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Change-Id: Ied34720ca5a6e6e717eea4e86003e854031b6eab
Signed-off-by: Dave Barach <dave@barachs.net>
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Change-Id: Id5ebb410f509ac4c83d60e48efd54e00035e5ce6
Signed-off-by: Florin Coras <fcoras@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: Ided2980373ed5329c68f958f61be893428bccd31
Signed-off-by: Florin Coras <fcoras@cisco.com>
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To enable this, applications set the proxy flag in their attach requests
and pass the transport protocols they want to act as proxies for as part
of the attach options.
When proxy is enabled, session rules that point incoming packets to the
proxy app are addedd to the local and global session tables, if these
scopes are accessible to the app. In particular, in case of the former,
the rule accepts packets from all sources and all ports destined to the
namespace's supporting interface address on any port. While in case of
the latter, a generic any destination and any port rule is addedd.
Change-Id: I791f8c1cc083350f02e26a2ac3bdbbfbfa19ece3
Signed-off-by: Florin Coras <fcoras@cisco.com>
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This introduces 5-tuple lookup tables that may be used to implement
custom session layer actions at connection establishment time (session
layer perspective).
The rules table build mask-match-action lookup trees that for a given
5-tuple key return the action for the first longest match. If rules
overlap, ordering is established by tuple longest match with the
following descending priority: remote ip, local ip, remote port, local
port.
At this time, the only match action supported is to forward packets to
the application identified by the action.
Change-Id: Icbade6fac720fa3979820d50cd7d6137f8b635c3
Signed-off-by: Florin Coras <fcoras@cisco.com>
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