/* Void Main's man pages */

{ phpMan } else { main(); }

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


TUX(2)                                                    System calls                                                    TUX(2)



NAME
       tux - interact with the TUX kernel subsystem

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/tuxmodule.h>

       int tux (unsigned int action, user_req_t * req);

DESCRIPTION
       The tux() system call calls the kernel to perform an action on behalf of the currently executing user-space TUX module.

       action can be one of:
           enum tux_actions {
                   TUX_ACTION_STARTUP = 1,
                   TUX_ACTION_SHUTDOWN = 2,
                   TUX_ACTION_STARTTHREAD = 3,
                   TUX_ACTION_STOPTHREAD = 4,
                   TUX_ACTION_EVENTLOOP = 5,
                   TUX_ACTION_GET_OBJECT = 6,
                   TUX_ACTION_SEND_OBJECT = 7,
                   TUX_ACTION_READ_OBJECT = 8,
                   TUX_ACTION_FINISH_REQ = 9,
                   TUX_ACTION_FINISH_CLOSE_REQ = 10,
                   TUX_ACTION_REGISTER_MODULE = 11,
                   TUX_ACTION_UNREGISTER_MODULE = 12,
                   TUX_ACTION_CURRENT_DATE = 13,
                   TUX_ACTION_REGISTER_MIMETYPE = 14,
                   TUX_ACTION_READ_HEADERS = 15,
                   TUX_ACTION_POSTPONE_REQ = 16,
                   TUX_ACTION_CONTINUE_REQ = 17,
                   TUX_ACTION_REDIRECT_REQ = 18,
                   TUX_ACTION_READ_POST_DATA = 19,
                   TUX_ACTION_SEND_BUFFER = 20,
                   TUX_ACTION_WATCH_PROXY_SOCKET = 21,
                   TUX_ACTION_WAIT_PROXY_SOCKET = 22,
                   TUX_ACTION_QUERY_VERSION = 23,
                   MAX_TUX_ACTION
           };

       The first action values listed below are administrative and are normally used only in the tux program.

       TUX_ACTION_STARTUP starts the tux subsystem, and takes a NULL req.  TODO: Only root can use TUX_ACTION_STARTUP.

       TUX_ACTION_SHUTDOWN stops the tux subsystem, and takes any req, even a zero-filled req.

       TUX_ACTION_STARTTHREAD is called once per thread with a req->thread_nr element monotonically increasing from 0.

       TUX_ACTION_STOPTHREAD  is  not  currently  used  by  the  tux  daemon  because  all  threads are automatically stopped on
       TUX_ACTION_SHUTDOWN.  It remains available because it may be useful in circumstances that the tux  daemon  does  not  yet
       handle.

       TUX_ACTION_REGISTER_MODULE  Register  a  user-space module identified by the req->modulename string.  One VFS name can be
       registered only once.

       req->version_major, req->version_minor, and req->version_patch have  to  be  set  appropriately  from  TUX_MAJOR_VERSION,
       TUX_MINOR_VERSION,  and  TUX_PATCHLEVEL_VERSION,  respectively;  the kernel will sanity-check binary compatibility of the
       module.

       TUX_ACTION_UNREGISTER_MODULE Unregister a user-space module identified by the req->modulename  string.   Only  registered
       modules can be unregistered.

       TUX_ACTION_CURRENT_DATE  Set  the  current  date string to req->new_date.  The date string must be RFC 1123-compliant and
       increase monotonically.  The tux daemon normally calls this once per second.

       TUX_ACTION_REGISTER_MIMETYPE Sets the extension req->objectname to map to mimetype req->object_addr.  The tux daemon nor-
       mally registers the mime types in /etc/tux.mime.types, but modules could conceivably create their own mimetype mappings.

       TUX_ACTION_QUERY_VERSION  Return the major version, minor version, and patchlevel of the kernel TUX subsystem, encoded in
       the return value as
       (TUX_MAJOR_VERSION << 24) | (TUX_MINOR_VERSION << 16) |
        TUX_PATCHLEVEL_VERSION
       If the system call sets errno to EINVAL, assume major version 2, minor version 1.


       The rest of the action values are used to respond to TUX events.  The general architecture is that TUX's  event  loop  is
       invoked to catch HTTP events, and then responses are generated in response to those events.

       TUX_ACTION_EVENTLOOP invokes the TUX event loop--the TUX subsystem will either immediately return with a new request req,
       or will wait for new requests to arrive.

       TUX_ACTION_GET_OBJECT issues a request for the URL object named in req->objectname. If  the  object  is  not  immediately
       available  then the currently handled request is suspended, and a new request is returned, or the TUX subsystem waits for
       new requests.

       A URL object is a data stream that is accessed via a URL and is directly associated with a file pointed to by  that  URL.
       (In the future, we may extend the concept of a URL object.)


       TUX_ACTION_SEND_OBJECT sends the current URL object to the client.

       TUX_ACTION_READ_OBJECT   reads   the   current   URL   object   into   the   address   specified   by   req->object_addr.
       TUX_ACTION_READ_OBJECT must not be called unless req->objectlen >= 0.

       TUX_ACTION_READ_HEADERS reads a non-zero-delimited string into req->object_addr, with the length of the  string  kept  in
       req->objectlen.  This is a workaround used to read fields that tux does not currently parse; if you need it, report it as
       a bug so that more fields can be added to user_req (unless your use is so specialized that it will be of no general util-
       ity).

       TUX_ACTION_POSTPONE_REQ  postpones  the request, meaning that no tux system calls will return data for this request until
       TUX_ACTION_CONTINUE_REQ is called.

       TUX_ACTION_CONTINUE_REQ continues a postponed request.  Unlike a normal TUX_ACTION, it takes as its argument  the  socket
       descriptor  (this  allows  it  to  be called from a program that is unrelated to the program that called TUX_ACTION_POST-
       PONE_REQ if necessary).  It is called like this:
           ret = tux(TUX_ACTION_CONTINUE_REQ, (user_req_t *)socket);

       TUX_ACTION_READ_POST_DATA is an atomic action (it will always return with the same request,  no  need  to  handle  a  new
       request)  that  puts  the  non-zero-delimited  POST  data,  up  to  the  maximum  set  in  req->objectlen (and limited by
       /proc/sys/net/tux/max_header_len), into req->object_addr, ands resets req->objectlen to the length.

       TUX_ACTION_REDIRECT_REQ causes the request to be redirected to the secondary server.  (No need  to  call  TUX_ACTION_FIN-
       ISH_REQ.)

       TUX_ACTION_FINISH_REQ finishes and logs the request.

       TUX_ACTION_FINISH_CLOSE_REQ is like TUX_ACTION_FINISH_REQ except that it also closes HTTP 1.1 keepalive connections.

       TUX_ACTION_SEND_BUFFER  is  like  TUX_ACTION_SEND_OBJECT except that it sends whatever is in the req->object_addr buffer.
       This can be used as a generic output buffer.

       TUX_ACTION_WATCH_PROXY_SOCKET sets up a non-TUX socket to be used with TUX_ACTION_WAIT_PROXY_SOCKET. The socket must be a
       network socket. The function is atomic. Repeated calls to this action will replace the previous proxy socket, so there is
       no need to deinitialize it. The socket file descriptor must be put into req->object_addr.

       TUX_ACTION_WAIT_PROXY_SOCKET postpones the current request until there are input packets on the socket that  was  set  up
       via TUX_ACTION_WATCH_PROXY_SOCKET. The proxy socket has a keepalive timer running. The request will be resumed once there
       is input activity on the socket - the module can use nonblocking recv() on the socket to process input packets.

       user_req_t req is the request returned by the TUX subsystem.  Defined fields depend on the version.  For major version 2,
       they are:
           typedef struct user_req_s {
                   int version_major;
                   int version_minor;
                   int version_patch;

                   int http_version;
                   int http_method;

                   int sock;
                   int event;
                   int thread_nr;
                   void *id;
                   void *priv;

                   int http_status;
                   int bytes_sent;
                   char *object_addr;
                   int module_index;
                   char modulename[MAX_MODULENAME_LEN];

                   unsigned int client_host;
                   unsigned int objectlen;
                   char query[MAX_URI_LEN];
                   char objectname[MAX_URI_LEN];

                   unsigned int cookies_len;
                   char cookies[MAX_COOKIE_LEN];

                   char content_type[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
                   char user_agent[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
                   char accept[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
                   char accept_charset[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
                   char accept_encoding[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
                   char accept_language[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
                   char cache_control[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
                   char if_modified_since[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
                   char negotiate[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
                   char pragma[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
                   char referer[MAX_FIELD_LEN];

                   char *post_data;
                   char new_date[DATE_LEN];
                   int keep_alive;
           } user_req_t;
       For major version 3, they are:
       typedef struct user_req_s {
            uint32_t version_major;
            uint32_t version_minor;
            uint32_t version_patch;
            uint32_t http_version;
            uint32_t http_method;
            uint32_t http_status;

            uint32_t sock;
            uint32_t event;
            uint32_t error;
            uint32_t thread_nr;
            uint32_t bytes_sent;
            uint32_t client_host;
            uint32_t objectlen;
            uint32_t module_index;
            uint32_t keep_alive;
            uint32_t cookies_len;

            uint64_t id;
            uint64_t priv;
            uint64_t object_addr;

            uint8_t query[MAX_URI_LEN];
            uint8_t objectname[MAX_URI_LEN];
            uint8_t cookies[MAX_COOKIE_LEN];
            uint8_t content_type[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t user_agent[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t accept[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t accept_charset[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t accept_encoding[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t accept_language[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t cache_control[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t if_modified_since[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t negotiate[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t pragma[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t referer[MAX_FIELD_LEN];
            uint8_t new_date[DATE_LEN];
       } user_req_t;

       version_major
              Always set to TUX_MAJOR_VERSION, used to flag binary incompatibility.

       version_minor
              Always set to TUX_MINOR_VERSION, used to flag binary incompatibility.

       version_patch
              Always set to TUX_PATCHLEVEL_VERSION, used to flag binary incompatibility.

       http_version
              One of HTTP_1_0 or HTTP_1_1

       http_method
              One of METHOD_NONE, METHOD_GET, METHOD_HEAD, METHOD_POST, or METHOD_PUT

       sock   Socket  file  descriptor; writing to this will send data to the connected client associated with this request.  Do
              not read from this socket file descriptor; you could potentially confuse the HTTP engine.

       event  Private, per-request state for use in tux modules.  The system will preserve this value as long as  a  request  is
              active.

       thread_nr
              Thread index; see discussion of TUX_ACTION_STARTTHREAD.

       id     A tux-daemon-internal value that is used to multiplex requests to the correct modules.

       priv   Works just like event, except that it is a pointer to private data instead of an integer.

       http_status
              Set  the error status as an integer for error reporting.  The status is good by default, so it should not be modi-
              fied except to report errors.

       bytes_sent
              When you write to sock, you must set bytes_sent to the total number of bytes sent since the last  tux()  operation
              on  this  req,  or  the log entry's bytes sent counter will be incorrect.  (This may change or disappear in future
              versions of tux.)

       object_addr
              Set to an address for a buffer of at least req->objectlen size into which to read an object  from  the  URL  cache
              with the TUX_ACTION_READ_OBJECT action.  TUX_ACTION_READ_OBJECT must not be called unless req->objectlen >= 0, and
              TUX implicitly relies on req->object_addr being at least req->objectlen in size.

       module_index
              Used by the tux(8) daemon to determine which loadable module to associate with a req.

       modulename
              The name of the module as set by TUX_ACTION_REGISTER_MODULE; private data to the tux daemon.

       client_host
              The IP address of the host to which sock is connected.

       objectlen
              The size of a file that satisfies the current request and which is currently living in the URL cache.  This is set
              if  a  request returns after TUX_ACTION_GET_OBJECT.  A module should make sure that the buffer at req->object_addr
              is at least req->objectlen in size before calling TUX_ACTION_READ_OBJECT.

       query  The full query string sent from the client.

       objectname
              Specifies the name of a URL to get with the TUX_ACTION_GET_OBJECT action.  If the URL is not immediately available
              (that  is, is not in the URL cache), the request is queued and the tux subsystem may go on to other ready requests
              while waiting.

       cookies_len
              If cookies are in the request header, cookies_len contains the length of the cookies string

       cookies
              If cookies are in the request header, cookies is the string in which the cookies are passed to the module.

       content_type
              The Content-Type header value for the request

       user_agent
              The User-Agent header value for the request

       accept The Accept header value for the request

       accept_charset
              The Accept-Charset header value for the request

       accept_encoding
              The Accept-Encoding header value for the request

       accept_language
              The Accept-Language header value for the request

       cache_control
              The  Cache-Control header value for the request

       if_modified_since
              The If-Modified-Since header value for the request

       negotiate
              The Negotiate header value for the request

       pragma The Pragma header value for the request

       referer
              The Referer header value for the request

       post_data
              For POST requests, the incoming data is placed in post_data.

       new_date
              Returns the current date/time

       keep_alive
              The KeepAlive header value for the request


RETURN VALUE
       tux() returns the following values:
           enum tux_reactions {
                   TUX_RETURN_USERSPACE_REQUEST = 0,
                   TUX_RETURN_EXIT = 1,
                   TUX_RETURN_SIGNAL = 2,
           };

       TUX_RETURN_USERSPACE_REQUEST means that the kernel has put a new request into req; the request must be responded to  with
       one of TUX_ACTION_GET_OBJECT, TUX_ACTION_SEND_OBJECT, TUX_ACTION_READ_OBJECT, or TUX_ACTION_FINISH_REQ.

       TUX_RETURN_EXIT means that TUX has been stopped.

       TUX_RETURN_SIGNAL means that a signal has occured.  No new request is scheduled.


ERRORS
       Any negative value (such as -EFAULT, -EINVAL) is an indication of an error.


BUGS
       This man page is incomplete.



Linux                                                      8 May 2003                                                     TUX(2)

Valid XHTML 1.0!Valid CSS!