apiref.rst revision 4429f8ea
1API Reference 2============= 3 4.. highlight:: c 5 6Preliminaries 7------------- 8 9All declarations are in :file:`lsquic.h`, so it is enough to 10 11:: 12 13 #incluide <lsquic.h> 14 15in each source file. 16 17 18Library Version 19--------------- 20 21LSQUIC follows the following versioning model. The version number 22has the form MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH, where 23 24- MAJOR changes when a large redesign occurs; 25- MINOR changes when an API change or another significant change occurs; and 26- PATCH changes when a bug is fixed or another small, API-compatible change occurs. 27 28QUIC Versions 29------------- 30 31LSQUIC supports two types of QUIC protocol: Google QUIC and IETF QUIC. The 32former will at some point become obsolete, while the latter is still being 33developed by the IETF. Both types are included in a single enum: 34 35.. type:: enum lsquic_version 36 37 .. member:: LSQVER_043 38 39 Google QUIC version Q043 40 41 .. member:: LSQVER_046 42 43 Google QUIC version Q046 44 45 .. member:: LSQVER_050 46 47 Google QUIC version Q050 48 49 .. member:: LSQVER_ID27 50 51 IETF QUIC version ID (Internet-Draft) 27; this version is deprecated. 52 53 .. member:: LSQVER_ID28 54 55 IETF QUIC version ID 28; this version is deprecated. 56 57 .. member:: LSQVER_ID29 58 59 IETF QUIC version ID 29 60 61 .. member:: LSQVER_ID32 62 63 IETF QUIC version ID 32 64 65 .. member:: N_LSQVER 66 67 Special value indicating the number of versions in the enum. It 68 may be used as argument to :func:`lsquic_engine_connect()`. 69 70Several version lists (as bitmasks) are defined in :file:`lsquic.h`: 71 72.. macro:: LSQUIC_SUPPORTED_VERSIONS 73 74List of all supported versions. 75 76.. macro:: LSQUIC_FORCED_TCID0_VERSIONS 77 78List of versions in which the server never includes CID in short packets. 79 80.. macro:: LSQUIC_EXPERIMENTAL_VERSIONS 81 82Experimental versions. 83 84.. macro:: LSQUIC_DEPRECATED_VERSIONS 85 86Deprecated versions. 87 88.. macro:: LSQUIC_GQUIC_HEADER_VERSIONS 89 90Versions that have Google QUIC-like headers. Only Q043 remains in this 91list. 92 93.. macro:: LSQUIC_IETF_VERSIONS 94 95IETF QUIC versions. 96 97.. macro:: LSQUIC_IETF_DRAFT_VERSIONS 98 99IETF QUIC *draft* versions. When IETF QUIC v1 is released, it will not 100be included in this list. 101 102LSQUIC Types 103------------ 104 105LSQUIC declares several types used by many of its public functions. They are: 106 107.. type:: lsquic_engine_t 108 109 Instance of LSQUIC engine. 110 111.. type:: lsquic_conn_t 112 113 QUIC connection. 114 115.. type:: lsquic_stream_t 116 117 QUIC stream. 118 119.. type:: lsquic_stream_id_t 120 121 Stream ID. 122 123.. type:: lsquic_conn_ctx_t 124 125 Connection context. This is the return value of :member:`lsquic_stream_if.on_new_conn`. 126 To LSQUIC, this is just an opaque pointer. User code is expected to 127 use it for its own purposes. 128 129.. type:: lsquic_stream_ctx_t 130 131 Stream context. This is the return value of :func:`on_new_stream()`. 132 To LSQUIC, this is just an opaque pointer. User code is expected to 133 use it for its own purposes. 134 135.. type:: lsquic_http_headers_t 136 137 HTTP headers 138 139Library Initialization 140---------------------- 141 142Before using the library, internal structures must be initialized using 143the global initialization function: 144 145:: 146 147 if (0 == lsquic_global_init(LSQUIC_GLOBAL_CLIENT|LSQUIC_GLOBAL_SERVER)) 148 /* OK, do something useful */ 149 ; 150 151This call only needs to be made once. Afterwards, any number of LSQUIC 152engines may be instantiated. 153 154After a process is done using LSQUIC, it should clean up: 155 156:: 157 158 lsquic_global_cleanup(); 159 160Logging 161------- 162 163.. type:: struct lsquic_logger_if 164 165 .. member:: int (*log_buf)(void *logger_ctx, const char *buf, size_t len) 166 167.. function:: void lsquic_logger_init (const struct lsquic_logger_if *logger_if, void *logger_ctx, enum lsquic_logger_timestamp_style) 168 169 Call this if you want to do something with LSQUIC log messages, as they are thrown out by default. 170 171.. function:: int lsquic_set_log_level (const char *log_level) 172 173 Set log level for all LSQUIC modules. 174 175 :param log_level: Acceptable values are debug, info, notice, warning, error, alert, emerg, crit (case-insensitive). 176 :return: 0 on success or -1 on failure (invalid log level). 177 178.. function:: int lsquic_logger_lopt (const char *log_specs) 179 180 Set log level for a particular module or several modules. 181 182 :param log_specs: 183 184 One or more "module=level" specifications serapated by comma. 185 For example, "event=debug,engine=info". See `List of Log Modules`_ 186 187Engine Instantiation and Destruction 188------------------------------------ 189 190To use the library, an instance of the ``struct lsquic_engine`` needs to be 191created: 192 193.. function:: lsquic_engine_t *lsquic_engine_new (unsigned flags, const struct lsquic_engine_api *api) 194 195 Create a new engine. 196 197 :param flags: This is is a bitmask of :macro:`LSENG_SERVER` and 198 :macro:`LSENG_HTTP`. 199 :param api: Pointer to an initialized :type:`lsquic_engine_api`. 200 201 The engine can be instantiated either in server mode (when ``LSENG_SERVER`` 202 is set) or client mode. If you need both server and client in your program, 203 create two engines (or as many as you'd like). 204 205 Specifying ``LSENG_HTTP`` flag enables the HTTP functionality: HTTP/2-like 206 for Google QUIC connections and HTTP/3 functionality for IETF QUIC 207 connections. 208 209.. macro:: LSENG_SERVER 210 211 One of possible bitmask values passed as first argument to 212 :type:`lsquic_engine_new`. When set, the engine instance 213 will be in the server mode. 214 215.. macro:: LSENG_HTTP 216 217 One of possible bitmask values passed as first argument to 218 :type:`lsquic_engine_new`. When set, the engine instance 219 will enable HTTP functionality. 220 221.. function:: void lsquic_engine_cooldown (lsquic_engine_t *engine) 222 223 This function closes all mini connections and marks all full connections 224 as going away. In server mode, this also causes the engine to stop 225 creating new connections. 226 227.. function:: void lsquic_engine_destroy (lsquic_engine_t *engine) 228 229 Destroy engine and all its resources. 230 231Engine Callbacks 232---------------- 233 234``struct lsquic_engine_api`` contains a few mandatory members and several 235optional members. 236 237.. type:: struct lsquic_engine_api 238 239 .. member:: const struct lsquic_stream_if *ea_stream_if 240 .. member:: void *ea_stream_if_ctx 241 242 ``ea_stream_if`` is mandatory. This structure contains pointers 243 to callbacks that handle connections and stream events. 244 245 .. member:: lsquic_packets_out_f ea_packets_out 246 .. member:: void *ea_packets_out_ctx 247 248 ``ea_packets_out`` is used by the engine to send packets. 249 250 .. member:: const struct lsquic_engine_settings *ea_settings 251 252 If ``ea_settings`` is set to NULL, the engine uses default settings 253 (see :func:`lsquic_engine_init_settings()`) 254 255 .. member:: lsquic_lookup_cert_f ea_lookup_cert 256 .. member:: void *ea_cert_lu_ctx 257 258 Look up certificate. Mandatory in server mode. 259 260 .. member:: struct ssl_ctx_st * (*ea_get_ssl_ctx)(void *peer_ctx) 261 262 Get SSL_CTX associated with a peer context. Mandatory in server 263 mode. This is use for default values for SSL instantiation. 264 265 .. member:: const struct lsquic_hset_if *ea_hsi_if 266 .. member:: void *ea_hsi_ctx 267 268 Optional header set interface. If not specified, the incoming headers 269 are converted to HTTP/1.x format and are read from stream and have to 270 be parsed again. 271 272 .. member:: const struct lsquic_shared_hash_if *ea_shi 273 .. member:: void *ea_shi_ctx 274 275 Shared hash interface can be used to share state between several 276 processes of a single QUIC server. 277 278 .. member:: const struct lsquic_packout_mem_if *ea_pmi 279 .. member:: void *ea_pmi_ctx 280 281 Optional set of functions to manage memory allocation for outgoing 282 packets. 283 284 .. member:: lsquic_cids_update_f ea_new_scids 285 .. member:: lsquic_cids_update_f ea_live_scids 286 .. member:: lsquic_cids_update_f ea_old_scids 287 .. member:: void *ea_cids_update_ctx 288 289 In a multi-process setup, it may be useful to observe the CID 290 lifecycle. This optional set of callbacks makes it possible. 291 292 .. member:: const char *ea_alpn 293 294 The optional ALPN string is used by the client if :macro:`LSENG_HTTP` 295 is not set. 296 297 .. member:: void (*ea_generate_scid)(lsquic_conn_t *, lsquic_cid_t *, unsigned) 298 299 Optional interface to control the creation of connection IDs. 300 301.. _apiref-engine-settings: 302 303Engine Settings 304--------------- 305 306Engine behavior can be controlled by several settings specified in the 307settings structure: 308 309.. type:: struct lsquic_engine_settings 310 311 .. member:: unsigned es_versions 312 313 This is a bit mask wherein each bit corresponds to a value in 314 :type:`lsquic_version`. Client starts negotiating with the highest 315 version and goes down. Server supports either of the versions 316 specified here. This setting applies to both Google and IETF QUIC. 317 318 The default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_VERSIONS`. 319 320 .. member:: unsigned es_cfcw 321 322 Initial default connection flow control window. 323 324 In server mode, per-connection values may be set lower than 325 this if resources are scarce. 326 327 Do not set es_cfcw and es_sfcw lower than :macro:`LSQUIC_MIN_FCW`. 328 329 .. member:: unsigned es_sfcw 330 331 Initial default stream flow control window. 332 333 In server mode, per-connection values may be set lower than 334 this if resources are scarce. 335 336 Do not set es_cfcw and es_sfcw lower than :macro:`LSQUIC_MIN_FCW`. 337 338 .. member:: unsigned es_max_cfcw 339 340 This value is used to specify maximum allowed value CFCW is allowed 341 to reach due to window auto-tuning. By default, this value is zero, 342 which means that CFCW is not allowed to increase from its initial 343 value. 344 345 This setting is applicable to both gQUIC and IETF QUIC. 346 347 See :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_cfcw`, 348 :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_init_max_data`. 349 350 .. member:: unsigned es_max_sfcw 351 352 This value is used to specify the maximum value stream flow control 353 window is allowed to reach due to auto-tuning. By default, this 354 value is zero, meaning that auto-tuning is turned off. 355 356 This setting is applicable to both gQUIC and IETF QUIC. 357 358 See :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_sfcw`, 359 :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_init_max_stream_data_bidi_local`, 360 :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_init_max_stream_data_bidi_remote`. 361 362 .. member:: unsigned es_max_streams_in 363 364 Maximum incoming streams, a.k.a. MIDS. 365 366 Google QUIC only. 367 368 .. member:: unsigned long es_handshake_to 369 370 Handshake timeout in microseconds. 371 372 For client, this can be set to an arbitrary value (zero turns the 373 timeout off). 374 375 For server, this value is limited to about 16 seconds. Do not set 376 it to zero. 377 378 Defaults to :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_HANDSHAKE_TO`. 379 380 .. member:: unsigned long es_idle_conn_to 381 382 Idle connection timeout, a.k.a ICSL, in microseconds; GQUIC only. 383 384 Defaults to :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_IDLE_CONN_TO` 385 386 .. member:: int es_silent_close 387 388 When true, ``CONNECTION_CLOSE`` is not sent when connection times out. 389 The server will also not send a reply to client's ``CONNECTION_CLOSE``. 390 391 Corresponds to SCLS (silent close) gQUIC option. 392 393 .. member:: unsigned es_max_header_list_size 394 395 This corresponds to SETTINGS_MAX_HEADER_LIST_SIZE 396 (:rfc:`7540#section-6.5.2`). 0 means no limit. Defaults 397 to :func:`LSQUIC_DF_MAX_HEADER_LIST_SIZE`. 398 399 .. member:: const char *es_ua 400 401 UAID -- User-Agent ID. Defaults to :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_UA`. 402 403 Google QUIC only. 404 405 406 More parameters for server 407 408 .. member:: unsigned es_max_inchoate 409 410 Maximum number of incoming connections in inchoate state. (In 411 other words, maximum number of mini connections.) 412 413 This is only applicable in server mode. 414 415 Defaults to :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_MAX_INCHOATE`. 416 417 .. member:: int es_support_push 418 419 Setting this value to 0 means that 420 421 For client: 422 423 1. we send a SETTINGS frame to indicate that we do not support server 424 push; and 425 2. all incoming pushed streams get reset immediately. 426 427 (For maximum effect, set es_max_streams_in to 0.) 428 429 For server: 430 431 1. :func:`lsquic_conn_push_stream()` will return -1. 432 433 .. member:: int es_support_tcid0 434 435 If set to true value, the server will not include connection ID in 436 outgoing packets if client's CHLO specifies TCID=0. 437 438 For client, this means including TCID=0 into CHLO message. Note that 439 in this case, the engine tracks connections by the 440 (source-addr, dest-addr) tuple, thereby making it necessary to create 441 a socket for each connection. 442 443 This option has no effect in Q046 and Q050, as the server never includes 444 CIDs in the short packets. 445 446 This setting is applicable to gQUIC only. 447 448 The default is :func:`LSQUIC_DF_SUPPORT_TCID0`. 449 450 .. member:: int es_support_nstp 451 452 Q037 and higher support "No STOP_WAITING frame" mode. When set, the 453 client will send NSTP option in its Client Hello message and will not 454 sent STOP_WAITING frames, while ignoring incoming STOP_WAITING frames, 455 if any. Note that if the version negotiation happens to downgrade the 456 client below Q037, this mode will *not* be used. 457 458 This option does not affect the server, as it must support NSTP mode 459 if it was specified by the client. 460 461 Defaults to :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_SUPPORT_NSTP`. 462 463 .. member:: int es_honor_prst 464 465 If set to true value, the library will drop connections when it 466 receives corresponding Public Reset packet. The default is to 467 ignore these packets. 468 469 The default is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_HONOR_PRST`. 470 471 .. member:: int es_send_prst 472 473 If set to true value, the library will send Public Reset packets 474 in response to incoming packets with unknown Connection IDs. 475 476 The default is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_SEND_PRST`. 477 478 .. member:: unsigned es_progress_check 479 480 A non-zero value enables internal checks that identify suspected 481 infinite loops in user `on_read` and `on_write` callbacks 482 and break them. An infinite loop may occur if user code keeps 483 on performing the same operation without checking status, e.g. 484 reading from a closed stream etc. 485 486 The value of this parameter is as follows: should a callback return 487 this number of times in a row without making progress (that is, 488 reading, writing, or changing stream state), loop break will occur. 489 490 The defaut value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_PROGRESS_CHECK`. 491 492 .. member:: int es_rw_once 493 494 A non-zero value make stream dispatch its read-write events once 495 per call. 496 497 When zero, read and write events are dispatched until the stream 498 is no longer readable or writeable, respectively, or until the 499 user signals unwillingness to read or write using 500 :func:`lsquic_stream_wantread()` or :func:`lsquic_stream_wantwrite()` 501 or shuts down the stream. 502 503 The default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_RW_ONCE`. 504 505 .. member:: unsigned es_proc_time_thresh 506 507 If set, this value specifies the number of microseconds that 508 :func:`lsquic_engine_process_conns()` and 509 :func:`lsquic_engine_send_unsent_packets()` are allowed to spend 510 before returning. 511 512 This is not an exact science and the connections must make 513 progress, so the deadline is checked after all connections get 514 a chance to tick (in the case of :func:`lsquic_engine_process_conns())` 515 and at least one batch of packets is sent out. 516 517 When processing function runs out of its time slice, immediate 518 calls to :func:`lsquic_engine_has_unsent_packets()` return false. 519 520 The default value is :func:`LSQUIC_DF_PROC_TIME_THRESH`. 521 522 .. member:: int es_pace_packets 523 524 If set to true, packet pacing is implemented per connection. 525 526 The default value is :func:`LSQUIC_DF_PACE_PACKETS`. 527 528 .. member:: unsigned es_clock_granularity 529 530 Clock granularity information is used by the pacer. The value 531 is in microseconds; default is :func:`LSQUIC_DF_CLOCK_GRANULARITY`. 532 533 .. member:: unsigned es_init_max_data 534 535 Initial max data. 536 537 This is a transport parameter. 538 539 Depending on the engine mode, the default value is either 540 :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_DATA_CLIENT` or 541 :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_DATA_SERVER`. 542 543 IETF QUIC only. 544 545 .. member:: unsigned es_init_max_stream_data_bidi_remote 546 547 Initial max stream data. 548 549 This is a transport parameter. 550 551 Depending on the engine mode, the default value is either 552 :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_BIDI_REMOTE_CLIENT` or 553 :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_BIDI_REMOTE_SERVER`. 554 555 IETF QUIC only. 556 557 .. member:: unsigned es_init_max_stream_data_bidi_local 558 559 Initial max stream data. 560 561 This is a transport parameter. 562 563 Depending on the engine mode, the default value is either 564 :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_BIDI_LOCAL_CLIENT` or 565 :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_BIDI_LOCAL_SERVER`. 566 567 IETF QUIC only. 568 569 .. member:: unsigned es_init_max_stream_data_uni 570 571 Initial max stream data for unidirectional streams initiated 572 by remote endpoint. 573 574 This is a transport parameter. 575 576 Depending on the engine mode, the default value is either 577 :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_UNI_CLIENT` or 578 :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_UNI_SERVER`. 579 580 IETF QUIC only. 581 582 .. member:: unsigned es_init_max_streams_bidi 583 584 Maximum initial number of bidirectional stream. 585 586 This is a transport parameter. 587 588 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAMS_BIDI`. 589 590 IETF QUIC only. 591 592 .. member:: unsigned es_init_max_streams_uni 593 594 Maximum initial number of unidirectional stream. 595 596 This is a transport parameter. 597 598 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAMS_UNI_CLIENT` or 599 :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_UNI_SERVER`. 600 601 IETF QUIC only. 602 603 .. member:: unsigned es_idle_timeout 604 605 Idle connection timeout. 606 607 This is a transport parameter. 608 609 (Note: `es_idle_conn_to` is not reused because it is in microseconds, 610 which, I now realize, was not a good choice. Since it will be 611 obsoleted some time after the switchover to IETF QUIC, we do not 612 have to keep on using strange units.) 613 614 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_IDLE_TIMEOUT`. 615 616 Maximum value is 600 seconds. 617 618 IETF QUIC only. 619 620 .. member:: unsigned es_ping_period 621 622 Ping period. If set to non-zero value, the connection will generate and 623 send PING frames in the absence of other activity. 624 625 By default, the server does not send PINGs and the period is set to zero. 626 The client's defaut value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_PING_PERIOD`. 627 628 IETF QUIC only. 629 630 .. member:: unsigned es_scid_len 631 632 Source Connection ID length. Valid values are 0 through 20, inclusive. 633 634 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_SCID_LEN`. 635 636 IETF QUIC only. 637 638 .. member:: unsigned es_scid_iss_rate 639 640 Source Connection ID issuance rate. This field is measured in CIDs 641 per minute. Using value 0 indicates that there is no rate limit for 642 CID issuance. 643 644 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_SCID_ISS_RATE`. 645 646 IETF QUIC only. 647 648 .. member:: unsigned es_qpack_dec_max_size 649 650 Maximum size of the QPACK dynamic table that the QPACK decoder will 651 use. 652 653 The default is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_QPACK_DEC_MAX_SIZE`. 654 655 IETF QUIC only. 656 657 .. member:: unsigned es_qpack_dec_max_blocked 658 659 Maximum number of blocked streams that the QPACK decoder is willing 660 to tolerate. 661 662 The default is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_QPACK_DEC_MAX_BLOCKED`. 663 664 IETF QUIC only. 665 666 .. member:: unsigned es_qpack_enc_max_size 667 668 Maximum size of the dynamic table that the encoder is willing to use. 669 The actual size of the dynamic table will not exceed the minimum of 670 this value and the value advertized by peer. 671 672 The default is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_QPACK_ENC_MAX_SIZE`. 673 674 IETF QUIC only. 675 676 .. member:: unsigned es_qpack_enc_max_blocked 677 678 Maximum number of blocked streams that the QPACK encoder is willing 679 to risk. The actual number of blocked streams will not exceed the 680 minimum of this value and the value advertized by peer. 681 682 The default is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_QPACK_ENC_MAX_BLOCKED`. 683 684 IETF QUIC only. 685 686 .. member:: int es_ecn 687 688 Enable ECN support. 689 690 The default is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_ECN` 691 692 IETF QUIC only. 693 694 .. member:: int es_allow_migration 695 696 Allow peer to migrate connection. 697 698 The default is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_ALLOW_MIGRATION` 699 700 IETF QUIC only. 701 702 .. member:: unsigned es_cc_algo 703 704 Congestion control algorithm to use. 705 706 - 0: Use default (:macro:`LSQUIC_DF_CC_ALGO`) 707 - 1: Cubic 708 - 2: BBRv1 709 - 3: Adaptive congestion control. 710 711 Adaptive congestion control adapts to the environment. It figures 712 out whether to use Cubic or BBRv1 based on the RTT. 713 714 .. member:: unsigned es_cc_rtt_thresh 715 716 Congestion controller RTT threshold in microseconds. 717 718 Adaptive congestion control uses BBRv1 until RTT is determined. At 719 that point a permanent choice of congestion controller is made. If 720 RTT is smaller than or equal to 721 :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_cc_rtt_thresh`, congestion 722 controller is switched to Cubic; otherwise, BBRv1 is picked. 723 724 The default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_CC_RTT_THRESH` 725 726 .. member:: int es_ql_bits 727 728 Use QL loss bits. Allowed values are: 729 730 - 0: Do not use loss bits 731 - 1: Allow loss bits 732 - 2: Allow and send loss bits 733 734 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_QL_BITS` 735 736 .. member:: int es_spin 737 738 Enable spin bit. Allowed values are 0 and 1. 739 740 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_SPIN` 741 742 .. member:: int es_delayed_acks 743 744 Enable delayed ACKs extension. Allowed values are 0 and 1. 745 746 **Warning**: this is an experimental feature. Using it will most likely 747 lead to degraded performance. 748 749 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_DELAYED_ACKS` 750 751 .. member:: int es_timestamps 752 753 Enable timestamps extension. Allowed values are 0 and 1. 754 755 Default value is @ref LSQUIC_DF_TIMESTAMPS 756 757 .. member:: unsigned short es_max_udp_payload_size_rx 758 759 Maximum packet size we are willing to receive. This is sent to 760 peer in transport parameters: the library does not enforce this 761 limit for incoming packets. 762 763 If set to zero, limit is not set. 764 765 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_MAX_UDP_PAYLOAD_SIZE_RX` 766 767 .. member:: int es_dplpmtud 768 769 If set to true value, enable DPLPMTUD -- Datagram Packetization 770 Layer Path MTU Discovery. 771 772 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_DPLPMTUD` 773 774 .. member:: unsigned short es_base_plpmtu 775 776 PLPMTU size expected to work for most paths. 777 778 If set to zero, this value is calculated based on QUIC and IP versions. 779 780 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_BASE_PLPMTU` 781 782 .. member:: unsigned short es_max_plpmtu 783 784 Largest PLPMTU size the engine will try. 785 786 If set to zero, picking this value is left to the engine. 787 788 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_MAX_PLPMTU` 789 790 .. member:: unsigned es_mtu_probe_timer 791 792 This value specifies how long the DPLPMTUD probe timer is, in 793 milliseconds. :rfc:`8899` says: 794 795 PROBE_TIMER: The PROBE_TIMER is configured to expire after a period 796 longer than the maximum time to receive an acknowledgment to a 797 probe packet. This value MUST NOT be smaller than 1 second, and 798 SHOULD be larger than 15 seconds. Guidance on selection of the 799 timer value are provided in section 3.1.1 of the UDP Usage 800 Guidelines :rfc:`8085#section-3.1`. 801 802 If set to zero, the default is used. 803 804 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_MTU_PROBE_TIMER` 805 806 .. member:: unsigned es_noprogress_timeout 807 808 No progress timeout. 809 810 If connection does not make progress for this number of seconds, the 811 connection is dropped. Here, progress is defined as user streams 812 being written to or read from. 813 814 If this value is zero, this timeout is disabled. 815 816 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_NOPROGRESS_TIMEOUT_SERVER` in server 817 mode and :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_NOPROGRESS_TIMEOUT_CLIENT` in client mode. 818 819 .. member:: int es_grease_quic_bit 820 821 Enable the "QUIC bit grease" extension. When set to a true value, 822 lsquic will grease the QUIC bit on the outgoing QUIC packets if 823 the peer sent the "grease_quic_bit" transport parameter. 824 825 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_GREASE_QUIC_BIT` 826 827 .. member:: int es_datagrams 828 829 Enable datagrams extension. Allowed values are 0 and 1. 830 831 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_DATAGRAMS` 832 833 .. member:: int es_optimistic_nat 834 835 If set to true, changes in peer port are assumed to be due to a 836 benign NAT rebinding and path characteristics -- MTU, RTT, and 837 CC state -- are not reset. 838 839 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_OPTIMISTIC_NAT` 840 841 .. member:: int es_ext_http_prio 842 843 If set to true, Extensible HTTP Priorities are enabled. This 844 is HTTP/3-only setting. 845 846 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_EXT_HTTP_PRIO` 847 848 .. member:: int es_qpack_experiment 849 850 If set to 1, QPACK statistics are logged per connection. 851 852 If set to 2, QPACK experiments are run. In this mode, encoder 853 and decoder setting values are randomly selected (from the range 854 [0, whatever is specified in es_qpack_(enc|dec)_*]) and these 855 values along with compression ratio and user agent are logged at 856 NOTICE level when connection is destroyed. The purpose of these 857 experiments is to use compression performance statistics to figure 858 out a good set of default values. 859 860 Default value is :macro:`LSQUIC_DF_QPACK_EXPERIMENT` 861 862To initialize the settings structure to library defaults, use the following 863convenience function: 864 865.. function:: lsquic_engine_init_settings (struct lsquic_engine_settings *, unsigned flags) 866 867 ``flags`` is a bitmask of ``LSENG_SERVER`` and ``LSENG_HTTP`` 868 869After doing this, change just the settings you'd like. To check whether 870the values are correct, another convenience function is provided: 871 872.. function:: lsquic_engine_check_settings (const struct lsquic_engine_settings *, unsigned flags, char *err_buf, size_t err_buf_sz) 873 874 Check settings for errors. Return 0 if settings are OK, -1 otherwise. 875 876 If `err_buf` and `err_buf_sz` are set, an error string is written to the 877 buffers. 878 879The following macros in :file:`lsquic.h` specify default values: 880 881*Note that, despite our best efforts, documentation may accidentally get 882out of date. Please check your :file:`lsquic.h` for actual values.* 883 884.. macro:: LSQUIC_MIN_FCW 885 886 Minimum flow control window is set to 16 KB for both client and server. 887 This means we can send up to this amount of data before handshake gets 888 completed. 889 890.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_VERSIONS 891 892 By default, deprecated and experimental versions are not included. 893 894.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_CFCW_SERVER 895.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_CFCW_CLIENT 896.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_SFCW_SERVER 897.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_SFCW_CLIENT 898.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_MAX_STREAMS_IN 899 900.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_DATA_SERVER 901.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_DATA_CLIENT 902.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_BIDI_REMOTE_SERVER 903.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_BIDI_LOCAL_SERVER 904.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_BIDI_REMOTE_CLIENT 905.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_BIDI_LOCAL_CLIENT 906.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAMS_BIDI 907.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAMS_UNI_CLIENT 908.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAMS_UNI_SERVER 909.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_UNI_CLIENT 910.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_INIT_MAX_STREAM_DATA_UNI_SERVER 911 912.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_IDLE_TIMEOUT 913 914 Default idle connection timeout is 30 seconds. 915 916.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_PING_PERIOD 917 918 Default ping period is 15 seconds. 919 920.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_HANDSHAKE_TO 921 922 Default handshake timeout is 10,000,000 microseconds (10 seconds). 923 924.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_IDLE_CONN_TO 925 926 Default idle connection timeout is 30,000,000 microseconds. 927 928.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_SILENT_CLOSE 929 930 By default, connections are closed silenty when they time out (no 931 ``CONNECTION_CLOSE`` frame is sent) and the server does not reply with 932 own ``CONNECTION_CLOSE`` after it receives one. 933 934.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_MAX_HEADER_LIST_SIZE 935 936 Default value of maximum header list size. If set to non-zero value, 937 SETTINGS_MAX_HEADER_LIST_SIZE will be sent to peer after handshake is 938 completed (assuming the peer supports this setting frame type). 939 940.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_UA 941 942 Default value of UAID (user-agent ID). 943 944.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_MAX_INCHOATE 945 946 Default is 1,000,000. 947 948.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_SUPPORT_NSTP 949 950 NSTP is not used by default. 951 952.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_SUPPORT_PUSH 953 954 Push promises are supported by default. 955 956.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_SUPPORT_TCID0 957 958 Support for TCID=0 is enabled by default. 959 960.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_HONOR_PRST 961 962 By default, LSQUIC ignores Public Reset packets. 963 964.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_SEND_PRST 965 966 By default, LSQUIC will not send Public Reset packets in response to 967 packets that specify unknown connections. 968 969.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_PROGRESS_CHECK 970 971 By default, infinite loop checks are turned on. 972 973.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_RW_ONCE 974 975 By default, read/write events are dispatched in a loop. 976 977.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_PROC_TIME_THRESH 978 979 By default, the threshold is not enabled. 980 981.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_PACE_PACKETS 982 983 By default, packets are paced 984 985.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_CLOCK_GRANULARITY 986 987 Default clock granularity is 1000 microseconds. 988 989.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_SCID_LEN 990 991 The default value is 8 for simplicity and speed. 992 993.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_SCID_ISS_RATE 994 995 The default value is 60 CIDs per minute. 996 997.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_QPACK_DEC_MAX_BLOCKED 998 999 Default value is 100. 1000 1001.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_QPACK_DEC_MAX_SIZE 1002 1003 Default value is 4,096 bytes. 1004 1005.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_QPACK_ENC_MAX_BLOCKED 1006 1007 Default value is 100. 1008 1009.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_QPACK_ENC_MAX_SIZE 1010 1011 Default value is 4,096 bytes. 1012 1013.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_ECN 1014 1015 ECN is disabled by default. 1016 1017.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_ALLOW_MIGRATION 1018 1019 Allow migration by default. 1020 1021.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_QL_BITS 1022 1023 Use QL loss bits by default. 1024 1025.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_SPIN 1026 1027 Turn spin bit on by default. 1028 1029.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_CC_ALGO 1030 1031 Use Adaptive Congestion Controller by default. 1032 1033.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_CC_RTT_THRESH 1034 1035 Default value of the CC RTT threshold is 1500 microseconds 1036 1037.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_DELAYED_ACKS 1038 1039 Delayed ACKs are off by default. 1040 1041.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_MAX_UDP_PAYLOAD_SIZE_RX 1042 1043 By default, incoming packet size is not limited. 1044 1045.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_DPLPMTUD 1046 1047 By default, DPLPMTUD is enabled 1048 1049.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_BASE_PLPMTU 1050 1051 By default, this value is left up to the engine. 1052 1053.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_MAX_PLPMTU 1054 1055 By default, this value is left up to the engine. 1056 1057.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_MTU_PROBE_TIMER 1058 1059 By default, we use the minimum timer of 1000 milliseconds. 1060 1061.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_NOPROGRESS_TIMEOUT_SERVER 1062 1063 By default, drop no-progress connections after 60 seconds on the server. 1064 1065.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_NOPROGRESS_TIMEOUT_CLIENT 1066 1067 By default, do not use no-progress timeout on the client. 1068 1069.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_GREASE_QUIC_BIT 1070 1071 By default, greasing the QUIC bit is enabled (if peer sent 1072 the "grease_quic_bit" transport parameter). 1073 1074.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_TIMESTAMPS 1075 1076 Timestamps are on by default. 1077 1078.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_DATAGRAMS 1079 1080 Datagrams are off by default. 1081 1082.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_OPTIMISTIC_NAT 1083 1084 Assume optimistic NAT by default. 1085 1086.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_EXT_HTTP_PRIO 1087 1088 Turn on Extensible HTTP Priorities by default. 1089 1090.. macro:: LSQUIC_DF_QPACK_EXPERIMENT 1091 1092 By default, QPACK experiments are turned off. 1093 1094Receiving Packets 1095----------------- 1096 1097Incoming packets are supplied to the engine using :func:`lsquic_engine_packet_in()`. 1098It is up to the engine to decide what do to with the packet. It can find an existing 1099connection and dispatch the packet there, create a new connection (in server mode), or 1100schedule a version negotiation or stateless reset packet. 1101 1102.. function:: int lsquic_engine_packet_in (lsquic_engine_t *engine, const unsigned char *data, size_t size, const struct sockaddr *local, const struct sockaddr *peer, void *peer_ctx, int ecn) 1103 1104 Pass incoming packet to the QUIC engine. This function can be called 1105 more than once in a row. After you add one or more packets, call 1106 :func:`lsquic_engine_process_conns()` to schedule outgoing packets, if any. 1107 1108 :param engine: Engine instance. 1109 :param data: Pointer to UDP datagram payload. 1110 :param size: Size of UDP datagram. 1111 :param local: Local address. 1112 :param peer: Peer address. 1113 :param peer_ctx: Peer context. 1114 :param ecn: ECN marking associated with this UDP datagram. 1115 1116 :return: 1117 1118 - ``0``: Packet was processed by a real connection. 1119 - ``1``: Packet was handled successfully, but not by a connection. 1120 This may happen with version negotiation and public reset 1121 packets as well as some packets that may be ignored. 1122 - ``-1``: Some error occurred. Possible reasons are invalid packet 1123 size or failure to allocate memory. 1124 1125.. function:: int lsquic_engine_earliest_adv_tick (lsquic_engine_t *engine, int *diff) 1126 1127 Returns true if there are connections to be processed, false otherwise. 1128 1129 :param engine: 1130 1131 Engine instance. 1132 1133 :param diff: 1134 1135 If the function returns a true value, the pointed to integer is set to the 1136 difference between the earliest advisory tick time and now. 1137 If the former is in the past, this difference is negative. 1138 1139 :return: 1140 1141 True if there are connections to be processed, false otherwise. 1142 1143Sending Packets 1144--------------- 1145 1146User specifies a callback :type:`lsquic_packets_out_f` in :type:`lsquic_engine_api` 1147that the library uses to send packets. 1148 1149.. type:: struct lsquic_out_spec 1150 1151 This structure describes an outgoing packet. 1152 1153 .. member:: struct iovec *iov 1154 1155 A vector with payload. 1156 1157 .. member:: size_t iovlen 1158 1159 Vector length. 1160 1161 .. member:: const struct sockaddr *local_sa 1162 1163 Local address. 1164 1165 .. member:: const struct sockaddr *dest_sa 1166 1167 Destination address. 1168 1169 .. member:: void *peer_ctx 1170 1171 Peer context associated with the local address. 1172 1173 .. member:: int ecn 1174 1175 ECN: Valid values are 0 - 3. See :rfc:`3168`. 1176 1177 ECN may be set by IETF QUIC connections if ``es_ecn`` is set. 1178 1179.. type:: typedef int (*lsquic_packets_out_f)(void *packets_out_ctx, const struct lsquic_out_spec *out_spec, unsigned n_packets_out) 1180 1181 Returns number of packets successfully sent out or -1 on error. -1 should 1182 only be returned if no packets were sent out. If -1 is returned or if the 1183 return value is smaller than ``n_packets_out``, this indicates that sending 1184 of packets is not possible. 1185 1186 If not all packets could be sent out, then: 1187 1188 - errno is examined. If it is not EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK, the connection 1189 whose packet caused the error is closed forthwith. 1190 - No packets are attempted to be sent out until :func:`lsquic_engine_send_unsent_packets()` 1191 is called. 1192 1193.. function:: void lsquic_engine_process_conns (lsquic_engine_t *engine) 1194 1195 Process tickable connections. This function must be called often enough so 1196 that packets and connections do not expire. The preferred method of doing 1197 so is by using :func:`lsquic_engine_earliest_adv_tick()`. 1198 1199.. function:: int lsquic_engine_has_unsent_packets (lsquic_engine_t *engine) 1200 1201 Returns true if engine has some unsent packets. This happens if 1202 :member:`lsquic_engine_api.ea_packets_out` could not send everything out 1203 or if processing deadline was exceeded (see 1204 :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_proc_time_thresh`). 1205 1206.. function:: void lsquic_engine_send_unsent_packets (lsquic_engine_t *engine) 1207 1208 Send out as many unsent packets as possibe: until we are out of unsent 1209 packets or until ``ea_packets_out()`` fails. 1210 1211 If ``ea_packets_out()`` cannot send all packets, this function must be 1212 called to signify that sending of packets is possible again. 1213 1214Stream Callback Interface 1215------------------------- 1216 1217The stream callback interface structure lists the callbacks used by 1218the engine to communicate with the user code: 1219 1220.. type:: struct lsquic_stream_if 1221 1222 .. member:: lsquic_conn_ctx_t *(*on_new_conn)(void *stream_if_ctx, lsquic_conn_t *) 1223 1224 Called when a new connection has been created. In server mode, 1225 this means that the handshake has been successful. In client mode, 1226 on the other hand, this callback is called as soon as connection 1227 object is created inside the engine, but before the handshake is 1228 done. 1229 1230 The return value is the connection context associated with this 1231 connection. Use :func:`lsquic_conn_get_ctx()` to get back this 1232 context. It is OK for this function to return NULL. 1233 1234 This callback is mandatory. 1235 1236 .. member:: void (*on_conn_closed)(lsquic_conn_t *) 1237 1238 Connection is closed. 1239 1240 This callback is mandatory. 1241 1242 .. member:: lsquic_stream_ctx_t * (*on_new_stream)(void *stream_if_ctx, lsquic_stream_t *) 1243 1244 If you need to initiate a connection, call lsquic_conn_make_stream(). 1245 This will cause `on_new_stream` callback to be called when appropriate 1246 (this operation is delayed when maximum number of outgoing streams is 1247 reached). 1248 1249 If connection is going away, this callback may be called with the 1250 second parameter set to NULL. 1251 1252 The return value is the stream context associated with the stream. 1253 A pointer to it is passed to `on_read()`, `on_write()`, and `on_close()` 1254 callbacks. It is OK for this function to return NULL. 1255 1256 This callback is mandatory. 1257 1258 .. member:: void (*on_read) (lsquic_stream_t *s, lsquic_stream_ctx_t *h) 1259 1260 Stream is readable: either there are bytes to be read or an error 1261 is ready to be collected. 1262 1263 This callback is mandatory. 1264 1265 .. member:: void (*on_write) (lsquic_stream_t *s, lsquic_stream_ctx_t *h) 1266 1267 Stream is writeable. 1268 1269 This callback is mandatory. 1270 1271 .. member:: void (*on_close) (lsquic_stream_t *s, lsquic_stream_ctx_t *h) 1272 1273 After this callback returns, the stream is no longer accessible. This is 1274 a good time to clean up the stream context. 1275 1276 This callback is mandatory. 1277 1278 .. member:: void (*on_hsk_done)(lsquic_conn_t *c, enum lsquic_hsk_status s) 1279 1280 When handshake is completed, this callback is called. 1281 1282 This callback is optional. 1283 1284 .. member:: void (*on_goaway_received)(lsquic_conn_t *) 1285 1286 This is called when our side received GOAWAY frame. After this, 1287 new streams should not be created. 1288 1289 This callback is optional. 1290 1291 .. member:: void (*on_new_token)(lsquic_conn_t *c, const unsigned char *token, size_t token_size) 1292 1293 When client receives a token in NEW_TOKEN frame, this callback is called. 1294 1295 This callback is optional. 1296 1297 .. member:: void (*on_sess_resume_info)(lsquic_conn_t *c, const unsigned char *, size_t) 1298 1299 This callback lets client record information needed to 1300 perform session resumption next time around. 1301 1302 This callback is optional. 1303 1304 .. member:: ssize_t (*on_dg_write)(lsquic_conn_t *c, void *buf, size_t buf_sz) 1305 1306 Called when datagram is ready to be written. Write at most 1307 ``buf_sz`` bytes to ``buf`` and return number of bytes 1308 written. 1309 1310 .. member:: void (*on_datagram)(lsquic_conn_t *c, const void *buf, size_t sz) 1311 1312 Called when datagram is read from a packet. This callback is 1313 required when :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_datagrams` is true. 1314 Take care to process it quickly, as this is called during 1315 :func:`lsquic_engine_packet_in()`. 1316 1317Creating Connections 1318-------------------- 1319 1320In server mode, the connections are created by the library based on incoming 1321packets. After handshake is completed, the library calls :member:`lsquic_stream_if.on_new_conn` 1322callback. 1323 1324In client mode, a new connection is created by 1325 1326.. function:: lsquic_conn_t * lsquic_engine_connect (lsquic_engine_t *engine, enum lsquic_version version, const struct sockaddr *local_sa, const struct sockaddr *peer_sa, void *peer_ctx, lsquic_conn_ctx_t *conn_ctx, const char *sni, unsigned short base_plpmtu, const unsigned char *sess_resume, size_t sess_resume_len, const unsigned char *token, size_t token_sz) 1327 1328 :param engine: Engine to use. 1329 1330 :param version: 1331 1332 To let the engine specify QUIC version, use N_LSQVER. If session resumption 1333 information is supplied, version is picked from there instead. 1334 1335 :param local_sa: 1336 1337 Local address. 1338 1339 :param peer_sa: 1340 1341 Address of the server. 1342 1343 :param peer_ctx: 1344 1345 Context associated with the peer. This is what gets passed to TODO. 1346 1347 :param conn_ctx: 1348 1349 Connection context can be set early using this parameter. Useful if 1350 you need the connection context to be available in `on_conn_new()`. 1351 Note that that callback's return value replaces the connection 1352 context set here. 1353 1354 :param sni: 1355 1356 The SNI is required for Google QUIC connections; it is optional for 1357 IETF QUIC and may be set to NULL. 1358 1359 :param base_plpmtu: 1360 1361 Base PLPMTU. If set to zero, it is selected based on the 1362 engine settings (see 1363 :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_base_plpmtu`), 1364 QUIC version, and IP version. 1365 1366 :param sess_resume: 1367 1368 Pointer to previously saved session resumption data needed for 1369 TLS resumption. May be NULL. 1370 1371 :param sess_resume_len: 1372 1373 Size of session resumption data. 1374 1375 :param token: 1376 1377 Pointer to previously received token to include in the Initial 1378 packet. Tokens are used by IETF QUIC to pre-validate client 1379 connections, potentially avoiding a retry. 1380 1381 See :member:`lsquic_stream_if.on_new_token` callback. 1382 1383 May be NULL. 1384 1385 :param token_sz: 1386 1387 Size of data pointed to by ``token``. 1388 1389Closing Connections 1390------------------- 1391 1392.. function:: void lsquic_conn_going_away (lsquic_conn_t *conn) 1393 1394 Mark connection as going away: send GOAWAY frame and do not accept 1395 any more incoming streams, nor generate streams of our own. 1396 1397 Only applicable to HTTP/3 and GQUIC connections. Otherwise a no-op. 1398 1399.. function:: void lsquic_conn_close (lsquic_conn_t *conn) 1400 1401 This closes the connection. :member:`lsquic_stream_if.on_conn_closed` 1402 and :member:`lsquic_stream_if.on_close` callbacks will be called. 1403 1404Creating Streams 1405---------------- 1406 1407Similar to connections, streams are created by the library in server mode; they 1408correspond to requests. In client mode, a new stream is created by 1409 1410.. function:: void lsquic_conn_make_stream (lsquic_conn_t *) 1411 1412 Create a new request stream. This causes :member:`on_new_stream()` callback 1413 to be called. If creating more requests is not permitted at the moment 1414 (due to number of concurrent streams limit), stream creation is registered 1415 as "pending" and the stream is created later when number of streams dips 1416 under the limit again. Any number of pending streams can be created. 1417 Use :func:`lsquic_conn_n_pending_streams()` and 1418 :func:`lsquic_conn_cancel_pending_streams()` to manage pending streams. 1419 1420 If connection is going away, :func:`on_new_stream()` is called with the 1421 stream parameter set to NULL. 1422 1423Stream Events 1424------------- 1425 1426To register or unregister an interest in a read or write event, use the 1427following functions: 1428 1429.. function:: int lsquic_stream_wantread (lsquic_stream_t *stream, int want) 1430 1431 :param stream: Stream to read from. 1432 :param want: Boolean value indicating whether the caller wants to read 1433 from stream. 1434 :return: Previous value of ``want`` or ``-1`` if the stream has already 1435 been closed for reading. 1436 1437 A stream becomes readable if there is was an error: for example, the 1438 peer may have reset the stream. In this case, reading from the stream 1439 will return an error. 1440 1441.. function:: int lsquic_stream_wantwrite (lsquic_stream_t *stream, int want) 1442 1443 :param stream: Stream to write to. 1444 :param want: Boolean value indicating whether the caller wants to write 1445 to stream. 1446 :return: Previous value of ``want`` or ``-1`` if the stream has already 1447 been closed for writing. 1448 1449Reading From Streams 1450-------------------- 1451 1452.. function:: ssize_t lsquic_stream_read (lsquic_stream_t *stream, unsigned char *buf, size_t sz) 1453 1454 :param stream: Stream to read from. 1455 :param buf: Buffer to copy data to. 1456 :param sz: Size of the buffer. 1457 :return: Number of bytes read, zero if EOS has been reached, or -1 on error. 1458 1459 Read up to ``sz`` bytes from ``stream`` into buffer ``buf``. 1460 1461 ``-1`` is returned on error, in which case ``errno`` is set: 1462 1463 - ``EBADF``: The stream is closed. 1464 - ``ECONNRESET``: The stream has been reset. 1465 - ``EWOULDBLOCK``: There is no data to be read. 1466 1467.. function:: ssize_t lsquic_stream_readv (lsquic_stream_t *stream, const struct iovec *vec, int iovcnt) 1468 1469 :param stream: Stream to read from. 1470 :param vec: Array of ``iovec`` structures. 1471 :param iovcnt: Number of elements in ``vec``. 1472 :return: Number of bytes read, zero if EOS has been reached, or -1 on error. 1473 1474 Similar to :func:`lsquic_stream_read()`, but reads data into a vector. 1475 1476.. function:: ssize_t lsquic_stream_readf (lsquic_stream_t *stream, size_t (*readf)(void *ctx, const unsigned char *buf, size_t len, int fin), void *ctx) 1477 1478 :param stream: Stream to read from. 1479 1480 :param readf: 1481 1482 The callback takes four parameters: 1483 1484 - Pointer to user-supplied context; 1485 - Pointer to the data; 1486 - Data size (can be zero); and 1487 - Indicator whether the FIN follows the data. 1488 1489 The callback returns number of bytes processed. If this number is zero 1490 or is smaller than ``len``, reading from stream stops. 1491 1492 :param ctx: Context pointer passed to ``readf``. 1493 1494 This function allows user-supplied callback to read the stream contents. 1495 It is meant to be used for zero-copy stream processing. 1496 1497 Return value and errors are same as in :func:`lsquic_stream_read()`. 1498 1499Writing To Streams 1500------------------ 1501 1502.. function:: ssize_t lsquic_stream_write (lsquic_stream_t *stream, const void *buf, size_t len) 1503 1504 :param stream: Stream to write to. 1505 :param buf: Buffer to copy data from. 1506 :param len: Number of bytes to copy. 1507 :return: Number of bytes written -- which may be smaller than ``len`` -- or a negative 1508 value when an error occurs. 1509 1510 Write ``len`` bytes to the stream. Returns number of bytes written, which 1511 may be smaller that ``len``. 1512 1513 A negative return value indicates a serious error (the library is likely 1514 to have aborted the connection because of it). 1515 1516.. function:: ssize_t lsquic_stream_writev (lsquic_stream_t *s, const struct iovec *vec, int count) 1517 1518 Like :func:`lsquic_stream_write()`, but read data from a vector. 1519 1520.. type:: struct lsquic_reader 1521 1522 Used as argument to :func:`lsquic_stream_writef()`. 1523 1524 .. member:: size_t (*lsqr_read) (void *lsqr_ctx, void *buf, size_t count) 1525 1526 :param lsqr_ctx: Pointer to user-specified context. 1527 :param buf: Memory location to write to. 1528 :param count: Size of available memory pointed to by ``buf``. 1529 :return: 1530 1531 Number of bytes written. This is not a ``ssize_t`` because 1532 the read function is not supposed to return an error. If an error 1533 occurs in the read function (for example, when reading from a file 1534 fails), it is supposed to deal with the error itself. 1535 1536 .. member:: size_t (*lsqr_size) (void *lsqr_ctx) 1537 1538 Return number of bytes remaining in the reader. 1539 1540 .. member:: void *lsqr_ctx 1541 1542 Context pointer passed both to ``lsqr_read()`` and to ``lsqr_size()``. 1543 1544.. function:: ssize_t lsquic_stream_writef (lsquic_stream_t *stream, struct lsquic_reader *reader) 1545 1546 :param stream: Stream to write to. 1547 :param reader: Reader to read from. 1548 :return: Number of bytes written or -1 on error. 1549 1550 Write to stream using :type:`lsquic_reader`. This is the most generic of 1551 the write functions -- :func:`lsquic_stream_write()` and 1552 :func:`lsquic_stream_writev()` utilize the same mechanism. 1553 1554.. function:: ssize_t lsquic_stream_pwritev (struct lsquic_stream *stream, ssize_t (*preadv)(void *user_data, const struct iovec *iov, int iovcnt), void *user_data, size_t n_to_write) 1555 1556 :param stream: Stream to write to. 1557 :param preadv: Pointer to a custom ``preadv(2)``-like function. 1558 :param user_data: Data to pass to ``preadv`` function. 1559 :param n_to_write: Number of bytes to write. 1560 :return: Number of bytes written or -1 on error. 1561 1562 Write to stream using user-supplied ``preadv()`` function. 1563 The stream allocates one or more packets and calls ``preadv()``, 1564 which then fills the array of buffers. This is a good way to 1565 minimize the number of ``read(2)`` system calls; the user can call 1566 ``preadv(2)`` instead. 1567 1568 The number of bytes available in the ``iov`` vector passed back to 1569 the user callback may be smaller than ``n_to_write``. The expected 1570 use pattern is to pass the number of bytes remaining in the file 1571 and keep on calling ``preadv(2)``. 1572 1573 Note that, unlike other stream-writing functions above, 1574 ``lsquic_stream_pwritev()`` does *not* buffer bytes inside the 1575 stream; it only writes to packets. That means the caller must be 1576 prepared for this function to return 0 even inside the "on write" 1577 stream callback. In that case, the caller should fall back to using 1578 another write function. 1579 1580 It is OK for the ``preadv`` callback to write fewer bytes that 1581 ``n_to_write``. (This can happen if the underlying data source 1582 is truncated.) 1583 1584:: 1585 1586 /* 1587 * For example, the return value of zero can be handled as follows: 1588 */ 1589 nw = lsquic_stream_pwritev(stream, my_readv, some_ctx, n_to_write); 1590 if (nw == 0) 1591 nw = lsquic_stream_write(stream, rem_bytes_buf, rem_bytes_len); 1592 1593.. function:: int lsquic_stream_flush (lsquic_stream_t *stream) 1594 1595 :param stream: Stream to flush. 1596 :return: 0 on success and -1 on failure. 1597 1598 Flush any buffered data. This triggers packetizing even a single byte 1599 into a separate frame. Flushing a closed stream is an error. 1600 1601Closing Streams 1602--------------- 1603 1604Streams can be closed for reading, writing, or both. 1605``on_close()`` callback is called at some point after a stream is closed 1606for both reading and writing, 1607 1608.. function:: int lsquic_stream_shutdown (lsquic_stream_t *stream, int how) 1609 1610 :param stream: Stream to shut down. 1611 :param how: 1612 1613 This parameter specifies what do to. Allowed values are: 1614 1615 - 0: Stop reading. 1616 - 1: Stop writing. 1617 - 2: Stop both reading and writing. 1618 1619 :return: 0 on success or -1 on failure. 1620 1621.. function:: int lsquic_stream_close (lsquic_stream_t *stream) 1622 1623 :param stream: Stream to close. 1624 :return: 0 on success or -1 on failure. 1625 1626Sending HTTP Headers 1627-------------------- 1628 1629.. type:: struct lsxpack_header 1630 1631This type is defined in _lsxpack_header.h_. See that header file for 1632more information. 1633 1634 .. member:: char *buf 1635 1636 the buffer for headers 1637 1638 .. member:: uint32_t name_hash 1639 1640 hash value for name 1641 1642 .. member:: uint32_t nameval_hash 1643 1644 hash value for name + value 1645 1646 .. member:: lsxpack_strlen_t name_offset 1647 1648 the offset for name in the buffer 1649 1650 .. member:: lsxpack_strlen_t name_len 1651 1652 the length of name 1653 1654 .. member:: lsxpack_strlen_t val_offset 1655 1656 the offset for value in the buffer 1657 1658 .. member:: lsxpack_strlen_t val_len 1659 1660 the length of value 1661 1662 .. member:: uint16_t chain_next_idx 1663 1664 mainly for cookie value chain 1665 1666 .. member:: uint8_t hpack_index 1667 1668 HPACK static table index 1669 1670 .. member:: uint8_t qpack_index 1671 1672 QPACK static table index 1673 1674 .. member:: uint8_t app_index 1675 1676 APP header index 1677 1678 .. member:: enum lsxpack_flag flags:8 1679 1680 combination of lsxpack_flag 1681 1682 .. member:: uint8_t indexed_type 1683 1684 control to disable index or not 1685 1686 .. member:: uint8_t dec_overhead 1687 1688 num of extra bytes written to decoded buffer 1689 1690.. type:: lsquic_http_headers_t 1691 1692 .. member:: int count 1693 1694 Number of headers in ``headers``. 1695 1696 .. member:: struct lsxpack_header *headers 1697 1698 Pointer to an array of HTTP headers. 1699 1700 HTTP header list structure. Contains a list of HTTP headers. 1701 1702.. function:: int lsquic_stream_send_headers (lsquic_stream_t *stream, const lsquic_http_headers_t *headers, int eos) 1703 1704 :param stream: 1705 1706 Stream to send headers on. 1707 1708 :param headers: 1709 1710 Headers to send. 1711 1712 :param eos: 1713 1714 Boolean value to indicate whether these headers constitute the whole 1715 HTTP message. 1716 1717 :return: 1718 1719 0 on success or -1 on error. 1720 1721Receiving HTTP Headers 1722---------------------- 1723 1724If ``ea_hsi_if`` is not set in :type:`lsquic_engine_api`, the library will translate 1725HPACK- and QPACK-encoded headers into HTTP/1.x-like headers and prepend them to the 1726stream. To the stream-reading function, it will look as if a standard HTTP/1.x 1727message. 1728 1729Alternatively, you can specify header-processing set of functions and manage header 1730fields yourself. In that case, the header set must be "read" from the stream via 1731:func:`lsquic_stream_get_hset()`. 1732 1733.. type:: struct lsquic_hset_if 1734 1735 .. member:: void * (*hsi_create_header_set)(void *hsi_ctx, lsquic_stream_t *stream, int is_push_promise) 1736 1737 :param hsi_ctx: User context. This is the pointer specifed in ``ea_hsi_ctx``. 1738 :param stream: Stream with which the header set is associated. May be set 1739 to NULL in server mode. 1740 :param is_push_promise: Boolean value indicating whether this header set is 1741 for a push promise. 1742 :return: Pointer to user-defined header set object. 1743 1744 Create a new header set. This object is (and must be) fetched from a 1745 stream by calling :func:`lsquic_stream_get_hset()` before the stream can 1746 be read. 1747 1748 .. member:: struct lsxpack_header * (*hsi_prepare_decode)(void *hdr_set, struct lsxpack_header *hdr, size_t space) 1749 1750 Return a header set prepared for decoding. If ``hdr`` is NULL, this 1751 means return a new structure with at least ``space`` bytes available 1752 in the decoder buffer. On success, a newly prepared header is 1753 returned. 1754 1755 If ``hdr`` is not NULL, it means there was not enough decoder buffer 1756 and it must be increased to at least ``space`` bytes. ``buf``, ``val_len``, 1757 and ``name_offset`` member of the ``hdr`` structure may change. On 1758 success, the return value is the same as ``hdr``. 1759 1760 If NULL is returned, the space cannot be allocated. 1761 1762 .. member:: int (*hsi_process_header)(void *hdr_set, struct lsxpack_header *hdr) 1763 1764 Process new header. 1765 1766 :param hdr_set: 1767 1768 Header set to add the new header field to. This is the object 1769 returned by ``hsi_create_header_set()``. 1770 1771 :param hdr: 1772 1773 The header returned by @ref ``hsi_prepare_decode()``. 1774 1775 :return: 1776 1777 Return 0 on success, a positive value if a header error occured, 1778 or a negative value on any other error. A positive return value 1779 will result in cancellation of associated stream. A negative return 1780 value will result in connection being aborted. 1781 1782 .. member:: void (*hsi_discard_header_set)(void *hdr_set) 1783 1784 :param hdr_set: Header set to discard. 1785 1786 Discard header set. This is called for unclaimed header sets and 1787 header sets that had an error. 1788 1789 .. member:: enum lsquic_hsi_flag hsi_flags 1790 1791 These flags specify properties of decoded headers passed to 1792 ``hsi_process_header()``. This is only applicable to QPACK headers; 1793 HPACK library header properties are based on compilation, not 1794 run-time, options. 1795 1796.. function:: void * lsquic_stream_get_hset (lsquic_stream_t *stream) 1797 1798 :param stream: Stream to fetch header set from. 1799 1800 :return: Header set associated with the stream. 1801 1802 Get header set associated with the stream. The header set is created by 1803 ``hsi_create_header_set()`` callback. After this call, the ownership of 1804 the header set is transferred to the caller. 1805 1806 This call must precede calls to :func:`lsquic_stream_read()`, 1807 :func:`lsquic_stream_readv()`, and :func:`lsquic_stream_readf()`. 1808 1809 If the optional header set interface is not specified, 1810 this function returns NULL. 1811 1812Push Promises 1813------------- 1814 1815.. function:: int lsquic_conn_push_stream (lsquic_conn_t *conn, void *hdr_set, lsquic_stream_t *stream, const lsquic_http_headers_t *headers) 1816 1817 :return: 1818 1819 - 0: Stream pushed successfully. 1820 - 1: Stream push failed because it is disabled or because we hit 1821 stream limit or connection is going away. 1822 - -1: Stream push failed because of an internal error. 1823 1824 A server may push a stream. This call creates a new stream in reference 1825 to stream ``stream``. It will behave as if the client made a request: it will 1826 trigger ``on_new_stream()`` event and it can be used as a regular client-initiated stream. 1827 1828 ``hdr_set`` must be set. It is passed as-is to :func:`lsquic_stream_get_hset()`. 1829 1830.. function:: int lsquic_conn_is_push_enabled (lsquic_conn_t *conn) 1831 1832 :return: Boolean value indicating whether push promises are enabled. 1833 1834 Only makes sense in server mode: the client cannot push a stream and this 1835 function always returns false in client mode. 1836 1837.. function:: int lsquic_stream_is_pushed (const lsquic_stream_t *stream) 1838 1839 :return: Boolean value indicating whether this is a pushed stream. 1840 1841.. function:: int lsquic_stream_refuse_push (lsquic_stream_t *stream) 1842 1843 Refuse pushed stream. Call it from ``on_new_stream()``. No need to 1844 call :func:`lsquic_stream_close()` after this. ``on_close()`` will be called. 1845 1846.. function:: int lsquic_stream_push_info (const lsquic_stream_t *stream, lsquic_stream_id_t *ref_stream_id, void **hdr_set) 1847 1848 Get information associated with pushed stream 1849 1850 :param ref_stream_id: Stream ID in response to which push promise was sent. 1851 :param hdr_set: Header set. This object was passed to or generated by :func:`lsquic_conn_push_stream()`. 1852 1853 :return: 0 on success and -1 if this is not a pushed stream. 1854 1855Stream Priorities 1856----------------- 1857 1858.. function:: unsigned lsquic_stream_priority (const lsquic_stream_t *stream) 1859 1860 Return current priority of the stream. 1861 1862.. function:: int lsquic_stream_set_priority (lsquic_stream_t *stream, unsigned priority) 1863 1864 Set stream priority. Valid priority values are 1 through 256, inclusive. 1865 Lower value means higher priority. 1866 1867 :return: 0 on success of -1 on failure (this happens if priority value is invalid). 1868 1869Miscellaneous Engine Functions 1870------------------------------ 1871 1872.. function:: unsigned lsquic_engine_quic_versions (const lsquic_engine_t *engine) 1873 1874 Return the list of QUIC versions (as bitmask) this engine instance supports. 1875 1876.. function:: unsigned lsquic_engine_count_attq (lsquic_engine_t *engine, int from_now) 1877 1878 Return number of connections whose advisory tick time is before current 1879 time plus ``from_now`` microseconds from now. ``from_now`` can be negative. 1880 1881Miscellaneous Connection Functions 1882---------------------------------- 1883 1884.. function:: enum lsquic_version lsquic_conn_quic_version (const lsquic_conn_t *conn) 1885 1886 Get QUIC version used by the connection. 1887 1888 If version has not yet been negotiated (can happen in client mode), ``-1`` is 1889 returned. 1890 1891.. function:: const lsquic_cid_t * lsquic_conn_id (const lsquic_conn_t *conn) 1892 1893 Get connection ID. 1894 1895.. function:: lsquic_engine_t * lsquic_conn_get_engine (lsquic_conn_t *conn) 1896 1897 Get pointer to the engine. 1898 1899.. function:: int lsquic_conn_get_sockaddr (lsquic_conn_t *conn, const struct sockaddr **local, const struct sockaddr **peer) 1900 1901 Get current (last used) addresses associated with the current path 1902 used by the connection. 1903 1904.. function:: struct stack_st_X509 * lsquic_conn_get_server_cert_chain (lsquic_conn_t *conn) 1905 1906 Get certificate chain returned by the server. This can be used for 1907 server certificate verification. 1908 1909 The caller releases the stack using sk_X509_free(). 1910 1911.. function:: lsquic_conn_ctx_t * lsquic_conn_get_ctx (const lsquic_conn_t *conn) 1912 1913 Get user-supplied context associated with the connection. 1914 1915.. function:: void lsquic_conn_set_ctx (lsquic_conn_t *conn, lsquic_conn_ctx_t *ctx) 1916 1917 Set user-supplied context associated with the connection. 1918 1919.. function:: void * lsquic_conn_get_peer_ctx (lsquic_conn_t *conn, const struct sockaddr *local_sa) 1920 1921 Get peer context associated with the connection and local address. 1922 1923.. function:: enum LSQUIC_CONN_STATUS lsquic_conn_status (lsquic_conn_t *conn, char *errbuf, size_t bufsz) 1924 1925 Get connection status. 1926 1927Miscellaneous Stream Functions 1928------------------------------ 1929 1930.. function:: unsigned lsquic_conn_n_avail_streams (const lsquic_conn_t *conn) 1931 1932 Return max allowed outbound streams less current outbound streams. 1933 1934.. function:: unsigned lsquic_conn_n_pending_streams (const lsquic_conn_t *conn) 1935 1936 Return number of delayed streams currently pending. 1937 1938.. function:: unsigned lsquic_conn_cancel_pending_streams (lsquic_conn_t *, unsigned n) 1939 1940 Cancel ``n`` pending streams. Returns new number of pending streams. 1941 1942.. function:: lsquic_conn_t * lsquic_stream_conn (const lsquic_stream_t *stream) 1943 1944 Get a pointer to the connection object. Use it with connection functions. 1945 1946.. function:: int lsquic_stream_is_rejected (const lsquic_stream_t *stream) 1947 1948 Returns true if this stream was rejected, false otherwise. Use this as 1949 an aid to distinguish between errors. 1950 1951Other Functions 1952--------------- 1953 1954.. function:: enum lsquic_version lsquic_str2ver (const char *str, size_t len) 1955 1956 Translate string QUIC version to LSQUIC QUIC version representation. 1957 1958.. function:: enum lsquic_version lsquic_alpn2ver (const char *alpn, size_t len) 1959 1960 Translate ALPN (e.g. "h3", "h3-23", "h3-Q046") to LSQUIC enum. 1961 1962Miscellaneous Types 1963------------------- 1964 1965.. type:: struct lsquic_shared_hash_if 1966 1967 The shared hash interface is used to share data between multiple LSQUIC instances. 1968 1969 .. member:: int (*shi_insert)(void *shi_ctx, void *key, unsigned key_sz, void *data, unsigned data_sz, time_t expiry) 1970 1971 :param shi_ctx: 1972 1973 Shared memory context pointer 1974 1975 :param key: 1976 1977 Key data. 1978 1979 :param key_sz: 1980 1981 Key size. 1982 1983 :param data: 1984 1985 Pointer to the data to store. 1986 1987 :param data_sz: 1988 1989 Data size. 1990 1991 :param expiry: When this item expires. If you want your item to never expire, set this to zero. 1992 1993 :return: 0 on success, -1 on failure. 1994 1995 If inserted successfully, ``free()`` will be called on ``data`` and ``key`` 1996 pointer when the element is deleted, whether due to expiration 1997 or explicit deletion. 1998 1999 .. member:: int (*shi_delete)(void *shi_ctx, const void *key, unsigned key_sz) 2000 2001 Delete item from shared hash 2002 2003 :return: 0 on success, -1 on failure. 2004 2005 .. member:: int (*shi_lookup)(void *shi_ctx, const void *key, unsigned key_sz, void **data, unsigned *data_sz) 2006 2007 :param shi_ctx: 2008 2009 Shared memory context pointer 2010 2011 :param key: 2012 2013 Key data. 2014 2015 :param key_sz: 2016 2017 Key size. 2018 2019 :param data: 2020 2021 Pointer to set to the result. 2022 2023 :param data_sz: 2024 2025 Pointer to the data size. 2026 2027 :return: 2028 2029 - ``1``: found. 2030 - ``0``: not found. 2031 - ``-1``: error (perhaps not enough room in ``data`` if copy was attempted). 2032 2033 The implementation may choose to copy the object into buffer pointed 2034 to by ``data``, so you should have it ready. 2035 2036.. type:: struct lsquic_packout_mem_if 2037 2038 The packet out memory interface is used by LSQUIC to get buffers to 2039 which outgoing packets will be written before they are passed to 2040 :member:`lsquic_engine_api.ea_packets_out` callback. 2041 2042 If not specified, malloc() and free() are used. 2043 2044 .. member:: void * (*pmi_allocate) (void *pmi_ctx, void *peer_ctx, lsquic_conn_get_ctx *conn_ctx, unsigned short sz, char is_ipv6) 2045 2046 Allocate buffer for sending. 2047 2048 .. member:: void (*pmi_release) (void *pmi_ctx, void *peer_ctx, void *buf, char is_ipv6) 2049 2050 This function is used to release the allocated buffer after it is 2051 sent via ``ea_packets_out()``. 2052 2053 .. member:: void (*pmi_return) (void *pmi_ctx, void *peer_ctx, void *buf, char is_ipv6) 2054 2055 If allocated buffer is not going to be sent, return it to the 2056 caller using this function. 2057 2058.. type:: typedef void (*lsquic_cids_update_f)(void *ctx, void **peer_ctx, const lsquic_cid_t *cids, unsigned n_cids) 2059 2060 :param ctx: 2061 2062 Context associated with the CID lifecycle callbacks (ea_cids_update_ctx). 2063 2064 :param peer_ctx: 2065 2066 Array of peer context pointers. 2067 2068 :param cids: 2069 2070 Array of connection IDs. 2071 2072 :param n_cids: 2073 2074 Number of elements in the peer context pointer and connection ID arrays. 2075 2076.. type:: struct lsquic_keylog_if 2077 2078 SSL keylog interface. 2079 2080 .. member:: void * (*kli_open) (void *keylog_ctx, lsquic_conn_t *conn) 2081 2082 Return keylog handle or NULL if no key logging is desired. 2083 2084 .. member:: void (*kli_log_line) (void *handle, const char *line) 2085 2086 Log line. The first argument is the pointer returned by ``kli_open()``. 2087 2088 .. member:: void (*kli_close) (void *handle) 2089 2090 Close handle. 2091 2092.. type:: enum lsquic_logger_timestamp_style 2093 2094 Enumerate timestamp styles supported by LSQUIC logger mechanism. 2095 2096 .. member:: LLTS_NONE 2097 2098 No timestamp is generated. 2099 2100 .. member:: LLTS_HHMMSSMS 2101 2102 The timestamp consists of 24 hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds. Example: 13:43:46.671 2103 2104 .. member:: LLTS_YYYYMMDD_HHMMSSMS 2105 2106 Like above, plus date, e.g: 2017-03-21 13:43:46.671 2107 2108 .. member:: LLTS_CHROMELIKE 2109 2110 This is Chrome-like timestamp used by proto-quic. The timestamp 2111 includes month, date, hours, minutes, seconds, and microseconds. 2112 2113 Example: 1223/104613.946956 (instead of 12/23 10:46:13.946956). 2114 2115 This is to facilitate reading two logs side-by-side. 2116 2117 .. member:: LLTS_HHMMSSUS 2118 2119 The timestamp consists of 24 hours, minutes, seconds, and microseconds. Example: 13:43:46.671123 2120 2121 .. member:: LLTS_YYYYMMDD_HHMMSSUS 2122 2123 Date and time using microsecond resolution, e.g: 2017-03-21 13:43:46.671123 2124 2125.. type:: enum LSQUIC_CONN_STATUS 2126 2127 .. member:: LSCONN_ST_HSK_IN_PROGRESS 2128 .. member:: LSCONN_ST_CONNECTED 2129 .. member:: LSCONN_ST_HSK_FAILURE 2130 .. member:: LSCONN_ST_GOING_AWAY 2131 .. member:: LSCONN_ST_TIMED_OUT 2132 .. member:: LSCONN_ST_RESET 2133 2134 If es_honor_prst is not set, the connection will never get public 2135 reset packets and this flag will not be set. 2136 2137 .. member:: LSCONN_ST_USER_ABORTED 2138 .. member:: LSCONN_ST_ERROR 2139 .. member:: LSCONN_ST_CLOSED 2140 .. member:: LSCONN_ST_PEER_GOING_AWAY 2141 2142.. type:: enum lsquic_hsi_flag 2143 2144 These flags are ORed together to specify properties of 2145 :type:`lsxpack_header` passed to :member:`lsquic_hset_if.hsi_process_header`. 2146 2147 .. member:: LSQUIC_HSI_HTTP1X 2148 2149 Turn HTTP/1.x mode on or off. In this mode, decoded name and value 2150 pair are separated by ``": "`` and ``"\r\n"`` is appended to the end 2151 of the string. By default, this mode is off. 2152 2153 .. member:: LSQUIC_HSI_HASH_NAME 2154 2155 Include name hash into lsxpack_header. 2156 2157 .. member:: LSQUIC_HSI_HASH_NAMEVAL 2158 2159 Include nameval hash into lsxpack_header. 2160 2161Global Variables 2162---------------- 2163 2164.. var:: const char *const lsquic_ver2str[N_LSQVER] 2165 2166 Convert LSQUIC version to human-readable string 2167 2168List of Log Modules 2169------------------- 2170 2171The following log modules are defined: 2172 2173- *alarmset*: Alarm processing. 2174- *bbr*: BBRv1 congestion controller. 2175- *bw-sampler*: Bandwidth sampler (used by BBR). 2176- *cfcw*: Connection flow control window. 2177- *conn*: Connection. 2178- *crypto*: Low-level Google QUIC cryptography tracing. 2179- *cubic*: Cubic congestion controller. 2180- *di*: "Data In" handler (storing incoming data before it is read). 2181- *eng-hist*: Engine history. 2182- *engine*: Engine. 2183- *event*: Cross-module significant events. 2184- *frame-reader*: Reader of the HEADERS stream in Google QUIC. 2185- *frame-writer*: Writer of the HEADERS stream in Google QUIC. 2186- *handshake*: Handshake and packet encryption and decryption. 2187- *hcsi-reader*: Reader of the HTTP/3 control stream. 2188- *hcso-writer*: Writer of the HTTP/3 control stream. 2189- *headers*: HEADERS stream (Google QUIC). 2190- *hsk-adapter*: 2191- *http1x*: Header conversion to HTTP/1.x. 2192- *logger*: Logger. 2193- *mini-conn*: Mini connection. 2194- *pacer*: Pacer. 2195- *parse*: Parsing. 2196- *prq*: PRQ stands for Packet Request Queue. This logs scheduling 2197 and sending packets not associated with a connection: version 2198 negotiation and stateless resets. 2199- *purga*: CID purgatory. 2200- *qdec-hdl*: QPACK decoder stream handler. 2201- *qenc-hdl*: QPACK encoder stream handler. 2202- *qlog*: QLOG output. At the moment, it is out of date. 2203- *qpack-dec*: QPACK decoder. 2204- *qpack-enc*: QPACK encoder. 2205- *sendctl*: Send controller. 2206- *sfcw*: Stream flow control window. 2207- *spi*: Stream priority iterator. 2208- *stream*: Stream operation. 2209- *tokgen*: Token generation and validation. 2210- *trapa*: Transport parameter processing. 2211 2212.. _extensible-http-priorities: 2213 2214Extensible HTTP Priorities 2215-------------------------- 2216 2217lsquic supports the 2218`Extensible HTTP Priorities Extension <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-priority>`_. 2219It is enabled by default when HTTP/3 is used. The "urgency" and "incremental" 2220parameters are included into a dedicated type: 2221 2222.. type:: struct lsquic_ext_http_prio 2223 2224 .. member:: unsigned char urgency 2225 2226 This value's range is [0, 7], where 0 is the highest and 7 is 2227 the lowest urgency. 2228 2229 .. member:: signed char incremental 2230 2231 This is a boolean value. The valid range is [0, 1]. 2232 2233Some useful macros are also available: 2234 2235.. macro:: LSQUIC_MAX_HTTP_URGENCY 2236 2237The maximum value of the "urgency" parameter is 7. 2238 2239.. macro:: LSQUIC_DEF_HTTP_URGENCY 2240 2241The default value of the "urgency" parameter is 3. 2242 2243.. macro:: LSQUIC_DEF_HTTP_INCREMENTAL 2244 2245The default value of the "incremental" parameter is 0. 2246 2247There are two functions to 2248manage a stream's priority: 2249 2250.. function:: int lsquic_stream_get_http_prio (lsquic_stream_t \*stream, struct lsquic_ext_http_prio \*ehp) 2251 2252 Get a stream's priority information. 2253 2254 :param stream: The stream whose priority informaion we want. 2255 2256 :param ehp: Structure that is to be populated with the stream's 2257 priority information. 2258 2259 :return: Returns zero on success of a negative value on failure. 2260 A failure occurs if this is not an HTTP/3 stream or if 2261 Extensible HTTP Priorities have not been enabled. 2262 See :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_ext_http_prio`. 2263 2264.. function:: int lsquic_stream_set_http_prio (lsquic_stream_t \*stream, const struct lsquic_ext_http_prio \*ehp) 2265 2266 Set a stream's priority information. 2267 2268 :param stream: The stream whose priority we want to set. 2269 2270 :param ehp: Structure containing the stream's new priority information. 2271 2272 :return: Returns zero on success of a negative value on failure. 2273 A failure occurs if some internal error occured or if this 2274 is not an HTTP/3 stream or if Extensible HTTP Priorities 2275 haven't been enabled. 2276 See :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_ext_http_prio`. 2277 2278.. _apiref-datagrams: 2279 2280Datagrams 2281--------- 2282 2283lsquic supports the 2284`Unreliable Datagram Extension <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-pauly-quic-datagram-05>`_. 2285To enable datagrams, set :member:`lsquic_engine_settings.es_datagrams` to 2286true and specify 2287:member:`lsquic_stream_if.on_datagram` 2288and 2289:member:`lsquic_stream_if.on_dg_write` callbacks. 2290 2291.. function:: int lsquic_conn_want_datagram_write (lsquic_conn_t *conn, int want) 2292 2293 Indicate desire (or lack thereof) to write a datagram. 2294 2295 :param conn: Connection on which to send a datagram. 2296 :param want: Boolean value indicating whether the caller wants to write 2297 a datagram. 2298 :return: Previous value of ``want`` or ``-1`` if the datagrams cannot be 2299 written. 2300 2301.. function:: size_t lsquic_conn_get_min_datagram_size (lsquic_conn_t *conn) 2302 2303 Get minimum datagram size. By default, this value is zero. 2304 2305.. function:: int lsquic_conn_set_min_datagram_size (lsquic_conn_t *conn, size_t sz) 2306 2307 Set minimum datagram size. This is the minumum value of the buffer 2308 passed to the :member:`lsquic_stream_if.on_dg_write` callback. 2309 Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. 2310