164 lines
6.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
164 lines
6.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _net_l2_interface:
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L2 Layer Management
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###################
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Overview
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********
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The L2 stack is designed to hide the whole networking link-layer part
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and the related device drivers from the higher IP stack. This is made
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through a unique object known as the "network interface object":
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:c:type:`struct net_if` declared in :file:`include/net/net_if.h`.
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The IP layer is unaware of implementation details beyond the net_if
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object and the generic API provided by the L2 layer in
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:file:`include/net/net_l2.h` as :c:type:`struct net_l2`.
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Only the L2 layer can talk to the device driver, linked to the net_if
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object. The L2 layer dictates the API provided by the device driver,
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specific for that device, and optimized for working together.
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Currently, there are L2 layers for Ethernet, IEEE 802.15.4 Soft-MAC,
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Bluetooth IPSP, and a dummy one, which is a generic layer example that
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can be used as a template for writing a new one.
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L2 layer API
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************
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In order to create an L2 layer, or even a driver for a specific L2
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layer, one needs to understand how the IP layer interacts with it and
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how the L2 layer is supposed to behave. The generic L2 API has 3
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functions:
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- recv: All device drivers, once they receive a packet which they put
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into a :c:type:`struct net_pkt`, will push this buffer to the IP
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core stack via :c:func:`net_recv_data()`. At this point, the IP core
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stack does not know what to do with it. Instead, it passes the
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buffer along to the L2 stack's recv() function for handling. The L2
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stack does what it needs to do with the packet, for example, parsing
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the link layer header, or handling link-layer only packets. The
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recv() function will return NET_DROP in case of an erroneous packet,
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NET_OK if the packet was fully consumed by the L2, or NET_CONTINUE
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if the IP stack should then handle it as an IP packet.
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- reserve: Prior to creating any network buffer content, the Zephyr
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core stack needs to know how much dedicated buffer space is needed
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for the L2 layer (for example, space for the link layer header). This
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reserve function returns the number of bytes needed.
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- send: Similar to recv, the IP core stack will call this function to
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actually send a packet. All relevant link-layer content will be
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generated and added by this function. As for recv, send returns a
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verdict and can decide to drop the packet via NET_DROP if something
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wrong happened, or will return NET_OK.
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Network Device drivers
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**********************
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Network device drivers fully follows Zephyr device driver model as a
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basis. Please refer to :ref:`device_drivers`.
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There are, however, two differences:
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- the driver_api pointer must point to a valid :c:type:`struct
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net_if_api` pointer.
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- The network device driver must use ``NET_DEVICE_INIT_INSTANCE()``. This
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macro will call the DEVICE_AND_API_INIT() macro, and also
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instantiate a unique :c:type:`struct net_if` related to the created
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device driver instance.
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Implementing a network device driver depends on the L2 stack it
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belongs to: Ethernet, IEEE 802.15.4, etc. In the next section, we will
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describe how a device driver should behave when receiving or sending a
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packet. The rest is really hardware dependent and thus does not need
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to be detailed here.
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Ethernet device driver
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======================
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On reception, it is up to the device driver to fill-in the buffer with
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as many data fragments as required. The buffer itself is a
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:c:type:`struct net_pkt` and should be allocated through
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:c:func:`net_pkt_get_reserve_rx(0)`. Then all fragments will be
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allocated through :c:func:`net_pkt_get_reserve_data(0)`. Of course
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the amount of required fragments depends on the size of the received
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packet and on the size of a fragment, which is given by
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:option:`CONFIG_NET_BUF_DATA_SIZE`.
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Note that it is not up to the device driver to decide on the
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link-layer space to be reserved in the buffer. Hence the 0 given as
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parameter here. The Ethernet L2 layer will update such information
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once the packet's Ethernet header has been successfully parsed.
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In case :c:func:`net_recv_data()` call fails, it will be up to the
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device driver to unreference the buffer via
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:c:func:`net_pkt_unref()`.
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On sending, it is up to the device driver to send the buffer all at
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once, with all the fragments.
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In case of a fully successful packet transmission only, the device
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driver must unreference the buffer via :c:func:`net_pkt_unref()`.
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Each Ethernet device driver will need, in the end, to call
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``NET_DEVICE_INIT_INSTANCE()`` like this:
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.. code-block:: c
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NET_DEVICE_INIT_INSTANCE(...,
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CONFIG_ETH_INIT_PRIORITY
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&the_valid_net_if_api_instance,
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ETHERNET_L2,
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NET_L2_GET_CTX_TYPE(ETHERNET_L2), 1500);
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IEEE 802.15.4 device driver
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===========================
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Device drivers for IEEE 802.15.4 L2 work basically the same as for
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Ethernet. What has been described above, especially for recv, applies
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here as well. There are two specific differences however:
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- It requires a dedicated device driver API: :c:type:`struct
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ieee802154_radio_api`, which overloads :c:type:`struct
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net_if_api`. This is because 802.15.4 L2 needs more from the device
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driver than just send and recv functions. This dedicated API is
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declared in :file:`include/net/ieee802154_radio.h`. Each and every IEEE
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802.15.4 device driver must provide a valid pointer on such
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relevantly filled-in API structure.
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- Sending a packet is slightly particular. IEEE 802.15.4 sends
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relatively small frames, 127 bytes all inclusive: frame header,
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payload and frame checksum. Buffer fragments are meant to fit such
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frame size limitation. But a buffer containing an IPv6/UDP packet
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might have more than one fragment. In the Ethernet device driver, it
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is up to the driver to handle all fragments. IEEE 802.15.4 drivers
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handle only one fragment at a time. This is why the :c:type:`struct
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ieee802154_radio_api` requires a tx function pointer which differs
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from the :c:type:`struct net_if_api` send function pointer.
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Instead, the IEEE 802.15.4 L2, provides a generic
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:c:func:`ieee802154_radio_send()` meant to be given as
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:c:type:`struct net_if` send function. It turn, the implementation
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of :c:func:`ieee802154_radio_send()` will ensure the same behavior:
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sending one fragment at a time through :c:type:`struct
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ieee802154_radio_api` tx function, and unreferencing the buffer
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only when all the transmission were successful.
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Each IEEE 802.15.4 device driver, in the end, will need to call
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``NET_DEVICE_INIT_INSTANCE()`` that way:
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.. code-block:: c
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NET_DEVICE_INIT_INSTANCE(...,
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the_device_init_prio,
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&the_valid_ieee802154_radio_api_instance,
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IEEE802154_L2,
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NET_L2_GET_CTX_TYPE(IEEE802154_L2), 125);
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API Reference
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*************
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.. doxygengroup:: net_l2
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:project: Zephyr
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