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| Raw TCP/IP interface for lwIP | ||||
|  | ||||
| Authors: Adam Dunkels, Leon Woestenberg, Christiaan Simons | ||||
|  | ||||
| lwIP provides three Application Program's Interfaces (APIs) for programs | ||||
| to use for communication with the TCP/IP code: | ||||
| * low-level "core" / "callback" or "raw" API. | ||||
| * higher-level "sequential" API. | ||||
| * BSD-style socket API. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The raw API (sometimes called native API) is an event-driven API designed | ||||
| to be used without an operating system that implements zero-copy send and | ||||
| receive. This API is also used by the core stack for interaction between | ||||
| the various protocols. It is the only API available when running lwIP | ||||
| without an operating system. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The sequential API provides a way for ordinary, sequential, programs | ||||
| to use the lwIP stack. It is quite similar to the BSD socket API. The | ||||
| model of execution is based on the blocking open-read-write-close | ||||
| paradigm. Since the TCP/IP stack is event based by nature, the TCP/IP | ||||
| code and the application program must reside in different execution | ||||
| contexts (threads). | ||||
|  | ||||
| The socket API is a compatibility API for existing applications, | ||||
| currently it is built on top of the sequential API. It is meant to | ||||
| provide all functions needed to run socket API applications running | ||||
| on other platforms (e.g. unix / windows etc.). However, due to limitations | ||||
| in the specification of this API, there might be incompatibilities | ||||
| that require small modifications of existing programs. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ** Multithreading | ||||
|  | ||||
| lwIP started targeting single-threaded environments. When adding multi- | ||||
| threading support, instead of making the core thread-safe, another | ||||
| approach was chosen: there is one main thread running the lwIP core | ||||
| (also known as the "tcpip_thread"). When running in a multithreaded | ||||
| environment, raw API functions MUST only be called from the core thread | ||||
| since raw API functions are not protected from concurrent access (aside | ||||
| from pbuf- and memory management functions). Application threads using | ||||
| the sequential- or socket API communicate with this main thread through | ||||
| message passing. | ||||
|  | ||||
|       As such, the list of functions that may be called from | ||||
|       other threads or an ISR is very limited! Only functions | ||||
|       from these API header files are thread-safe: | ||||
|       - api.h | ||||
|       - netbuf.h | ||||
|       - netdb.h | ||||
|       - netifapi.h | ||||
|       - pppapi.h | ||||
|       - sockets.h | ||||
|       - sys.h | ||||
|  | ||||
|       Additionaly, memory (de-)allocation functions may be | ||||
|       called from multiple threads (not ISR!) with NO_SYS=0 | ||||
|       since they are protected by SYS_LIGHTWEIGHT_PROT and/or | ||||
|       semaphores. | ||||
|  | ||||
|       Netconn or Socket API functions are thread safe against the | ||||
|       core thread but they are not reentrant at the control block | ||||
|       granularity level. That is, a UDP or TCP control block must | ||||
|       not be shared among multiple threads without proper locking. | ||||
|  | ||||
|       If SYS_LIGHTWEIGHT_PROT is set to 1 and | ||||
|       LWIP_ALLOW_MEM_FREE_FROM_OTHER_CONTEXT is set to 1, | ||||
|       pbuf_free() may also be called from another thread or | ||||
|       an ISR (since only then, mem_free - for PBUF_RAM - may | ||||
|       be called from an ISR: otherwise, the HEAP is only | ||||
|       protected by semaphores). | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| ** The remainder of this document discusses the "raw" API. ** | ||||
|  | ||||
| The raw TCP/IP interface allows the application program to integrate | ||||
| better with the TCP/IP code. Program execution is event based by | ||||
| having callback functions being called from within the TCP/IP | ||||
| code. The TCP/IP code and the application program both run in the same | ||||
| thread. The sequential API has a much higher overhead and is not very | ||||
| well suited for small systems since it forces a multithreaded paradigm | ||||
| on the application. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The raw TCP/IP interface is not only faster in terms of code execution | ||||
| time but is also less memory intensive. The drawback is that program | ||||
| development is somewhat harder and application programs written for | ||||
| the raw TCP/IP interface are more difficult to understand. Still, this | ||||
| is the preferred way of writing applications that should be small in | ||||
| code size and memory usage. | ||||
|  | ||||
| All APIs can be used simultaneously by different application | ||||
| programs. In fact, the sequential API is implemented as an application | ||||
| program using the raw TCP/IP interface. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Do not confuse the lwIP raw API with raw Ethernet or IP sockets. | ||||
| The former is a way of interfacing the lwIP network stack (including | ||||
| TCP and UDP), the later refers to processing raw Ethernet or IP data | ||||
| instead of TCP connections or UDP packets. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Raw API applications may never block since all packet processing | ||||
| (input and output) as well as timer processing (TCP mainly) is done | ||||
| in a single execution context. | ||||
|  | ||||
| --- Callbacks | ||||
|  | ||||
| Program execution is driven by callbacks functions, which are then | ||||
| invoked by the lwIP core when activity related to that application | ||||
| occurs. A particular application may register to be notified via a | ||||
| callback function for events such as incoming data available, outgoing | ||||
| data sent, error notifications, poll timer expiration, connection | ||||
| closed, etc. An application can provide a callback function to perform | ||||
| processing for any or all of these events. Each callback is an ordinary | ||||
| C function that is called from within the TCP/IP code. Every callback | ||||
| function is passed the current TCP or UDP connection state as an | ||||
| argument. Also, in order to be able to keep program specific state, | ||||
| the callback functions are called with a program specified argument | ||||
| that is independent of the TCP/IP state. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The function for setting the application connection state is: | ||||
|  | ||||
| - void tcp_arg(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, void *arg) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Specifies the program specific state that should be passed to all | ||||
|   other callback functions. The "pcb" argument is the current TCP | ||||
|   connection control block, and the "arg" argument is the argument | ||||
|   that will be passed to the callbacks. | ||||
|  | ||||
|    | ||||
| --- TCP connection setup | ||||
|  | ||||
| The functions used for setting up connections is similar to that of | ||||
| the sequential API and of the BSD socket API. A new TCP connection | ||||
| identifier (i.e., a protocol control block - PCB) is created with the | ||||
| tcp_new() function. This PCB can then be either set to listen for new | ||||
| incoming connections or be explicitly connected to another host. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - struct tcp_pcb *tcp_new(void) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Creates a new connection identifier (PCB). If memory is not | ||||
|   available for creating the new pcb, NULL is returned. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - err_t tcp_bind(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, ip_addr_t *ipaddr, | ||||
|                  u16_t port) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Binds the pcb to a local IP address and port number. The IP address | ||||
|   can be specified as IP_ADDR_ANY in order to bind the connection to | ||||
|   all local IP addresses. | ||||
|  | ||||
|   If another connection is bound to the same port, the function will | ||||
|   return ERR_USE, otherwise ERR_OK is returned. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - struct tcp_pcb *tcp_listen(struct tcp_pcb *pcb) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Commands a pcb to start listening for incoming connections. When an | ||||
|   incoming connection is accepted, the function specified with the | ||||
|   tcp_accept() function will be called. The pcb will have to be bound | ||||
|   to a local port with the tcp_bind() function. | ||||
|  | ||||
|   The tcp_listen() function returns a new connection identifier, and | ||||
|   the one passed as an argument to the function will be | ||||
|   deallocated. The reason for this behavior is that less memory is | ||||
|   needed for a connection that is listening, so tcp_listen() will | ||||
|   reclaim the memory needed for the original connection and allocate a | ||||
|   new smaller memory block for the listening connection. | ||||
|  | ||||
|   tcp_listen() may return NULL if no memory was available for the | ||||
|   listening connection. If so, the memory associated with the pcb | ||||
|   passed as an argument to tcp_listen() will not be deallocated. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - struct tcp_pcb *tcp_listen_with_backlog(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, u8_t backlog) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Same as tcp_listen, but limits the number of outstanding connections | ||||
|   in the listen queue to the value specified by the backlog argument. | ||||
|   To use it, your need to set TCP_LISTEN_BACKLOG=1 in your lwipopts.h. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - void tcp_accept(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, | ||||
|                   err_t (* accept)(void *arg, struct tcp_pcb *newpcb, | ||||
|                                    err_t err)) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Specified the callback function that should be called when a new | ||||
|   connection arrives on a listening connection. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - err_t tcp_connect(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, ip_addr_t *ipaddr, | ||||
|                     u16_t port, err_t (* connected)(void *arg, | ||||
|                                                     struct tcp_pcb *tpcb, | ||||
|                                                     err_t err)); | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Sets up the pcb to connect to the remote host and sends the | ||||
|   initial SYN segment which opens the connection.  | ||||
|  | ||||
|   The tcp_connect() function returns immediately; it does not wait for | ||||
|   the connection to be properly setup. Instead, it will call the | ||||
|   function specified as the fourth argument (the "connected" argument) | ||||
|   when the connection is established. If the connection could not be | ||||
|   properly established, either because the other host refused the | ||||
|   connection or because the other host didn't answer, the "err" | ||||
|   callback function of this pcb (registered with tcp_err, see below) | ||||
|   will be called. | ||||
|  | ||||
|   The tcp_connect() function can return ERR_MEM if no memory is | ||||
|   available for enqueueing the SYN segment. If the SYN indeed was | ||||
|   enqueued successfully, the tcp_connect() function returns ERR_OK. | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| --- Sending TCP data | ||||
|  | ||||
| TCP data is sent by enqueueing the data with a call to | ||||
| tcp_write(). When the data is successfully transmitted to the remote | ||||
| host, the application will be notified with a call to a specified | ||||
| callback function. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - err_t tcp_write(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, const void *dataptr, u16_t len, | ||||
|                   u8_t apiflags) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Enqueues the data pointed to by the argument dataptr. The length of | ||||
|   the data is passed as the len parameter. The apiflags can be one or more of: | ||||
|   - TCP_WRITE_FLAG_COPY: indicates whether the new memory should be allocated | ||||
|     for the data to be copied into. If this flag is not given, no new memory | ||||
|     should be allocated and the data should only be referenced by pointer. This | ||||
|     also means that the memory behind dataptr must not change until the data is | ||||
|     ACKed by the remote host | ||||
|   - TCP_WRITE_FLAG_MORE: indicates that more data follows. If this is omitted, | ||||
|     the PSH flag is set in the last segment created by this call to tcp_write. | ||||
|     If this flag is given, the PSH flag is not set. | ||||
|  | ||||
|   The tcp_write() function will fail and return ERR_MEM if the length | ||||
|   of the data exceeds the current send buffer size or if the length of | ||||
|   the queue of outgoing segment is larger than the upper limit defined | ||||
|   in lwipopts.h. The number of bytes available in the output queue can | ||||
|   be retrieved with the tcp_sndbuf() function. | ||||
|  | ||||
|   The proper way to use this function is to call the function with at | ||||
|   most tcp_sndbuf() bytes of data. If the function returns ERR_MEM, | ||||
|   the application should wait until some of the currently enqueued | ||||
|   data has been successfully received by the other host and try again. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - void tcp_sent(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, | ||||
|                 err_t (* sent)(void *arg, struct tcp_pcb *tpcb, | ||||
|                 u16_t len)) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Specifies the callback function that should be called when data has | ||||
|   successfully been received (i.e., acknowledged) by the remote | ||||
|   host. The len argument passed to the callback function gives the | ||||
|   amount bytes that was acknowledged by the last acknowledgment. | ||||
|  | ||||
|    | ||||
| --- Receiving TCP data | ||||
|  | ||||
| TCP data reception is callback based - an application specified | ||||
| callback function is called when new data arrives. When the | ||||
| application has taken the data, it has to call the tcp_recved() | ||||
| function to indicate that TCP can advertise increase the receive | ||||
| window. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - void tcp_recv(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, | ||||
|                 err_t (* recv)(void *arg, struct tcp_pcb *tpcb, | ||||
|                                struct pbuf *p, err_t err)) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Sets the callback function that will be called when new data | ||||
|   arrives. The callback function will be passed a NULL pbuf to | ||||
|   indicate that the remote host has closed the connection. If | ||||
|   there are no errors and the callback function is to return | ||||
|   ERR_OK, then it must free the pbuf. Otherwise, it must not | ||||
|   free the pbuf so that lwIP core code can store it. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - void tcp_recved(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, u16_t len) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Must be called when the application has received the data. The len | ||||
|   argument indicates the length of the received data. | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| --- Application polling | ||||
|  | ||||
| When a connection is idle (i.e., no data is either transmitted or | ||||
| received), lwIP will repeatedly poll the application by calling a | ||||
| specified callback function. This can be used either as a watchdog | ||||
| timer for killing connections that have stayed idle for too long, or | ||||
| as a method of waiting for memory to become available. For instance, | ||||
| if a call to tcp_write() has failed because memory wasn't available, | ||||
| the application may use the polling functionality to call tcp_write() | ||||
| again when the connection has been idle for a while. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - void tcp_poll(struct tcp_pcb *pcb,  | ||||
|                 err_t (* poll)(void *arg, struct tcp_pcb *tpcb), | ||||
|                 u8_t interval) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Specifies the polling interval and the callback function that should | ||||
|   be called to poll the application. The interval is specified in | ||||
|   number of TCP coarse grained timer shots, which typically occurs | ||||
|   twice a second. An interval of 10 means that the application would | ||||
|   be polled every 5 seconds. | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| --- Closing and aborting connections | ||||
|  | ||||
| - err_t tcp_close(struct tcp_pcb *pcb) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Closes the connection. The function may return ERR_MEM if no memory | ||||
|   was available for closing the connection. If so, the application | ||||
|   should wait and try again either by using the acknowledgment | ||||
|   callback or the polling functionality. If the close succeeds, the | ||||
|   function returns ERR_OK. | ||||
|  | ||||
|   The pcb is deallocated by the TCP code after a call to tcp_close().  | ||||
|  | ||||
| - void tcp_abort(struct tcp_pcb *pcb) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Aborts the connection by sending a RST (reset) segment to the remote | ||||
|   host. The pcb is deallocated. This function never fails. | ||||
|  | ||||
|   ATTENTION: When calling this from one of the TCP callbacks, make | ||||
|   sure you always return ERR_ABRT (and never return ERR_ABRT otherwise | ||||
|   or you will risk accessing deallocated memory or memory leaks! | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| If a connection is aborted because of an error, the application is | ||||
| alerted of this event by the err callback. Errors that might abort a | ||||
| connection are when there is a shortage of memory. The callback | ||||
| function to be called is set using the tcp_err() function. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - void tcp_err(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, void (* err)(void *arg, | ||||
|        err_t err)) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   The error callback function does not get the pcb passed to it as a | ||||
|   parameter since the pcb may already have been deallocated. | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| --- UDP interface | ||||
|  | ||||
| The UDP interface is similar to that of TCP, but due to the lower | ||||
| level of complexity of UDP, the interface is significantly simpler. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - struct udp_pcb *udp_new(void) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Creates a new UDP pcb which can be used for UDP communication. The | ||||
|   pcb is not active until it has either been bound to a local address | ||||
|   or connected to a remote address. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - void udp_remove(struct udp_pcb *pcb) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Removes and deallocates the pcb.   | ||||
|    | ||||
| - err_t udp_bind(struct udp_pcb *pcb, ip_addr_t *ipaddr, | ||||
|                  u16_t port) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Binds the pcb to a local address. The IP-address argument "ipaddr" | ||||
|   can be IP_ADDR_ANY to indicate that it should listen to any local IP | ||||
|   address. The function currently always return ERR_OK. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - err_t udp_connect(struct udp_pcb *pcb, ip_addr_t *ipaddr, | ||||
|                     u16_t port) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Sets the remote end of the pcb. This function does not generate any | ||||
|   network traffic, but only set the remote address of the pcb. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - err_t udp_disconnect(struct udp_pcb *pcb) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Remove the remote end of the pcb. This function does not generate | ||||
|   any network traffic, but only removes the remote address of the pcb. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - err_t udp_send(struct udp_pcb *pcb, struct pbuf *p) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Sends the pbuf p. The pbuf is not deallocated. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - void udp_recv(struct udp_pcb *pcb, | ||||
|                 void (* recv)(void *arg, struct udp_pcb *upcb, | ||||
|                                          struct pbuf *p, | ||||
|                                          ip_addr_t *addr, | ||||
|                                          u16_t port), | ||||
|                               void *recv_arg) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Specifies a callback function that should be called when a UDP | ||||
|   datagram is received. | ||||
|    | ||||
|  | ||||
| --- System initalization | ||||
|  | ||||
| A truly complete and generic sequence for initializing the lwIP stack | ||||
| cannot be given because it depends on additional initializations for | ||||
| your runtime environment (e.g. timers). | ||||
|  | ||||
| We can give you some idea on how to proceed when using the raw API. | ||||
| We assume a configuration using a single Ethernet netif and the | ||||
| UDP and TCP transport layers, IPv4 and the DHCP client. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Call these functions in the order of appearance: | ||||
|  | ||||
| - lwip_init() | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Initialize the lwIP stack and all of its subsystems. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - netif_add(struct netif *netif, const ip4_addr_t *ipaddr, | ||||
|             const ip4_addr_t *netmask, const ip4_addr_t *gw, | ||||
|             void *state, netif_init_fn init, netif_input_fn input) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Adds your network interface to the netif_list. Allocate a struct | ||||
|   netif and pass a pointer to this structure as the first argument. | ||||
|   Give pointers to cleared ip_addr structures when using DHCP, | ||||
|   or fill them with sane numbers otherwise. The state pointer may be NULL. | ||||
|  | ||||
|   The init function pointer must point to a initialization function for | ||||
|   your Ethernet netif interface. The following code illustrates its use. | ||||
|    | ||||
|   err_t netif_if_init(struct netif *netif) | ||||
|   { | ||||
|     u8_t i; | ||||
|      | ||||
|     for (i = 0; i < ETHARP_HWADDR_LEN; i++) { | ||||
|       netif->hwaddr[i] = some_eth_addr[i]; | ||||
|     } | ||||
|     init_my_eth_device(); | ||||
|     return ERR_OK; | ||||
|   } | ||||
|    | ||||
|   For Ethernet drivers, the input function pointer must point to the lwIP | ||||
|   function ethernet_input() declared in "netif/etharp.h". Other drivers | ||||
|   must use ip_input() declared in "lwip/ip.h". | ||||
|    | ||||
| - netif_set_default(struct netif *netif) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Registers the default network interface. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - netif_set_link_up(struct netif *netif) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   This is the hardware link state; e.g. whether cable is plugged for wired | ||||
|   Ethernet interface. This function must be called even if you don't know | ||||
|   the current state. Having link up and link down events is optional but | ||||
|   DHCP and IPv6 discover benefit well from those events. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - netif_set_up(struct netif *netif) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   This is the administrative (= software) state of the netif, when the | ||||
|   netif is fully configured this function must be called. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - dhcp_start(struct netif *netif) | ||||
|  | ||||
|   Creates a new DHCP client for this interface on the first call. | ||||
|    | ||||
|   You can peek in the netif->dhcp struct for the actual DHCP status. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - sys_check_timeouts() | ||||
|  | ||||
|   When the system is running, you have to periodically call | ||||
|   sys_check_timeouts() which will handle all timers for all protocols in | ||||
|   the stack; add this to your main loop or equivalent. | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| --- Optimalization hints | ||||
|  | ||||
| The first thing you want to optimize is the lwip_standard_checksum() | ||||
| routine from src/core/inet.c. You can override this standard | ||||
| function with the #define LWIP_CHKSUM <your_checksum_routine>. | ||||
|  | ||||
| There are C examples given in inet.c or you might want to | ||||
| craft an assembly function for this. RFC1071 is a good | ||||
| introduction to this subject. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Other significant improvements can be made by supplying | ||||
| assembly or inline replacements for htons() and htonl() | ||||
| if you're using a little-endian architecture. | ||||
| #define lwip_htons(x) <your_htons> | ||||
| #define lwip_htonl(x) <your_htonl> | ||||
| If you #define them to htons() and htonl(), you should | ||||
| #define LWIP_DONT_PROVIDE_BYTEORDER_FUNCTIONS to prevent lwIP from | ||||
| defining hton*/ntoh* compatibility macros. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Check your network interface driver if it reads at | ||||
| a higher speed than the maximum wire-speed. If the | ||||
| hardware isn't serviced frequently and fast enough | ||||
| buffer overflows are likely to occur. | ||||
|  | ||||
| E.g. when using the cs8900 driver, call cs8900if_service(ethif) | ||||
| as frequently as possible. When using an RTOS let the cs8900 interrupt | ||||
| wake a high priority task that services your driver using a binary | ||||
| semaphore or event flag. Some drivers might allow additional tuning | ||||
| to match your application and network. | ||||
|  | ||||
| For a production release it is recommended to set LWIP_STATS to 0. | ||||
| Note that speed performance isn't influenced much by simply setting | ||||
| high values to the memory options. | ||||
|  | ||||
| For more optimization hints take a look at the lwIP wiki. | ||||
|  | ||||
| --- Zero-copy MACs | ||||
|  | ||||
| To achieve zero-copy on transmit, the data passed to the raw API must | ||||
| remain unchanged until sent. Because the send- (or write-)functions return | ||||
| when the packets have been enqueued for sending, data must be kept stable | ||||
| after that, too. | ||||
|  | ||||
| This implies that PBUF_RAM/PBUF_POOL pbufs passed to raw-API send functions | ||||
| must *not* be reused by the application unless their ref-count is 1. | ||||
|  | ||||
| For no-copy pbufs (PBUF_ROM/PBUF_REF), data must be kept unchanged, too, | ||||
| but the stack/driver will/must copy PBUF_REF'ed data when enqueueing, while | ||||
| PBUF_ROM-pbufs are just enqueued (as ROM-data is expected to never change). | ||||
|  | ||||
| Also, data passed to tcp_write without the copy-flag must not be changed! | ||||
|  | ||||
| Therefore, be careful which type of PBUF you use and if you copy TCP data | ||||
| or not! | ||||
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