
286				 * functions simpler to write.
287				 */
288
289/* These return values describe the success or failure of a number of
290 * routines which form the lower interface to SCTP_outqueue.
291 */
292enum sctp_xmit {
293	SCTP_XMIT_OK,
294	SCTP_XMIT_PMTU_FULL,
295	SCTP_XMIT_RWND_FULL,
296	SCTP_XMIT_DELAY,
297};
298
299/* These are the commands for manipulating transports.  */
300enum sctp_transport_cmd {
301	SCTP_TRANSPORT_UP,
302	SCTP_TRANSPORT_DOWN,
303	SCTP_TRANSPORT_PF,
304};
305
306/* These are the address scopes defined mainly for IPv4 addresses
307 * based on draft of SCTP IPv4 scoping <draft-stewart-tsvwg-sctp-ipv4-00.txt>.
308 * These scopes are hopefully generic enough to be used on scoping both
309 * IPv4 and IPv6 addresses in SCTP.
310 * At this point, the IPv6 scopes will be mapped to these internal scopes
311 * as much as possible.
312 */
313enum sctp_scope {
314	SCTP_SCOPE_GLOBAL,		/* IPv4 global addresses */
315	SCTP_SCOPE_PRIVATE,		/* IPv4 private addresses */
316	SCTP_SCOPE_LINK,		/* IPv4 link local address */
317	SCTP_SCOPE_LOOPBACK,		/* IPv4 loopback address */
318	SCTP_SCOPE_UNUSABLE,		/* IPv4 unusable addresses */
319};
320
321enum {
322	SCTP_SCOPE_POLICY_DISABLE,	/* Disable IPv4 address scoping */
323	SCTP_SCOPE_POLICY_ENABLE,	/* Enable IPv4 address scoping */
324	SCTP_SCOPE_POLICY_PRIVATE,	/* Follow draft but allow IPv4 private addresses */
325	SCTP_SCOPE_POLICY_LINK,		/* Follow draft but allow IPv4 link local addresses */
326};
327
328#define SCTP_SCOPE_POLICY_MAX	SCTP_SCOPE_POLICY_LINK
329
330/* Based on IPv4 scoping <draft-stewart-tsvwg-sctp-ipv4-00.txt>,
331 * SCTP IPv4 unusable addresses: 0.0.0.0/8, 224.0.0.0/4, 198.18.0.0/24,
332 * 192.88.99.0/24.
333 * Also, RFC 8.4, non-unicast addresses are not considered valid SCTP
334 * addresses.
335 */
336#define IS_IPV4_UNUSABLE_ADDRESS(a)	    \
337	((htonl(INADDR_BROADCAST) == a) ||  \
338	 ipv4_is_multicast(a) ||	    \
339	 ipv4_is_zeronet(a) ||		    \
340	 ipv4_is_test_198(a) ||		    \
341	 ipv4_is_anycast_6to4(a))
342
343/* Flags used for the bind address copy functions.  */
344#define SCTP_ADDR6_ALLOWED	0x00000001	/* IPv6 address is allowed by
345						   local sock family */
346#define SCTP_ADDR4_PEERSUPP	0x00000002	/* IPv4 address is supported by
347						   peer */
348#define SCTP_ADDR6_PEERSUPP	0x00000004	/* IPv6 address is supported by
349						   peer */
350
351/* Reasons to retransmit. */
352enum sctp_retransmit_reason {
353	SCTP_RTXR_T3_RTX,
354	SCTP_RTXR_FAST_RTX,
355	SCTP_RTXR_PMTUD,
356	SCTP_RTXR_T1_RTX,
357};
358
359/* Reasons to lower cwnd. */
360enum sctp_lower_cwnd {
361	SCTP_LOWER_CWND_T3_RTX,
362	SCTP_LOWER_CWND_FAST_RTX,
363	SCTP_LOWER_CWND_ECNE,
364	SCTP_LOWER_CWND_INACTIVE,
365};
366
367
368/* SCTP-AUTH Necessary constants */
369
370/* SCTP-AUTH, Section 3.3
371 *
372 *  The following Table 2 shows the currently defined values for HMAC
373 *  identifiers.
374 *
375 *  +-----------------+--------------------------+
376 *  | HMAC Identifier | Message Digest Algorithm |
377 *  +-----------------+--------------------------+
378 *  | 0               | Reserved                 |
379 *  | 1               | SHA-1 defined in [8]     |
380 *  | 2               | Reserved                 |
381 *  | 3               | SHA-256 defined in [8]   |
382 *  +-----------------+--------------------------+
383 */
384enum {
385	SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_ID_RESERVED_0,
386	SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_ID_SHA1,
387	SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_ID_RESERVED_2,
388#if defined (CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA256) || defined (CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA256_MODULE)
389	SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_ID_SHA256,
390#endif
391	__SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_MAX
392};
393
394#define SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_ID_MAX	__SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_MAX - 1
395#define SCTP_AUTH_NUM_HMACS 	__SCTP_AUTH_HMAC_MAX
396#define SCTP_SHA1_SIG_SIZE 20
397#define SCTP_SHA256_SIG_SIZE 32
398
399/*  SCTP-AUTH, Section 3.2
400 *     The chunk types for INIT, INIT-ACK, SHUTDOWN-COMPLETE and AUTH chunks
401 *     MUST NOT be listed in the CHUNKS parameter
402 */
403#define SCTP_NUM_NOAUTH_CHUNKS	4
404#define SCTP_AUTH_MAX_CHUNKS	(SCTP_NUM_CHUNK_TYPES - SCTP_NUM_NOAUTH_CHUNKS)
405
406/* SCTP-AUTH Section 6.1
407 * The RANDOM parameter MUST contain a 32 byte random number.
408 */
409#define SCTP_AUTH_RANDOM_LENGTH 32
410
411#endif /* __sctp_constants_h__ */