man ipsec_set_policy (Fonctions bibliothèques) - ipsec_set_policy ,
NAME
LIBRARY
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
generates an IPsec policy specification structure, namely struct sadb_x_policy and/or struct sadb_x_ipsecrequest from a human-readable policy specification. The policy specification must be given as a C string policy and its length len . ipsec_set_policy will return a buffer with the corresponding IPsec policy specification structure. The buffer is dynamically allocated, and must be free(3) Ap d by the caller.
You can get the length of the generated buffer with ipsec_get_policylen (i.e. for calling setsockopt(2) ) .
ipsec_dump_policy converts an IPsec policy structure into human-readable form. Therefore, ipsec_dump_policy can be regarded as the inverse function to ipsec_set_policy . buf points to an IPsec policy structure, struct sadb_x_policy . delim is a delimiter string, which is usually a blank character. If you set delim to NULL , a single whitespace is assumed. ipsec_dump_policy returns a pointer to a dynamically allocated string. It is the caller's responsibility to free() it.
policy is formatted as either of the following:
- direction [priority specification] discard
-
direction
must be
in ,
out ,
or
fwd .
direction
specifies in which direction the policy needs to be applied.
The non-standard direction
fwd
is substituted with
in
on platforms which do not support forward policies.
priority specification
is used to control the placement of the policy within the SPD.
The policy position is determined by
a signed integer where higher priorities indicate the policy is placed
closer to the beginning of the list and lower priorities indicate the
policy is placed closer to the end of the list.
Policies with equal
priorities are added at the end of the group of such policies.
Priority can only
be specified when libipsec has been compiled against kernel headers that
support policy priorities (Linux [Gt]= 2.6.6).
It takes one of the following formats:
- Xo
- {priority,prio} offset offset is an integer in the range -2147483647..214783648.
- Xo
- {priority,prio} base {+,-} offset base is either low (-1073741824) , def (0) , or high (1073741824) . offset is an unsigned integer. It can be up to 1073741824 for positive offsets, and up to 1073741823 for negative offsets.
- direction [priority specification] entrust
- entrust means to consult the SPD defined by setkey(8) .
- direction [priority specification] bypass
- bypass means to bypass the IPsec processing. This is for privileged sockets.
- Xo
-
direction
ipsec
request ...
ipsec
means that the matching packets are subject to IPsec processing.
ipsec
can be followed by one or more
request
strings, which are formatted as below:
- Xo
- protocol / mode / src - dst [/level] protocol is either ah , esp , or ipcomp . mode is either transport or tunnel . src and dst specifies the IPsec endpoint. src always means the and dst always means the Therefore, when direction is in , dst is this node and src is the other node If mode is transport , Both src and dst can be omitted. level must be set to one of the following: default , use , require , or unique . default means that the kernel should consult the system default policy defined by sysctl(8) , such as net.inet.ipsec.esp_trans_deflev . See ipsec() regarding the system default. use means that a relevant SA can be used when available, since the kernel may perform IPsec operation against packets when possible. In this case, packets can be transmitted in clear or encrypted require means that a relevant SA is required, since the kernel must perform IPsec operation against packets. unique is the same as require , but adds the restriction that the SA for outbound traffic is used only for this policy. You may need the identifier in order to relate the policy and the SA when you define the SA by manual keying. You can put the decimal number as the identifier after unique like unique : number . number must be between 1 and 32767 . If the request string is kept unambiguous, level and slash prior to level can be omitted. However, it is encouraged to specify them explicitly to avoid unintended behavior. If level is omitted, it will be interpreted as default .
RETURN VALUES
returns a pointer to the allocated buffer with the policy specification if successful; otherwise a NULL pointer is returned. ipsec_get_policylen returns a positive value on success, and a negative value on errors. ipsec_dump_policy returns a pointer to a dynamically allocated region on success, and NULL on errors.
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The functions first appeared in the WIDE/KAME IPv6 protocol stack kit.