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Revision: 1.66
Committed: Sat Mar 13 00:11:38 2010 UTC (14 years, 2 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.65: +1 -0 lines
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File Contents

# User Rev Content
1 root 1.1 =head1 NAME
2    
3 root 1.13 AnyEvent::MP::Transport - actual transport protocol handler
4 root 1.1
5     =head1 SYNOPSIS
6    
7     use AnyEvent::MP::Transport;
8    
9     =head1 DESCRIPTION
10    
11 root 1.43 This module implements (and documents) the actual transport protocol for
12     AEMP.
13 root 1.1
14 root 1.7 See the "PROTOCOL" section below if you want to write another client for
15     this protocol.
16 root 1.1
17     =head1 FUNCTIONS/METHODS
18    
19     =over 4
20    
21     =cut
22    
23     package AnyEvent::MP::Transport;
24    
25     use common::sense;
26    
27 root 1.27 use Scalar::Util ();
28     use List::Util ();
29 root 1.1 use MIME::Base64 ();
30     use Storable ();
31 root 1.2 use JSON::XS ();
32 root 1.1
33 root 1.19 use Digest::MD6 ();
34     use Digest::HMAC_MD6 ();
35    
36 root 1.1 use AE ();
37     use AnyEvent::Socket ();
38 root 1.27 use AnyEvent::Handle 4.92 ();
39 root 1.2
40 root 1.30 use AnyEvent::MP::Config ();
41    
42 root 1.55 our $PROTOCOL_VERSION = 1;
43 root 1.1
44 root 1.52 our @HOOK_CONNECT; # called at connect/accept time
45     our @HOOK_GREETING; # called at greeting1 time
46     our @HOOK_CONNECTED; # called at data phase
47     our @HOOK_DESTROY; # called at destroy time
48 root 1.59 our %HOOK_PROTOCOL = (
49     "aemp-dataconn" => sub {
50     require AnyEvent::MP::DataConn;
51     &AnyEvent::MP::DataConn::_inject;
52     },
53     );
54 root 1.52
55 root 1.39 =item $listener = mp_listener $host, $port, <constructor-args>
56 root 1.1
57     Creates a listener on the given host/port using
58     C<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_server>.
59    
60     See C<new>, below, for constructor arguments.
61    
62 root 1.10 Defaults for peerhost, peerport and fh are provided.
63 root 1.1
64     =cut
65    
66 root 1.46 sub mp_server($$;%) {
67     my ($host, $port, %arg) = @_;
68 root 1.1
69     AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_server $host, $port, sub {
70     my ($fh, $host, $port) = @_;
71    
72 root 1.39 my $tp = new AnyEvent::MP::Transport
73 root 1.1 fh => $fh,
74     peerhost => $host,
75     peerport => $port,
76 root 1.46 %arg,
77 root 1.39 ;
78     $tp->{keepalive} = $tp;
79 root 1.46 }, delete $arg{prepare}
80 root 1.1 }
81    
82 root 1.2 =item $guard = mp_connect $host, $port, <constructor-args>, $cb->($transport)
83    
84     =cut
85    
86     sub mp_connect {
87 root 1.31 my $release = pop;
88 root 1.2 my ($host, $port, @args) = @_;
89    
90 root 1.51 new AnyEvent::MP::Transport
91     connect => [$host, $port],
92 root 1.52 peerhost => $host,
93     peerport => $port,
94 root 1.51 release => $release,
95     @args,
96     ;
97 root 1.2 }
98    
99 root 1.1 =item new AnyEvent::MP::Transport
100    
101     # immediately starts negotiation
102     my $transport = new AnyEvent::MP::Transport
103 root 1.2 # mandatory
104 root 1.1 fh => $filehandle,
105 root 1.2 local_id => $identifier,
106 root 1.1 on_recv => sub { receive-callback },
107     on_error => sub { error-callback },
108    
109     # optional
110     on_eof => sub { clean-close-callback },
111     on_connect => sub { successful-connect-callback },
112 root 1.2 greeting => { key => value },
113 root 1.1
114     # tls support
115     tls_ctx => AnyEvent::TLS,
116     peername => $peername, # for verification
117     ;
118    
119     =cut
120    
121     sub new {
122     my ($class, %arg) = @_;
123    
124     my $self = bless \%arg, $class;
125    
126     {
127     Scalar::Util::weaken (my $self = $self);
128    
129 root 1.50 my $config = $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::CONFIG;
130 root 1.30
131 root 1.50 my $timeout = $config->{monitor_timeout};
132 root 1.64 my $lframing = $config->{framing_format};
133 root 1.50 my $auth_snd = $config->{auth_offer};
134     my $auth_rcv = $config->{auth_accept};
135 root 1.31
136 root 1.42 $self->{secret} = $config->{secret}
137     unless exists $self->{secret};
138 root 1.2
139 root 1.42 my $secret = $self->{secret};
140 root 1.19
141 root 1.30 if (exists $config->{cert}) {
142 root 1.42 $self->{tls_ctx} = {
143 root 1.19 sslv2 => 0,
144     sslv3 => 0,
145     tlsv1 => 1,
146     verify => 1,
147 root 1.30 cert => $config->{cert},
148     ca_cert => $config->{cert},
149 root 1.19 verify_require_client_cert => 1,
150     };
151     }
152    
153 root 1.1 $self->{hdl} = new AnyEvent::Handle
154 root 1.52 +($self->{fh} ? (fh => $self->{fh}) : (connect => $self->{connect})),
155 root 1.63 autocork => $config->{autocork},
156     no_delay => exists $config->{nodelay} ? $config->{nodelay} : 1,
157 root 1.48 keepalive => 1,
158     on_error => sub {
159 root 1.1 $self->error ($_[2]);
160     },
161 root 1.49 rtimeout => $timeout,
162 root 1.1 ;
163    
164 root 1.52 my $greeting_kv = $self->{local_greeting} ||= {};
165 root 1.24
166 root 1.42 $greeting_kv->{tls} = "1.0" if $self->{tls_ctx};
167 root 1.62 $greeting_kv->{provider} = "AE-$AnyEvent::MP::VERSION"; # MP.pm might not be loaded, so best effort :(
168 root 1.7 $greeting_kv->{peeraddr} = AnyEvent::Socket::format_hostport $self->{peerhost}, $self->{peerport};
169 root 1.23
170 root 1.58 my $protocol = $self->{protocol} || "aemp";
171    
172 root 1.52 # can modify greeting_kv
173 root 1.58 $_->($self) for $protocol eq "aemp" ? @HOOK_CONNECT : ();
174 root 1.52
175 root 1.1 # send greeting
176 root 1.58 my $lgreeting1 = "$protocol;$PROTOCOL_VERSION"
177 root 1.52 . ";$AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::NODE"
178 root 1.50 . ";" . (join ",", @$auth_rcv)
179     . ";" . (join ",", @$lframing)
180 root 1.7 . (join "", map ";$_=$greeting_kv->{$_}", keys %$greeting_kv);
181 root 1.12
182 root 1.31 my $lgreeting2 = MIME::Base64::encode_base64 AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::nonce (66), "";
183 root 1.1
184 root 1.7 $self->{hdl}->push_write ("$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2\012");
185 root 1.1
186     # expect greeting
187 root 1.12 $self->{hdl}->rbuf_max (4 * 1024);
188 root 1.1 $self->{hdl}->push_read (line => sub {
189 root 1.7 my $rgreeting1 = $_[1];
190 root 1.1
191 root 1.26 my ($aemp, $version, $rnode, $auths, $framings, @kv) = split /;/, $rgreeting1;
192 root 1.1
193 root 1.53 $self->{remote_node} = $rnode;
194    
195     $self->{remote_greeting} = {
196     map /^([^=]+)(?:=(.*))?/ ? ($1 => $2) : (),
197     @kv
198     };
199    
200 root 1.60 # maybe upgrade the protocol
201     if ($protocol eq "aemp" and $aemp =~ /^aemp-\w+$/) {
202     # maybe check for existence of the protocol handler?
203     $self->{protocol} = $protocol = $aemp;
204     }
205    
206 root 1.58 $_->($self) for $protocol eq "aemp" ? @HOOK_GREETING : ();
207 root 1.54
208 root 1.60 if ($aemp ne $protocol and $aemp ne "aemp") {
209 root 1.58 return $self->error ("unparsable greeting, expected '$protocol', got '$aemp'");
210 root 1.12 } elsif ($version != $PROTOCOL_VERSION) {
211     return $self->error ("version mismatch (we: $PROTOCOL_VERSION, they: $version)");
212 root 1.60 } elsif ($protocol eq "aemp") {
213     if ($rnode eq $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::NODE) {
214     return $self->error ("I refuse to talk to myself");
215     } elsif ($AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::NODE{$rnode} && $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::NODE{$rnode}{transport}) {
216     return $self->error ("$rnode already connected, not connecting again.");
217     }
218 root 1.1 }
219    
220 root 1.7 # read nonce
221     $self->{hdl}->push_read (line => sub {
222     my $rgreeting2 = $_[1];
223    
224 root 1.19 "$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2" ne "$rgreeting1\012$rgreeting2" # echo attack?
225     or return $self->error ("authentication error, echo attack?");
226    
227 root 1.41 my $tls = $self->{tls_ctx} && 1 == int $self->{remote_greeting}{tls};
228    
229     my $s_auth;
230     for my $auth_ (split /,/, $auths) {
231 root 1.50 if (grep $auth_ eq $_, @$auth_snd and ($auth_ !~ /^tls_/ or $tls)) {
232 root 1.41 $s_auth = $auth_;
233     last;
234     }
235     }
236    
237     defined $s_auth
238     or return $self->error ("$auths: no common auth type supported");
239    
240     my $s_framing;
241     for my $framing_ (split /,/, $framings) {
242 root 1.50 if (grep $framing_ eq $_, @$lframing) {
243 root 1.41 $s_framing = $framing_;
244     last;
245     }
246     }
247    
248     defined $s_framing
249     or return $self->error ("$framings: no common framing method supported");
250    
251 root 1.30 my $key;
252 root 1.19 my $lauth;
253    
254 root 1.41 if ($tls) {
255 root 1.8 $self->{tls} = $lgreeting2 lt $rgreeting2 ? "connect" : "accept";
256     $self->{hdl}->starttls ($self->{tls}, $self->{tls_ctx});
257 root 1.66 return unless $self->{hdl}; # starttls might destruct us
258 root 1.41
259     $lauth =
260     $s_auth eq "tls_anon" ? ""
261     : $s_auth eq "tls_md6_64_256" ? Digest::MD6::md6_hex "$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2\012$rgreeting1\012$rgreeting2\012"
262     : return $self->error ("$s_auth: fatal, selected unsupported snd auth method");
263    
264 root 1.30 } elsif (length $secret) {
265 root 1.41 return $self->error ("$s_auth: fatal, selected unsupported snd auth method")
266     unless $s_auth eq "hmac_md6_64_256"; # hardcoded atm.
267    
268 root 1.30 $key = Digest::MD6::md6 $secret;
269 root 1.19 # we currently only support hmac_md6_64_256
270     $lauth = Digest::HMAC_MD6::hmac_md6_hex $key, "$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2\012$rgreeting1\012$rgreeting2\012", 64, 256;
271 root 1.41
272 root 1.30 } else {
273     return $self->error ("unable to handshake TLS and no shared secret configured");
274 root 1.8 }
275 root 1.2
276 root 1.7 $self->{hdl}->push_write ("$s_auth;$lauth;$s_framing\012");
277 root 1.2
278 root 1.19 # read the authentication response
279 root 1.7 $self->{hdl}->push_read (line => sub {
280     my ($hdl, $rline) = @_;
281 root 1.2
282 root 1.7 my ($auth_method, $rauth2, $r_framing) = split /;/, $rline;
283 root 1.1
284 root 1.19 my $rauth =
285     $auth_method eq "hmac_md6_64_256" ? Digest::HMAC_MD6::hmac_md6_hex $key, "$rgreeting1\012$rgreeting2\012$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2\012", 64, 256
286     : $auth_method eq "cleartext" ? unpack "H*", $secret
287 root 1.41 : $auth_method eq "tls_anon" ? ($tls ? "" : "\012\012") # \012\012 never matches
288     : $auth_method eq "tls_md6_64_256" ? ($tls ? Digest::MD6::md6_hex "$rgreeting1\012$rgreeting2\012$lgreeting1\012$lgreeting2\012" : "\012\012")
289     : return $self->error ("$auth_method: fatal, selected unsupported rcv auth method");
290 root 1.19
291 root 1.7 if ($rauth2 ne $rauth) {
292     return $self->error ("authentication failure/shared secret mismatch");
293     }
294 root 1.1
295 root 1.7 $self->{s_framing} = $s_framing;
296 root 1.2
297 root 1.7 $hdl->rbuf_max (undef);
298 root 1.1
299 root 1.49 # we rely on TCP retransmit timeouts and keepalives
300     $self->{hdl}->rtimeout (undef);
301    
302     $self->{remote_greeting}{untrusted} = 1
303     if $auth_method eq "tls_anon";
304 root 1.24
305 root 1.7 $self->connected;
306 root 1.1
307 root 1.64 if ($protocol eq "aemp" and $self->{hdl}) {
308 root 1.59 # listener-less node need to continuously probe
309     unless (@$AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::LISTENER) {
310     $self->{hdl}->wtimeout ($timeout);
311     $self->{hdl}->on_wtimeout (sub { $self->send ([]) });
312     }
313 root 1.58
314     # receive handling
315     my $src_node = $self->{node};
316 root 1.65 Scalar::Util::weaken $src_node;
317 root 1.45
318 root 1.65 if ($r_framing eq "\njsonxyz") {#d#
319     } else {
320     my $rmsg; $rmsg = $self->{rmsg} = sub {
321     $_[0]->push_read ($r_framing => $rmsg);
322    
323     local $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::SRCNODE = $src_node;
324     AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::_inject (@{ $_[1] });
325     };
326     eval {
327     $hdl->push_read ($r_framing => $rmsg);
328     };
329     Scalar::Util::weaken $rmsg;
330     return $self->error ("$r_framing: unusable remote framing")
331     if $@;
332     }
333 root 1.58 }
334 root 1.7 });
335 root 1.1 });
336     });
337     }
338    
339     $self
340     }
341    
342     sub error {
343     my ($self, $msg) = @_;
344    
345 root 1.39 delete $self->{keepalive};
346    
347 root 1.58 if ($self->{protocol}) {
348 root 1.59 $HOOK_PROTOCOL{$self->{protocol}}->($self, $msg);
349 root 1.58 } else {
350     $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::WARN->(9, "$self->{peerhost}:$self->{peerport} $msg");#d#
351 root 1.39
352 root 1.58 $self->{node}->transport_error (transport_error => $self->{node}{id}, $msg)
353     if $self->{node} && $self->{node}{transport} == $self;
354     }
355 root 1.31
356     (delete $self->{release})->()
357     if exists $self->{release};
358    
359 root 1.37 # $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::WARN->(7, "$self->{peerhost}:$self->{peerport}: $msg");
360 root 1.4 $self->destroy;
361 root 1.1 }
362    
363 root 1.2 sub connected {
364     my ($self) = @_;
365    
366 root 1.39 delete $self->{keepalive};
367    
368 root 1.58 if ($self->{protocol}) {
369 root 1.59 $self->{hdl}->on_error (undef);
370     $HOOK_PROTOCOL{$self->{protocol}}->($self, undef);
371 root 1.58 } else {
372     $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::WARN->(9, "$self->{peerhost}:$self->{peerport} connected as $self->{remote_node}");
373    
374     my $node = AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::add_node ($self->{remote_node});
375     Scalar::Util::weaken ($self->{node} = $node);
376     $node->transport_connect ($self);
377 root 1.39
378 root 1.58 $_->($self) for @HOOK_CONNECTED;
379     }
380 root 1.61
381     (delete $self->{release})->()
382     if exists $self->{release};
383 root 1.2 }
384    
385 root 1.1 sub send {
386 root 1.2 $_[0]{hdl}->push_write ($_[0]{s_framing} => $_[1]);
387 root 1.1 }
388    
389     sub destroy {
390     my ($self) = @_;
391    
392 root 1.42 (delete $self->{release})->()
393     if exists $self->{release};
394    
395 root 1.2 $self->{hdl}->destroy
396     if $self->{hdl};
397 root 1.52
398 root 1.59 $_->($self) for $self->{protocol} ? () : @HOOK_DESTROY;
399 root 1.1 }
400    
401     sub DESTROY {
402     my ($self) = @_;
403    
404     $self->destroy;
405     }
406    
407     =back
408    
409 root 1.7 =head1 PROTOCOL
410    
411 root 1.59 The AEMP protocol is comparatively simple, and consists of three phases
412     which are symmetrical for both sides: greeting (followed by optionally
413     switching to TLS mode), authentication and packet exchange.
414 root 1.7
415 root 1.43 The protocol is designed to allow both full-text and binary streams.
416 root 1.7
417     The greeting consists of two text lines that are ended by either an ASCII
418     CR LF pair, or a single ASCII LF (recommended).
419    
420     =head2 GREETING
421    
422 root 1.15 All the lines until after authentication must not exceed 4kb in length,
423 root 1.43 including line delimiter. Afterwards there is no limit on the packet size
424     that can be received.
425 root 1.15
426     =head3 First Greeting Line
427 root 1.12
428 root 1.16 Example:
429    
430 root 1.43 aemp;0;rain;tls_md6_64_256,hmac_md6_64_256,tls_anon,cleartext;json,storable;timeout=12;peeraddr=10.0.0.1:48082
431 root 1.16
432     The first line contains strings separated (not ended) by C<;>
433 root 1.43 characters. The first five strings are fixed by the protocol, the
434 root 1.16 remaining strings are C<KEY=VALUE> pairs. None of them may contain C<;>
435 root 1.43 characters themselves (when escaping is needed, use C<%3b> to represent
436     C<;> and C<%25> to represent C<%>)-
437 root 1.16
438 root 1.12 The fixed strings are:
439 root 1.7
440     =over 4
441    
442 root 1.18 =item protocol identification
443 root 1.7
444 root 1.43 The constant C<aemp> to identify this protocol.
445 root 1.7
446     =item protocol version
447    
448 root 1.55 The protocol version supported by this end, currently C<1>. If the
449 root 1.12 versions don't match then no communication is possible. Minor extensions
450 root 1.18 are supposed to be handled through additional key-value pairs.
451 root 1.7
452 root 1.43 =item the node ID
453 root 1.7
454 root 1.57 This is the node ID of the connecting node.
455 root 1.7
456     =item the acceptable authentication methods
457    
458     A comma-separated list of authentication methods supported by the
459     node. Note that AnyEvent::MP supports a C<hex_secret> authentication
460 root 1.43 method that accepts a clear-text password (hex-encoded), but will not use
461     this authentication method itself.
462 root 1.7
463 root 1.43 The receiving side should choose the first authentication method it
464     supports.
465 root 1.7
466     =item the acceptable framing formats
467    
468 root 1.43 A comma-separated list of packet encoding/framing formats understood. The
469 root 1.7 receiving side should choose the first framing format it supports for
470     sending packets (which might be different from the format it has to accept).
471    
472 root 1.10 =back
473 root 1.8
474     The remaining arguments are C<KEY=VALUE> pairs. The following key-value
475     pairs are known at this time:
476    
477     =over 4
478    
479     =item provider=<module-version>
480    
481     The software provider for this implementation. For AnyEvent::MP, this is
482     C<AE-0.0> or whatever version it currently is at.
483    
484     =item peeraddr=<host>:<port>
485    
486 root 1.39 The peer address (socket address of the other side) as seen locally.
487 root 1.8
488     =item tls=<major>.<minor>
489    
490     Indicates that the other side supports TLS (version should be 1.0) and
491     wishes to do a TLS handshake.
492    
493     =back
494    
495 root 1.15 =head3 Second Greeting Line
496    
497 root 1.8 After this greeting line there will be a second line containing a
498     cryptographic nonce, i.e. random data of high quality. To keep the
499     protocol text-only, these are usually 32 base64-encoded octets, but
500     it could be anything that doesn't contain any ASCII CR or ASCII LF
501     characters.
502    
503 root 1.14 I<< The two nonces B<must> be different, and an aemp implementation
504     B<must> check and fail when they are identical >>.
505    
506 root 1.43 Example of a nonce line (yes, it's random-looking because it is random
507     data):
508 root 1.8
509 root 1.43 2XYhdG7/O6epFa4wuP0ujAEx1rXYWRcOypjUYK7eF6yWAQr7gwIN9m/2+mVvBrTPXz5GJDgfGm9d8QRABAbmAP/s
510 root 1.8
511     =head2 TLS handshake
512    
513 root 1.14 I<< If, after the handshake, both sides indicate interest in TLS, then the
514 root 1.43 connection B<must> use TLS, or fail to continue. >>
515 root 1.8
516     Both sides compare their nonces, and the side who sent the lower nonce
517     value ("string" comparison on the raw octet values) becomes the client,
518     and the one with the higher nonce the server.
519    
520     =head2 AUTHENTICATION PHASE
521    
522     After the greeting is received (and the optional TLS handshake),
523     the authentication phase begins, which consists of sending a single
524     C<;>-separated line with three fixed strings and any number of
525     C<KEY=VALUE> pairs.
526    
527     The three fixed strings are:
528    
529     =over 4
530    
531     =item the authentication method chosen
532    
533     This must be one of the methods offered by the other side in the greeting.
534    
535 root 1.41 Note that all methods starting with C<tls_> are only valid I<iff> TLS was
536     successfully handshaked (and to be secure the implementation must enforce
537     this).
538    
539 root 1.13 The currently supported authentication methods are:
540    
541     =over 4
542    
543     =item cleartext
544    
545     This is simply the shared secret, lowercase-hex-encoded. This method is of
546 root 1.43 course very insecure if TLS is not used (and not completely secure even
547     if TLS is used), which is why this module will accept, but not generate,
548     cleartext auth replies.
549 root 1.13
550     =item hmac_md6_64_256
551    
552 root 1.43 This method uses an MD6 HMAC with 64 bit blocksize and 256 bit hash, and
553     requires a shared secret. It is the preferred auth method when a shared
554     secret is available.
555    
556     First, the shared secret is hashed with MD6:
557 root 1.13
558     key = MD6 (secret)
559    
560     This secret is then used to generate the "local auth reply", by taking
561     the two local greeting lines and the two remote greeting lines (without
562     line endings), appending \012 to all of them, concatenating them and
563 root 1.43 calculating the MD6 HMAC with the key:
564 root 1.13
565     lauth = HMAC_MD6 key, "lgreeting1\012lgreeting2\012rgreeting1\012rgreeting2\012"
566    
567     This authentication token is then lowercase-hex-encoded and sent to the
568     other side.
569    
570     Then the remote auth reply is generated using the same method, but local
571     and remote greeting lines swapped:
572    
573     rauth = HMAC_MD6 key, "rgreeting1\012rgreeting2\012lgreeting1\012lgreeting2\012"
574    
575     This is the token that is expected from the other side.
576    
577 root 1.41 =item tls_anon
578 root 1.19
579 root 1.43 This type is only valid I<iff> TLS was enabled and the TLS handshake
580 root 1.19 was successful. It has no authentication data, as the server/client
581     certificate was successfully verified.
582    
583 root 1.43 This authentication type is somewhat insecure, as it allows a
584     man-in-the-middle attacker to change some of the connection parameters
585     (such as the framing format), although there is no known attack that
586     exploits this in a way that is worse than just denying the service.
587 root 1.41
588 root 1.43 By default, this implementation accepts but never generates this auth
589     reply.
590 root 1.41
591     =item tls_md6_64_256
592    
593 root 1.43 This type is only valid I<iff> TLS was enabled and the TLS handshake was
594     successful.
595 root 1.41
596     This authentication type simply calculates:
597    
598     lauth = MD6 "rgreeting1\012rgreeting2\012lgreeting1\012lgreeting2\012"
599    
600     and lowercase-hex encodes the result and sends it as authentication
601     data. No shared secret is required (authentication is done by TLS). The
602 root 1.43 checksum exists only to make tinkering with the greeting hard.
603 root 1.19
604 root 1.13 =back
605    
606 root 1.8 =item the authentication data
607    
608 root 1.13 The authentication data itself, usually base64 or hex-encoded data, see
609     above.
610 root 1.8
611     =item the framing protocol chosen
612    
613     This must be one of the framing protocols offered by the other side in the
614 root 1.43 greeting. Each side must accept the choice of the other side, and generate
615     packets in the format it chose itself.
616 root 1.8
617     =back
618    
619 root 1.16 Example of an authentication reply:
620 root 1.9
621 root 1.13 hmac_md6_64_256;363d5175df38bd9eaddd3f6ca18aa1c0c4aa22f0da245ac638d048398c26b8d3;json
622 root 1.9
623 root 1.8 =head2 DATA PHASE
624    
625     After this, packets get exchanged using the chosen framing protocol. It is
626     quite possible that both sides use a different framing protocol.
627    
628 root 1.16 =head2 FULL EXAMPLE
629    
630 root 1.17 This is an actual protocol dump of a handshake, followed by a single data
631 root 1.16 packet. The greater than/less than lines indicate the direction of the
632     transfer only.
633    
634 root 1.43 > aemp;0;anon/57Cs1CggVJjzYaQp13XXg4;tls_md6_64_256,hmac_md6_64_256,tls_anon,cleartext;json,storable;provider=AE-0.8;timeout=12;peeraddr=10.0.0.17:4040
635     > yLgdG1ov/02shVkVQer3wzeuywZK+oraTdEQBmIqWHaegxSGDG4g+HqogLQbvdypFOsoDWJ1Sh4ImV4DMhvUBwTK
636    
637     < aemp;0;ruth;tls_md6_64_256,hmac_md6_64_256,tls_anon,cleartext;json,storable;provider=AE-0.8;timeout=12;peeraddr=10.0.0.1:37108
638     < +xMQXP8ElfNmuvEhsmcp+s2wCJOuQAsPxSg3d2Ewhs6gBnJz+ypVdWJ/wAVrXqlIJfLeVS/CBy4gEGkyWHSuVb1L
639    
640     > hmac_md6_64_256;5ad913855742ae5a03a5aeb7eafa4c78629de136bed6acd73eea36c9e98df44a;json
641    
642     < hmac_md6_64_256;84cd590976f794914c2ca26dac3a207a57a6798b9171289c114de07cf0c20401;json
643     < ["","AnyEvent::MP::_spawn","57Cs1CggVJjzYaQp13XXg4.c","AnyEvent::MP::Global::connect",0,"anon/57Cs1CggVJjzYaQp13XXg4"]
644     ...
645    
646     The shared secret in use was C<8ugxrtw6H5tKnfPWfaSr4HGhE8MoJXmzTT1BWq7sLutNcD0IbXprQlZjIbl7MBKoeklG3IEfY9GlJthC0pENzk>.
647 root 1.16
648 root 1.65 =head2 SIMPLE HANDSHAKE FOR NON-PERL NODES
649    
650     Implementing the full set of options for handshaking can be a daunting
651     task.
652    
653     If security is not so important (because you only connect locally and
654     control the host, a common case), and you want to interface with an AEMP
655     node from another programming language, then you can also implement a
656     simplified handshake.
657    
658     For example, in a simple implementation you could decide to simply not
659     check the authenticity of the other side and use cleartext authentication
660     yourself. The the handshake is as simple as sending three lines of text,
661     reading three lines of text, and then you can exchange JSON-formatted
662     messages:
663    
664     aemp;1;<nodename>;hmac_md6_64_256;json
665     <nonce>
666     cleartext;<hexencoded secret>;json
667    
668     The nodename should be unique within the network, preferably unique with
669     every connection, the <nonce> could be empty or some random data, and the
670     hexencoded secret would be the shared secret, in lowercase hex (e.g. if
671     the secret is "geheim", the hex-encoded version would be "67656865696d").
672    
673     Note that apart from the low-level handshake and framing protocol, there
674     is a high-level protocol, e.g. for monitoring, building the mesh or
675     spawning. All these messages are sent to the node port (the empty string)
676     and can safely be ignored if you do not need the relevant functionality.
677    
678     =head3 USEFUL HINTS
679    
680     Since taking part in the global protocol to find port groups is
681     nontrivial, hardcoding port names should be considered as well, i.e. the
682     non-Perl node could simply listen to messages for a few well-known ports.
683    
684     Alternatively, the non-Perl node could call a (already loaded) function
685     in the Perl node by sending it a special message:
686    
687     ["", "Some::Function::name", "myownport", 1, 2, 3]
688    
689     This would call the function C<Some::Function::name> with the string
690     C<myownport> and some additional arguments.
691    
692 root 1.49 =head2 MONITORING
693    
694     Monitoring the connection itself is transport-specific. For TCP, all
695     connection monitoring is currently left to TCP retransmit time-outs
696     on a busy link, and TCP keepalive (which should be enabled) for idle
697     connections.
698    
699     This is not sufficient for listener-less nodes, however: they need
700     to regularly send data (30 seconds, or the monitoring interval, is
701     recommended), so TCP actively probes.
702    
703     Future implementations of AnyEvent::Transport might query the kernel TCP
704     buffer after a write timeout occurs, and if it is non-empty, shut down the
705     connections, but this is an area of future research :)
706    
707     =head2 NODE PROTOCOL
708    
709     The transport simply transfers messages, but to implement a full node, a
710     special node port must exist that understands a number of requests.
711    
712     If you are interested in implementing this, drop us a note so we finish
713     the documentation.
714    
715 root 1.1 =head1 SEE ALSO
716    
717 root 1.29 L<AnyEvent::MP>.
718 root 1.1
719     =head1 AUTHOR
720    
721     Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
722     http://home.schmorp.de/
723    
724     =cut
725    
726     1
727