/* * Copyright (C) 2005-2007 Martin Willi * Copyright (C) 2005 Jan Hutter * Hochschule fuer Technik Rapperswil * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it * under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the * Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your * option) any later version. See . * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY * or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License * for more details. */ /** * @defgroup receiver receiver * @{ @ingroup network */ #ifndef RECEIVER_H_ #define RECEIVER_H_ typedef struct receiver_t receiver_t; #include #include /** * Receives packets from the socket and adds them to the job queue. * * The receiver starts a thread, which reads on the blocking socket. A received * packet is preparsed and a process_message_job is queued in the job queue. * * To endure DoS attacks, cookies are enabled when to many IKE_SAs are half * open. The calculation of cookies is slightly different from the proposed * method in RFC4306. We do not include a nonce, because we think the advantage * we gain does not justify the overhead to parse the whole message. * Instead of VersionIdOfSecret, we include a timestamp. This allows us to * find out which key was used for cookie creation. Further, we can set a * lifetime for the cookie, which allows us to reuse the secret for a longer * time. * COOKIE = time | sha1( IPi | SPIi | time | secret ) * * The secret is changed after a certain amount of cookies sent. The old * secret is stored to allow a clean migration between secret changes. * * Further, the number of half-initiated IKE_SAs is limited per peer. This * mades it impossible for a peer to flood the server with its real IP address. */ struct receiver_t { /** * Destroys a receiver_t object. */ void (*destroy) (receiver_t *receiver); }; /** * Create a receiver_t object. * * The receiver thread will start working, get data * from the socket and add those packets to the job queue. * * @return receiver_t object, NULL if initialization fails */ receiver_t * receiver_create(void); #endif /** RECEIVER_H_ @}*/