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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd" [
<!ENTITY mdash "&#x2014;" >
]>
<chapter id="hooks-libraries">
<title>Hooks Libraries</title>
<section id="hooks-libraries-introduction">
<title>Introduction</title>
<para>
Although Kea offers a lot of flexibility, there may be cases where
its behavior needs customisation. To accommodate this possibility,
Kea includes the idea of "Hooks". This feature lets Kea load one
or more dynamically-linked libraries (known as "hooks libraries")
and, at various points in its processing ("hook points"), call
functions in them. Those functions perform whatever custom
processing is required.
</para>
<para>
Hooks libraries are attached to individual Kea processes, not to
Kea as a whole. This means (for example) that it is possible
to associate one set of libraries with the DHCP4 server and a
different set to the DHCP6 server.
</para>
<para>
Another point to note is that it is possible for a process to
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load multiple libraries. When processing reaches a hook point,
Kea calls the hooks library functions attached to it. If multiple
libraries have attached a function to a given hook point, Kea calls
all of them, in the order in which the libraries are specified in
the configuration file. The order may be important: consult the
documentation of the libraries to see if this is the case.
</para>
<para>
The next section describes how to configure hooks libraries. If you
are interested in writing your own hooks library, information can be
found in the <ulink url="https://jenkins.isc.org/job/Fedora20_32_doxygen_doc/doxygen/">Kea
Developer's Guide</ulink>.
</para>
</section> <!-- end Introduction -->
<section>
<title>Configuring Hooks Libraries</title>
<para>
The hooks libraries for a given process are configured using the
<command>hooks-libraries</command> keyword in the
configuration for that process. (Note that
the word "hooks" is plural). The value of the keyword
is an array of map structures, each structure corresponding to a hooks
library. For example, to set up two hooks libraries for the DHCPv4
server, the configuration would be:
<screen>
<userinput>"Dhcp4": {
:
"hooks-libraries": [
{
"library": "/opt/charging.so"
},
{
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"library": "/opt/local/notification.so",
"parameters": {
"mail": "spam@example.com",
"floor": 13,
"debug": false,
"users": [ "alice", "bob", "charlie" ],
"languages": {
"french": "bonjour",
"klingon": "yl'el"
}
}
}
]
:
}</userinput>
</screen>
</para>
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<note><para>
This is a change to the syntax used in Kea 0.9.2 and earlier, where
hooks-libraries was a list of strings, each string being the name of
a library. The change was made in Kea 1.0 to facilitate the
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specification of library-specific parameters, a capability
available in Kea 1.1.0 onwards.
</para></note>
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<note>
<para>
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The library reloading behavior has changed in Kea 1.1. Libraries are
reloaded, even if their list hasn't changed. Kea does that, because
the parameters specified for the library (or the files those
parameters point to) may have changed.
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</para>
</note>
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<para>
Libraries may have additional parameters. Those are not mandatory in the
sense that there may be libraries that don't require them. However, for
specific library there is often specific requirement for specify certain
set of parameters. Please consult the documentation for your library
for details. In the example above, the first library has no parameters.
The second library has five parameters, specifying mail (string
parameter), floor (integer parameter), debug (boolean parameter) and
even lists (list of strings) and maps (containing strings). Nested
parameters could be used if the library supports it. This topic is
explained in detail in the Hooks Developer's Guide in the "Configuring
Hooks Libraries" section.
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</para>
<para>
Notes:
<itemizedlist mark='bullet'>
<listitem><para>
The full path to each library should be given.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
As noted above, order may be important - consult the documentation for
each library.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
An empty list has the same effect as omitting the
<command>hooks-libraries</command> configuration element all together.
</para>
<note><para>
There is one case where this is not true: if Kea
is running with a configuration that contains a
<command>hooks-libraries</command> item, and that item is
removed and the configuration reloaded, the removal will be
ignored and the libraries remain loaded. As a workaround,
instead of removing the <command>hooks-libraries</command>
item, change it to an empty list. This will be fixed in a
future version of Kea.
</para></note>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
<para>
At the present time, only the kea-dhcp4 and kea-dhcp6 processes support
hooks libraries.
</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Available Hooks Libraries</title>
<para>
As described above, the hooks functionality provides a way to customize
a Kea server without modifying the core code. ISC has chosen to take
advantage of this feature to provide functions that may only be useful
to a subset of Kea users. To this end ISC has created some hooks
libraries; these discussed in the following sections.
</para>
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<note><para>
Some of these libraries will be available with the base code while others
will be shared with organizations supporting development of Kea
, possibly as a 'benefit' or 'thank you' for helping to sustain
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the larger Kea project. If you would like to get access to those
libraries, please consider taking out a support contract: this includes
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professional support, advance security notifications, input into our
roadmap planning, and many other benefits, while helping
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making Kea sustainable in the long term.
</para></note>
<para>Currently the following libraries are available or planned from ISC:
<table frame="all" id="hook-libs">
<title>List of available hooks libraries</title>
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<tgroup cols='3'>
<colspec colname='name' />
<colspec colname='avail' />
<colspec colname='description' />
<thead>
<row>
<entry>Name</entry>
<entry>Availability</entry>
<entry>Since</entry>
<entry>Description</entry>
</row>
</thead>
<tbody>
<row>
<entry>user_chk</entry>
<entry>Kea sources</entry>
<entry>Kea 0.8</entry>
<entry>Reads known users list from a file. Unknown users
will be assigned a
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lease from the last subnet defined in the configuration file,
e.g. to redirect them a captive portal. This demonstrates how an
external source of information can be used to influence the Kea
allocation engine. This hook is part of the Kea source code and is
available in the src/hooks/dhcp/user_chk directory.</entry>
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</row>
<row>
<entry>Forensic Logging</entry>
<entry>Support customers</entry>
<entry>Kea 1.1.0</entry>
<entry>This library provides hooks that record a detailed log of
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lease assignments and renewals into a set of log files. In many
legal jurisdictions companies, especially ISPs, must record
information about the addresses they have leased to DHCP
clients. This library is designed to help with that
requirement. If the information that it records is sufficient it
may be used directly. If your jurisdiction requires that you save
a different set of information, you may use it as a template or
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example and create your own custom logging hooks.</entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>Lightweight 4over6</entry>
<entry>Support customers</entry>
<entry>Autumn 2016</entry>
<entry>Lightweight 4over6
(<ulink url="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7596">RFC 7596</ulink>)
is a new IPv6 transition
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technology that provides IPv4 as a service in IPv6-only
network. It assumes that dual-stack clients will get a regular IPv6
address and IPv6 prefix, but only a fraction of an IPv4 address. The
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fraction is specified as port-set, which is essentially a range of
TCP and UDP ports a client can use. By doing the transition on the
client side, this technology eliminates the need to deploy
expensive Carrier Grade NATs within the operator's network. The
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problem on the DHCP side is the non-trivial logic behind it: each
client needs to receive an unique set of lightweight 4over6 options
(<ulink url="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7598">RFC 7598</ulink>),
that include the IPv4 address (shared among several
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clients), port-set (which is unique among clients sharing the same
IPv4 address) and a number of additional parameters. This hooks
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library will generate values of those options dynamically, thus
eliminating the need to manually configure values for each client
separately.
</entry>
</row>
</tbody>
</tgroup>
</table>
</para>
<para>
ISC hopes to see more hooks libraries become available as time
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progresses, both developed internally and externally. Since
this list may evolve dynamically, we decided to keep it on a
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wiki page, available at this link: <ulink
url="http://kea.isc.org/wiki/Hooks">http://kea.isc.org/wiki/Hooks</ulink>.
If you are a developer or are aware of any hooks libraries not
listed there, please send a note to the kea-users or kea-dev
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mailing lists and someone will update it.
</para>
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<section>
<title>user_chk: Checking User Access</title>
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<para>
The user_chk library is the first hooks library published by ISC. It
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attempts to serve several purposes:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>To assign "new" or "unregistered" users to a
restricted subnet, while "known" or "registered" users are assigned
to unrestricted subnets.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>To allow DHCP response options or vendor option
values to be customized based upon user identity. </para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>To provide a real time record of the user registration
activity which can be sampled by an external consumer.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para> To serve as a demonstration of various capabilities
possible using the hooks interface.</para>
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</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
<para>
Once loaded, the library allows segregating incomings requests into
known and unknown clients. For known clients, the packets are
processed mostly as usual, except it is possible to override certain
options being sent. That can be done on a per host basis. Clients
that are not on the known hosts list will be treated as unknown and
will be assigned to the last subnet defined in the configuration file.
</para>
<para>
As an example of use, this behavior may be used to put unknown users into a
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separate subnet that leads to a walled garden, where they can only
access a registration portal. Once they fill in necessary data, their
details are added to the known clients file and they get a proper
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address after their device is restarted.
</para>
<note><para>This library was developed several years before the host
reservation mechanism has become available. Currently host reservation is
much more
powerful and flexible, but nevertheless the user_chk capability to consult
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and external source of information about clients and alter Kea's
behavior is useful and remains of educational value.
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</para></note>
<para>
The library reads the /tmp/user_chk_registry.txt file while being
loaded and each time an incoming packet is processed. The file is expected
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to have each line contain a self-contained JSON snippet which must
have the following two entries:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para><command>type</command>, whose value
is "HW_ADDR" for IPv4 users or "DUID" for IPv6
users</para></listitem>
<listitem><para><command>id</command>, whose value is
either the hardware address or the DUID from the equest
formatted as a string of hex digits, with or without
":" delimiters.</para></listitem>
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</itemizedlist>
and may have the zero or more of the following entries:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para><command>bootfile</command> whose value
is the pathname of the desired file</para></listitem>
<listitem><para><command>tftp_server</command> whose
value is the hostname or IP address of the desired
server</para></listitem>
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</itemizedlist>
A sample user registry file is shown below:
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<screen>{ "type" : "HW_ADDR", "id" : "0c:0e:0a:01:ff:04", "bootfile" : "/tmp/v4bootfile" }
{ "type" : "HW_ADDR", "id" : "0c:0e:0a:01:ff:06", "tftp_server" : "tftp.v4.example.com" }
{ "type" : "DUID", "id" : "00:01:00:01:19:ef:e6:3b:00:0c:01:02:03:04", "bootfile" : "/tmp/v6bootfile" }
{ "type" : "DUID", "id" : "00:01:00:01:19:ef:e6:3b:00:0c:01:02:03:06", "tftp_server" : "tftp.v6.example.com" }</screen>
</para>
<para>As with any other hooks libraries provided by ISC, internals of the
user_chk code are well documented. You can take a look at the <ulink
url="https://jenkins.isc.org/job/Fedora20_32_doxygen_doc/doxygen/d8/db2/libdhcp_user_chk.html">Kea Developer's Guide section dedicated to the user_chk library</ulink>
that discusses how the code works internally. That, together with
our general entries in <ulink
url="https://jenkins.isc.org/job/Fedora20_32_doxygen_doc/doxygen/">Hooks
Framework section</ulink> should give you some pointers how to extend
this library and perhaps even write your own from scratch.</para>
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</section>
<section>
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<title>Forensic Logging Hooks</title>
<para>
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This section describes the forensic log hooks library. This library
povides hooks that record a detailed log of lease assignments
and renewals into a set of log files. Currently this library
is only available to ISC customers with a support contract.
</para>
<para>
In many legal jurisdictions companies, especially ISPs, must record
information about the addresses they have leased to DHCP clients.
This library is designed to help with that requirement. If the
information that it records is sufficient it may be used directly.
If your jurisdiction requires that you save a different set of
information you may use it as a template or example and create your
own custom logging hooks.
</para>
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<para>
This logging is done as a set of hooks to allow it to be customized
to any particular need. Modifying a hooks library is easier and
safer than updating the core code. In addition by using the hooks
features those users who don't need to log this information can
leave it out and avoid any performance penalties.
</para>
<section>
<title>Log File Naming</title>
<para>
The names for the log files have the following form:
</para>
<screen>
path/base-name.CCYYMMDD.txt
</screen>
<para>
The &quot;path&quot; and &quot;base-name&quot; are supplied in the
configuration as described below see
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<xref linkend="forensic-log-configuration"/>. The next part of the name is
the date the log file was started, with four digits for year, two digits
for month and two digits for day. The file is rotated on a daily basis.
</para>
<note><para>
When running Kea servers for both DHCPv4 and DHCPv6 the log names must
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be distinct. See the examples in <xref linkend="forensic-log-configuration"/>.
</para></note>
</section>
<section>
<title>DHCPv4 Log Entries</title>
<para>
For DHCPv4 the library creates entries based on DHCPREQUEST messages
and corresponding DHCPv4 leases intercepted by lease4_select
(for new leases) and lease4_renew (for renewed leases) hooks.
</para>
<para>
An entry is a single string with no embedded end-of-line markers
and has the following sections:
<screen>
address duration device-id {client-info} {relay-info}
</screen>
</para>
<para>
Where:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para>
address - the leased IPv4 address given out and whether it was
assigned or renewed.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
duration - the lease lifetime expressed in days (if present),
hours, minutes and seconds. A lease lifetime of 0xFFFFFFFF will be
denoted with the text &quot;infinite duration&quot;.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
device-id - the client's hardware address shown as numerical type
and hex digit string.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
client-info - the DHCP client id option (61) if present, shown as
a hex string.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
relay-info - for relayed packets the giaddr and the RAI circuit id
and remote id options (option 82 sub options 1 and 2) if present.
The circuit id and remote id are presented as hex strings
</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
<para>
For instance (line breaks added for readability, they would not
be present in the log file).
<screen>
Address: 192.2.1.100 has been renewed for 1 hrs 52 min 15 secs to a device with
hardware address: hwtype=1 08:00:2b:02:3f:4e, client-id: 17:34:e2:ff:09:92:54
connected via relay at address: 192.2.16.33, identified by circuit-id:
68:6f:77:64:79 and remote-id: 87:f6:79:77:ef
</screen>
</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>DHCPv6 Log Entries</title>
<para>
For DHCPv6 the library creates entries based on lease management
actions intercepted by the lease6_select (for new leases), lease6_renew
(for renewed leases) and lease6_rebind (for rebound leases).
</para>
<para>
An entry is a single string with no embedded end-of-line markers
and has the following sections:
<screen>
address duration device-id {relay-info}*
</screen>
</para>
<para>
Where:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para>
address - the leased IPv6 address or prefix given out and whether
it was assigned or renewed.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
duration - the lease lifetime expressed in days (if present),
hours, minutes and seconds. A lease lifetime of 0xFFFFFFFF will be
denoted with the text "infinite duration".
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
device-id - the client's DUID and hardware address (if present).
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
relay-info - for relayed packets the content of relay agent
messages, remote id and subscriber id options (x and xx) if present.
</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
<para>
For instance (line breaks added for readability, they would not
be present in the log file).
<screen>
Address:2001:db8:1:: has been assigned for 0 hrs 11 mins 53 secs to a device with
DUID: 17:34:e2:ff:09:92:54 and hardware address: hwtype=1 08:00:2b:02:3f:4e
(from Raw Socket) connected via relay at address: fe80::abcd for client on
link address: 3001::1, hop count: 1, identified by remote-id:
01:02:03:04:0a:0b:0c:0d:0e:0f and subscriber-id: 1a:2b:3c:4d:5e:6f
</screen>
</para>
</section>
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<section id="forensic-log-configuration">
<title>Configuring the Forensic Log Hooks</title>
<para>
To use this functionality the hook library must be included in the
configuration of the desired DHCP server modules. The legal_log
library is installed alongside the Kea libraries in
<filename>[kea-install-dir]/lib</filename> where
<filename>kea-install-dir</filename> is determined by the
&quot;--prefix&quot; option of the configure script. It defaults to
<filename>/usr/local</filename>. Assuming the
default value then, configuring kea-dhcp4 to load the legal_log
library could be done with the following Kea4 configuration:
<screen>
"Dhcp4": { <userinput>
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"hooks-libraries": [
{
"library": "/usr/local/lib/libdhcp_legal_log.so",
"parameters": {
"path": "/var/kea/var",
"base-name": "kea-forensic4"
}
},
...
] </userinput>
}
</screen>
</para>
<para>
To configure it for kea-dhcp6, the commands are simply as shown below:
<screen>
"Dhcp6": { <userinput>
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"hooks-libraries": [
{
"library": "/usr/local/lib/libdhcp_legal_log.so",
"parameters": {
"path": "/var/kea/var",
"base-name": "kea-forensic6"
}
},
...
] </userinput>
}
</screen>
</para>
<para>
Two Hook Library parameters are supported:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para>
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path - the directory in which the forensic file(s) will be written. The
default value is
<filename>[prefix]/kea/var</filename>. The directory must exist.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
base-name - an arbitrary value which is used in conjunction with
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the current system date to form the current foresnic file name. It defaults
to <filename>kea-legal</filename>.
</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</section>
</section>
</section>
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<section id="user-context">
<title>User contexts</title>
<para>Hook libraries can have their own configuration parameters. That is
convenient if the parameter applies to the whole library. However,
sometimes it is very useful if certain configuration entities are extended
with additional configuration data. This is where the concept of user
contexts comes in. A sysadmin can define an arbitrary set of data and
attach it to Kea structures, as long as the data is specified as JSON map.
In particular, it is possible to define fields that are integers, strings,
boolean, lists and maps. It is possible to define nested structures of
arbitrary complexity. Kea does not use that data on its own, simply stores
and makes it available for the hook libraries.
</para>
<para>
As of Kea 1.2, the only structures that allow user contexts are address
and prefix pools, but it is expected to extend other structures with the
user context capability.
</para>
</section>
</chapter> <!-- hooks-libraries -->