/*
This file is part of GNUnet.
- (C) 2009-2013 Christian Grothoff (and other contributing authors)
+ (C) 2009-2014 Christian Grothoff (and other contributing authors)
GNUnet is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published
*/
#define GNUNET_CORE_VERSION 0x00000001
+/**
+ * Traffic priorities.
+ */
+enum GNUNET_CORE_Priority
+{
+
+ /**
+ * Lowest priority, i.e. background traffic (i.e. fs)
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_PRIO_BACKGROUND = 0,
+
+ /**
+ * Normal traffic (i.e. mesh/dv relay, DHT)
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_PRIO_BEST_EFFORT = 1,
+
+ /**
+ * Urgent traffic (local peer, i.e. conversation).
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_PRIO_URGENT = 2,
+
+ /**
+ * Highest priority, control traffic (i.e. NSE, Core/Mesh KX).
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_PRIO_CRITICAL_CONTROL = 3
+
+
+};
+
/**
* Opaque handle to the service.
* @param cls closure
* @param peer peer identity this notification is about
*/
-typedef void (*GNUNET_CORE_ConnectEventHandler) (void *cls,
- const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *peer);
+typedef void
+(*GNUNET_CORE_ConnectEventHandler) (void *cls,
+ const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *peer);
/**
* @param cls closure
* @param peer peer identity this notification is about
*/
-typedef void (*GNUNET_CORE_DisconnectEventHandler) (void *cls,
- const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *peer);
+typedef void
+(*GNUNET_CORE_DisconnectEventHandler) (void *cls,
+ const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *peer);
/**
* @return #GNUNET_OK to keep the connection open,
* #GNUNET_SYSERR to close connection to the peer (signal serious error)
*/
-typedef int (*GNUNET_CORE_MessageCallback) (void *cls,
- const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *
- other,
- const struct GNUNET_MessageHeader *
- message);
+typedef int
+(*GNUNET_CORE_MessageCallback) (void *cls,
+ const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *other,
+ const struct GNUNET_MessageHeader *message);
/**
struct GNUNET_CORE_MessageHandler
{
/**
- * Function to call for messages of "type".
+ * Function to call for messages of @e type.
*/
GNUNET_CORE_MessageCallback callback;
* @param cls closure
* @param my_identity ID of this peer, NULL if we failed
*/
-typedef void (*GNUNET_CORE_StartupCallback) (void *cls,
- const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *my_identity);
+typedef void
+(*GNUNET_CORE_StartupCallback) (void *cls,
+ const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *my_identity);
/**
* @param handle connection to core service
* @param cork is corking allowed for this transmission?
* @param priority how important is the message?
- * @param maxdelay how long can the message wait?
+ * @param maxdelay how long can the message wait? Only effective if @a cork is #GNUNET_YES
* @param target who should receive the message, never NULL (can be this peer's identity for loopback)
* @param notify_size how many bytes of buffer space does notify want?
* @param notify function to call when buffer space is available;
* if NULL is returned, "notify" will NOT be called.
*/
struct GNUNET_CORE_TransmitHandle *
-GNUNET_CORE_notify_transmit_ready (struct GNUNET_CORE_Handle *handle, int cork,
- uint32_t priority,
+GNUNET_CORE_notify_transmit_ready (struct GNUNET_CORE_Handle *handle,
+ int cork,
+ enum GNUNET_CORE_Priority priority,
struct GNUNET_TIME_Relative maxdelay,
const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *target,
size_t notify_size,
* @param th handle that was returned by "notify_transmit_ready".
*/
void
-GNUNET_CORE_notify_transmit_ready_cancel (struct GNUNET_CORE_TransmitHandle
- *th);
+GNUNET_CORE_notify_transmit_ready_cancel (struct GNUNET_CORE_TransmitHandle *th);
+
+
+/**
+ * Handle to a CORE monitoring operation.
+ */
+struct GNUNET_CORE_MonitorHandle;
/**
- * Iterate over all connected peers. Calls @a peer_cb with each
- * connected peer, and then once with NULL to indicate that all peers
- * have been handled. Normal users of the CORE API are not expected
- * to use this function. It is different in that it truly lists
- * all connections, not just those relevant to the application. This
- * function is used by special applications for diagnostics. This
- * function is NOT part of the 'versioned', 'official' API.
+ * State machine for our P2P encryption handshake. Everyone starts in
+ * #GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_DOWN, if we receive the other peer's key
+ * (other peer initiated) we start in state
+ * #GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_KEY_RECEIVED (since we will immediately send
+ * our own); otherwise we start in #GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_KEY_SENT. If
+ * we get back a PONG from within either state, we move up to
+ * #GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_UP (the PONG will always be sent back
+ * encrypted with the key we sent to the other peer). Eventually,
+ * we will try to rekey, for this we will enter
+ * #GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_REKEY_SENT until the rekey operation is
+ * confirmed by a PONG from the other peer.
+ */
+enum GNUNET_CORE_KxState
+{
+ /**
+ * No handshake yet.
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_DOWN,
+
+ /**
+ * We've sent our session key.
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_KEY_SENT,
+
+ /**
+ * We've received the other peers session key.
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_KEY_RECEIVED,
+
+ /**
+ * The other peer has confirmed our session key + PING with a PONG
+ * message encrypted with his session key (which we got). Key
+ * exchange is done.
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_UP,
+
+ /**
+ * We're rekeying (or had a timeout), so we have sent the other peer
+ * our new ephemeral key, but we did not get a matching PONG yet.
+ * This is equivalent to being #GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_KEY_RECEIVED,
+ * except that the session is marked as 'up' with sessions (as we
+ * don't want to drop and re-establish P2P connections simply due to
+ * rekeying).
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_KX_STATE_REKEY_SENT,
+
+ /**
+ * Last state of a KX (when it is being terminated). Set
+ * just before CORE frees the internal state for this peer.
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_KX_PEER_DISCONNECT,
+
+ /**
+ * This is not a state in a peer's state machine, but a special
+ * value used with the #GNUNET_CORE_MonitorCallback to indicate
+ * that we finished the initial iteration over the peers.
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_KX_ITERATION_FINISHED,
+
+ /**
+ * This is not a state in a peer's state machine, but a special
+ * value used with the #GNUNET_CORE_MonitorCallback to indicate
+ * that we lost the connection to the CORE service (and will try
+ * to reconnect). If this happens, most likely the CORE service
+ * crashed and thus all connection state should be assumed lost.
+ */
+ GNUNET_CORE_KX_CORE_DISCONNECT
+
+};
+
+
+/**
+ * Function called by the monitor callback whenever
+ * a peer's connection status changes.
*
- * FIXME: we should probably make it possible to 'cancel' the
- * operation...
+ * @param cls closure
+ * @param pid identity of the peer this update is about
+ * @param state current key exchange state of the peer
+ * @param timeout when does the current state expire
+ */
+typedef void
+(*GNUNET_CORE_MonitorCallback)(void *cls,
+ const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *pid,
+ enum GNUNET_CORE_KxState state,
+ struct GNUNET_TIME_Absolute timeout);
+
+
+/**
+ * Monitor connectivity and KX status of all peers known to CORE.
+ * Calls @a peer_cb with the current status for each connected peer,
+ * and then once with NULL to indicate that all peers that are
+ * currently active have been handled. After that, the iteration
+ * continues until it is cancelled. Normal users of the CORE API are
+ * not expected to use this function. It is different in that it
+ * truly lists all connections (including those where the KX is in
+ * progress), not just those relevant to the application. This
+ * function is used by special applications for diagnostics.
*
* @param cfg configuration handle
* @param peer_cb function to call with the peer information
- * @param cb_cls closure for @a peer_cb
- * @return #GNUNET_OK on success, #GNUNET_SYSERR on errors
+ * @param peer_cb_cls closure for @a peer_cb
+ * @return NULL on error
*/
-int
-GNUNET_CORE_iterate_peers (const struct GNUNET_CONFIGURATION_Handle *cfg,
- GNUNET_CORE_ConnectEventHandler peer_cb,
- void *cb_cls);
+struct GNUNET_CORE_MonitorHandle *
+GNUNET_CORE_monitor_start (const struct GNUNET_CONFIGURATION_Handle *cfg,
+ GNUNET_CORE_MonitorCallback peer_cb,
+ void *peer_cb_cls);
+
+
+/**
+ * Stop monitoring CORE activity.
+ *
+ * @param mh monitor to stop
+ */
+void
+GNUNET_CORE_monitor_stop (struct GNUNET_CORE_MonitorHandle *mh);
/**
* expected to track which peers are connected based on the connect/disconnect
* callbacks from #GNUNET_CORE_connect. This function is NOT part of the
* 'versioned', 'official' API. This function returns
- * synchronously after looking in the CORE API cache.
+ * synchronously after looking in the CORE API cache.
*
* @param h the core handle
* @param pid the identity of the peer to check if it has been connected to us
const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *pid);
+/**
+ * Create a message queue for sending messages to a peer with CORE.
+ * Messages may only be queued with #GNUNET_MQ_send once the init callback has
+ * been called for the given handle.
+ * There must only be one queue per peer for each core handle.
+ * The message queue can only be used to transmit messages,
+ * not to receive them.
+ *
+ * @param h the core handle
+ * @param target the target peer for this queue, may not be NULL
+ * @return a message queue for sending messages over the core handle
+ * to the target peer
+ */
+struct GNUNET_MQ_Handle *
+GNUNET_CORE_mq_create (struct GNUNET_CORE_Handle *h,
+ const struct GNUNET_PeerIdentity *target);
+
+
#if 0 /* keep Emacsens' auto-indent happy */
{
#endif