annotate win64-msvc/include/capnp/membrane.h @ 58:eab3b14ddc95

Further win32 build updates
author Chris Cannam
date Mon, 09 Jan 2017 13:51:38 +0000
parents d93140aac40b
children 0f2d93caa50c
rev   line source
Chris@47 1 // Copyright (c) 2015 Sandstorm Development Group, Inc. and contributors
Chris@47 2 // Licensed under the MIT License:
Chris@47 3 //
Chris@47 4 // Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
Chris@47 5 // of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
Chris@47 6 // in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
Chris@47 7 // to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
Chris@47 8 // copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
Chris@47 9 // furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
Chris@47 10 //
Chris@47 11 // The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
Chris@47 12 // all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
Chris@47 13 //
Chris@47 14 // THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
Chris@47 15 // IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
Chris@47 16 // FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
Chris@47 17 // AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
Chris@47 18 // LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
Chris@47 19 // OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
Chris@47 20 // THE SOFTWARE.
Chris@47 21
Chris@47 22 #ifndef CAPNP_MEMBRANE_H_
Chris@47 23 #define CAPNP_MEMBRANE_H_
Chris@47 24 // In capability theory, a "membrane" is a wrapper around a capability which (usually) forwards
Chris@47 25 // calls but recursively wraps capabilities in those calls in the same membrane. The purpose of a
Chris@47 26 // membrane is to enforce a barrier between two capabilities that cannot be bypassed by merely
Chris@47 27 // introducing new objects.
Chris@47 28 //
Chris@47 29 // The most common use case for a membrane is revocation: Say Alice wants to give Bob a capability
Chris@47 30 // to access Carol, but wants to be able to revoke this capability later. Alice can accomplish this
Chris@47 31 // by wrapping Carol in a revokable wrapper which passes through calls until such a time as Alice
Chris@47 32 // indicates it should be revoked, after which all calls through the wrapper will throw exceptions.
Chris@47 33 // However, a naive wrapper approach has a problem: if Bob makes a call to Carol and sends a new
Chris@47 34 // capability in that call, or if Carol returns a capability to Bob in the response to a call, then
Chris@47 35 // the two are now able to communicate using this new capability, which Alice cannot revoke. In
Chris@47 36 // order to avoid this problem, Alice must use not just a wrapper but a "membrane", which
Chris@47 37 // recursively wraps all objects that pass through it in either direction. Thus, all connections
Chris@47 38 // formed between Bob and Carol (originating from Alice's original introduction) can be revoked
Chris@47 39 // together by revoking the membrane.
Chris@47 40 //
Chris@47 41 // Note that when a capability is passed into a membrane and then passed back out, the result is
Chris@47 42 // the original capability, not a double-membraned capability. This means that in our revocation
Chris@47 43 // example, if Bob uses his capability to Carol to obtain another capability from her, then send
Chris@47 44 // it back to her, the capability Carol receives back will NOT be revoked when Bob's access to
Chris@47 45 // Carol is revoked. Thus Bob can create long-term irrevocable connections. In most practical use
Chris@47 46 // cases, this is what you want. APIs commonly rely on the fact that a capability obtained and then
Chris@47 47 // passed back can be recognized as the original capability.
Chris@47 48 //
Chris@47 49 // Mark Miller on membranes: http://www.eros-os.org/pipermail/e-lang/2003-January/008434.html
Chris@47 50
Chris@47 51 #include "capability.h"
Chris@47 52
Chris@47 53 namespace capnp {
Chris@47 54
Chris@47 55 class MembranePolicy {
Chris@47 56 // Applications may implement this interface to define a membrane policy, which allows some
Chris@47 57 // calls crossing the membrane to be blocked or redirected.
Chris@47 58
Chris@47 59 public:
Chris@47 60 virtual kj::Maybe<Capability::Client> inboundCall(
Chris@47 61 uint64_t interfaceId, uint16_t methodId, Capability::Client target) = 0;
Chris@47 62 // Given an inbound call (a call originating "outside" the membrane destined for an object
Chris@47 63 // "inside" the membrane), decides what to do with it. The policy may:
Chris@47 64 //
Chris@47 65 // - Return null to indicate that the call should proceed to the destination. All capabilities
Chris@47 66 // in the parameters or result will be properly wrapped in the same membrane.
Chris@47 67 // - Return a capability to have the call redirected to that capability. Note that the redirect
Chris@47 68 // capability will be treated as outside the membrane, so the params and results will not be
Chris@47 69 // auto-wrapped; however, the callee can easily wrap the returned capability in the membrane
Chris@47 70 // itself before returning to achieve this effect.
Chris@47 71 // - Throw an exception to cause the call to fail with that exception.
Chris@47 72 //
Chris@47 73 // `target` is the underlying capability (*inside* the membrane) for which the call is destined.
Chris@47 74 // Generally, the only way you should use `target` is to wrap it in some capability which you
Chris@47 75 // return as a redirect. The redirect capability may modify the call in some way and send it to
Chris@47 76 // `target`. Be careful to use `copyIntoMembrane()` and `copyOutOfMembrane()` as appropriate when
Chris@47 77 // copying parameters or results across the membrane.
Chris@47 78 //
Chris@47 79 // Note that since `target` is inside the capability, if you were to directly return it (rather
Chris@47 80 // than return null), the effect would be that the membrane would be broken: the call would
Chris@47 81 // proceed directly and any new capabilities introduced through it would not be membraned. You
Chris@47 82 // generally should not do that.
Chris@47 83
Chris@47 84 virtual kj::Maybe<Capability::Client> outboundCall(
Chris@47 85 uint64_t interfaceId, uint16_t methodId, Capability::Client target) = 0;
Chris@47 86 // Like `inboundCall()`, but applies to calls originating *inside* the membrane and terminating
Chris@47 87 // outside.
Chris@47 88 //
Chris@47 89 // Note: It is strongly recommended that `outboundCall()` returns null in exactly the same cases
Chris@47 90 // that `inboundCall()` return null. Conversely, for any case where `inboundCall()` would
Chris@47 91 // redirect or throw, `outboundCall()` should also redirect or throw. Otherwise, you can run
Chris@47 92 // into inconsistent behavion when a promise is returned across a membrane, and that promise
Chris@47 93 // later resolves to a capability on the other side of the membrane: calls on the promise
Chris@47 94 // will enter and then exit the membrane, but calls on the eventual resolution will not cross
Chris@47 95 // the membrane at all, so it is important that these two cases behave the same.
Chris@47 96
Chris@47 97 virtual kj::Own<MembranePolicy> addRef() = 0;
Chris@47 98 // Return a new owned pointer to the same policy.
Chris@47 99 //
Chris@47 100 // Typically an implementation of MembranePolicy should also inherit kj::Refcounted and implement
Chris@47 101 // `addRef()` as `return kj::addRef(*this);`.
Chris@47 102 //
Chris@47 103 // Note that the membraning system considers two membranes created with the same MembranePolicy
Chris@47 104 // object actually to be the *same* membrane. This is relevant when an object passes into the
Chris@47 105 // membrane and then back out (or out and then back in): instead of double-wrapping the object,
Chris@47 106 // the wrapping will be removed.
Chris@47 107 };
Chris@47 108
Chris@47 109 Capability::Client membrane(Capability::Client inner, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy);
Chris@47 110 // Wrap `inner` in a membrane specified by `policy`. `inner` is considered "inside" the membrane,
Chris@47 111 // while the returned capability should only be called from outside the membrane.
Chris@47 112
Chris@47 113 Capability::Client reverseMembrane(Capability::Client outer, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy);
Chris@47 114 // Like `membrane` but treat the input capability as "outside" the membrane, and return a
Chris@47 115 // capability appropriate for use inside.
Chris@47 116 //
Chris@47 117 // Applications typically won't use this directly; the membraning code automatically sets up
Chris@47 118 // reverse membranes where needed.
Chris@47 119
Chris@47 120 template <typename ClientType>
Chris@47 121 ClientType membrane(ClientType inner, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy);
Chris@47 122 template <typename ClientType>
Chris@47 123 ClientType reverseMembrane(ClientType inner, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy);
Chris@47 124 // Convenience templates which return the same interface type as the input.
Chris@47 125
Chris@47 126 template <typename ServerType>
Chris@47 127 typename ServerType::Serves::Client membrane(
Chris@47 128 kj::Own<ServerType> inner, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy);
Chris@47 129 template <typename ServerType>
Chris@47 130 typename ServerType::Serves::Client reverseMembrane(
Chris@47 131 kj::Own<ServerType> inner, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy);
Chris@47 132 // Convenience templates which input a capability server type and return the appropriate client
Chris@47 133 // type.
Chris@47 134
Chris@47 135 template <typename Reader>
Chris@47 136 Orphan<typename kj::Decay<Reader>::Reads> copyIntoMembrane(
Chris@47 137 Reader&& from, Orphanage to, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy);
Chris@47 138 // Copy a Cap'n Proto object (e.g. struct or list), adding the given membrane to any capabilities
Chris@47 139 // found within it. `from` is interpreted as "outside" the membrane while `to` is "inside".
Chris@47 140
Chris@47 141 template <typename Reader>
Chris@47 142 Orphan<typename kj::Decay<Reader>::Reads> copyOutOfMembrane(
Chris@47 143 Reader&& from, Orphanage to, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy);
Chris@47 144 // Like copyIntoMembrane() except that `from` is "inside" the membrane and `to` is "outside".
Chris@47 145
Chris@47 146 // =======================================================================================
Chris@47 147 // inline implementation details
Chris@47 148
Chris@47 149 template <typename ClientType>
Chris@47 150 ClientType membrane(ClientType inner, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy) {
Chris@47 151 return membrane(Capability::Client(kj::mv(inner)), kj::mv(policy))
Chris@47 152 .castAs<typename ClientType::Calls>();
Chris@47 153 }
Chris@47 154 template <typename ClientType>
Chris@47 155 ClientType reverseMembrane(ClientType inner, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy) {
Chris@47 156 return reverseMembrane(Capability::Client(kj::mv(inner)), kj::mv(policy))
Chris@47 157 .castAs<typename ClientType::Calls>();
Chris@47 158 }
Chris@47 159
Chris@47 160 template <typename ServerType>
Chris@47 161 typename ServerType::Serves::Client membrane(
Chris@47 162 kj::Own<ServerType> inner, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy) {
Chris@47 163 return membrane(Capability::Client(kj::mv(inner)), kj::mv(policy))
Chris@47 164 .castAs<typename ServerType::Serves::Client>();
Chris@47 165 }
Chris@47 166 template <typename ServerType>
Chris@47 167 typename ServerType::Serves::Client reverseMembrane(
Chris@47 168 kj::Own<ServerType> inner, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy) {
Chris@47 169 return reverseMembrane(Capability::Client(kj::mv(inner)), kj::mv(policy))
Chris@47 170 .castAs<typename ServerType::Serves::Client>();
Chris@47 171 }
Chris@47 172
Chris@47 173 namespace _ { // private
Chris@47 174
Chris@47 175 OrphanBuilder copyOutOfMembrane(PointerReader from, Orphanage to,
Chris@47 176 kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy, bool reverse);
Chris@47 177 OrphanBuilder copyOutOfMembrane(StructReader from, Orphanage to,
Chris@47 178 kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy, bool reverse);
Chris@47 179 OrphanBuilder copyOutOfMembrane(ListReader from, Orphanage to,
Chris@47 180 kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy, bool reverse);
Chris@47 181
Chris@47 182 } // namespace _ (private)
Chris@47 183
Chris@47 184 template <typename Reader>
Chris@47 185 Orphan<typename kj::Decay<Reader>::Reads> copyIntoMembrane(
Chris@47 186 Reader&& from, Orphanage to, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy) {
Chris@47 187 return _::copyOutOfMembrane(
Chris@47 188 _::PointerHelpers<typename kj::Decay<Reader>::Reads>::getInternalReader(from),
Chris@47 189 to, kj::mv(policy), true);
Chris@47 190 }
Chris@47 191
Chris@47 192 template <typename Reader>
Chris@47 193 Orphan<typename kj::Decay<Reader>::Reads> copyOutOfMembrane(
Chris@47 194 Reader&& from, Orphanage to, kj::Own<MembranePolicy> policy) {
Chris@47 195 return _::copyOutOfMembrane(
Chris@47 196 _::PointerHelpers<typename kj::Decay<Reader>::Reads>::getInternalReader(from),
Chris@47 197 to, kj::mv(policy), false);
Chris@47 198 }
Chris@47 199
Chris@47 200 } // namespace capnp
Chris@47 201
Chris@47 202 #endif // CAPNP_MEMBRANE_H_