#ifndef OSSL_QUIC_CHANNEL_LOCAL_H # define OSSL_QUIC_CHANNEL_LOCAL_H # include "internal/quic_channel.h" # ifndef OPENSSL_NO_QUIC /* * QUIC Channel Structure * ====================== * * QUIC channel internals. It is intended that only the QUIC_CHANNEL * implementation and the RX depacketiser be allowed to access this structure * directly. As the RX depacketiser has no state of its own and computes over a * QUIC_CHANNEL structure, it can be viewed as an extention of the QUIC_CHANNEL * implementation. While the RX depacketiser could be provided with adequate * accessors to do what it needs, this would weaken the abstraction provided by * the QUIC_CHANNEL to other components; moreover the coupling of the RX * depacketiser to QUIC_CHANNEL internals is too deep and bespoke to make this * desirable. * * Other components should not include this header. */ struct quic_channel_st { OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx; const char *propq; /* * Master synchronisation mutex used for thread assisted mode * synchronisation. We don't own this; the instantiator of the channel * passes it to us and is responsible for freeing it after channel * destruction. */ CRYPTO_MUTEX *mutex; /* * Callback used to get the current time. */ OSSL_TIME (*now_cb)(void *arg); void *now_cb_arg; /* * The associated TLS 1.3 connection data. Used to provide the handshake * layer; its 'network' side is plugged into the crypto stream for each EL * (other than the 0-RTT EL). */ QUIC_TLS *qtls; SSL *tls; /* * The transport parameter block we will send or have sent. * Freed after sending or when connection is freed. */ unsigned char *local_transport_params; /* Asynchronous I/O reactor. */ QUIC_REACTOR rtor; /* Our current L4 peer address, if any. */ BIO_ADDR cur_peer_addr; /* Network-side read and write BIOs. */ BIO *net_rbio, *net_wbio; /* * Subcomponents of the connection. All of these components are instantiated * and owned by us. */ OSSL_QUIC_TX_PACKETISER *txp; QUIC_TXPIM *txpim; QUIC_CFQ *cfq; /* * Connection level FC. The stream_count RXFCs is used to manage * MAX_STREAMS signalling. */ QUIC_TXFC conn_txfc; QUIC_RXFC conn_rxfc; QUIC_RXFC max_streams_bidi_rxfc, max_streams_uni_rxfc; QUIC_STREAM_MAP qsm; OSSL_STATM statm; OSSL_CC_DATA *cc_data; const OSSL_CC_METHOD *cc_method; OSSL_ACKM *ackm; /* * RX demuxer. We register incoming DCIDs with this. Since we currently only * support client operation and use one L4 port per connection, we own the * demuxer and register a single zero-length DCID with it. */ QUIC_DEMUX *demux; /* Record layers in the TX and RX directions, plus the RX demuxer. */ OSSL_QTX *qtx; OSSL_QRX *qrx; /* * Send and receive parts of the crypto streams. * crypto_send[QUIC_PN_SPACE_APP] is the 1-RTT crypto stream. There is no * 0-RTT crypto stream. */ QUIC_SSTREAM *crypto_send[QUIC_PN_SPACE_NUM]; QUIC_RSTREAM *crypto_recv[QUIC_PN_SPACE_NUM]; /* Internal state. */ /* * Client: The DCID used in the first Initial packet we transmit as a client. * Server: The DCID used in the first Initial packet the client transmitted. * Randomly generated and required by RFC to be at least 8 bytes. */ QUIC_CONN_ID init_dcid; /* * Client: The SCID found in the first Initial packet from the server. * Not valid for servers. * Valid if have_received_enc_pkt is set. */ QUIC_CONN_ID init_scid; /* * Client only: The SCID found in an incoming Retry packet we handled. * Not valid for servers. */ QUIC_CONN_ID retry_scid; /* The DCID we currently use to talk to the peer and its sequence num. */ QUIC_CONN_ID cur_remote_dcid; uint64_t cur_remote_seq_num; uint64_t cur_retire_prior_to; /* Server only: The DCID we currently expect the peer to use to talk to us. */ QUIC_CONN_ID cur_local_cid; /* Transport parameter values we send to our peer. */ uint64_t tx_init_max_stream_data_bidi_local; uint64_t tx_init_max_stream_data_bidi_remote; uint64_t tx_init_max_stream_data_uni; /* Transport parameter values received from server. */ uint64_t rx_init_max_stream_data_bidi_local; uint64_t rx_init_max_stream_data_bidi_remote; uint64_t rx_init_max_stream_data_uni; uint64_t rx_max_ack_delay; /* ms */ unsigned char rx_ack_delay_exp; /* * Temporary staging area to store information about the incoming packet we * are currently processing. */ OSSL_QRX_PKT *qrx_pkt; /* * Current limit on number of streams we may create. Set by transport * parameters initially and then by MAX_STREAMS frames. */ uint64_t max_local_streams_bidi; uint64_t max_local_streams_uni; /* The negotiated maximum idle timeout in milliseconds. */ uint64_t max_idle_timeout; /* * Maximum payload size in bytes for datagrams sent to our peer, as * negotiated by transport parameters. */ uint64_t rx_max_udp_payload_size; /* Maximum active CID limit, as negotiated by transport parameters. */ uint64_t rx_active_conn_id_limit; /* * Used to allocate stream IDs. This is a stream ordinal, i.e., a stream ID * without the low two bits designating type and initiator. Shift and or in * the type bits to convert to a stream ID. */ uint64_t next_local_stream_ordinal_bidi; uint64_t next_local_stream_ordinal_uni; /* * Used to track which stream ordinals within a given stream type have been * used by the remote peer. This is an optimisation used to determine * which streams should be implicitly created due to usage of a higher * stream ordinal. */ uint64_t next_remote_stream_ordinal_bidi; uint64_t next_remote_stream_ordinal_uni; /* * Application error code to be used for STOP_SENDING/RESET_STREAM frames * used to autoreject incoming streams. */ uint64_t incoming_stream_auto_reject_aec; /* Valid if we are in the TERMINATING or TERMINATED states. */ QUIC_TERMINATE_CAUSE terminate_cause; /* * Deadline at which we move to TERMINATING state. Valid if in the * TERMINATING state. */ OSSL_TIME terminate_deadline; /* * Deadline at which connection dies due to idle timeout if no further * events occur. */ OSSL_TIME idle_deadline; /* * Deadline at which we should send an ACK-eliciting packet to ensure * idle timeout does not occur. */ OSSL_TIME ping_deadline; /* * State tracking. QUIC connection-level state is best represented based on * whether various things have happened yet or not, rather than as an * explicit FSM. We do have a coarse state variable which tracks the basic * state of the connection's lifecycle, but more fine-grained conditions of * the Active state are tracked via flags below. For more details, see * doc/designs/quic-design/connection-state-machine.md. We are in the Open * state if the state is QUIC_CSM_STATE_ACTIVE and handshake_confirmed is * set. */ unsigned int state : 3; /* * Have we received at least one encrypted packet from the peer? * (If so, Retry and Version Negotiation messages should no longer * be received and should be ignored if they do occur.) */ unsigned int have_received_enc_pkt : 1; /* * Have we sent literally any packet yet? If not, there is no point polling * RX. */ unsigned int have_sent_any_pkt : 1; /* * Are we currently doing proactive version negotiation? */ unsigned int doing_proactive_ver_neg : 1; /* We have received transport parameters from the peer. */ unsigned int got_remote_transport_params : 1; /* * This monotonically transitions to 1 once the TLS state machine is * 'complete', meaning that it has both sent a Finished and successfully * verified the peer's Finished (see RFC 9001 s. 4.1.1). Note that it * does not transition to 1 at both peers simultaneously. * * Handshake completion is not the same as handshake confirmation (see * below). */ unsigned int handshake_complete : 1; /* * This monotonically transitions to 1 once the handshake is confirmed. * This happens on the client when we receive a HANDSHAKE_DONE frame. * At our option, we may also take acknowledgement of any 1-RTT packet * we sent as a handshake confirmation. */ unsigned int handshake_confirmed : 1; /* * We are sending Initial packets based on a Retry. This means we definitely * should not receive another Retry, and if we do it is an error. */ unsigned int doing_retry : 1; /* * We don't store the current EL here; the TXP asks the QTX which ELs * are provisioned to determine which ELs to use. */ /* Have statm, qsm been initialised? Used to track cleanup. */ unsigned int have_statm : 1; unsigned int have_qsm : 1; /* * Preferred ELs for transmission and reception. This is not strictly needed * as it can be inferred from what keys we have provisioned, but makes * determining the current EL simpler and faster. A separate EL for * transmission and reception is not strictly necessary but makes things * easier for interoperation with the handshake layer, which likes to invoke * the yield secret callback at different times for TX and RX. */ unsigned int tx_enc_level : 3; unsigned int rx_enc_level : 3; /* If bit n is set, EL n has been discarded. */ unsigned int el_discarded : 4; /* * While in TERMINATING - CLOSING, set when we should generate a connection * close frame. */ unsigned int conn_close_queued : 1; /* Are we in server mode? Never changes after instantiation. */ unsigned int is_server : 1; /* * Set temporarily when the handshake layer has given us a new RX secret. * Used to determine if we need to check our RX queues again. */ unsigned int have_new_rx_secret : 1; /* * Have we sent an ack-eliciting packet since the last successful packet * reception? Used to determine when to bump idle timer (see RFC 9000 s. * 10.1). */ unsigned int have_sent_ack_eliciting_since_rx : 1; /* Should incoming streams automatically be rejected? */ unsigned int incoming_stream_auto_reject : 1; }; # endif #endif