enough into the mbuf data area. Solve this problem once and for all
by pulling up the entire (standard) header for TCP and UDP, and four
bytes of header for ICMP (enough for type, code and cksum fields).
the IP_FW_IF_IPID rule. (We have recently decided to keep the
ip_id field in network byte order inside the kernel, see revision
1.140 of src/sys/netinet/ip_input.c).
I did not like to have the conversion happen in userland, and I
think that the similar conversions for fw_tcp(seq|ack|win) should
be moved out of userland (src/sbin/ipfw/ipfw.c) into the kernel.
in favor of the new-style per-vif socket.
this does not affect the behavior of the ISI rsvpd but allows
another rsvp implementation (e.g., KOM rsvp) to take advantage
of the new style for particular sockets while using the old style
for others.
in the future, rsvp supporn should be replaced by more generic
router-alert support.
PR: kern/20984
Submitted by: Martin Karsten <Martin.Karsten@KOM.tu-darmstadt.de>
Reviewed by: kjc
but have a network interrupt arrive and deactivate the timeout before
the callout routine runs. Check for this case in the callout routine;
it should only run if the callout is active and not on the wheel.
It causes a panic when/if snd_una is incremented elsewhere (this
is a conservative change, because originally no rollback occurred
for any packets at all).
Submitted by: Vivek Sadananda Pai <vivek@imimic.com>
Update copyrights.
Introduce a new sysctl node:
net.inet.accf
Although acceptfilters need refcounting to be properly (safely) unloaded
as a temporary hack allow them to be unloaded if the sysctl
net.inet.accf.unloadable is set, this is really for developers who want
to work on thier own filters.
A near complete re-write of the accf_http filter:
1) Parse check if the request is HTTP/1.0 or HTTP/1.1 if not dump
to the application.
Because of the performance implications of this there is a sysctl
'net.inet.accf.http.parsehttpversion' that when set to non-zero
parses the HTTP version.
The default is to parse the version.
2) Check if a socket has filled and dump to the listener
3) optimize the way that mbuf boundries are handled using some voodoo
4) even though you'd expect accept filters to only be used on TCP
connections that don't use m_nextpkt I've fixed the accept filter
for socket connections that use this.
This rewrite of accf_http should allow someone to use them and maintain
full HTTP compliance as long as net.inet.accf.http.parsehttpversion is
set.
for them does not belong in the IP_FW_F_COMMAND switch, that mask doesn't even
apply to them(!).
2. You cannot add a uid/gid rule to something that isn't TCP, UDP, or IP.
XXX - this should be handled in ipfw(8) as well (for more diagnostic output),
but this at least protects bogus rules from being added.
Pointy hat: green
datagram embedded into ICMP error message, not with protocol
field of ICMP message itself (which is always IPPROTO_ICMP).
Pointed by: Erik Salander <erik@whistle.com>
fields between host and network byte order. The details:
o icmp_error() now does not add IP header length. This fixes the problem
when icmp_error() is called from ip_forward(). In this case the ip_len
of the original IP datagram returned with ICMP error was wrong.
o icmp_error() expects all three fields, ip_len, ip_id and ip_off in host
byte order, so DTRT and convert these fields back to network byte order
before sending a message. This fixes the problem described in PR 16240
and PR 20877 (ip_id field was returned in host byte order).
o ip_ttl decrement operation in ip_forward() was moved down to make sure
that it does not corrupt the copy of original IP datagram passed later
to icmp_error().
o A copy of original IP datagram in ip_forward() was made a read-write,
independent copy. This fixes the problem I first reported to Garrett
Wollman and Bill Fenner and later put in audit trail of PR 16240:
ip_output() (not always) converts fields of original datagram to network
byte order, but because copy (mcopy) and its original (m) most likely
share the same mbuf cluster, ip_output()'s manipulations on original
also corrupted the copy.
o ip_output() now expects all three fields, ip_len, ip_off and (what is
significant) ip_id in host byte order. It was a headache for years that
ip_id was handled differently. The only compatibility issue here is the
raw IP socket interface with IP_HDRINCL socket option set and a non-zero
ip_id field, but ip.4 manual page was unclear on whether in this case
ip_id field should be in host or network byte order.
not alias `ip_src' unless it comes from the host an original
datagram that triggered this error message was destined for.
PR: 20712
Reviewed by: brian, Charles Mott <cmott@scientech.com>
When this happens, we know for sure that the packet data was not
received by the peer. Therefore, back out any advancing of the
transmit sequence number so that we send the same data the next
time we transmit a packet, avoiding a guaranteed missed packet and
its resulting TCP transmit slowdown.
In most systems ip_output() probably never returns an error, and
so this problem is never seen. However, it is more likely to occur
with device drivers having short output queues (causing ENOBUFS to
be returned when they are full), not to mention low memory situations.
Moreover, because of this problem writers of slow devices were
required to make an unfortunate choice between (a) having a relatively
short output queue (with low latency but low TCP bandwidth because
of this problem) or (b) a long output queue (with high latency and
high TCP bandwidth). In my particular application (ISDN) it took
an output queue equal to ~5 seconds of transmission to avoid ENOBUFS.
A more reasonable output queue of 0.5 seconds resulted in only about
50% TCP throughput. With this patch full throughput was restored in
the latter case.
Reviewed by: freebsd-net
delete the cloned route that is associated with the connection.
This does not exhaust the routing table memory when the system
is under a SYN flood attack. The route entry is not deleted if there
is any prior information cached in it.
Reviewed by: Peter Wemm,asmodai
reply if the requesting machine isn't on the interface we believe
it should be. Prevents arp wars when you plug cables in the wrong
way around.
PR: 9848
Submitted by: Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
Not objected to by: wollman
- Multiple PPTP clients behind NAT to the same or different servers.
- Single PPTP server behind NAT -- you just need to redirect TCP
port 1723 to a local machine. Multiple servers behind NAT is
possible but would require a simple API change.
- No API changes!
For more information on how this works see comments at the start of
the alias_pptp.c.
PacketAliasPptp() is no longer necessary and will be removed soon.
Submitted by: Erik Salander <erik@whistle.com>
Reviewed by: ru
Rewritten by: ru
Reviewed by: Erik Salander <erik@whistle.com>
accept filters are now loadable as well as able to be compiled into
the kernel.
two accept filters are provided, one that returns sockets when data
arrives the other when an http request is completed (doesn't work
with 0.9 requests)
Reviewed by: jmg
It does mean that it is now possible to run passive-mode FTP
server behind NAT.
- SECURITY: FTP aliasing engine now ensures that:
o the segment preceding a PORT/227 segment terminates with a \r\n;
o the IP address in the PORT/227 matches the source IP address of
the packet;
o the port number in the PORT command or 277 reply is greater than
or equal to 1024.
Submitted by: Erik Salander <erik@whistle.com>
Reviewed by: ru
It also squashes 99% of packet kiddie synflood orgies. For example, to
rate syn packets without MSS,
ipfw pipe 10 config 56Kbit/s queue 10Packets
ipfw add pipe 10 tcp from any to any in setup tcpoptions !mss
Submitted by: Richard A. Steenbergen <ras@e-gerbil.net>
a mbuf, it may return without setting any timers. If no more data is
scheduled to be transmitted (this was a FIN) the system will sit in
LAST_ACK state forever.
Thus, when mbuf allocation fails, set the retransmit timer if neither
the retransmit or persist timer is already pending.
Problem discovered by: Mike Silbersack (silby@silby.com)
Pushed for a fix by: Bosko Milekic <bmilekic@dsuper.net>
Reviewed by: jayanth
down as a result of a reset. Returning EINVAL in that case makes no
sense at all and just confuses people as to what happened. It could be
argued that we should save the original address somewhere so that
getsockname() etc can tell us what it used to be so we know where the
problem connection attempts are coming from.
integer expression. Otherwise the sizeof() call will force the expression
to be evaluated as unsigned, which is not the intended behavior.
Obtained from: NetBSD (in a different form)
code retransmitting data from the wrong offset.
As a footnote, the newreno code was partially derived from NetBSD
and Tom Henderson <tomh@cs.berkeley.edu>
of the individual drivers and into the common routine ether_input().
Also, remove the (incomplete) hack for matching ethernet headers
in the ip_fw code.
The good news: net result of 1016 lines removed, and this should make
bridging now work with *all* Ethernet drivers.
The bad news: it's nearly impossible to test every driver, especially
for bridging, and I was unable to get much testing help on the mailing
lists.
Reviewed by: freebsd-net
better recovery for multiple packet losses in a single window.
The algorithm can be toggled via the sysctl net.inet.tcp.newreno,
which defaults to "on".
Submitted by: Jayanth Vijayaraghavan <jayanth@yahoo-inc.com>
calling in_pcbbind so that in_pcbbind sees a valid address if no
address was specified (since divert sockets ignore them).
PR: 17552
Reviewed by: Brian
to PPTP) with more generic PacketAliasRedirectProto().
Major number is not bumped because it is believed that noone
has started using PacketAliasRedirectPptp() yet.
LSNAT links are first created by either PacketAliasRedirectPort() or
PacketAliasRedirectAddress() and then set up by one or more calls to
PacketAliasAddServer().
Without this fix, all IPv6 TCP RST packet has wrong cksum value,
so IPv6 connect() trial to 5.0 machine won't fail until tcp connect timeout,
when they should fail soon.
Thanks to haro@tk.kubota.co.jp (Munehiro Matsuda) for his much debugging
help and detailed info.
connections, after SYN packets were seen from both ends. Before this,
it would get applied right after the first SYN packet was seen (either
from client or server). With broken TCP connection attempts, when the
remote end does not respond with SYNACK nor with RST, this resulted in
having a useless (ie, no actual TCP connection associated with it) TCP
link with 86400 seconds TTL, wasting system memory. With high rate of
such broken connection attempts (for example, remote end simply blocks
these connection attempts with ipfw(8) without sending RST back), this
could result in a denial-of-service.
PR: bin/17963
but with `dst_port' work for outgoing packets.
This case was not handled properly when I first fixed this
in revision 1.17.
This change is also required for the upcoming improved PPTP
support patches -- that is how I found the problem.
Before this change:
# natd -v -a aliasIP \
-redirect_port tcp localIP:localPORT publicIP:publicPORT 0:remotePORT
Out [TCP] [TCP] localIP:localPORT -> remoteIP:remotePORT aliased to
[TCP] aliasIP:localPORT -> remoteIP:remotePORT
After this change:
# natd -v -a aliasIP \
-redirect_port tcp localIP:localPORT publicIP:publicPORT 0:remotePORT
Out [TCP] [TCP] localIP:localPORT -> remoteIP:remotePORT aliased to
[TCP] publicIP:publicPORT -> remoteIP:remotePORT
INADDR_NONE: Incoming packets go to the alias address (the default)
INADDR_ANY: Incoming packets are not NAT'd (direct access to the
internal network from outside)
anything else: Incoming packets go to the specified address
Change a few inaddr::s_addr == 0 to inaddr::s_addr == INADDR_ANY
while I'm there.
redirected and when no target address has been specified, NAT
the destination address to the alias address rather than
allowing people direct access to your internal network from
outside.
mbuf is marked for delayed checksums, then additionally mark the
packet as having it's checksums computed. This allows us to bypass
computing/checking the checksum entirely, which isn't really needeed
as the packet has never hit the wire.
Reviewed by: green
Reported in Usenet by: locke@mcs.net (Peter Johnson)
While i was at it, prepended a 0x to the %D output, to make it clear that
the printed value is in hex (i assume %D has been chosen over %#x to
obey network byte order).
improperly doing the equivalent of (m = (function() == NULL)) instead
of ((m = function()) == NULL).
This fixes a NULL pointer dereference panic with runt arp packets.
Remove a bogus (redundant, just weird, etc.) key_freeso(so).
There are no consumers of it now, nor does it seem there
ever will be.
in6?_pcb.c:
Add an if (inp->in6?p_sp != NULL) before the call to
ipsec[46]_delete_pcbpolicy(inp). In low-memory conditions
this can cause a crash because in6?_sp can be NULL...
from iso88025.h.
o Add minimal llc support to iso88025_input.
o Clean up most of the source routing code.
* Submitted by: Nikolai Saoukh <nms@otdel-1.org>
Now most big problem of IPv6 is getting IPv6 address
assignment.
6to4 solve the problem. 6to4 addr is defined like below,
2002: 4byte v4 addr : 2byte SLA ID : 8byte interface ID
The most important point of the address format is that an IPv4 addr
is embeded in it. So any user who has IPv4 addr can get IPv6 address
block with 2byte subnet space. Also, the IPv4 addr is used for
semi-automatic IPv6 over IPv4 tunneling.
With 6to4, getting IPv6 addr become dramatically easy.
The attached patch enable 6to4 extension, and confirmed to work,
between "Richard Seaman, Jr." <dick@tar.com> and me.
Approved by: jkh
Reviewed by: itojun
ARP packets. This can incorrectly reject complete frames since the frame
could be stored in more than one mbuf.
The following patches fix the length comparisson, and add several
diagnostic log messages to the interrupt handler for out-of-the-norm ARP
packets. This should make ARP problems easier to detect, diagnose and
fix.
Submitted by: C. Stephen Gunn <csg@waterspout.com>
Approved by: jkh
Reviewed by: rwatson
Without this, kernel will panic at getsockopt() of IPSEC_POLICY.
Also make compilable libipsec/test-policy.c which tries getsockopt() of
IPSEC_POLICY.
Approved by: jkh
Submitted by: sakane@kame.net
KAME put INET6 related stuff into sys/netinet6 dir, but IPv6
standard API(RFC2553) require following files to be under sys/netinet.
netinet/ip6.h
netinet/icmp6.h
Now those header files just include each following files.
netinet6/ip6.h
netinet6/icmp6.h
Also KAME has netinet6/in6.h for easy INET6 common defs
sharing between different BSDs, but RFC2553 requires only
netinet/in.h should be included from userland.
So netinet/in.h also includes netinet6/in6.h inside.
To keep apps portability, apps should not directly include
above files from netinet6 dir.
Ideally, all contents of,
netinet6/ip6.h
netinet6/icmp6.h
netinet6/in6.h
should be moved into
netinet/ip6.h
netinet/icmp6.h
netinet/in.h
but to avoid big changes in this stage, add some hack, that
-Put some special macro define into those files under neitnet
-Let files under netinet6 cause error if it is included
from some apps, and, if the specifal macro define is not
defined.
(which should have been defined if files under netinet is
included)
-And let them print an error message which tells the
correct name of the include file to be included.
Also fix apps which includes invalid header files.
Approved by: jkh
Obtained from: KAME project
at the same time.
When rfc1323 and rfc1644 option are enabled by sysctl,
and tcp over IPv6 is tried, kernel panic happens by the
following check in tcp_output(), because now hdrlen is bigger
in such case than before.
/*#ifdef DIAGNOSTIC*/
if (max_linkhdr + hdrlen > MHLEN)
panic("tcphdr too big");
/*#endif*/
So change the above check to compare with MCLBYTES in #ifdef INET6 case.
Also, allocate a mbuf cluster for the header mbuf, in that case.
Bug reported at KAME environment.
Approved by: jkh
Reviewed by: sumikawa
Obtained from: KAME project
This is fix to usr.sbin/trpt and tcp_debug.[ch]
I think of putting this after 4.0 but,,,
-There was bug that when INET6 is defined,
IPv4 socket is not traced by trpt.
-I received request from a person who distribute a program
which use tcp_debug interface and print performance statistics,
that
-leave comptibility with old program as much as possible
-use same interface with other OSes
So, I talked with itojun, and synced API with netbsd IPv6 extension.
makeworld check, kernel build check(includes GENERIC) is done.
But if there happen to any problem, please let me know and
I soon backout this change.
o Drop all broadcast and multicast source addresses in tcp_input.
o Enable ICMP_BANDLIM in GENERIC.
o Change default to 200/s from 100/s. This will still stop the attack, but
is conservative enough to do this close to code freeze.
This is not the optimal patch for the problem, but is likely the least
intrusive patch that can be made for this.
Obtained from: Don Lewis and Matt Dillon.
Reviewed by: freebsd-security
for IPv4 communication.(IPv4 mapped IPv6 addr.)
Also removed IPv6 hoplimit initialization because it is alway done at
tcp_output.
Confirmed by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely5.cicely.de>
include this in all kernels. Declare some const *intrq_present
variables that can be checked by a module prior to using *intrq
to queue data.
Make the if_tun module capable of processing atm, ip, ip6, ipx,
natm and netatalk packets when TUNSIFHEAD is ioctl()d on.
Review not required by: freebsd-hackers
-opt_ipsec.h was missing on some tcp files (sorry for basic mistake)
-made buildable as above fix
-also added some missing IPv4 mapped IPv6 addr consideration into
ipsec4_getpolicybysock
This must be one of the reason why connections over IPsec hangs for
bigger packets.(which was reported on freebsd-current@freebsd.org)
But there still seems to be another bug and the problem is not yet fixed.
is very likely to become consensus as recent ietf/ipng mailing list
discussion. Also recent KAME repository and other KAME patched BSDs
also applied it.
s/__ss_family/ss_family/
s/__ss_len/ss_len/
Makeworld is confirmed, and no application should be affected by this change
yet.
now you can dynamically create rate-limited queues for different
flows using masks on dst/src IP, port and protocols.
Read the ipfw(8) manpage for details and examples.
Restructure the internals of the traffic shaper to use heaps,
so that it manages efficiently large number of queues.
Fix a bug which was present in the previous versions which could
cause, under certain unfrequent conditions, to send out very large
bursts of traffic.
All in all, this new code is much cleaner than the previous one and
should also perform better.
Work supported by Akamba Corp.
is an application space macro and the applications are supposed to be free
to use it as they please (but cannot). This is consistant with the other
BSD's who made this change quite some time ago. More commits to come.
desperation measure in low-memory situations), walk the tcpbs and
flush the reassembly queues.
This behaviour is currently controlled by the debug.do_tcpdrain sysctl
(defaults to on).
Submitted by: Bosko Milekic <bmilekic@dsuper.net>
Reviewed by: wollman
pr_input() routines prototype is also changed to support IPSEC and IPV6
chained protocol headers.
Reviewed by: freebsd-arch, cvs-committers
Obtained from: KAME project
to print out protocol specific pcb info.
A patch submitted by guido@gvr.org, and asmodai@wxs.nl also reported
the problem.
Thanks and sorry for your troubles.
Submitted by: guido@gvr.org
Reviewed by: shin
packet divert at kernel for IPv6/IPv4 translater daemon
This includes queue related patch submitted by jburkhol@home.com.
Submitted by: queue related patch from jburkhol@home.com
Reviewed by: freebsd-arch, cvs-committers
Obtained from: KAME project