blob: 277b9bbde25714882e993ba55b1277f270d60a73 [file] [log] [blame]
/* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later */
/* The SPDX header above is actually correct in claiming this was
* LGPL-2.1-or-later, because it is. Since the kernel doesn't consider that
* compatible with GPL we will claim this to be GPL however, which should be
* fine given that LGPL-2.1-or-later downgrades to GPL if needed.
*/
#include <linux/types.h>
/*
* Bind rule is matched with socket fields accessible to cgroup/bind{4,6} hook
* through bpf_sock_addr struct.
* 'address_family' is expected to be one of AF_UNSPEC, AF_INET or AF_INET6.
* Matching by family is bypassed for rules with AF_UNSPEC set, which makes the
* rest of a rule applicable for both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
* If matching by family is either successful or bypassed, a rule and a socket
* are matched by ip protocol.
* If 'protocol' is 0, matching is bypassed.
* 'nr_ports' and 'port_min' fields specify a set of ports to match a user port
* with.
* If 'nr_ports' is 0, matching by port is bypassed, making that rule applicable
* for all possible ports, e.g. [1, 65535] range. Thus a rule with
* 'address_family', 'protocol' and 'nr_ports' equal to AF_UNSPEC, 0 and 0
* correspondingly forms 'allow any' or 'deny any' cases.
* For positive 'nr_ports', a user_port lying in a range from 'port_min' to'
* 'port_min' + 'nr_ports' exclusively is considered to be a match. 'nr_ports'
* equalling to 1 forms a rule for a single port.
* Ports are in host order.
*
* Examples:
* AF_UNSPEC, 1, 0, 7777: match IPv4 and IPv6 addresses with 7777 user port;
*
* AF_INET, 1023, 0, 1: match IPv4 addresses with user port in [1, 1023]
* range inclusively;
*
* AF_INET6, 0, 0, 0: match IPv6 addresses;
*
* AF_UNSPEC, 0, 0, 0: match IPv4 and IPv6 addresses;
*
* AF_INET6, IPPROTO_TCP, 0, 0: match IPv6/TCP addresses.
*/
struct socket_bind_rule {
__u32 address_family;
__u32 protocol;
__u16 nr_ports;
__u16 port_min;
};
#define SOCKET_BIND_MAX_RULES 128