tor/src/or/connection_st.h
Nick Mathewson bba998af65 Extract connection_t into its own header.
Now the entire connection_t hierarchy is extracted from or.h
2018-06-15 11:05:56 -04:00

133 lines
6.2 KiB
C

/* Copyright (c) 2001 Matej Pfajfar.
* Copyright (c) 2001-2004, Roger Dingledine.
* Copyright (c) 2004-2006, Roger Dingledine, Nick Mathewson.
* Copyright (c) 2007-2017, The Tor Project, Inc. */
/* See LICENSE for licensing information */
#ifndef CONNECTION_ST_H
#define CONNECTION_ST_H
struct buf_t;
/** Description of a connection to another host or process, and associated
* data.
*
* A connection is named based on what it's connected to -- an "OR
* connection" has a Tor node on the other end, an "exit
* connection" has a website or other server on the other end, and an
* "AP connection" has an application proxy (and thus a user) on the
* other end.
*
* Every connection has a type and a state. Connections never change
* their type, but can go through many state changes in their lifetime.
*
* Every connection has two associated input and output buffers.
* Listeners don't use them. For non-listener connections, incoming
* data is appended to conn->inbuf, and outgoing data is taken from
* conn->outbuf. Connections differ primarily in the functions called
* to fill and drain these buffers.
*/
typedef struct connection_t {
uint32_t magic; /**< For memory debugging: must equal one of
* *_CONNECTION_MAGIC. */
uint8_t state; /**< Current state of this connection. */
unsigned int type:5; /**< What kind of connection is this? */
unsigned int purpose:5; /**< Only used for DIR and EXIT types currently. */
/* The next fields are all one-bit booleans. Some are only applicable to
* connection subtypes, but we hold them here anyway, to save space.
*/
unsigned int read_blocked_on_bw:1; /**< Boolean: should we start reading
* again once the bandwidth throttler allows it? */
unsigned int write_blocked_on_bw:1; /**< Boolean: should we start writing
* again once the bandwidth throttler allows
* writes? */
unsigned int hold_open_until_flushed:1; /**< Despite this connection's being
* marked for close, do we flush it
* before closing it? */
unsigned int inbuf_reached_eof:1; /**< Boolean: did read() return 0 on this
* conn? */
/** Set to 1 when we're inside connection_flushed_some to keep us from
* calling connection_handle_write() recursively. */
unsigned int in_flushed_some:1;
/** True if connection_handle_write is currently running on this connection.
*/
unsigned int in_connection_handle_write:1;
/* For linked connections:
*/
unsigned int linked:1; /**< True if there is, or has been, a linked_conn. */
/** True iff we'd like to be notified about read events from the
* linked conn. */
unsigned int reading_from_linked_conn:1;
/** True iff we're willing to write to the linked conn. */
unsigned int writing_to_linked_conn:1;
/** True iff we're currently able to read on the linked conn, and our
* read_event should be made active with libevent. */
unsigned int active_on_link:1;
/** True iff we've called connection_close_immediate() on this linked
* connection. */
unsigned int linked_conn_is_closed:1;
/** CONNECT/SOCKS proxy client handshake state (for outgoing connections). */
unsigned int proxy_state:4;
/** Our socket; set to TOR_INVALID_SOCKET if this connection is closed,
* or has no socket. */
tor_socket_t s;
int conn_array_index; /**< Index into the global connection array. */
struct event *read_event; /**< Libevent event structure. */
struct event *write_event; /**< Libevent event structure. */
struct buf_t *inbuf; /**< Buffer holding data read over this connection. */
struct buf_t *outbuf; /**< Buffer holding data to write over this
* connection. */
size_t outbuf_flushlen; /**< How much data should we try to flush from the
* outbuf? */
time_t timestamp_last_read_allowed; /**< When was the last time libevent said
* we could read? */
time_t timestamp_last_write_allowed; /**< When was the last time libevent
* said we could write? */
time_t timestamp_created; /**< When was this connection_t created? */
int socket_family; /**< Address family of this connection's socket. Usually
* AF_INET, but it can also be AF_UNIX, or AF_INET6 */
tor_addr_t addr; /**< IP that socket "s" is directly connected to;
* may be the IP address for a proxy or pluggable transport,
* see "address" for the address of the final destination.
*/
uint16_t port; /**< If non-zero, port that socket "s" is directly connected
* to; may be the port for a proxy or pluggable transport,
* see "address" for the port at the final destination. */
uint16_t marked_for_close; /**< Should we close this conn on the next
* iteration of the main loop? (If true, holds
* the line number where this connection was
* marked.) */
const char *marked_for_close_file; /**< For debugging: in which file were
* we marked for close? */
char *address; /**< FQDN (or IP) and port of the final destination for this
* connection; this is always the remote address, it is
* passed to a proxy or pluggable transport if one in use.
* See "addr" and "port" for the address that socket "s" is
* directly connected to.
* strdup into this, because free_connection() frees it. */
/** Another connection that's connected to this one in lieu of a socket. */
struct connection_t *linked_conn;
/** Unique identifier for this connection on this Tor instance. */
uint64_t global_identifier;
/** Bytes read since last call to control_event_conn_bandwidth_used().
* Only used if we're configured to emit CONN_BW events. */
uint32_t n_read_conn_bw;
/** Bytes written since last call to control_event_conn_bandwidth_used().
* Only used if we're configured to emit CONN_BW events. */
uint32_t n_written_conn_bw;
} connection_t;
#endif