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construct/doc/technical/hostmask.txt

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The hostmask/netmask system.
Copyright(C) 2001 by Andrew Miller(A1kmm)<a1kmm@mware.virtualave.net>
Contents
========
* Section 1: Motivation
* Section 2: Underlying mechanism
- 2.1: General overview.
- 2.2: IPv4 netmasks.
- 2.3: IPv6 netmasks.
- 2.4: Hostmasks.
* Section 3: Exposed abstraction layer
- 3.1: Parsing masks.
- 3.2: Adding configuration items.
- 3.3: Initialising or rehashing.
- 3.4: Finding IP/host confs.
- 3.5: Deleting entries.
- 3.6: Reporting entries.
Section 1: Motivation
=====================
Looking up config hostnames and IP addresses(such as for I-lines and
K-lines) needs to be implemented efficiently. It turns out a hash
based algorithm like that employed here performs well on the average
case, which is what we should be the most concerned about. A profiling
comparison with the mtrie code using data from a real network confirmed
that this algorithm performs much better.
Section 2: Underlying mechanism
===============================
2.1: General overview
---------------------
In short, a hash-table with linked lists for buckets is used to locate
the correct hostname/netmask entries. In order to support CIDR IPs and
wildcard masks, the entire key cannot be hashed, and there is a need to
rehash. The means for deciding how much to hash differs between hostmasks
and IPv4/6 netmasks.
2.2: IPv4 netmasks
------------------
In order to hash IPv4 netmasks for addition to the hash, the mask is first
processed to a 32 bit address and a number of bits used. All unused bits
are set to 0. The mask could be in the forms:
1.2.3.4 => 1.2.3.4 32
1.2.3.* => 1.2.3.0 24
1.2 => 1.2.0.0 16
1.2.3.64/26 => 1.2.3.64 26
The number of whole bytes is then calculated, and only those bytes are
hashed. (e.g. 1.2.3.64/26 and 1.2.3.0/24 hash the same).
When a complete IPv4 address is given so that an IPv4 match can be found,
the entire IP address is first hashed, and looked up in the table. Then
the most significant three bytes are hashed, followed by the most
significant two, the most significant one, and finally the 'identity hash'
bucket is searched(to match masks like 192/7).
2.3: IPv6 netmasks
------------------
As per IPv4 netmasks, except that instead of rehashing with a one byte
granularity, a 16 bit(two byte) granularity is used, as 16 rehashes is
considered too great a fixed offset to be justified for a (possible)
slight reduction in hash collisions.
2.4: Hostmasks
--------------
On adding a hostmask to the hash, all of the hostmask right of the next
dot after the last wildcard character in the string is hashed, or in the
case that there are no wildcards in the hostmask, the entire string is
hashed.
On searching for a hostmask match, the entire hostname is hashed, followed
by the entire hostmask after the first dot, followed by the entire
hostmask after the second dot, and so on. Finally, the 'identity' hash
bucket is checked, to catch hostnames like *test*.
Section 3: Exposed abstraction layer
====================================
Section 3.1: Parsing masks
--------------------------
Call "parse_netmask()" with the netmask and a pointer to an irc_inaddr
structure to be filled in, as well as a pointer to an integer where the
number of bits will be placed.
Always check the return value. If it returns HM_HOST, it means that the
mask is probably a hostname mask. If it returns HM_IPV4, it means it was
an IPv4 address. If it returns HM_IPV6, it means it was an IPv6 address.
If parse_netmask returns HM_HOST, no change is made to the irc_inaddr
structure or the number of bits.
Section 3.2: Adding configuration items
---------------------------------------
Call "add_conf_by_address" with the hostname or IP mask, the username,
and the ConfItem* to associate with this mask.
Section 3.3: Initialising and rehashing
----------------------------------------
To initialise, call init_host_hash(). This only needs to be done once on
startup.
On rehash, to wipe out the old unwanted conf, and free them if there are
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no references to them, call clear_out_address_conf().
Section 3.4: Finding IP/host confs
----------------------------------
Call find_address_conf() with the hostname, the username, the address,
and the address family.
To find a d-line, call find_dline() with the address and address family.
Section 3.5: Deletiing entries
------------------------------
Call delete_one_address_conf() with the hostname and the ConfItem*.
Section 3.6: Reporting entries
------------------------------
Call report_dlines, report_exemptlines, report_Klines() or report_Ilines()
with the client pointer to report to. Note these walk the hash, which is
inefficient, but these are not called often enough to justify the memory
and maintenance clockcycles to for more efficient data structure.