| Thrift C++ Software Library |
| |
| # License |
| |
| Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one |
| or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file |
| distributed with this work for additional information |
| regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file |
| to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the |
| "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance |
| with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| |
| http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| |
| Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, |
| software distributed under the License is distributed on an |
| "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY |
| KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the |
| specific language governing permissions and limitations |
| under the License. |
| |
| |
| # Using Thrift with C++ |
| |
| The Thrift C++ libraries are built using the GNU tools. Follow the instructions |
| in the top-level README.md |
| |
| In case you do not want to open another README.md file, do this thrift src: |
| |
| ./bootstrap.sh |
| ./configure (--with-boost=/usr/local) |
| make |
| sudo make install |
| |
| Thrift is divided into two libraries. |
| |
| * libthrift - The core Thrift library contains all the core Thrift code. It requires |
| boost shared pointers, pthreads, and librt. |
| |
| * libthriftnb - This library contains the Thrift nonblocking server, which uses libevent. |
| To link this library you will also need to link libevent. |
| |
| ## Linking Against Thrift |
| |
| After you build and install Thrift the libraries are installed to |
| /usr/local/lib by default. Make sure this is in your LDPATH. |
| |
| On Linux, the best way to do this is to ensure that /usr/local/lib is in |
| your /etc/ld.so.conf and then run /sbin/ldconfig. |
| |
| Depending upon whether you are linking dynamically or statically and how |
| your build environment it set up, you may need to include additional |
| libraries when linking against thrift, such as librt and/or libpthread. If |
| you are using libthriftnb you will also need libevent. |
| |
| ## Dependencies |
| |
| boost shared pointers |
| http://www.boost.org/libs/smart_ptr/smart_ptr.htm |
| |
| libevent (for libthriftnb only) |
| http://monkey.org/~provos/libevent/ |
| |
| # Using Thrift with C++ on Windows |
| |
| You need to define an environment variables for 3rd party components separately: |
| |
| BOOST_ROOT : For boost, e.g. D:\boost_1_55_0 |
| OPENSSL_ROOT_DIR : For OpenSSL, e.g. D:\OpenSSL-Win32 |
| |
| only required by libthriftnb: |
| |
| LIBEVENT_ROOT_DIR : For Libevent e.g. D:\libevent-2.0.21-stable |
| |
| See /3rdparty.user for more details. |
| |
| Thrift is divided into two libraries. |
| |
| * libthrift - The core Thrift library contains all the core Thrift code. It requires |
| boost shared pointers, pthreads, and librt. |
| |
| * libthriftnb - This library contains the Thrift nonblocking server, which uses libevent. |
| To link this library you will also need to link libevent. |
| |
| ## Linking Against Thrift |
| |
| You need to link your project that uses thrift against all the thrift |
| dependencies; in the case of libthrift, boost and for |
| libthriftnb, libevent. |
| |
| In the project properties you must also set HAVE_CONFIG_H as force include |
| the config header: "windows/confg.h" |
| |
| ## Dependencies |
| |
| boost shared pointers |
| http://www.boost.org/libs/smart_ptr/smart_ptr.htm |
| |
| boost thread |
| http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/release/doc/html/thread.html |
| |
| libevent (for libthriftnb only) |
| http://monkey.org/~provos/libevent/ |
| |
| ## Notes on boost thread (static vs shared): |
| |
| By default lib/cpp/windows/force_inc.h defines: |
| |
| #define BOOST_ALL_NO_LIB 1 |
| #define BOOST_THREAD_NO_LIB 1 |
| |
| This has for effect to have the host application linking against Thrift |
| to have to link with boost thread as a static library. |
| |
| If you wanted instead to link with boost thread as a shared library, |
| you'll need to uncomment those two lines, and recompile. |
| |
| ## Windows version compatibility |
| |
| The Thrift library targets Windows XP for broadest compatbility. A notable |
| difference is in the Windows-specific implementation of the socket poll |
| function. To target Vista, Win7 or other versions, comment out the line |
| |
| #define TARGET_WIN_XP. |
| |
| ## Named Pipes |
| |
| Named Pipe transport has been added in the TPipe and TPipeServer classes. This |
| is currently Windows-only. Named pipe transport for *NIX has not been |
| implemented. Domain sockets are a better choice for local IPC under non-Windows |
| OS's. *NIX named pipes only support 1:1 client-server connection. |
| |
| # Thrift/SSL |
| |
| ## Scope |
| |
| This SSL only supports blocking mode socket I/O. It can only be used with |
| TSimpleServer, TThreadedServer, and TThreadPoolServer. |
| |
| ## Implementation |
| |
| There're two main classes TSSLSocketFactory and TSSLSocket. Instances of |
| TSSLSocket are always created from TSSLSocketFactory. |
| |
| PosixSSLThreadFactory creates PosixSSLThread. The only difference from the |
| PthreadThread type is that it cleanups OpenSSL error queue upon exiting |
| the thread. Ideally, OpenSSL APIs should only be called from PosixSSLThread. |
| |
| ## How to use SSL APIs |
| |
| This is for demo. In real code, typically only one TSSLSocketFactory |
| instance is needed. |
| |
| shared_ptr<TSSLSocketFactory> getSSLSocketFactory() { |
| shared_ptr<TSSLSocketFactory> factory(new TSSLSocketFactory()); |
| // client: load trusted certificates |
| factory->loadTrustedCertificates("my-trusted-ca-certificates.pem"); |
| // client: optionally set your own access manager, otherwise, |
| // the default client access manager will be loaded. |
| |
| factory->loadCertificate("my-certificate-signed-by-ca.pem"); |
| factory->loadPrivateKey("my-private-key.pem"); |
| // server: optionally setup access manager |
| // shared_ptr<AccessManager> accessManager(new MyAccessManager); |
| // factory->access(accessManager); |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| |
| client code sample |
| |
| shared_ptr<TSSLSocketFactory> factory = getSSLSocketFactory(); |
| shared_ptr<TSocket> socket = factory.createSocket(host, port); |
| shared_ptr<TBufferedTransport> transport(new TBufferedTransport(socket)); |
| ... |
| |
| |
| server code sample |
| |
| shared_ptr<TSSLSocketFactory> factory = getSSLSocketFactory(); |
| shared_ptr<TSSLServerSocket> socket(new TSSLServerSocket(port, factory)); |
| shared_ptr<TTransportFactory> transportFactory(new TBufferedTransportFactory)); |
| ... |
| |
| ## AccessManager |
| |
| AccessManager defines a callback interface. It has three callback methods: |
| |
| (a) Decision verify(const sockaddr_storage& sa); |
| |
| (b) Decision verify(const string& host, const char* name, int size); |
| |
| (c) Decision verify(const sockaddr_storage& sa, const char* data, int size); |
| |
| After SSL handshake completes, additional checks are conducted. Application |
| is given the chance to decide whether or not to continue the conversation |
| with the remote. Application is queried through the above three "verify" |
| method. They are called at different points of the verification process. |
| |
| Decisions can be one of ALLOW, DENY, and SKIP. ALLOW and DENY means the |
| conversation should be continued or disconnected, respectively. ALLOW and |
| DENY decision stops the verification process. SKIP means there's no decision |
| based on the given input, continue the verification process. |
| |
| First, (a) is called with the remote IP. It is called once at the beginning. |
| "sa" is the IP address of the remote peer. |
| |
| Then, the certificate of remote peer is loaded. SubjectAltName extensions |
| are extracted and sent to application for verification. When a DNS |
| subjectAltName field is extracted, (b) is called. When an IP subjectAltName |
| field is extracted, (c) is called. |
| |
| The "host" in (b) is the value from TSocket::getHost() if this is a client |
| side socket, or TSocket::getPeerHost() if this is a server side socket. The |
| reason is client side socket initiates the connection. TSocket::getHost() |
| is the remote host name. On server side, the remote host name is unknown |
| unless it's retrieved through TSocket::getPeerHost(). Either way, "host" |
| should be the remote host name. Keep in mind, if TSocket::getPeerHost() |
| failed, it would return the remote host name in numeric format. |
| |
| If all subjectAltName extensions were "skipped", the common name field would |
| be checked. It is sent to application through (c), where "sa" is the remote |
| IP address. "data" is the IP address extracted from subjectAltName IP |
| extension, and "size" is the length of the extension data. |
| |
| If any of the above "verify" methods returned a decision ALLOW or DENY, the |
| verification process would be stopped. |
| |
| If any of the above "verify" methods returned SKIP, that decision would be |
| ignored and the verification process would move on till the last item is |
| examined. At that point, if there's still no decision, the connection is |
| terminated. |
| |
| Thread safety, an access manager should not store state information if it's |
| to be used by many SSL sockets. |
| |
| ## SIGPIPE signal |
| |
| Applications running OpenSSL over network connections may crash if SIGPIPE |
| is not ignored. This happens when they receive a connection reset by remote |
| peer exception, which somehow triggers a SIGPIPE signal. If not handled, |
| this signal would kill the application. |
| |
| ## How to run test client/server in SSL mode |
| |
| The server and client expects the followings from the directory /test/ |
| |
| - keys/server.crt |
| - keys/server.key |
| - keys/CA.pem |
| |
| The file names are hard coded in the source code. You need to create these |
| certificates before you can run the test code in SSL mode. Make sure at least |
| one of the followings is included in "keys/server.crt", |
| |
| - subjectAltName, DNS localhost |
| - subjectAltName, IP 127.0.0.1 |
| - common name, localhost |
| |
| Run within /test/ folder, |
| |
| ./cpp/TestServer --ssl & |
| ./cpp/TestClient --ssl |
| |
| If "-h <host>" is used to run client, the above "localhost" in the above |
| keys/server.crt has to be replaced with that host name. |
| |
| ## TSSLSocketFactory::randomize() |
| |
| The default implementation of OpenSSLSocketFactory::randomize() simply calls |
| OpenSSL's RAND_poll() when OpenSSL library is first initialized. |
| |
| The PRNG seed is key to the application security. This method should be |
| overridden if it's not strong enough for you. |