screen(2)screen(2)NAMEscreen - Gateway packet screening facility
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <net/gw_screen.h>
int mode; struct screen_data sdata; struct screen_stats sstats;
ioctl(s, SIOCSCREENON, (caddr_t)&mode); ioctl(s, SIOCSCREEN,
(caddr_t)&data); ioctl(s, SIOCSCREENSTATS, (caddr_t)&sstats);
PARAMETERS
The interface to the gateway screen facility is a set of ioctl
requests.
All these requests are meant to be used on a file descriptor created
by the socket() system call. The mode parameter, passed by reference,
can be SCREENMODE_OFF, SCREENMODE_ON, or SCREENMODE_NOCHANGE. Upon com‐
pletion of the system call, the mode parameter contains the previous
value of the screen mode. Unprivileged users may only use the SCREEN‐
MODE_NOCHANGE request. This is the most important request and is
described below. Only the super-user may make this request. Returns,
by reference using the sstats parameter, statistics in this structure:
struct screen_stats {
u_long ss_packets; /* total packets screened */
u_long ss_nobuffer; /* dropped, buffer was full */
u_long ss_accept; /* total accepted */
u_long ss_reject; /* total rejected */
u_long ss_badsync; /* dropped, user was out of sync */
u_long ss_stale; /* dropped, too old */ };
DESCRIPTION
The gateway screen facility allows a user-level process to decide which
network packets should be forwarded by the kernel (when the system is
acting as a gateway). When the screen mode is set to “off,” all packets
are forwarded normally; when the screen mode is set to “on,” all pack‐
ets that would be forwarded must be approved through the use of this
facility.
Use of SIOCSCREEN
The SIOCSCREEN request is used in the main loop of the user-level dae‐
mon. Each time it is called, it returns (by reference using the sdata
parameter) a screen_data structure containing a prefix of a packet
(normally containing the packet headers) and some additional informa‐
tion:
struct screen_data_hdr {
short sdh_count; /* length of entire record */
short sdh_dlen; /* bytes of packet header */
u_int sdh_xid; /* transaction ID */
struct timeval sdh_arrival; /* time packet arrived */
short sdh_family; /* address family */
int sdh_action; /* disposition for packet */
#define SCREEN_ACCEPT 0x0001 /* Accept this packet */ #define
SCREEN_DROP 0x0000 /* Do not accept this packet */ #define
SCREEN_NOTIFY 0x0002 /* Notify sender of failure */ #define
SCREEN_NONOTIFY 0x0000 /* Do not notify sender */ };
struct screen_data {
struct screen_data_hdr sd_hdr;
char sd_data[SCREEN_DATALEN]; /* sd_dlen bytes of packet header
*/ };
#define sd_count sd_hdr.sdh_count #define sd_dlen
sd_hdr.sdh_dlen #define sd_xid sd_hdr.sdh_xid #define sd_action
sd_hdr.sdh_action #define sd_arrival sd_hdr.sdh_arrival #define
sd_family sd_hdr.sdh_family
The sd_family field indicates the protocol family (for example,
AF_INET) under which the packet is being handled; there is no protocol-
specific code in the kernel implementation of the gateway screen.
Either the sd_family field should be initialized to a specific family
before the request is invoked (indicating that the user process is
willing to handle requests for this family only), or it should be set
to AF_UNSPEC (indicating that the user process is willing to handle all
protocols).
The user-level process examines the packet headers and decides whether
or not the packet should be forwarded. It communicates this decision
to the kernel by filling in the sd_action field in the screen_data
structure with either SCREEN_ACCEPT, SCREEN_DROP, or SCREEN_DROP bit-
wise ORed with SCREEN_NOTIFY; the last choice causes the gateway to
drop the packet but send an error packet to the source host (if this is
supported in the protocol family). The process then passes that struc‐
ture back to the kernel in another invocation of the SIOCSCREEN
request. That ioctl call then blocks until a new packet is available,
at which point the cycle repeats.
Note that two actions are being carried out through one system call,
and that each cycle starts mid-way through a system call. Thus, the
first time a daemon uses this ioctl request, it has to pass in a no-op
decision to complete the first (half) cycle. The kernel matches incom‐
ing decisions with pending packets by comparing both the transaction id
(sd_xid) field, and the user's process id (so one process cannot pro‐
vide decisions on packets presented to a different process). Decisions
must be supplied in first-in, first-out order; decisions supplied in
the wrong order may result in packets being dropped.
RETURN VALUES
If an error has occurred, a value of -1 is returned and errno is set to
indicate the error.
ERRORS
In addition to those error codes described for ioctl(), the SIOCSCREEN
request can also return: If the screen mode is set to SCREENMODE_OFF,
the SIOCSCREEN request is meaningless. If an operation reserved for
the superuser is attempted by a non-superuser.
SEE ALSO
Functions: ioctl(2)
Daemons: screenmode(8), screend(8), screenstat(8)screen(2)