gitea-tea/vendor/golang.org/x/sys/unix/ifreq_linux.go

150 lines
4.5 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2021 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
//go:build linux
// +build linux
package unix
import (
"bytes"
"unsafe"
)
// Helpers for dealing with ifreq since it contains a union and thus requires a
// lot of unsafe.Pointer casts to use properly.
// An Ifreq is a type-safe wrapper around the raw ifreq struct. An Ifreq
// contains an interface name and a union of arbitrary data which can be
// accessed using the Ifreq's methods. To create an Ifreq, use the NewIfreq
// function.
//
// Use the Name method to access the stored interface name. The union data
// fields can be get and set using the following methods:
// - Uint16/SetUint16: flags
// - Uint32/SetUint32: ifindex, metric, mtu
type Ifreq struct{ raw ifreq }
// NewIfreq creates an Ifreq with the input network interface name after
// validating the name does not exceed IFNAMSIZ-1 (trailing NULL required)
// bytes.
func NewIfreq(name string) (*Ifreq, error) {
// Leave room for terminating NULL byte.
if len(name) >= IFNAMSIZ {
return nil, EINVAL
}
var ifr ifreq
copy(ifr.Ifrn[:], name)
return &Ifreq{raw: ifr}, nil
}
// TODO(mdlayher): get/set methods for hardware address sockaddr, char array, etc.
// Name returns the interface name associated with the Ifreq.
func (ifr *Ifreq) Name() string {
// BytePtrToString requires a NULL terminator or the program may crash. If
// one is not present, just return the empty string.
if !bytes.Contains(ifr.raw.Ifrn[:], []byte{0x00}) {
return ""
}
return BytePtrToString(&ifr.raw.Ifrn[0])
}
// According to netdevice(7), only AF_INET addresses are returned for numerous
// sockaddr ioctls. For convenience, we expose these as Inet4Addr since the Port
// field and other data is always empty.
// Inet4Addr returns the Ifreq union data from an embedded sockaddr as a C
// in_addr/Go []byte (4-byte IPv4 address) value. If the sockaddr family is not
// AF_INET, an error is returned.
func (ifr *Ifreq) Inet4Addr() ([]byte, error) {
raw := *(*RawSockaddrInet4)(unsafe.Pointer(&ifr.raw.Ifru[:SizeofSockaddrInet4][0]))
if raw.Family != AF_INET {
// Cannot safely interpret raw.Addr bytes as an IPv4 address.
return nil, EINVAL
}
return raw.Addr[:], nil
}
// SetInet4Addr sets a C in_addr/Go []byte (4-byte IPv4 address) value in an
// embedded sockaddr within the Ifreq's union data. v must be 4 bytes in length
// or an error will be returned.
func (ifr *Ifreq) SetInet4Addr(v []byte) error {
if len(v) != 4 {
return EINVAL
}
var addr [4]byte
copy(addr[:], v)
ifr.clear()
*(*RawSockaddrInet4)(
unsafe.Pointer(&ifr.raw.Ifru[:SizeofSockaddrInet4][0]),
) = RawSockaddrInet4{
// Always set IP family as ioctls would require it anyway.
Family: AF_INET,
Addr: addr,
}
return nil
}
// Uint16 returns the Ifreq union data as a C short/Go uint16 value.
func (ifr *Ifreq) Uint16() uint16 {
return *(*uint16)(unsafe.Pointer(&ifr.raw.Ifru[:2][0]))
}
// SetUint16 sets a C short/Go uint16 value as the Ifreq's union data.
func (ifr *Ifreq) SetUint16(v uint16) {
ifr.clear()
*(*uint16)(unsafe.Pointer(&ifr.raw.Ifru[:2][0])) = v
}
// Uint32 returns the Ifreq union data as a C int/Go uint32 value.
func (ifr *Ifreq) Uint32() uint32 {
return *(*uint32)(unsafe.Pointer(&ifr.raw.Ifru[:4][0]))
}
// SetUint32 sets a C int/Go uint32 value as the Ifreq's union data.
func (ifr *Ifreq) SetUint32(v uint32) {
ifr.clear()
*(*uint32)(unsafe.Pointer(&ifr.raw.Ifru[:4][0])) = v
}
// clear zeroes the ifreq's union field to prevent trailing garbage data from
// being sent to the kernel if an ifreq is reused.
func (ifr *Ifreq) clear() {
for i := range ifr.raw.Ifru {
ifr.raw.Ifru[i] = 0
}
}
// TODO(mdlayher): export as IfreqData? For now we can provide helpers such as
// IoctlGetEthtoolDrvinfo which use these APIs under the hood.
// An ifreqData is an Ifreq which carries pointer data. To produce an ifreqData,
// use the Ifreq.withData method.
type ifreqData struct {
name [IFNAMSIZ]byte
// A type separate from ifreq is required in order to comply with the
// unsafe.Pointer rules since the "pointer-ness" of data would not be
// preserved if it were cast into the byte array of a raw ifreq.
data unsafe.Pointer
// Pad to the same size as ifreq.
_ [len(ifreq{}.Ifru) - SizeofPtr]byte
}
// withData produces an ifreqData with the pointer p set for ioctls which require
// arbitrary pointer data.
func (ifr Ifreq) withData(p unsafe.Pointer) ifreqData {
return ifreqData{
name: ifr.raw.Ifrn,
data: p,
}
}