ACCEPT_FILTER(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | ACCEPT_FILTER(9) |
accept_filter
,
accept_filt_add
,
accept_filt_del
,
accept_filt_generic_mod_event
,
accept_filt_get
— filter
incoming connections
#include
<sys/types.h>
#include <sys/module.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#define ACCEPT_FILTER_MOD
#include
<sys/socketvar.h>
int
accept_filt_add
(struct
accept_filter *filt);
int
accept_filt_del
(char
*name);
int
accept_filt_generic_mod_event
(module_t
mod, int event,
void *data);
struct accept_filter *
accept_filt_get
(char
*name);
Accept filters allow an application to request that the kernel
pre-process incoming connections. An accept filter is requested via the
setsockopt(2) system call, passing in an
optname of
SO_ACCEPTFILTER
.
A module that wants to be an accept filter must provide a struct accept_filter to the system:
struct accept_filter { char accf_name[16]; void (*accf_callback)(struct socket *so, void *arg, int waitflag); void * (*accf_create)(struct socket *so, char *arg); void (*accf_destroy)(struct socket *so); SLIST_ENTRY(accept_filter) accf_next; /* next on the list */ };
The module should register it with the function
accept_filt_add
(), passing a pointer to a
struct accept_filter, allocated with
malloc(9).
The fields of struct accept_filter are as follows:
The accept_filt_del
() function passed the
same string used in accept_filter.accf_name during
registration with accept_filt_add
(), the kernel will
then disallow and further userland use of the filter.
The accept_filt_get
() function is used
internally to locate which accept filter to use via the
setsockopt(2) system call.
The accept_filt_generic_mod_event
()
function provides a simple way to avoid duplication of code for accept
filters which do not use the argument field to load and unload themselves.
This function can be used in the moduledata_t struct
for the DECLARE_MODULE(9) macro.
setsockopt(2), accf_data(9), accf_dns(9), accf_http(9), malloc(9)
The accept filter mechanism was introduced in FreeBSD 4.0.
This manual page was written by Alfred Perlstein, Sheldon Hearn and Jeroen Ruigrok van der Werven.
The accept filter concept was pioneered by David Filo at Yahoo! and refined to be a loadable module system by Alfred Perlstein.
June 25, 2000 | Debian |