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11 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andy Green
101b474217 ss: rx metadata
At the moment you can define and set per-stream metadata at the client,
which will be string-substituted and if configured in the policy, set in
related outgoing protocol specific content like h1 headers.

This patch extends the metadata concept to also check incoming protocol-
specific content like h1 headers and where it matches the binding in the
streamtype's metadata entry, make it available to the client by name, via
a new lws_ss_get_metadata() api.

Currently warmcat.com has additional headers for

server: lwsws                (well-known header name)
test-custom-header: hello    (custom header name)

minimal-secure-streams test is updated to try to recover these both
in direct and -client (via proxy) versions.  The corresponding metadata
part of the "mintest" stream policy from warmcat.com is

                        {
                                "srv": "server:"
                        }, {
                                "test": "test-custom-header:"
                        },

If built direct, or at the proxy, the stream has access to the static
policy metadata definitions and can store the rx metadata in the stream
metadata allocation, with heap-allocated a value.  For client side that
talks to a proxy, only the proxy knows the policy, and it returns rx
metadata inside the serialized link to the client, which stores it on
the heap attached to the stream.

In addition an optimization for mapping static policy metadata definitions
to individual stream handle metadata is changed to match by name.
2020-09-16 13:10:26 +01:00
Andy Green
4ae3ef51c1 ss: improve callback return consistency
Formalize the LWSSSSRET_ enums into a type "lws_ss_state_return_t"
returned by the rx, tx and state callbacks, and some private helpers
lws_ss_backoff() and lws_ss_event_helper().

Remove LWSSSSRET_SS_HANDLE_DESTROYED concept... the two helpers that could
have destroyed the ss and returned that, now return LWSSSSRET_DESTROY_ME
to the caller to perform or pass up to their caller instead.

Handle helper returns in all the ss protocols and update the rx / tx
calls to have their returns from rx / tx / event helper and ss backoff
all handled by unified code.
2020-08-31 16:51:37 +01:00
Andy Green
83912f40e8 sspc: proxy: extend DESTROY_ME 2020-08-17 14:36:33 +01:00
Andy Green
d1d5cf2947 sspc: improve client async close flow 2020-08-10 15:04:10 +01:00
Andy Green
3899a416a9 sspc: segregate client and proxy states properly 2020-08-10 15:04:10 +01:00
Andy Green
1a93e73402 fakewsi: replace with smaller substructure
Currently we always reserve a fakewsi per pt so events that don't have a related actual
wsi, like vhost-protocol-init or vhost cert init via protocol callback can make callbacks
that look reasonable to user protocol handler code expecting a valid wsi every time.

This patch splits out stuff that user callbacks often unconditionally expect to be in
a wsi, like context pointer, vhost pointer etc into a substructure, which is composed
into struct lws at the top of it.  Internal references (struct lws is opaque, so there
are only internal references) are all updated to go via the substructre, the compiler
should make that a NOP.

Helpers are added when fakewsi is used and referenced.

If not PLAT_FREERTOS, we continue to provide a full fakewsi in the pt as before,
although the helpers improve consistency by zeroing down the substructure.  There is
a huge amount of user code out there over the last 10 years that did not always have
the minimal examples to follow, some of it does some unexpected things.

If it is PLAT_FREERTOS, that is a newer thing in lws and users have the benefit of
being able to follow the minimal examples' approach.  For PLAT_FREERTOS we don't
reserve the fakewsi in the pt any more, saving around 800 bytes.  The helpers then
create a struct lws_a (the substructure) on the stack, zero it down (but it is only
like 4 pointers) and prepare it with whatever we know like the context.

Then we cast it to a struct lws * and use it in the user protocol handler call.
In this case, the remainder of the struct lws is undefined.  However the amount of
old protocol handlers that might touch things outside of the substructure in
PLAT_FREERTOS is very limited compared to legacy lws user code and the saving is
significant on constrained devices.

User handlers should not be touching everything in a wsi every time anyway, there
are several cases where there is no valid wsi to do the call with.  Dereference of
things outside the substructure should only happen when the callback reason shows
there is a valid wsi bound to the activity (as in all the minimal examples).
2020-07-20 06:28:52 +01:00
Andy Green
4a5f1d83c2 ss: proxy: make sure state is always available in ssi 2020-07-15 16:17:59 +01:00
Andy Green
f902873634 ss: add timeout 2020-07-07 11:28:28 +01:00
Andy Green
8eca7e17f2 lws_smd: system message distribution
- Add low level system message distibution framework
 - Add support for local Secure Streams to participate using _lws_smd streamtype
 - Add apit test and minimal example
 - Add SS proxy support for _lws_smd

See minimal-secure-streams-smd README.md
2020-06-27 07:57:22 +01:00
Andy Green
30f3606b0e context: option to disable system state management 2020-06-27 07:57:22 +01:00
Andy Green
28ce32af64 client: secure streams
Secure Streams is an optional layer on top of lws that separates policy
like endpoint selection and tls cert validation into a device JSON
policy document.

Code that wants to open a client connection just specifies a streamtype name,
and no longer deals with details like the endpoint, the protocol (!) or anything
else other than payloads and optionally generic metadata; the JSON policy
contains all the details for each streamtype.  h1, h2, ws and mqtt client
connections are supported.

Logical secure streams outlive any particular connection and supports "nailed-up"
connectivity regardless of underlying connection stability.
2020-03-04 12:17:49 +00:00