This patch adds a quic_transport_params struct to bind_conf struct
used for the listeners. This is to store the QUIC transport parameters
for the listeners. Also initializes them when calling str2listener().
Before str2sa_range() it's too early to figure we're going to speak QUIC,
and after it's too late as listeners are already created. So it seems that
doing it in str2listener() when the protocol is discovered is the best
place.
Also adds two ebtrees to the underlying receivers to store the connection
by connections IDs (one for the original connection IDs, and another
one for the definitive connection IDs which really identify the connections.
However it doesn't seem normal that it is stored in the receiver nor the
listener. There should be a private context in the listener so that
protocols can store internal information. This element should in
fact be the listener handle.
Something still feels wrong, and probably we'll have to make QUIC and
SSL co-exist: a proof of this is that there's some explicit code in
bind_parse_ssl() to prevent the "ssl" keyword from replacing the xprt.
We add src/quic_sock.c QUIC specific socket management functions as callbacks
for the control layer: ->accept_conn, ->default_iocb and ->rx_listening.
accept_conn() will have to be defined. The default I/O handler only recvfrom()
the datagrams received. Furthermore, ->rx_listening callback always returns 1 at
this time but should returns 0 when reloading the processus.
As QUIC is a connection oriented protocol, this file is almost a copy of
proto_tcp without TCP specific features. To suspend/resume a QUIC receiver
we proceed the same way as for proto_udp receivers.
With the recent updates to the listeners, we don't need a specific set of
quic*_add_listener() functions, the default ones are sufficient. The fields
declaration were reordered to make the various layers more visible like in
other protocols.
udp_suspend_receiver/udp_resume_receiver are up-to-date (the check for INHERITED
is present) and the code being UDP-specific, it's normal to use UDP here.
Note that in the future we might more reasily reference stacked layers so that
there's no more need for specifying the pointer here.