1) Ruleset parser uses a global variable for anchor stack.
2) When processing a wildcard anchor, matching anchors are marked.
To fix the first one:
o Allocate anchor processing stack on stack. To make this allocation
as small as possible, following measures taken:
- Maximum stack size reduced from 64 to 32.
- The struct pf_anchor_stackframe trimmed by one pointer - parent.
We can always obtain the parent via the rule pointer.
- When pf_test_rule() calls pf_get_translation(), the former lends
its stack to the latter, to avoid recursive allocation 32 entries.
The second one appeared more tricky. The code, that marks anchors was
added in OpenBSD rev. 1.516 of pf.c. According to commit log, the idea
is to enable the "quick" keyword on an anchor rule. The feature isn't
documented anywhere. The most obscure part of the 1.516 was that code
examines the "match" mark on a just processed child, which couldn't be
put here by current frame. Since this wasn't documented even in the
commit message and functionality of this is not clear to me, I decided
to drop this examination for now. The rest of 1.516 is redone in a
thread safe manner - the mark isn't put on the anchor itself, but on
current stack frame. To avoid growing stack frame, we utilize LSB
from the rule pointer, relying on kernel malloc(9) returning pointer
aligned addresses.
Discussed with: dhartmei
reside, and move there ipfw(4) and pf(4).
o Move most modified parts of pf out of contrib.
Actual movements:
sys/contrib/pf/net/*.c -> sys/netpfil/pf/
sys/contrib/pf/net/*.h -> sys/net/
contrib/pf/pfctl/*.c -> sbin/pfctl
contrib/pf/pfctl/*.h -> sbin/pfctl
contrib/pf/pfctl/pfctl.8 -> sbin/pfctl
contrib/pf/pfctl/*.4 -> share/man/man4
contrib/pf/pfctl/*.5 -> share/man/man5
sys/netinet/ipfw -> sys/netpfil/ipfw
The arguable movement is pf/net/*.h -> sys/net. There are
future plans to refactor pf includes, so I decided not to
break things twice.
Not modified bits of pf left in contrib: authpf, ftp-proxy,
tftp-proxy, pflogd.
The ipfw(4) movement is planned to be merged to stable/9,
to make head and stable match.
Discussed with: bz, luigi