forked from ValveSoftware/GameNetworkingSockets
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
isteamnetworkingsockets.h
974 lines (894 loc) · 53 KB
/
isteamnetworkingsockets.h
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
936
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
954
955
956
957
958
959
960
961
962
963
964
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
972
973
974
//====== Copyright Valve Corporation, All rights reserved. ====================
#ifndef ISTEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS
#define ISTEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS
#pragma once
#include "steamnetworkingtypes.h"
#include "steam_api_common.h"
struct SteamNetAuthenticationStatus_t;
struct SteamNetworkingFakeIPResult_t;
class ISteamNetworkingConnectionSignaling;
class ISteamNetworkingSignalingRecvContext;
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
/// Lower level networking API.
///
/// - Connection-oriented API (like TCP, not UDP). When sending and receiving
/// messages, a connection handle is used. (For a UDP-style interface, where
/// the peer is identified by their address with each send/recv call, see
/// ISteamNetworkingMessages.) The typical pattern is for a "server" to "listen"
/// on a "listen socket." A "client" will "connect" to the server, and the
/// server will "accept" the connection. If you have a symmetric situation
/// where either peer may initiate the connection and server/client roles are
/// not clearly defined, check out k_ESteamNetworkingConfig_SymmetricConnect.
/// - But unlike TCP, it's message-oriented, not stream-oriented.
/// - Mix of reliable and unreliable messages
/// - Fragmentation and reassembly
/// - Supports connectivity over plain UDP
/// - Also supports SDR ("Steam Datagram Relay") connections, which are
/// addressed by the identity of the peer. There is a "P2P" use case and
/// a "hosted dedicated server" use case.
///
/// Note that neither of the terms "connection" nor "socket" necessarily correspond
/// one-to-one with an underlying UDP socket. An attempt has been made to
/// keep the semantics as similar to the standard socket model when appropriate,
/// but some deviations do exist.
///
/// See also: ISteamNetworkingMessages, the UDP-style interface. This API might be
/// easier to use, especially when porting existing UDP code.
class ISteamNetworkingSockets
{
public:
/// Creates a "server" socket that listens for clients to connect to by
/// calling ConnectByIPAddress, over ordinary UDP (IPv4 or IPv6)
///
/// You must select a specific local port to listen on and set it
/// the port field of the local address.
///
/// Usually you will set the IP portion of the address to zero (SteamNetworkingIPAddr::Clear()).
/// This means that you will not bind to any particular local interface (i.e. the same
/// as INADDR_ANY in plain socket code). Furthermore, if possible the socket will be bound
/// in "dual stack" mode, which means that it can accept both IPv4 and IPv6 client connections.
/// If you really do wish to bind a particular interface, then set the local address to the
/// appropriate IPv4 or IPv6 IP.
///
/// If you need to set any initial config options, pass them here. See
/// SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t for more about why this is preferable to
/// setting the options "immediately" after creation.
///
/// When a client attempts to connect, a SteamNetConnectionStatusChangedCallback_t
/// will be posted. The connection will be in the connecting state.
virtual HSteamListenSocket CreateListenSocketIP( const SteamNetworkingIPAddr &localAddress, int nOptions, const SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t *pOptions ) = 0;
/// Creates a connection and begins talking to a "server" over UDP at the
/// given IPv4 or IPv6 address. The remote host must be listening with a
/// matching call to CreateListenSocketIP on the specified port.
///
/// A SteamNetConnectionStatusChangedCallback_t callback will be triggered when we start
/// connecting, and then another one on either timeout or successful connection.
///
/// If the server does not have any identity configured, then their network address
/// will be the only identity in use. Or, the network host may provide a platform-specific
/// identity with or without a valid certificate to authenticate that identity. (These
/// details will be contained in the SteamNetConnectionStatusChangedCallback_t.) It's
/// up to your application to decide whether to allow the connection.
///
/// By default, all connections will get basic encryption sufficient to prevent
/// casual eavesdropping. But note that without certificates (or a shared secret
/// distributed through some other out-of-band mechanism), you don't have any
/// way of knowing who is actually on the other end, and thus are vulnerable to
/// man-in-the-middle attacks.
///
/// If you need to set any initial config options, pass them here. See
/// SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t for more about why this is preferable to
/// setting the options "immediately" after creation.
virtual HSteamNetConnection ConnectByIPAddress( const SteamNetworkingIPAddr &address, int nOptions, const SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t *pOptions ) = 0;
/// Like CreateListenSocketIP, but clients will connect using ConnectP2P.
///
/// nLocalVirtualPort specifies how clients can connect to this socket using
/// ConnectP2P. It's very common for applications to only have one listening socket;
/// in that case, use zero. If you need to open multiple listen sockets and have clients
/// be able to connect to one or the other, then nLocalVirtualPort should be a small
/// integer (<1000) unique to each listen socket you create.
///
/// If you use this, you probably want to call ISteamNetworkingUtils::InitRelayNetworkAccess()
/// when your app initializes.
///
/// If you are listening on a dedicated servers in known data center,
/// then you can listen using this function instead of CreateHostedDedicatedServerListenSocket,
/// to allow clients to connect without a ticket. Any user that owns
/// the app and is signed into Steam will be able to attempt to connect to
/// your server. Also, a connection attempt may require the client to
/// be connected to Steam, which is one more moving part that may fail. When
/// tickets are used, then once a ticket is obtained, a client can connect to
/// your server even if they got disconnected from Steam or Steam is offline.
///
/// If you need to set any initial config options, pass them here. See
/// SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t for more about why this is preferable to
/// setting the options "immediately" after creation.
virtual HSteamListenSocket CreateListenSocketP2P( int nLocalVirtualPort, int nOptions, const SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t *pOptions ) = 0;
/// Begin connecting to a peer that is identified using a platform-specific identifier.
/// This uses the default rendezvous service, which depends on the platform and library
/// configuration. (E.g. on Steam, it goes through the steam backend.)
///
/// If you need to set any initial config options, pass them here. See
/// SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t for more about why this is preferable to
/// setting the options "immediately" after creation.
///
/// To use your own signaling service, see:
/// - ConnectP2PCustomSignaling
/// - k_ESteamNetworkingConfig_Callback_CreateConnectionSignaling
virtual HSteamNetConnection ConnectP2P( const SteamNetworkingIdentity &identityRemote, int nRemoteVirtualPort, int nOptions, const SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t *pOptions ) = 0;
/// Accept an incoming connection that has been received on a listen socket.
///
/// When a connection attempt is received (perhaps after a few basic handshake
/// packets have been exchanged to prevent trivial spoofing), a connection interface
/// object is created in the k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_Connecting state
/// and a SteamNetConnectionStatusChangedCallback_t is posted. At this point, your
/// application MUST either accept or close the connection. (It may not ignore it.)
/// Accepting the connection will transition it either into the connected state,
/// or the finding route state, depending on the connection type.
///
/// You should take action within a second or two, because accepting the connection is
/// what actually sends the reply notifying the client that they are connected. If you
/// delay taking action, from the client's perspective it is the same as the network
/// being unresponsive, and the client may timeout the connection attempt. In other
/// words, the client cannot distinguish between a delay caused by network problems
/// and a delay caused by the application.
///
/// This means that if your application goes for more than a few seconds without
/// processing callbacks (for example, while loading a map), then there is a chance
/// that a client may attempt to connect in that interval and fail due to timeout.
///
/// If the application does not respond to the connection attempt in a timely manner,
/// and we stop receiving communication from the client, the connection attempt will
/// be timed out locally, transitioning the connection to the
/// k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_ProblemDetectedLocally state. The client may also
/// close the connection before it is accepted, and a transition to the
/// k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_ClosedByPeer is also possible depending the exact
/// sequence of events.
///
/// Returns k_EResultInvalidParam if the handle is invalid.
/// Returns k_EResultInvalidState if the connection is not in the appropriate state.
/// (Remember that the connection state could change in between the time that the
/// notification being posted to the queue and when it is received by the application.)
///
/// A note about connection configuration options. If you need to set any configuration
/// options that are common to all connections accepted through a particular listen
/// socket, consider setting the options on the listen socket, since such options are
/// inherited automatically. If you really do need to set options that are connection
/// specific, it is safe to set them on the connection before accepting the connection.
virtual EResult AcceptConnection( HSteamNetConnection hConn ) = 0;
/// Disconnects from the remote host and invalidates the connection handle.
/// Any unread data on the connection is discarded.
///
/// nReason is an application defined code that will be received on the other
/// end and recorded (when possible) in backend analytics. The value should
/// come from a restricted range. (See ESteamNetConnectionEnd.) If you don't need
/// to communicate any information to the remote host, and do not want analytics to
/// be able to distinguish "normal" connection terminations from "exceptional" ones,
/// You may pass zero, in which case the generic value of
/// k_ESteamNetConnectionEnd_App_Generic will be used.
///
/// pszDebug is an optional human-readable diagnostic string that will be received
/// by the remote host and recorded (when possible) in backend analytics.
///
/// If you wish to put the socket into a "linger" state, where an attempt is made to
/// flush any remaining sent data, use bEnableLinger=true. Otherwise reliable data
/// is not flushed.
///
/// If the connection has already ended and you are just freeing up the
/// connection interface, the reason code, debug string, and linger flag are
/// ignored.
virtual bool CloseConnection( HSteamNetConnection hPeer, int nReason, const char *pszDebug, bool bEnableLinger ) = 0;
/// Destroy a listen socket. All the connections that were accepting on the listen
/// socket are closed ungracefully.
virtual bool CloseListenSocket( HSteamListenSocket hSocket ) = 0;
/// Set connection user data. the data is returned in the following places
/// - You can query it using GetConnectionUserData.
/// - The SteamNetworkingmessage_t structure.
/// - The SteamNetConnectionInfo_t structure.
/// (Which is a member of SteamNetConnectionStatusChangedCallback_t -- but see WARNINGS below!!!!)
///
/// Do you need to set this atomically when the connection is created?
/// See k_ESteamNetworkingConfig_ConnectionUserData.
///
/// WARNING: Be *very careful* when using the value provided in callbacks structs.
/// Callbacks are queued, and the value that you will receive in your
/// callback is the userdata that was effective at the time the callback
/// was queued. There are subtle race conditions that can hapen if you
/// don't understand this!
///
/// If any incoming messages for this connection are queued, the userdata
/// field is updated, so that when when you receive messages (e.g. with
/// ReceiveMessagesOnConnection), they will always have the very latest
/// userdata. So the tricky race conditions that can happen with callbacks
/// do not apply to retrieving messages.
///
/// Returns false if the handle is invalid.
virtual bool SetConnectionUserData( HSteamNetConnection hPeer, int64 nUserData ) = 0;
/// Fetch connection user data. Returns -1 if handle is invalid
/// or if you haven't set any userdata on the connection.
virtual int64 GetConnectionUserData( HSteamNetConnection hPeer ) = 0;
/// Set a name for the connection, used mostly for debugging
virtual void SetConnectionName( HSteamNetConnection hPeer, const char *pszName ) = 0;
/// Fetch connection name. Returns false if handle is invalid
virtual bool GetConnectionName( HSteamNetConnection hPeer, char *pszName, int nMaxLen ) = 0;
/// Send a message to the remote host on the specified connection.
///
/// nSendFlags determines the delivery guarantees that will be provided,
/// when data should be buffered, etc. E.g. k_nSteamNetworkingSend_Unreliable
///
/// Note that the semantics we use for messages are not precisely
/// the same as the semantics of a standard "stream" socket.
/// (SOCK_STREAM) For an ordinary stream socket, the boundaries
/// between chunks are not considered relevant, and the sizes of
/// the chunks of data written will not necessarily match up to
/// the sizes of the chunks that are returned by the reads on
/// the other end. The remote host might read a partial chunk,
/// or chunks might be coalesced. For the message semantics
/// used here, however, the sizes WILL match. Each send call
/// will match a successful read call on the remote host
/// one-for-one. If you are porting existing stream-oriented
/// code to the semantics of reliable messages, your code should
/// work the same, since reliable message semantics are more
/// strict than stream semantics. The only caveat is related to
/// performance: there is per-message overhead to retain the
/// message sizes, and so if your code sends many small chunks
/// of data, performance will suffer. Any code based on stream
/// sockets that does not write excessively small chunks will
/// work without any changes.
///
/// The pOutMessageNumber is an optional pointer to receive the
/// message number assigned to the message, if sending was successful.
///
/// Returns:
/// - k_EResultInvalidParam: invalid connection handle, or the individual message is too big.
/// (See k_cbMaxSteamNetworkingSocketsMessageSizeSend)
/// - k_EResultInvalidState: connection is in an invalid state
/// - k_EResultNoConnection: connection has ended
/// - k_EResultIgnored: You used k_nSteamNetworkingSend_NoDelay, and the message was dropped because
/// we were not ready to send it.
/// - k_EResultLimitExceeded: there was already too much data queued to be sent.
/// (See k_ESteamNetworkingConfig_SendBufferSize)
virtual EResult SendMessageToConnection( HSteamNetConnection hConn, const void *pData, uint32 cbData, int nSendFlags, int64 *pOutMessageNumber ) = 0;
/// Send one or more messages without copying the message payload.
/// This is the most efficient way to send messages. To use this
/// function, you must first allocate a message object using
/// ISteamNetworkingUtils::AllocateMessage. (Do not declare one
/// on the stack or allocate your own.)
///
/// You should fill in the message payload. You can either let
/// it allocate the buffer for you and then fill in the payload,
/// or if you already have a buffer allocated, you can just point
/// m_pData at your buffer and set the callback to the appropriate function
/// to free it. Note that if you use your own buffer, it MUST remain valid
/// until the callback is executed. And also note that your callback can be
/// invoked at any time from any thread (perhaps even before SendMessages
/// returns!), so it MUST be fast and threadsafe.
///
/// You MUST also fill in:
/// - m_conn - the handle of the connection to send the message to
/// - m_nFlags - bitmask of k_nSteamNetworkingSend_xxx flags.
///
/// All other fields are currently reserved and should not be modified.
///
/// The library will take ownership of the message structures. They may
/// be modified or become invalid at any time, so you must not read them
/// after passing them to this function.
///
/// pOutMessageNumberOrResult is an optional array that will receive,
/// for each message, the message number that was assigned to the message
/// if sending was successful. If sending failed, then a negative EResult
/// value is placed into the array. For example, the array will hold
/// -k_EResultInvalidState if the connection was in an invalid state.
/// See ISteamNetworkingSockets::SendMessageToConnection for possible
/// failure codes.
virtual void SendMessages( int nMessages, SteamNetworkingMessage_t *const *pMessages, int64 *pOutMessageNumberOrResult ) = 0;
/// Flush any messages waiting on the Nagle timer and send them
/// at the next transmission opportunity (often that means right now).
///
/// If Nagle is enabled (it's on by default) then when calling
/// SendMessageToConnection the message will be buffered, up to the Nagle time
/// before being sent, to merge small messages into the same packet.
/// (See k_ESteamNetworkingConfig_NagleTime)
///
/// Returns:
/// k_EResultInvalidParam: invalid connection handle
/// k_EResultInvalidState: connection is in an invalid state
/// k_EResultNoConnection: connection has ended
/// k_EResultIgnored: We weren't (yet) connected, so this operation has no effect.
virtual EResult FlushMessagesOnConnection( HSteamNetConnection hConn ) = 0;
/// Fetch the next available message(s) from the connection, if any.
/// Returns the number of messages returned into your array, up to nMaxMessages.
/// If the connection handle is invalid, -1 is returned.
///
/// The order of the messages returned in the array is relevant.
/// Reliable messages will be received in the order they were sent (and with the
/// same sizes --- see SendMessageToConnection for on this subtle difference from a stream socket).
///
/// Unreliable messages may be dropped, or delivered out of order with respect to
/// each other or with respect to reliable messages. The same unreliable message
/// may be received multiple times.
///
/// If any messages are returned, you MUST call SteamNetworkingMessage_t::Release() on each
/// of them free up resources after you are done. It is safe to keep the object alive for
/// a little while (put it into some queue, etc), and you may call Release() from any thread.
virtual int ReceiveMessagesOnConnection( HSteamNetConnection hConn, SteamNetworkingMessage_t **ppOutMessages, int nMaxMessages ) = 0;
/// Returns basic information about the high-level state of the connection.
virtual bool GetConnectionInfo( HSteamNetConnection hConn, SteamNetConnectionInfo_t *pInfo ) = 0;
/// Returns a small set of information about the real-time state of the connection
/// Returns false if the connection handle is invalid, or the connection has ended.
virtual bool GetQuickConnectionStatus( HSteamNetConnection hConn, SteamNetworkingQuickConnectionStatus *pStats ) = 0;
/// Returns detailed connection stats in text format. Useful
/// for dumping to a log, etc.
///
/// Returns:
/// -1 failure (bad connection handle)
/// 0 OK, your buffer was filled in and '\0'-terminated
/// >0 Your buffer was either nullptr, or it was too small and the text got truncated.
/// Try again with a buffer of at least N bytes.
virtual int GetDetailedConnectionStatus( HSteamNetConnection hConn, char *pszBuf, int cbBuf ) = 0;
/// Returns local IP and port that a listen socket created using CreateListenSocketIP is bound to.
///
/// An IPv6 address of ::0 means "any IPv4 or IPv6"
/// An IPv6 address of ::ffff:0000:0000 means "any IPv4"
virtual bool GetListenSocketAddress( HSteamListenSocket hSocket, SteamNetworkingIPAddr *address ) = 0;
/// Create a pair of connections that are talking to each other, e.g. a loopback connection.
/// This is very useful for testing, or so that your client/server code can work the same
/// even when you are running a local "server".
///
/// The two connections will immediately be placed into the connected state, and no callbacks
/// will be posted immediately. After this, if you close either connection, the other connection
/// will receive a callback, exactly as if they were communicating over the network. You must
/// close *both* sides in order to fully clean up the resources!
///
/// By default, internal buffers are used, completely bypassing the network, the chopping up of
/// messages into packets, encryption, copying the payload, etc. This means that loopback
/// packets, by default, will not simulate lag or loss. Passing true for bUseNetworkLoopback will
/// cause the socket pair to send packets through the local network loopback device (127.0.0.1)
/// on ephemeral ports. Fake lag and loss are supported in this case, and CPU time is expended
/// to encrypt and decrypt.
///
/// If you wish to assign a specific identity to either connection, you may pass a particular
/// identity. Otherwise, if you pass nullptr, the respective connection will assume a generic
/// "localhost" identity. If you use real network loopback, this might be translated to the
/// actual bound loopback port. Otherwise, the port will be zero.
virtual bool CreateSocketPair( HSteamNetConnection *pOutConnection1, HSteamNetConnection *pOutConnection2, bool bUseNetworkLoopback, const SteamNetworkingIdentity *pIdentity1, const SteamNetworkingIdentity *pIdentity2 ) = 0;
/// Get the identity assigned to this interface.
/// E.g. on Steam, this is the user's SteamID, or for the gameserver interface, the SteamID assigned
/// to the gameserver. Returns false and sets the result to an invalid identity if we don't know
/// our identity yet. (E.g. GameServer has not logged in. On Steam, the user will know their SteamID
/// even if they are not signed into Steam.)
virtual bool GetIdentity( SteamNetworkingIdentity *pIdentity ) = 0;
/// Indicate our desire to be ready participate in authenticated communications.
/// If we are currently not ready, then steps will be taken to obtain the necessary
/// certificates. (This includes a certificate for us, as well as any CA certificates
/// needed to authenticate peers.)
///
/// You can call this at program init time if you know that you are going to
/// be making authenticated connections, so that we will be ready immediately when
/// those connections are attempted. (Note that essentially all connections require
/// authentication, with the exception of ordinary UDP connections with authentication
/// disabled using k_ESteamNetworkingConfig_IP_AllowWithoutAuth.) If you don't call
/// this function, we will wait until a feature is utilized that that necessitates
/// these resources.
///
/// You can also call this function to force a retry, if failure has occurred.
/// Once we make an attempt and fail, we will not automatically retry.
/// In this respect, the behavior of the system after trying and failing is the same
/// as before the first attempt: attempting authenticated communication or calling
/// this function will call the system to attempt to acquire the necessary resources.
///
/// You can use GetAuthenticationStatus or listen for SteamNetAuthenticationStatus_t
/// to monitor the status.
///
/// Returns the current value that would be returned from GetAuthenticationStatus.
virtual ESteamNetworkingAvailability InitAuthentication() = 0;
/// Query our readiness to participate in authenticated communications. A
/// SteamNetAuthenticationStatus_t callback is posted any time this status changes,
/// but you can use this function to query it at any time.
///
/// The value of SteamNetAuthenticationStatus_t::m_eAvail is returned. If you only
/// want this high level status, you can pass NULL for pDetails. If you want further
/// details, pass non-NULL to receive them.
virtual ESteamNetworkingAvailability GetAuthenticationStatus( SteamNetAuthenticationStatus_t *pDetails ) = 0;
//
// Poll groups. A poll group is a set of connections that can be polled efficiently.
// (In our API, to "poll" a connection means to retrieve all pending messages. We
// actually don't have an API to "poll" the connection *state*, like BSD sockets.)
//
/// Create a new poll group.
///
/// You should destroy the poll group when you are done using DestroyPollGroup
virtual HSteamNetPollGroup CreatePollGroup() = 0;
/// Destroy a poll group created with CreatePollGroup().
///
/// If there are any connections in the poll group, they are removed from the group,
/// and left in a state where they are not part of any poll group.
/// Returns false if passed an invalid poll group handle.
virtual bool DestroyPollGroup( HSteamNetPollGroup hPollGroup ) = 0;
/// Assign a connection to a poll group. Note that a connection may only belong to a
/// single poll group. Adding a connection to a poll group implicitly removes it from
/// any other poll group it is in.
///
/// You can pass k_HSteamNetPollGroup_Invalid to remove a connection from its current
/// poll group without adding it to a new poll group.
///
/// If there are received messages currently pending on the connection, an attempt
/// is made to add them to the queue of messages for the poll group in approximately
/// the order that would have applied if the connection was already part of the poll
/// group at the time that the messages were received.
///
/// Returns false if the connection handle is invalid, or if the poll group handle
/// is invalid (and not k_HSteamNetPollGroup_Invalid).
virtual bool SetConnectionPollGroup( HSteamNetConnection hConn, HSteamNetPollGroup hPollGroup ) = 0;
/// Same as ReceiveMessagesOnConnection, but will return the next messages available
/// on any connection in the poll group. Examine SteamNetworkingMessage_t::m_conn
/// to know which connection. (SteamNetworkingMessage_t::m_nConnUserData might also
/// be useful.)
///
/// Delivery order of messages among different connections will usually match the
/// order that the last packet was received which completed the message. But this
/// is not a strong guarantee, especially for packets received right as a connection
/// is being assigned to poll group.
///
/// Delivery order of messages on the same connection is well defined and the
/// same guarantees are present as mentioned in ReceiveMessagesOnConnection.
/// (But the messages are not grouped by connection, so they will not necessarily
/// appear consecutively in the list; they may be interleaved with messages for
/// other connections.)
virtual int ReceiveMessagesOnPollGroup( HSteamNetPollGroup hPollGroup, SteamNetworkingMessage_t **ppOutMessages, int nMaxMessages ) = 0;
//
// Clients connecting to dedicated servers hosted in a data center,
// using tickets issued by your game coordinator. If you are not
// issuing your own tickets to restrict who can attempt to connect
// to your server, then you won't use these functions.
//
/// Call this when you receive a ticket from your backend / matchmaking system. Puts the
/// ticket into a persistent cache, and optionally returns the parsed ticket.
///
/// See stamdatagram_ticketgen.h for more details.
virtual bool ReceivedRelayAuthTicket( const void *pvTicket, int cbTicket, SteamDatagramRelayAuthTicket *pOutParsedTicket ) = 0;
/// Search cache for a ticket to talk to the server on the specified virtual port.
/// If found, returns the number of seconds until the ticket expires, and optionally
/// the complete cracked ticket. Returns 0 if we don't have a ticket.
///
/// Typically this is useful just to confirm that you have a ticket, before you
/// call ConnectToHostedDedicatedServer to connect to the server.
virtual int FindRelayAuthTicketForServer( const SteamNetworkingIdentity &identityGameServer, int nRemoteVirtualPort, SteamDatagramRelayAuthTicket *pOutParsedTicket ) = 0;
/// Client call to connect to a server hosted in a Valve data center, on the specified virtual
/// port. You must have placed a ticket for this server into the cache, or else this connect
/// attempt will fail! If you are not issuing your own tickets, then to connect to a dedicated
/// server via SDR in auto-ticket mode, use ConnectP2P. (The server must be configured to allow
/// this type of connection by listening using CreateListenSocketP2P.)
///
/// You may wonder why tickets are stored in a cache, instead of simply being passed as an argument
/// here. The reason is to make reconnection to a gameserver robust, even if the client computer loses
/// connection to Steam or the central backend, or the app is restarted or crashes, etc.
///
/// If you use this, you probably want to call ISteamNetworkingUtils::InitRelayNetworkAccess()
/// when your app initializes
///
/// If you need to set any initial config options, pass them here. See
/// SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t for more about why this is preferable to
/// setting the options "immediately" after creation.
virtual HSteamNetConnection ConnectToHostedDedicatedServer( const SteamNetworkingIdentity &identityTarget, int nRemoteVirtualPort, int nOptions, const SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t *pOptions ) = 0;
//
// Servers hosted in data centers known to the Valve relay network
//
/// Returns the value of the SDR_LISTEN_PORT environment variable. This
/// is the UDP server your server will be listening on. This will
/// configured automatically for you in production environments.
///
/// In development, you'll need to set it yourself. See
/// https://partner.steamgames.com/doc/api/ISteamNetworkingSockets
/// for more information on how to configure dev environments.
virtual uint16 GetHostedDedicatedServerPort() = 0;
/// Returns 0 if SDR_LISTEN_PORT is not set. Otherwise, returns the data center the server
/// is running in. This will be k_SteamDatagramPOPID_dev in non-production environment.
virtual SteamNetworkingPOPID GetHostedDedicatedServerPOPID() = 0;
/// Return info about the hosted server. This contains the PoPID of the server,
/// and opaque routing information that can be used by the relays to send traffic
/// to your server.
///
/// You will need to send this information to your backend, and put it in tickets,
/// so that the relays will know how to forward traffic from
/// clients to your server. See SteamDatagramRelayAuthTicket for more info.
///
/// Also, note that the routing information is contained in SteamDatagramGameCoordinatorServerLogin,
/// so if possible, it's preferred to use GetGameCoordinatorServerLogin to send this info
/// to your game coordinator service, and also login securely at the same time.
///
/// On a successful exit, k_EResultOK is returned
///
/// Unsuccessful exit:
/// - Something other than k_EResultOK is returned.
/// - k_EResultInvalidState: We are not configured to listen for SDR (SDR_LISTEN_SOCKET
/// is not set.)
/// - k_EResultPending: we do not (yet) have the authentication information needed.
/// (See GetAuthenticationStatus.) If you use environment variables to pre-fetch
/// the network config, this data should always be available immediately.
/// - A non-localized diagnostic debug message will be placed in m_data that describes
/// the cause of the failure.
///
/// NOTE: The returned blob is not encrypted. Send it to your backend, but don't
/// directly share it with clients.
virtual EResult GetHostedDedicatedServerAddress( SteamDatagramHostedAddress *pRouting ) = 0;
/// Create a listen socket on the specified virtual port. The physical UDP port to use
/// will be determined by the SDR_LISTEN_PORT environment variable. If a UDP port is not
/// configured, this call will fail.
///
/// This call MUST be made through the SteamGameServerNetworkingSockets() interface.
///
/// This function should be used when you are using the ticket generator library
/// to issue your own tickets. Clients connecting to the server on this virtual
/// port will need a ticket, and they must connect using ConnectToHostedDedicatedServer.
///
/// If you need to set any initial config options, pass them here. See
/// SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t for more about why this is preferable to
/// setting the options "immediately" after creation.
virtual HSteamListenSocket CreateHostedDedicatedServerListenSocket( int nLocalVirtualPort, int nOptions, const SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t *pOptions ) = 0;
/// Generate an authentication blob that can be used to securely login with
/// your backend, using SteamDatagram_ParseHostedServerLogin. (See
/// steamdatagram_gamecoordinator.h)
///
/// Before calling the function:
/// - Populate the app data in pLoginInfo (m_cbAppData and m_appData). You can leave
/// all other fields uninitialized.
/// - *pcbSignedBlob contains the size of the buffer at pBlob. (It should be
/// at least k_cbMaxSteamDatagramGameCoordinatorServerLoginSerialized.)
///
/// On a successful exit:
/// - k_EResultOK is returned
/// - All of the remaining fields of pLoginInfo will be filled out.
/// - *pcbSignedBlob contains the size of the serialized blob that has been
/// placed into pBlob.
///
/// Unsuccessful exit:
/// - Something other than k_EResultOK is returned.
/// - k_EResultNotLoggedOn: you are not logged in (yet)
/// - See GetHostedDedicatedServerAddress for more potential failure return values.
/// - A non-localized diagnostic debug message will be placed in pBlob that describes
/// the cause of the failure.
///
/// This works by signing the contents of the SteamDatagramGameCoordinatorServerLogin
/// with the cert that is issued to this server. In dev environments, it's OK if you do
/// not have a cert. (You will need to enable insecure dev login in SteamDatagram_ParseHostedServerLogin.)
/// Otherwise, you will need a signed cert.
///
/// NOTE: The routing blob returned here is not encrypted. Send it to your backend
/// and don't share it directly with clients.
virtual EResult GetGameCoordinatorServerLogin( SteamDatagramGameCoordinatorServerLogin *pLoginInfo, int *pcbSignedBlob, void *pBlob ) = 0;
//
// Relayed connections using custom signaling protocol
//
// This is used if you have your own method of sending out-of-band
// signaling / rendezvous messages through a mutually trusted channel.
//
/// Create a P2P "client" connection that does signaling over a custom
/// rendezvous/signaling channel.
///
/// pSignaling points to a new object that you create just for this connection.
/// It must stay valid until Release() is called. Once you pass the
/// object to this function, it assumes ownership. Release() will be called
/// from within the function call if the call fails. Furthermore, until Release()
/// is called, you should be prepared for methods to be invoked on your
/// object from any thread! You need to make sure your object is threadsafe!
/// Furthermore, you should make sure that dispatching the methods is done
/// as quickly as possible.
///
/// This function will immediately construct a connection in the "connecting"
/// state. Soon after (perhaps before this function returns, perhaps in another thread),
/// the connection will begin sending signaling messages by calling
/// ISteamNetworkingConnectionSignaling::SendSignal.
///
/// When the remote peer accepts the connection (See
/// ISteamNetworkingSignalingRecvContext::OnConnectRequest),
/// it will begin sending signaling messages. When these messages are received,
/// you can pass them to the connection using ReceivedP2PCustomSignal.
///
/// If you know the identity of the peer that you expect to be on the other end,
/// you can pass their identity to improve debug output or just detect bugs.
/// If you don't know their identity yet, you can pass NULL, and their
/// identity will be established in the connection handshake.
///
/// If you use this, you probably want to call ISteamNetworkingUtils::InitRelayNetworkAccess()
/// when your app initializes
///
/// If you need to set any initial config options, pass them here. See
/// SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t for more about why this is preferable to
/// setting the options "immediately" after creation.
virtual HSteamNetConnection ConnectP2PCustomSignaling( ISteamNetworkingConnectionSignaling *pSignaling, const SteamNetworkingIdentity *pPeerIdentity, int nRemoteVirtualPort, int nOptions, const SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t *pOptions ) = 0;
/// Called when custom signaling has received a message. When your
/// signaling channel receives a message, it should save off whatever
/// routing information was in the envelope into the context object,
/// and then pass the payload to this function.
///
/// A few different things can happen next, depending on the message:
///
/// - If the signal is associated with existing connection, it is dealt
/// with immediately. If any replies need to be sent, they will be
/// dispatched using the ISteamNetworkingConnectionSignaling
/// associated with the connection.
/// - If the message represents a connection request (and the request
/// is not redundant for an existing connection), a new connection
/// will be created, and ReceivedConnectRequest will be called on your
/// context object to determine how to proceed.
/// - Otherwise, the message is for a connection that does not
/// exist (anymore). In this case, we *may* call SendRejectionReply
/// on your context object.
///
/// In any case, we will not save off pContext or access it after this
/// function returns.
///
/// Returns true if the message was parsed and dispatched without anything
/// unusual or suspicious happening. Returns false if there was some problem
/// with the message that prevented ordinary handling. (Debug output will
/// usually have more information.)
///
/// If you expect to be using relayed connections, then you probably want
/// to call ISteamNetworkingUtils::InitRelayNetworkAccess() when your app initializes
virtual bool ReceivedP2PCustomSignal( const void *pMsg, int cbMsg, ISteamNetworkingSignalingRecvContext *pContext ) = 0;
//
// Certificate provision by the application. On Steam, we normally handle all this automatically
// and you will not need to use these advanced functions.
//
/// Get blob that describes a certificate request. You can send this to your game coordinator.
/// Upon entry, *pcbBlob should contain the size of the buffer. On successful exit, it will
/// return the number of bytes that were populated. You can pass pBlob=NULL to query for the required
/// size. (512 bytes is a conservative estimate.)
///
/// Pass this blob to your game coordinator and call SteamDatagram_CreateCert.
virtual bool GetCertificateRequest( int *pcbBlob, void *pBlob, SteamNetworkingErrMsg &errMsg ) = 0;
/// Set the certificate. The certificate blob should be the output of
/// SteamDatagram_CreateCert.
virtual bool SetCertificate( const void *pCertificate, int cbCertificate, SteamNetworkingErrMsg &errMsg ) = 0;
/// Reset the identity associated with this instance.
/// Any open connections are closed. Any previous certificates, etc are discarded.
/// You can pass a specific identity that you want to use, or you can pass NULL,
/// in which case the identity will be invalid until you set it using SetCertificate
///
/// NOTE: This function is not actually supported on Steam! It is included
/// for use on other platforms where the active user can sign out and
/// a new user can sign in.
virtual void ResetIdentity( const SteamNetworkingIdentity *pIdentity ) = 0;
//
// Misc
//
/// Invoke all callback functions queued for this interface.
/// See k_ESteamNetworkingConfig_Callback_ConnectionStatusChanged, etc
///
/// You don't need to call this if you are using Steam's callback dispatch
/// mechanism (SteamAPI_RunCallbacks and SteamGameserver_RunCallbacks).
virtual void RunCallbacks() = 0;
//
// "FakeIP" system.
//
// A FakeIP is essentially a temporary, arbitrary identifier that
// happens to be a valid IPv4 address. The purpose of this system is to make it
// easy to integrate with existing code that identifies hosts using IPv4 addresses.
// The FakeIP address will never actually be used to send or receive any packets
// on the Internet, it is strictly an identifier.
//
// FakeIP addresses are designed to (hopefully) pass through existing code as
// transparently as possible, while conflicting with "real" addresses that might
// be in use on networks (both the Internet and LANs) in the same code as little
// as possible. At the time this comment is being written, they come from the
// 169.254.0.0/16 range, and the port number will always be >1024. HOWEVER,
// this is subject to change! Do not make assumptions about these addresses,
// or your code might break in the future. In particular, you should use
// functions such as ISteamNetworkingUtils::IsFakeIP to determine if an IP
// address is a "fake" one used by this system.
//
/// Begin asynchronous process of allocating a fake IPv4 address that other
/// peers can use to contact us via P2P. IP addresses returned by this
/// function are globally unique for a given appid.
///
/// nNumPorts is the numbers of ports you wish to reserve. This is useful
/// for the same reason that listening on multiple UDP ports is useful for
/// different types of traffic. Because these allocations come from a global
/// namespace, there is a relatively strict limit on the maximum number of
/// ports you may request. (At the time of this writing, the limit is 4.)
/// The Port assignments are *not* guaranteed to have any particular order
/// or relationship! Do *not* assume they are contiguous, even though that
/// may often occur in practice.
///
/// Returns false if a request was already in progress, true if a new request
/// was started. A SteamNetworkingFakeIP_t will be posted when the request
/// completes.
///
/// You can call this before you are logged in. For gameservers, doing so is
/// *required*, and all places where your public IP appears (such as the server
/// browser) will be replaced by the FakeIP, and the fake port at index 0.
/// A failure will not be posted (using SteamNetworkingFakeIP_t) unless we get
/// logged in, and then the request fails. Furthermore, it is assumed that
/// FakeIP allocation is essential for your application to function, and so
/// failure will not be reported until *several* retries have been attempted,
/// possibly lasting several minutes. It is highly recommended to treat failure
/// as fatal.
///
/// To communicate using a connection-oriented (TCP-style) API:
/// - Server creates a listen socket using CreateListenSocketP2PFakeIP
/// - Client connects using ConnectByIPAddress, passing in the FakeIP address.
/// - The connection will behave mostly like a P2P connection. The identities
/// that appear in SteamNetConnectionInfo_t will be the FakeIP identity until
/// we know the real identity. Then it will be the real identity. If the
/// SteamNetConnectionInfo_t::m_addrRemote is valid, it will be a real IPv4
/// address of a NAT-punched connection. Otherwise, it will not be valid.
///
/// To communicate using an ad-hoc sendto/recv from (UDP-style) API:
/// - ISteamNetworkingMessages::SendMessageToFakeIP
/// FIXME - more coming soon
virtual bool BeginAsyncRequestFakeIP( int nNumPorts ) = 0;
/// Return info about the FakeIP and port(s) that we have been assigned,
/// if any. idxFirstPort is currently reserved and must be zero.
/// Make sure and check SteamNetworkingFakeIPResult_t::m_eResult
virtual void GetFakeIP( int idxFirstPort, SteamNetworkingFakeIPResult_t *pInfo ) = 0;
/// Create a listen socket that will listen for P2P connections sent
/// to our FakeIP. A peer can initiate connections to this listen
/// socket by calling ConnectByIPAddress.
///
/// idxFakePort refers to the *index* of the fake port requested,
/// not the actual port number. For example, pass 0 to refer to the
/// first port in the reservation. You must call this only after calling
/// BeginAsyncRequestFakeIP. However, you do not need to wait for the
/// request to complete before creating the listen socket.
virtual HSteamListenSocket CreateListenSocketP2PFakeIP( int idxFakePort, int nOptions, const SteamNetworkingConfigValue_t *pOptions ) = 0;
/// If the connection was initiated using the "FakeIP" system, then we
/// we can get an IP address for the remote host. If the remote host had
/// a global FakeIP at the time the connection was established, this
/// function will return that global IP. Otherwise, a FakeIP that is
/// unique locally will be allocated from the local FakeIP address space,
/// and that will be returned.
///
/// The allocation of local FakeIPs attempts to assign addresses in
/// a consistent manner. If multiple connections are made to the
/// same remote host, they *probably* will return the same FakeIP.
/// However, since the namespace is limited, this cannot be guaranteed.
///
/// On failure, returns:
/// - k_EResultInvalidParam: invalid connection handle
/// - k_EResultIPNotFound: This connection wasn't made using FakeIP system
virtual EResult GetRemoteFakeIPForConnection( HSteamNetConnection hConn, SteamNetworkingIPAddr *pOutAddr ) = 0;
protected:
~ISteamNetworkingSockets(); // Silence some warnings
};
#define STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_INTERFACE_VERSION "SteamNetworkingSockets011"
// Global accessors
// Using standalone lib
#ifdef STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_STANDALONELIB
// Standalone lib.
static_assert( STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_INTERFACE_VERSION[24] == '1', "Version mismatch" );
STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_INTERFACE ISteamNetworkingSockets *SteamNetworkingSockets_LibV11();
inline ISteamNetworkingSockets *SteamNetworkingSockets_Lib() { return SteamNetworkingSockets_LibV11(); }
// If running in context of steam, we also define a gameserver instance.
#ifdef STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_STEAM
STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_INTERFACE ISteamNetworkingSockets *SteamGameServerNetworkingSockets_LibV11();
inline ISteamNetworkingSockets *SteamGameServerNetworkingSockets_Lib() { return SteamGameServerNetworkingSockets_LibV11(); }
#endif
#ifndef STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_STEAMAPI
inline ISteamNetworkingSockets *SteamNetworkingSockets() { return SteamNetworkingSockets_LibV11(); }
#ifdef STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_STEAM
inline ISteamNetworkingSockets *SteamGameServerNetworkingSockets() { return SteamGameServerNetworkingSockets_LibV11(); }
#endif
#endif
#endif
// Using Steamworks SDK
#ifdef STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_STEAMAPI
// Steamworks SDK
STEAM_DEFINE_USER_INTERFACE_ACCESSOR( ISteamNetworkingSockets *, SteamNetworkingSockets_SteamAPI, STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_INTERFACE_VERSION );
STEAM_DEFINE_GAMESERVER_INTERFACE_ACCESSOR( ISteamNetworkingSockets *, SteamGameServerNetworkingSockets_SteamAPI, STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_INTERFACE_VERSION );
#ifndef STEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS_STANDALONELIB
inline ISteamNetworkingSockets *SteamNetworkingSockets() { return SteamNetworkingSockets_SteamAPI(); }
inline ISteamNetworkingSockets *SteamGameServerNetworkingSockets() { return SteamGameServerNetworkingSockets_SteamAPI(); }
#endif
#endif
/// Callback struct used to notify when a connection has changed state
#if defined( VALVE_CALLBACK_PACK_SMALL )
#pragma pack( push, 4 )
#elif defined( VALVE_CALLBACK_PACK_LARGE )
#pragma pack( push, 8 )
#else
#error "Must define VALVE_CALLBACK_PACK_SMALL or VALVE_CALLBACK_PACK_LARGE"
#endif
/// This callback is posted whenever a connection is created, destroyed, or changes state.
/// The m_info field will contain a complete description of the connection at the time the
/// change occurred and the callback was posted. In particular, m_eState will have the
/// new connection state.
///
/// You will usually need to listen for this callback to know when:
/// - A new connection arrives on a listen socket.
/// m_info.m_hListenSocket will be set, m_eOldState = k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_None,
/// and m_info.m_eState = k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_Connecting.
/// See ISteamNetworkigSockets::AcceptConnection.
/// - A connection you initiated has been accepted by the remote host.
/// m_eOldState = k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_Connecting, and
/// m_info.m_eState = k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_Connected.
/// Some connections might transition to k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_FindingRoute first.
/// - A connection has been actively rejected or closed by the remote host.
/// m_eOldState = k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_Connecting or k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_Connected,
/// and m_info.m_eState = k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_ClosedByPeer. m_info.m_eEndReason
/// and m_info.m_szEndDebug will have for more details.
/// NOTE: upon receiving this callback, you must still destroy the connection using
/// ISteamNetworkingSockets::CloseConnection to free up local resources. (The details
/// passed to the function are not used in this case, since the connection is already closed.)
/// - A problem was detected with the connection, and it has been closed by the local host.
/// The most common failure is timeout, but other configuration or authentication failures
/// can cause this. m_eOldState = k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_Connecting or
/// k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_Connected, and m_info.m_eState = k_ESteamNetworkingConnectionState_ProblemDetectedLocally.
/// m_info.m_eEndReason and m_info.m_szEndDebug will have for more details.
/// NOTE: upon receiving this callback, you must still destroy the connection using
/// ISteamNetworkingSockets::CloseConnection to free up local resources. (The details
/// passed to the function are not used in this case, since the connection is already closed.)
///
/// Remember that callbacks are posted to a queue, and networking connections can
/// change at any time. It is possible that the connection has already changed
/// state by the time you process this callback.
///
/// Also note that callbacks will be posted when connections are created and destroyed by your own API calls.
struct SteamNetConnectionStatusChangedCallback_t
{
enum { k_iCallback = k_iSteamNetworkingSocketsCallbacks + 1 };
/// Connection handle
HSteamNetConnection m_hConn;
/// Full connection info
SteamNetConnectionInfo_t m_info;
/// Previous state. (Current state is in m_info.m_eState)
ESteamNetworkingConnectionState m_eOldState;
};
/// A struct used to describe our readiness to participate in authenticated,
/// encrypted communication. In order to do this we need:
///
/// - The list of trusted CA certificates that might be relevant for this
/// app.
/// - A valid certificate issued by a CA.
///
/// This callback is posted whenever the state of our readiness changes.
struct SteamNetAuthenticationStatus_t
{
enum { k_iCallback = k_iSteamNetworkingSocketsCallbacks + 2 };
/// Status
ESteamNetworkingAvailability m_eAvail;
/// Non-localized English language status. For diagnostic/debugging
/// purposes only.
char m_debugMsg[ 256 ];
};
/// A struct used to describe a "fake IP" we have been assigned to
/// use as an identifier. This callback is posted when
/// ISteamNetworkingStatus::BeginAsyncRequestFakeIP completes.
/// See also ISteamNetworkingSockets::GetFakeIP
struct SteamNetworkingFakeIPResult_t
{
enum { k_iCallback = k_iSteamNetworkingSocketsCallbacks + 3 };
/// Status/result of the allocation request. Possible failure values are:
/// - k_EResultBusy - you called GetFakeIP but the request has not completed.
/// - k_EResultInvalidParam - you called GetFakeIP with an invalid port index
/// - k_EResultLimitExceeded - You asked for too many ports, or made an
/// additional request after one had already succeeded
/// - k_EResultNoMatch - GetFakeIP was called, but no request has been made
///
/// Note that, with the exception of k_EResultBusy (if you are polling),
/// it is highly recommended to treat all failures as fatal.
EResult m_eResult;
/// Local identity of the ISteamNetworkingSockets object that made
/// this request and is assigned the IP. This is needed in the callback
/// in the case where there are multiple ISteamNetworkingSockets objects.
/// (E.g. one for the user, and another for the local gameserver).
SteamNetworkingIdentity m_identity;
/// Fake IPv4 IP address that we have been assigned. NOTE: this
/// IP address is not exclusively ours! Steam tries to avoid sharing
/// IP addresses, but this may not always be possible. The IP address
/// may be currently in use by another host, but with different port(s).
/// The exact same IP:port address may have been used previously.
/// Steam tries to avoid reusing ports until they have not been in use for
/// some time, but this may not always be possible.
uint32 m_unIP;
/// Port number(s) assigned to us. Only the first entries will contain
/// nonzero values. Entries corresponding to ports beyond what was
/// allocated for you will be zero.
///
/// (NOTE: At the time of this writing, the maximum number of ports you may
/// request is 4.)
enum { k_nMaxReturnPorts = 8 };
uint16 m_unPorts[k_nMaxReturnPorts];
};
#pragma pack( pop )
#endif // ISTEAMNETWORKINGSOCKETS