Commit Graph

190 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Julien Charbon
cea40c4888 Fix a race condition in TCP timewait between tcp_tw_2msl_reuse() and
tcp_tw_2msl_scan().  This race condition drives unplanned timewait
timeout cancellation.  Also simplify implementation by holding inpcb
reference and removing tcptw reference counting.

Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D826
Submitted by:		Marc De la Gueronniere <mdelagueronniere@verisign.com>
Submitted by:		jch
Reviewed By:		jhb (mentor), adrian, rwatson
Sponsored by:		Verisign, Inc.
MFC after:		2 weeks
X-MFC-With:		r264321
2014-10-30 08:53:56 +00:00
Hans Petter Selasky
f0188618f2 Fix multiple incorrect SYSCTL arguments in the kernel:
- Wrong integer type was specified.

- Wrong or missing "access" specifier. The "access" specifier
sometimes included the SYSCTL type, which it should not, except for
procedural SYSCTL nodes.

- Logical OR where binary OR was expected.

- Properly assert the "access" argument passed to all SYSCTL macros,
using the CTASSERT macro. This applies to both static- and dynamically
created SYSCTLs.

- Properly assert the the data type for both static and dynamic
SYSCTLs. In the case of static SYSCTLs we only assert that the data
pointed to by the SYSCTL data pointer has the correct size, hence
there is no easy way to assert types in the C language outside a
C-function.

- Rewrote some code which doesn't pass a constant "access" specifier
when creating dynamic SYSCTL nodes, which is now a requirement.

- Updated "EXAMPLES" section in SYSCTL manual page.

MFC after:	3 days
Sponsored by:	Mellanox Technologies
2014-10-21 07:31:21 +00:00
Sean Bruno
882ac53ed7 Handle small file case with regards to plpmtud blackhole detection.
Submitted by:	Mikhail <mp@lenta.ru>
MFC after:	2 weeks
Relnotes:	yes
2014-10-13 21:06:21 +00:00
Sean Bruno
f6f6703f27 Implement PLPMTUD blackhole detection (RFC 4821), inspired by code
from xnu sources.  If we encounter a network where ICMP is blocked
the Needs Frag indicator may not propagate back to us.  Attempt to
downshift the mss once to a preconfigured value.

Default this feature to off for now while we do not have a full PLPMTUD
implementation in our stack.

Adds the following new sysctl's for control:
net.inet.tcp.pmtud_blackhole_detection -- turns on/off this feature
net.inet.tcp.pmtud_blackhole_mss       -- mss to try for ipv4
net.inet.tcp.v6pmtud_blackhole_mss     -- mss to try for ipv6

Adds the following new sysctl's for monitoring:
-- Number of times the code was activated to attempt a mss downshift
net.inet.tcp.pmtud_blackhole_activated
-- Number of times the blackhole mss was used in an attempt to downshift
net.inet.tcp.pmtud_blackhole_min_activated
-- Number of times that we failed to connect after we downshifted the mss
net.inet.tcp.pmtud_blackhole_failed

Phabricator:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D506
Reviewed by:	rpaulo bz
MFC after:	2 weeks
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	Limelight Networks
2014-10-07 21:50:28 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
8f7e75cbbd If we're doing RSS then ensure the TCP timer selection uses the multi-CPU
callwheel setup, rather than just dumping all the timers on swi0.
2014-06-30 04:26:29 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
883831c675 When RSS is enabled and per cpu TCP timers are enabled, do an RSS
lookup for the inp flowid/flowtype to destination CPU.

This only modifies the case where RSS is enabled and the per-cpu tcp
timer option is enabled.  Otherwise the behaviour should be the same
as before.
2014-05-18 22:39:01 +00:00
John Baldwin
66eefb1eae Currently, the TCP slow timer can starve TCP input processing while it
walks the list of connections in TIME_WAIT closing expired connections
due to contention on the global TCP pcbinfo lock.

To remediate, introduce a new global lock to protect the list of
connections in TIME_WAIT.  Only acquire the TCP pcbinfo lock when
closing an expired connection.  This limits the window of time when
TCP input processing is stopped to the amount of time needed to close
a single connection.

Submitted by:	Julien Charbon <jcharbon@verisign.com>
Reviewed by:	rwatson, rrs, adrian
MFC after:	2 months
2014-04-10 18:15:35 +00:00
Davide Italiano
5b999a6be0 - Make callout(9) tickless, relying on eventtimers(4) as backend for
precise time event generation. This greatly improves granularity of
callouts which are not anymore constrained to wait next tick to be
scheduled.
- Extend the callout KPI introducing a set of callout_reset_sbt* functions,
which take a sbintime_t as timeout argument. The new KPI also offers a
way for consumers to specify precision tolerance they allow, so that
callout can coalesce events and reduce number of interrupts as well as
potentially avoid scheduling a SWI thread.
- Introduce support for dispatching callouts directly from hardware
interrupt context, specifying an additional flag. This feature should be
used carefully, as long as interrupt context has some limitations
(e.g. no sleeping locks can be held).
- Enhance mechanisms to gather informations about callwheel, introducing
a new sysctl to obtain stats.

This change breaks the KBI. struct callout fields has been changed, in
particular 'int ticks' (4 bytes) has been replaced with 'sbintime_t'
(8 bytes) and another 'sbintime_t' field was added for precision.

Together with:	mav
Reviewed by:	attilio, bde, luigi, phk
Sponsored by:	Google Summer of Code 2012, iXsystems inc.
Tested by:	flo (amd64, sparc64), marius (sparc64), ian (arm),
		markj (amd64), mav, Fabian Keil
2013-03-04 11:09:56 +00:00
John Baldwin
6c0ef8957f Don't drop options from the third retransmitted SYN by default. If the
SYNs (or SYN/ACK replies) are dropped due to network congestion, then the
remote end of the connection may act as if options such as window scaling
are enabled but the local end will think they are not.  This can result in
very slow data transfers in the case of window scaling disagreements.

The old behavior can be obtained by setting the
net.inet.tcp.rexmit_drop_options sysctl to a non-zero value.

Reviewed by:	net@
MFC after:	2 weeks
2013-01-09 20:27:06 +00:00
Navdeep Parhar
825fd1e437 Make sure that tcp_timer_activate() correctly sees TCP_OFFLOAD (or not). 2012-11-27 06:42:44 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
322181c98e If the user has closed the socket then drop a persisting connection
after a much reduced timeout.

Typically web servers close their sockets quickly under the assumption
that the TCP connections goes away as well.  That is not entirely true
however.  If the peer closed the window we're going to wait for a long
time with lots of data in the send buffer.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2012-10-28 19:58:20 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
77339e1cdc Update comment to reflect the change made in r242263.
MFC after:	2 weeks
2012-10-28 19:22:18 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
c4ab59c1a1 Add SACK_PERMIT to the list of TCP options that are switched off after
retransmitting a SYN three times.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2012-10-28 19:20:23 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
f4748ef5fb When retransmitting SYN in TCPS_SYN_SENT state use TCPTV_RTOBASE,
the default retransmit timeout, as base to calculate the backoff
time until next try instead of the TCP_REXMTVAL() macro which only
works correctly when we already have measured an actual RTT+RTTVAR.

Before it would cause the first retransmit at RTOBASE, the next
four at the same time (!) about 200ms later, and then another one
again RTOBASE later.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2012-10-28 18:56:57 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
602e8e45ee Remove bogus 'else' in #ifdef that prevented the rttvar from being reset
tcp_timer_rexmt() on retransmit for IPv6 sessions.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2012-10-28 18:45:04 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
cf8f04f4c0 When SYN or SYN/ACK had to be retransmitted RFC5681 requires us to
reduce the initial CWND to one segment.  This reduction got lost
some time ago due to a change in initialization ordering.

Additionally in tcp_timer_rexmt() avoid entering fast recovery when
we're still in TCPS_SYN_SENT state.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2012-10-28 17:25:08 +00:00
Mikolaj Golub
655f934b78 In tcp timers, check INP_DROPPED flag a little later, after
callout_deactivate(), so if INP_DROPPED is set we return with the
timer active flag cleared.

For me this fixes negative keep timer values reported by `netstat -x'
for connections in CLOSE state.

Approved by:	net (silence)
MFC after:	2 weeks
2012-08-05 17:30:17 +00:00
Navdeep Parhar
09fe63205c - Updated TOE support in the kernel.
- Stateful TCP offload drivers for Terminator 3 and 4 (T3 and T4) ASICs.
  These are available as t3_tom and t4_tom modules that augment cxgb(4)
  and cxgbe(4) respectively.  The cxgb/cxgbe drivers continue to work as
  usual with or without these extra features.

- iWARP driver for Terminator 3 ASIC (kernel verbs).  T4 iWARP in the
  works and will follow soon.

Build-tested with make universe.

30s overview
============
What interfaces support TCP offload?  Look for TOE4 and/or TOE6 in the
capabilities of an interface:
# ifconfig -m | grep TOE

Enable/disable TCP offload on an interface (just like any other ifnet
capability):
# ifconfig cxgbe0 toe
# ifconfig cxgbe0 -toe

Which connections are offloaded?  Look for toe4 and/or toe6 in the
output of netstat and sockstat:
# netstat -np tcp | grep toe
# sockstat -46c | grep toe

Reviewed by:	bz, gnn
Sponsored by:	Chelsio communications.
MFC after:	~3 months (after 9.1, and after ensuring MFC is feasible)
2012-06-19 07:34:13 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
9077f38738 Add new socket options: TCP_KEEPINIT, TCP_KEEPIDLE, TCP_KEEPINTVL and
TCP_KEEPCNT, that allow to control initial timeout, idle time, idle
re-send interval and idle send count on a per-socket basis.

Reviewed by:	andre, bz, lstewart
2012-02-05 16:53:02 +00:00
Navdeep Parhar
aa4b09c5c7 Make sure the inp wasn't dropped when rexmt let go of the inp and
pcbinfo locks.

Reviewed by:	andre@
MFC after:	7 days
2011-10-12 19:52:23 +00:00
Robert Watson
fa046d8774 Decompose the current single inpcbinfo lock into two locks:
- The existing ipi_lock continues to protect the global inpcb list and
  inpcb counter.  This lock is now relegated to a small number of
  allocation and free operations, and occasional operations that walk
  all connections (including, awkwardly, certain UDP multicast receive
  operations -- something to revisit).

- A new ipi_hash_lock protects the two inpcbinfo hash tables for
  looking up connections and bound sockets, manipulated using new
  INP_HASH_*() macros.  This lock, combined with inpcb locks, protects
  the 4-tuple address space.

Unlike the current ipi_lock, ipi_hash_lock follows the individual inpcb
connection locks, so may be acquired while manipulating a connection on
which a lock is already held, avoiding the need to acquire the inpcbinfo
lock preemptively when a binding change might later be required.  As a
result, however, lookup operations necessarily go through a reference
acquire while holding the lookup lock, later acquiring an inpcb lock --
if required.

A new function in_pcblookup() looks up connections, and accepts flags
indicating how to return the inpcb.  Due to lock order changes, callers
no longer need acquire locks before performing a lookup: the lookup
routine will acquire the ipi_hash_lock as needed.  In the future, it will
also be able to use alternative lookup and locking strategies
transparently to callers, such as pcbgroup lookup.  New lookup flags are,
supplementing the existing INPLOOKUP_WILDCARD flag:

  INPLOOKUP_RLOCKPCB - Acquire a read lock on the returned inpcb
  INPLOOKUP_WLOCKPCB - Acquire a write lock on the returned inpcb

Callers must pass exactly one of these flags (for the time being).

Some notes:

- All protocols are updated to work within the new regime; especially,
  TCP, UDPv4, and UDPv6.  pcbinfo ipi_lock acquisitions are largely
  eliminated, and global hash lock hold times are dramatically reduced
  compared to previous locking.
- The TCP syncache still relies on the pcbinfo lock, something that we
  may want to revisit.
- Support for reverting to the FreeBSD 7.x locking strategy in TCP input
  is no longer available -- hash lookup locks are now held only very
  briefly during inpcb lookup, rather than for potentially extended
  periods.  However, the pcbinfo ipi_lock will still be acquired if a
  connection state might change such that a connection is added or
  removed.
- Raw IP sockets continue to use the pcbinfo ipi_lock for protection,
  due to maintaining their own hash tables.
- The interface in6_pcblookup_hash_locked() is maintained, which allows
  callers to acquire hash locks and perform one or more lookups atomically
  with 4-tuple allocation: this is required only for TCPv6, as there is no
  in6_pcbconnect_setup(), which there should be.
- UDPv6 locking remains significantly more conservative than UDPv4
  locking, which relates to source address selection.  This needs
  attention, as it likely significantly reduces parallelism in this code
  for multithreaded socket use (such as in BIND).
- In the UDPv4 and UDPv6 multicast cases, we need to revisit locking
  somewhat, as they relied on ipi_lock to stablise 4-tuple matches, which
  is no longer sufficient.  A second check once the inpcb lock is held
  should do the trick, keeping the general case from requiring the inpcb
  lock for every inpcb visited.
- This work reminds us that we need to revisit locking of the v4/v6 flags,
  which may be accessed lock-free both before and after this change.
- Right now, a single lock name is used for the pcbhash lock -- this is
  undesirable, and probably another argument is required to take care of
  this (or a char array name field in the pcbinfo?).

This is not an MFC candidate for 8.x due to its impact on lookup and
locking semantics.  It's possible some of these issues could be worked
around with compatibility wrappers, if necessary.

Reviewed by:    bz
Sponsored by:   Juniper Networks, Inc.
2011-05-30 09:43:55 +00:00
John Baldwin
672dc4aea2 TCP reuses t_rxtshift to determine the backoff timer used for both the
persist state and the retransmit timer.  However, the code that implements
"bad retransmit recovery" only checks t_rxtshift to see if an ACK has been
received in during the first retransmit timeout window.  As a result, if
ticks has wrapped over to a negative value and a socket is in the persist
state, it can incorrectly treat an ACK from the remote peer as a
"bad retransmit recovery" and restore saved values such as snd_ssthresh and
snd_cwnd.  However, if the socket has never had a retransmit timeout, then
these saved values will be zero, so snd_ssthresh and snd_cwnd will be set
to 0.

If the socket is in fast recovery (this can be caused by excessive
duplicate ACKs such as those fixed by 220794), then each ACK that arrives
triggers either NewReno or SACK partial ACK handling which clamps snd_cwnd
to be no larger than snd_ssthresh.  In effect, the socket's send window
is permamently stuck at 0 even though the remote peer is advertising a
much larger window and pending data is only sent via TCP window probes
(so one byte every few seconds).

Fix this by adding a new TCP pcb flag (TF_PREVVALID) that indicates that
the various snd_*_prev fields in the pcb are valid and only perform
"bad retransmit recovery" if this flag is set in the pcb.  The flag is set
on the first retransmit timeout that occurs and is cleared on subsequent
retransmit timeouts or when entering the persist state.

Reviewed by:	bz
MFC after:	2 weeks
2011-04-29 15:40:12 +00:00
John Baldwin
79e955ed63 Trim extra spaces before tabs. 2011-01-07 21:40:34 +00:00
John Baldwin
b5224580a4 Fix a typo in a comment.
MFC after:	1 week
2010-12-21 19:30:24 +00:00
Lawrence Stewart
b5af1b88a5 Pass NULL instead of 0 for the th pointer value. NULL != 0 on all platforms.
Submitted by:	David Hayes <dahayes at swin edu au>
MFC after:	9 weeks
X-MFC with:	r215166
2010-12-02 00:47:55 +00:00
Lawrence Stewart
dbc4240942 This commit marks the first formal contribution of the "Five New TCP Congestion
Control Algorithms for FreeBSD" FreeBSD Foundation funded project. More details
about the project are available at: http://caia.swin.edu.au/freebsd/5cc/

- Add a KPI and supporting infrastructure to allow modular congestion control
  algorithms to be used in the net stack. Algorithms can maintain per-connection
  state if required, and connections maintain their own algorithm pointer, which
  allows different connections to concurrently use different algorithms. The
  TCP_CONGESTION socket option can be used with getsockopt()/setsockopt() to
  programmatically query or change the congestion control algorithm respectively
  from within an application at runtime.

- Integrate the framework with the TCP stack in as least intrusive a manner as
  possible. Care was also taken to develop the framework in a way that should
  allow integration with other congestion aware transport protocols (e.g. SCTP)
  in the future. The hope is that we will one day be able to share a single set
  of congestion control algorithm modules between all congestion aware transport
  protocols.

- Introduce a new congestion recovery (TF_CONGRECOVERY) state into the TCP stack
  and use it to decouple the meaning of recovery from a congestion event and
  recovery from packet loss (TF_FASTRECOVERY) a la RFC2581. ECN and delay based
  congestion control protocols don't generally need to recover from packet loss
  and need a different way to note a congestion recovery episode within the
  stack.

- Remove the net.inet.tcp.newreno sysctl, which simplifies some portions of code
  and ensures the stack always uses the appropriate mechanisms for recovering
  from packet loss during a congestion recovery episode.

- Extract the NewReno congestion control algorithm from the TCP stack and
  massage it into module form. NewReno is always built into the kernel and will
  remain the default algorithm for the forseeable future. Implementations of
  additional different algorithms will become available in the near future.

- Bump __FreeBSD_version to 900025 and note in UPDATING that rebuilding code
  that relies on the size of "struct tcpcb" is required.

Many thanks go to the Cisco University Research Program Fund at Community
Foundation Silicon Valley and the FreeBSD Foundation. Their support of our work
at the Centre for Advanced Internet Architectures, Swinburne University of
Technology is greatly appreciated.

In collaboration with:	David Hayes <dahayes at swin edu au> and
			Grenville Armitage <garmitage at swin edu au>
Sponsored by:	Cisco URP, FreeBSD Foundation
Reviewed by:	rpaulo
Tested by:	David Hayes (and many others over the years)
MFC after:	3 months
2010-11-12 06:41:55 +00:00
Kip Macy
87aedea449 - spread tcp timer callout load evenly across cpus if net.inet.tcp.per_cpu_timers is set to 1
- don't default to acquiring tcbinfo lock exclusively in rexmt

MFC after:	7 days
2010-03-20 19:47:30 +00:00
Robert Watson
1f821c53f0 Locking the tcbinfo structure should not be necessary in tcp_timer_delack(),
so don't.

MFC after:      1 week
Reviewed by:    bz
Sponsored by:   Juniper Networks
2010-03-07 14:23:44 +00:00
Mike Silbersack
b8614722ff Add the ability to see TCP timers via netstat -x. This can be a useful
feature when you have a seemingly stuck socket and want to figure
out why it has not been closed yet.

No plans to MFC this, as it changes the netstat sysctl ABI.

Reviewed by:	andre, rwatson, Eric Van Gyzen
2009-09-16 05:33:15 +00:00
Robert Watson
530c006014 Merge the remainder of kern_vimage.c and vimage.h into vnet.c and
vnet.h, we now use jails (rather than vimages) as the abstraction
for virtualization management, and what remained was specific to
virtual network stacks.  Minor cleanups are done in the process,
and comments updated to reflect these changes.

Reviewed by:	bz
Approved by:	re (vimage blanket)
2009-08-01 19:26:27 +00:00
Robert Watson
5ee847d3ac Reimplement and/or implement vnet list locking by replacing a mostly
unused custom mutex/condvar-based sleep locks with two locks: an
rwlock (for non-sleeping use) and sxlock (for sleeping use).  Either
acquired for read is sufficient to stabilize the vnet list, but both
must be acquired for write to modify the list.

Replace previous no-op read locking macros, used in various places
in the stack, with actual locking to prevent race conditions.  Callers
must declare when they may perform unbounded sleeps or not when
selecting how to lock.

Refactor vnet sysinits so that the vnet list and locks are initialized
before kernel modules are linked, as the kernel linker will use them
for modules loaded by the boot loader.

Update various consumers of these KPIs based on whether they may sleep
or not.

Reviewed by:	bz
Approved by:	re (kib)
2009-07-19 14:20:53 +00:00
Robert Watson
eddfbb763d Build on Jeff Roberson's linker-set based dynamic per-CPU allocator
(DPCPU), as suggested by Peter Wemm, and implement a new per-virtual
network stack memory allocator.  Modify vnet to use the allocator
instead of monolithic global container structures (vinet, ...).  This
change solves many binary compatibility problems associated with
VIMAGE, and restores ELF symbols for virtualized global variables.

Each virtualized global variable exists as a "reference copy", and also
once per virtual network stack.  Virtualized global variables are
tagged at compile-time, placing the in a special linker set, which is
loaded into a contiguous region of kernel memory.  Virtualized global
variables in the base kernel are linked as normal, but those in modules
are copied and relocated to a reserved portion of the kernel's vnet
region with the help of a the kernel linker.

Virtualized global variables exist in per-vnet memory set up when the
network stack instance is created, and are initialized statically from
the reference copy.  Run-time access occurs via an accessor macro, which
converts from the current vnet and requested symbol to a per-vnet
address.  When "options VIMAGE" is not compiled into the kernel, normal
global ELF symbols will be used instead and indirection is avoided.

This change restores static initialization for network stack global
variables, restores support for non-global symbols and types, eliminates
the need for many subsystem constructors, eliminates large per-subsystem
structures that caused many binary compatibility issues both for
monitoring applications (netstat) and kernel modules, removes the
per-function INIT_VNET_*() macros throughout the stack, eliminates the
need for vnet_symmap ksym(2) munging, and eliminates duplicate
definitions of virtualized globals under VIMAGE_GLOBALS.

Bump __FreeBSD_version and update UPDATING.

Portions submitted by:  bz
Reviewed by:            bz, zec
Discussed with:         gnn, jamie, jeff, jhb, julian, sam
Suggested by:           peter
Approved by:            re (kensmith)
2009-07-14 22:48:30 +00:00
John Baldwin
6b0c5521b5 Trim extra sets of ()'s.
Requested by:	bde
2009-06-16 19:00:48 +00:00
Robert Watson
78b5071407 Update stats in struct tcpstat using two new macros, TCPSTAT_ADD() and
TCPSTAT_INC(), rather than directly manipulating the fields across the
kernel.  This will make it easier to change the implementation of
these statistics, such as using per-CPU versions of the data structures.

MFC after:	3 days
2009-04-11 22:07:19 +00:00
Robert Watson
ad71fe3c35 Correct a number of evolved problems with inp_vflag and inp_flags:
certain flags that should have been in inp_flags ended up in inp_vflag,
meaning that they were inconsistently locked, and in one case,
interpreted.  Move the following flags from inp_vflag to gaps in the
inp_flags space (and clean up the inp_flags constants to make gaps
more obvious to future takers):

  INP_TIMEWAIT
  INP_SOCKREF
  INP_ONESBCAST
  INP_DROPPED

Some aspects of this change have no effect on kernel ABI at all, as these
are UDP/TCP/IP-internal uses; however, netstat and sockstat detect
INP_TIMEWAIT when listing TCP sockets, so any MFC will need to take this
into account.

MFC after:      1 week (or after dependencies are MFC'd)
Reviewed by:    bz
2009-03-15 09:58:31 +00:00
Lawrence Stewart
24cb0f2232 Add TCP Appropriate Byte Counting (RFC 3465) support to kernel.
The new behaviour is on by default, and can be disabled by setting the
net.inet.tcp.rfc3465 sysctl to 0 to obtain previous behaviour.

The patch changes struct tcpcb in sys/netinet/tcp_var.h which breaks
the ABI. Bump __FreeBSD_version to 800061 accordingly. User space tools
that rely on the size of struct tcpcb (e.g. sockstat) need to be recompiled.

Reviewed by:	rpaulo, gnn
Approved by:	gnn, kmacy (mentors)
Sponsored by:	FreeBSD Foundation
2009-01-15 06:44:22 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
4b79449e2f Rather than using hidden includes (with cicular dependencies),
directly include only the header files needed. This reduces the
unneeded spamming of various headers into lots of files.

For now, this leaves us with very few modules including vnet.h
and thus needing to depend on opt_route.h.

Reviewed by:	brooks, gnn, des, zec, imp
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2008-12-02 21:37:28 +00:00
Marko Zec
8b615593fc Step 1.5 of importing the network stack virtualization infrastructure
from the vimage project, as per plan established at devsummit 08/08:
http://wiki.freebsd.org/Image/Notes200808DevSummit

Introduce INIT_VNET_*() initializer macros, VNET_FOREACH() iterator
macros, and CURVNET_SET() context setting macros, all currently
resolving to NOPs.

Prepare for virtualization of selected SYSCTL objects by introducing a
family of SYSCTL_V_*() macros, currently resolving to their global
counterparts, i.e. SYSCTL_V_INT() == SYSCTL_INT().

Move selected #defines from sys/sys/vimage.h to newly introduced header
files specific to virtualized subsystems (sys/net/vnet.h,
sys/netinet/vinet.h etc.).

All the changes are verified to have zero functional impact at this
point in time by doing MD5 comparision between pre- and post-change
object files(*).

(*) netipsec/keysock.c did not validate depending on compile time options.

Implemented by:	julian, bz, brooks, zec
Reviewed by:	julian, bz, brooks, kris, rwatson, ...
Approved by:	julian (mentor)
Obtained from:	//depot/projects/vimage-commit2/...
X-MFC after:	never
Sponsored by:	NLnet Foundation, The FreeBSD Foundation
2008-10-02 15:37:58 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
603724d3ab Commit step 1 of the vimage project, (network stack)
virtualization work done by Marko Zec (zec@).

This is the first in a series of commits over the course
of the next few weeks.

Mark all uses of global variables to be virtualized
with a V_ prefix.
Use macros to map them back to their global names for
now, so this is a NOP change only.

We hope to have caught at least 85-90% of what is needed
so we do not invalidate a lot of outstanding patches again.

Obtained from:	//depot/projects/vimage-commit2/...
Reviewed by:	brooks, des, ed, mav, julian,
		jamie, kris, rwatson, zec, ...
		(various people I forgot, different versions)
		md5 (with a bit of help)
Sponsored by:	NLnet Foundation, The FreeBSD Foundation
X-MFC after:	never
V_Commit_Message_Reviewed_By:	more people than the patch
2008-08-17 23:27:27 +00:00
Tom Rhodes
41698ebf5b Document a few sysctls.
Reviewed by:	rwatson
2008-07-20 15:29:58 +00:00
Robert Watson
53640b0e3a When allocating temporary storage to hold a TCP/IP packet header
template, use an M_TEMP malloc(9) allocation rather than an mbuf
with mtod(9) and dtom(9).  This eliminates the last use of
dtom(9) in TCP.

MFC after:	3 weeks
2008-06-02 14:20:26 +00:00
Robert Watson
8501a69cc9 Convert pcbinfo and inpcb mutexes to rwlocks, and modify macros to
explicitly select write locking for all use of the inpcb mutex.
Update some pcbinfo lock assertions to assert locked rather than
write-locked, although in practice almost all uses of the pcbinfo
rwlock main exclusive, and all instances of inpcb lock acquisition
are exclusive.

This change should introduce (ideally) little functional change.
However, it lays the groundwork for significantly increased
parallelism in the TCP/IP code.

MFC after:	3 months
Tested by:	kris (superset of committered patch)
2008-04-17 21:38:18 +00:00
Mike Silbersack
4b421e2daa Add FBSDID to all files in netinet so that people can more
easily include file version information in bug reports.

Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-10-07 20:44:24 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
586b4a0e50 Revert rev. 1.94. After recent tcp backouts, tcp_close() may return NULL.
Check the return value of tcp_close() being NULL before dereferencing it
in #ifdef TCPDEBUG block.

Reviewed by:	rwatson
Approved by:	re (gnn)
2007-09-24 14:46:27 +00:00
Mike Silbersack
e2f2059f68 Two changes:
- Reintegrate the ANSI C function declaration change
  from tcp_timer.c rev 1.92

- Reorganize the tcpcb structure so that it has a single
  pointer to the "tcp_timer" structure which contains all
  of the tcp timer callouts.  This change means that when
  the single tcp timer change is reintegrated, tcpcb will
  not change in size, and therefore the ABI between
  netstat and the kernel will not change.

Neither of these changes should have any functional
impact.

Reviewed by: bmah, rrs
Approved by: re (bmah)
2007-09-24 05:26:24 +00:00
Robert Watson
85d9437250 Back out tcp_timer.c:1.93 and associated changes that reimplemented the many
TCP timers as a single timer, but retain the API changes necessary to
reintroduce this change.  This will back out the source of at least two
reported problems: lock leaks in certain timer edge cases, and TCP timers
continuing to fire after a connection has closed (a bug previously fixed and
then reintroduced with the timer rewrite).

In a follow-up commit, some minor restylings and comment changes performed
after the TCP timer rewrite will be reapplied, and a further change to allow
the TCP timer rewrite to be added back without disturbing the ABI.  The new
design is believed to be a good thing, but the outstanding issues are
leading to significant stability/correctness problems that are holding
up 7.0.

This patch was generated by silby, but is being committed by proxy due to
poor network connectivity for silby this week.

Approved by:	re (kensmith)
Submitted by:	silby
Tested by:	rwatson, kris
Problems reported by:	peter, kris, others
2007-09-07 09:19:22 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
f58747375d Handle a race condition on >2 core machines in tcp_timer() when
a timer issues a shutdown and a simultaneous close on the socket
happens.  This race condition is inherent in the current socket/
inpcb life cycle system but can be handled well.

Reported by:	kris
Tested by:	kris (on 8-core machine)
2007-06-09 17:49:39 +00:00
Robert Watson
c214db75f2 In tcp_timer_2msl(), tp can never become NULL, so don't check it for
NULL before entering tcp_trace().

Found with:	Coverity Prevent(tm)
CID:		1840
2007-05-27 17:52:02 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
2104448fe7 Move TIME_WAIT related functions and timer handling from files
other than repo copied tcp_subr.c into tcp_timewait.c#1.284:

 tcp_input.c#1.350 tcp_timewait() -> tcp_twcheck()

 tcp_timer.c#1.92 tcp_timer_2msl_reset() -> tcp_tw_2msl_reset()
 tcp_timer.c#1.92 tcp_timer_2msl_stop() -> tcp_tw_2msl_stop()
 tcp_timer.c#1.92 tcp_timer_2msl_tw() -> tcp_tw_2msl_scan()

This is a mechanical move with appropriate renames and making
them static if used only locally.

The tcp_tw_2msl_scan() cleanup function is still run from the
tcp_slowtimo() in tcp_timer.c.
2007-05-16 17:14:25 +00:00
Robert Watson
f2565d68a4 Move universally to ANSI C function declarations, with relatively
consistent style(9)-ish layout.
2007-05-10 15:58:48 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
37ba9d112a Fix two comments. 2007-05-06 13:38:25 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
b8152ba793 Change the TCP timer system from using the callout system five times
directly to a merged model where only one callout, the next to fire,
is registered.

Instead of callout_reset(9) and callout_stop(9) the new function
tcp_timer_activate() is used which then internally manages the callout.

The single new callout is a mutex callout on inpcb simplifying the
locking a bit.

tcp_timer() is the called function which handles all race conditions
in one place and then dispatches the individual timer functions.

Reviewed by:	rwatson (earlier version)
2007-04-11 09:45:16 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
5dd9dfefd6 Retire unused TCP_SACK_DEBUG. 2007-04-04 14:44:15 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
ad3f9ab320 ANSIfy function declarations and remove register keywords for variables.
Consistently apply style to all function declarations.
2007-03-21 19:37:55 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
6489fe6553 Match up SYSCTL declaration style. 2007-03-19 19:00:51 +00:00
Mohan Srinivasan
7c72af8770 Reap FIN_WAIT_2 connections marked SOCANTRCVMORE faster. This mitigate
potential issues where the peer does not close, potentially leaving
thousands of connections in FIN_WAIT_2. This is controlled by a new sysctl
fast_finwait2_recycle, which is disabled by default.

Reviewed by: gnn, silby.
2007-02-26 22:25:21 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
751dea2935 Back when we had T/TCP support, we used to apply different
timeouts for TCP and T/TCP connections in the TIME_WAIT
state, and we had two separate timed wait queues for them.
Now that is has gone, the timeout is always 2*MSL again,
and there is no reason to keep two queues (the first was
unused anyway!).

Also, reimplement the remaining queue using a TAILQ (it
was technically impossible before, with two queues).
2006-09-07 13:06:00 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
3c89486cc7 Remove a microoptimization for i386 that was a micropessimization for amd64. 2006-09-07 09:49:08 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
2c857a9be9 o Backout rev. 1.125 of in_pcb.c. It appeared to behave extremely
bad under high load. For example with 40k sockets and 25k tcptw
  entries, connect() syscall can run for seconds. Debugging showed
  that it iterates the cycle millions times and purges thousands of
  tcptw entries at a time.
  Besides practical unusability this change is architecturally
  wrong. First, in_pcblookup_local() is used in connect() and bind()
  syscalls. No stale entries purging shouldn't be done here. Second,
  it is a layering violation.
o Return back the tcptw purging cycle to tcp_timer_2msl_tw(),
  that was removed in rev. 1.78 by rwatson. The commit log of this
  revision tells nothing about the reason cycle was removed. Now
  we need this cycle, since major cleaner of stale tcptw structures
  is removed.
o Disable probably necessary, but now unused
  tcp_twrecycleable() function.

Reviewed by:	ru
2006-09-06 13:56:35 +00:00
Mohan Srinivasan
464469c713 Fixes an edge case bug in timewait handling where ticks rolling over causing
the timewait expiry to be exactly 0 corrupts the timewait queues (and that entry).
Reviewed by:	silby
2006-08-11 21:15:23 +00:00
Robert Watson
d8ab0ec661 When entering a timer on a tcpcb, don't continue processing if it has been
dropped.  This prevents a bug introduced during the socket/pcb refcounting
work from occuring, in which occasionally the retransmit timer may fire
after a connection has been reset, resulting in the resulting R|A TCP
packet having a source port of 0, as the port reservation has been
released.

While here, fixing up some RUNLOCK->WUNLOCK bugs.

MFC after:	1 month
2006-06-03 19:37:08 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
ffb761f624 - Backout one line from 1.78. The tp can be freed by tcp_drop().
- Style next line.

Coverity ID:	912
2006-05-16 10:51:26 +00:00
Robert Watson
3127286870 Only return (tw) from tcp_twclose() if reuse is passed, otherwise
return NULL.  In principle this shouldn't change the behavior, but
avoids returning a potentially invalid/inappropriate pointer to
the caller.

Found with:	Coverity Prevent (tm)
Submitted by:	pjd
MFC after:	3 months
2006-05-05 06:50:23 +00:00
Robert Watson
623dce13c6 Update TCP for infrastructural changes to the socket/pcb refcount model,
pru_abort(), pru_detach(), and in_pcbdetach():

- Universally support and enforce the invariant that so_pcb is
  never NULL, converting dozens of unnecessary NULL checks into
  assertions, and eliminating dozens of unnecessary error handling
  cases in protocol code.

- In some cases, eliminate unnecessary pcbinfo locking, as it is no
  longer required to ensure so_pcb != NULL.  For example, the receive
  code no longer requires the pcbinfo lock, and the send code only
  requires it if building a new connection on an otherwise unconnected
  socket triggered via sendto() with an address.  This should
  significnatly reduce tcbinfo lock contention in the receive and send
  cases.

- In order to support the invariant that so_pcb != NULL, it is now
  necessary for the TCP code to not discard the tcpcb any time a
  connection is dropped, but instead leave the tcpcb until the socket
  is shutdown.  This case is handled by setting INP_DROPPED, to
  substitute for using a NULL so_pcb to indicate that the connection
  has been dropped.  This requires the inpcb lock, but not the pcbinfo
  lock.

- Unlike all other protocols in the tree, TCP may need to retain access
  to the socket after the file descriptor has been closed.  Set
  SS_PROTOREF in tcp_detach() in order to prevent the socket from being
  freed, and add a flag, INP_SOCKREF, so that the TCP code knows whether
  or not it needs to free the socket when the connection finally does
  close.  The typical case where this occurs is if close() is called on
  a TCP socket before all sent data in the send socket buffer has been
  transmitted or acknowledged.  If INP_SOCKREF is found when the
  connection is dropped, we release the inpcb, tcpcb, and socket instead
  of flagging INP_DROPPED.

- Abort and detach protocol switch methods no longer return failures,
  nor attempt to free sockets, as the socket layer does this.

- Annotate the existence of a long-standing race in the TCP timer code,
  in which timers are stopped but not drained when the socket is freed,
  as waiting for drain may lead to deadlocks, or have to occur in a
  context where waiting is not permitted.  This race has been handled
  by testing to see if the tcpcb pointer in the inpcb is NULL (and vice
  versa), which is not normally permitted, but may be true of a inpcb
  and tcpcb have been freed.  Add a counter to test how often this race
  has actually occurred, and a large comment for each instance where
  we compare potentially freed memory with NULL.  This will have to be
  fixed in the near future, but requires is to further address how to
  handle the timer shutdown shutdown issue.

- Several TCP calls no longer potentially free the passed inpcb/tcpcb,
  so no longer need to return a pointer to indicate whether the argument
  passed in is still valid.

- Un-macroize debugging and locking setup for various protocol switch
  methods for TCP, as it lead to more obscurity, and as locking becomes
  more customized to the methods, offers less benefit.

- Assert copyright on tcp_usrreq.c due to significant modifications that
  have been made as part of this work.

These changes significantly modify the memory management and connection
logic of our TCP implementation, and are (as such) High Risk Changes,
and likely to contain serious bugs.  Please report problems to the
current@ mailing list ASAP, ideally with simple test cases, and
optionally, packet traces.

MFC after:	3 months
2006-04-01 16:36:36 +00:00
Robert Watson
1c53f80637 Explicitly assert socket pointer is non-NULL in tcp_input() so as to
provide better debugging information.

Prefer explicit comparison to NULL for tcpcb pointers rather than
treating them as booleans.

MFC after:	1 month
2006-03-26 01:33:41 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
a4684d742d Make sysctl_msec_to_ticks(SYSCTL_HANDLER_ARGS) generally available instead
of being private to tcp_timer.c.

Sponsored by:	TCP/IP Optimization Fundraise 2005
MFC after:	3 days
2006-02-16 15:40:36 +00:00
Robert Watson
f59a9ebf10 Remove no-op spl's and most comment references to spls, as TCP locking
is believed to be basically done (modulo any remaining bugs).

MFC after:	3 days
2005-07-19 12:21:26 +00:00
Paul Saab
2cdbfa66ee Replace t_force with a t_flag (TF_FORCEDATA).
Submitted by:   Raja Mukerji.
Reviewed by:    Mohan, Silby, Andre Opperman.
2005-05-21 00:38:29 +00:00
Warner Losh
c398230b64 /* -> /*- for license, minor formatting changes 2005-01-07 01:45:51 +00:00
Robert Watson
db0aae38b6 Remove the now unused tcp_canceltimers() function. tcpcb timers are
now stopped as part of tcp_discardcb().

MFC after:	2 weeks
2004-12-23 01:25:59 +00:00
Robert Watson
950ab1e470 Remove an annotation of a minor race relating to the update of
multiple MIB entries using sysctl in short order, which might
result in unexpected values for tcp_maxidle being generated by
tcp_slowtimo.  In practice, this will not happen, or at least,
doesn't require an explicit comment.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2004-12-23 01:21:54 +00:00
Robert Watson
79a9e59c89 Assert the tcptw inpcb lock in tcp_timer_2msl_reset(), as fields in
the tcptw undergo non-atomic read-modify-writes.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2004-12-05 22:47:29 +00:00
Robert Watson
cce83ffb5a tcp_timewait() performs multiple non-atomic reads on the tcptw
structure, so assert the inpcb lock associated with the tcptw.
Also assert the tcbinfo lock, as tcp_timewait() may call
tcp_twclose() or tcp_2msl_rest(), which require it.  Since
tcp_timewait() is already called with that lock from tcp_input(),
this doesn't change current locking, merely documents reasons for
it.

In tcp_twstart(), assert the tcbinfo lock, as tcp_timer_2msl_rest()
is called, which requires that lock.

In tcp_twclose(), assert the tcbinfo lock, as tcp_timer_2msl_stop()
is called, which requires that lock.

Document the locking strategy for the time wait queues in tcp_timer.c,
which consists of protecting the time wait queues in the same manner
as the tcbinfo structure (using the tcbinfo lock).

In tcp_timer_2msl_reset(), assert the tcbinfo lock, as the time wait
queues are modified.

In tcp_timer_2msl_stop(), assert the tcbinfo lock, as the time wait
queues may be modified.

In tcp_timer_2msl_tw(), assert the tcbinfo lock, as the time wait
queues may be modified.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2004-11-23 17:21:30 +00:00
Robert Watson
b42ff86e73 De-spl tcp_slowtimo; tcp_maxidle assignment is subject to possible
but unlikely races that could be corrected by having tcp_keepcnt
and tcp_keepintvl modifications go through handler functions via
sysctl, but probably is not worth doing.  Updates to multiple
sysctls within evaluation of a single addition are unlikely.

Annotate that tcp_canceltimers() is currently unused.

De-spl tcp_timer_delack().

De-spl tcp_timer_2msl().

MFC after:	2 weeks
2004-11-23 16:45:07 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
c94c54e4df Remove RFC1644 T/TCP support from the TCP side of the network stack.
A complete rationale and discussion is given in this message
and the resulting discussion:

 http://docs.freebsd.org/cgi/mid.cgi?4177C8AD.6060706

Note that this commit removes only the functional part of T/TCP
from the tcp_* related functions in the kernel.  Other features
introduced with RFC1644 are left intact (socket layer changes,
sendmsg(2) on connection oriented protocols)  and are meant to
be reused by a simpler and less intrusive reimplemention of the
previous T/TCP functionality.

Discussed on:	-arch
2004-11-02 22:22:22 +00:00
Robert Watson
a4f757cd5d White space cleanup for netinet before branch:
- Trailing tab/space cleanup
- Remove spurious spaces between or before tabs

This change avoids touching files that Andre likely has in his working
set for PFIL hooks changes for IPFW/DUMMYNET.

Approved by:	re (scottl)
Submitted by:	Xin LI <delphij@frontfree.net>
2004-08-16 18:32:07 +00:00
Paul Saab
6d90faf3d8 Add support for TCP Selective Acknowledgements. The work for this
originated on RELENG_4 and was ported to -CURRENT.

The scoreboarding code was obtained from OpenBSD, and many
of the remaining changes were inspired by OpenBSD, but not
taken directly from there.

You can enable/disable sack using net.inet.tcp.do_sack. You can
also limit the number of sack holes that all senders can have in
the scoreboard with net.inet.tcp.sackhole_limit.

Reviewed by:	gnn
Obtained from:	Yahoo! (Mohan Srinivasan, Jayanth Vijayaraghavan)
2004-06-23 21:04:37 +00:00
Warner Losh
f36cfd49ad Remove advertising clause from University of California Regent's
license, per letter dated July 22, 1999 and email from Peter Wemm,
Alan Cox and Robert Watson.

Approved by: core, peter, alc, rwatson
2004-04-07 20:46:16 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
97d8d152c2 Introduce tcp_hostcache and remove the tcp specific metrics from
the routing table.  Move all usage and references in the tcp stack
from the routing table metrics to the tcp hostcache.

It caches measured parameters of past tcp sessions to provide better
initial start values for following connections from or to the same
source or destination.  Depending on the network parameters to/from
the remote host this can lead to significant speedups for new tcp
connections after the first one because they inherit and shortcut
the learning curve.

tcp_hostcache is designed for multiple concurrent access in SMP
environments with high contention and is hash indexed by remote
ip address.

It removes significant locking requirements from the tcp stack with
regard to the routing table.

Reviewed by:	sam (mentor), bms
Reviewed by:	-net, -current, core@kame.net (IPv6 parts)
Approved by:	re (scottl)
2003-11-20 20:07:39 +00:00
Sam Leffler
2a0746208b use local values instead of chasing pointers
Supported by:	FreeBSD Foundation
2003-11-08 22:57:13 +00:00
Jeffrey Hsu
9d11646de7 Unify the "send high" and "recover" variables as specified in the
lastest rev of the spec.  Use an explicit flag for Fast Recovery. [1]

Fix bug with exiting Fast Recovery on a retransmit timeout
diagnosed by Lu Guohan. [2]

Reviewed by:		Thomas Henderson <thomas.r.henderson@boeing.com>
Reported and tested by:	Lu Guohan <lguohan00@mails.tsinghua.edu.cn> [2]
Approved by:		Thomas Henderson <thomas.r.henderson@boeing.com>,
			Sally Floyd <floyd@acm.org> [1]
2003-07-15 21:49:53 +00:00
Jeffrey Hsu
f058535deb Compensate for decreasing the minimum retransmit timeout.
Reviewed by:	jlemon
2003-06-04 10:03:55 +00:00
Jonathan Lemon
607b0b0cc9 Remove a panic(); if the zone allocator can't provide more timewait
structures, reuse the oldest one.  Also move the expiry timer from
a per-structure callout to the tcp slow timer.

Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2003-03-08 22:06:20 +00:00
Jonathan Lemon
340c35de6a Add a TCP TIMEWAIT state which uses less space than a fullblown TCP
control block.  Allow the socket and tcpcb structures to be freed
earlier than inpcb.  Update code to understand an inp w/o a socket.

Reviewed by: hsu, silby, jayanth
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2003-02-19 22:32:43 +00:00
Jonathan Lemon
7990938421 Convert tcp_fillheaders(tp, ...) -> tcpip_fillheaders(inp, ...) so the
routine does not require a tcpcb to operate.  Since we no longer keep
template mbufs around, move pseudo checksum out of this routine, and
merge it with the length update.

Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
2003-02-19 22:18:06 +00:00
Jeffrey Hsu
cb942153c8 Fix NewReno.
Reviewed by: Tom Henderson <thomas.r.henderson@boeing.com>
2003-01-13 11:01:20 +00:00
Jeffrey Hsu
abe239cfe2 Validate inp to prevent an use after free. 2002-12-24 21:00:31 +00:00
Bruce Evans
c74af4fac1 Include <sys/mutex.h> and its prerequisite <sys/lock.h> instead of depending
on namespace pollution 4 layers deep in <netinet/in_pcb.h>.

Removed unused includes.  Sorted includes.
2002-09-05 15:33:30 +00:00
John Polstra
8ea8a6804b Fix overflows in intermediate calculations in sysctl_msec_to_ticks().
At hz values of 1000 and above the overflows caused net.inet.tcp.keepidle
to be reported as negative.

MFC after:	3 days
2002-07-20 23:48:59 +00:00
Matthew Dillon
701bec5a38 Introduce two new sysctl's:
net.inet.tcp.rexmit_min (default 3 ticks equiv)

    This sysctl is the retransmit timer RTO minimum,
    specified in milliseconds.  This value is
    designed for algorithmic stability only.

net.inet.tcp.rexmit_slop (default 200ms)

    This sysctl is the retransmit timer RTO slop
    which is added to every retransmit timeout and
    is designed to handle protocol stack overheads
    and delayed ack issues.

Note that the *original* code applied a 1-second
RTO minimum but never applied real slop to the RTO
calculation, so any RTO calculation over one second
would have no slop and thus not account for
protocol stack overheads (TCP timestamps are not
a measure of protocol turnaround!).  Essentially,
the original code made the RTO calculation almost
completely irrelevant.

Please note that the 200ms slop is debateable.
This commit is not meant to be a line in the sand,
and if the community winds up deciding that increasing
it is the correct solution then it's easy to do.
Note that larger values will destroy performance
on lossy networks while smaller values may result in
a greater number of unnecessary retransmits.
2002-07-18 19:06:12 +00:00
Jeffrey Hsu
f76fcf6d4c Lock up inpcb.
Submitted by:	Jennifer Yang <yangjihui@yahoo.com>
2002-06-10 20:05:46 +00:00
Seigo Tanimura
4cc20ab1f0 Back out my lats commit of locking down a socket, it conflicts with hsu's work.
Requested by:	hsu
2002-05-31 11:52:35 +00:00
Seigo Tanimura
243917fe3b Lock down a socket, milestone 1.
o Add a mutex (sb_mtx) to struct sockbuf. This protects the data in a
  socket buffer. The mutex in the receive buffer also protects the data
  in struct socket.

o Determine the lock strategy for each members in struct socket.

o Lock down the following members:

  - so_count
  - so_options
  - so_linger
  - so_state

o Remove *_locked() socket APIs.  Make the following socket APIs
  touching the members above now require a locked socket:

 - sodisconnect()
 - soisconnected()
 - soisconnecting()
 - soisdisconnected()
 - soisdisconnecting()
 - sofree()
 - soref()
 - sorele()
 - sorwakeup()
 - sotryfree()
 - sowakeup()
 - sowwakeup()

Reviewed by:	alfred
2002-05-20 05:41:09 +00:00
Robert Watson
c39a614e0d o Our currenty userland boot code (due to rc.conf and rc.network) always
enables TCP keepalives using the net.inet.tcp.always_keepalive by default.
  Synchronize the kernel default with the userland default.
2001-12-07 17:01:28 +00:00
Mike Silbersack
b0e3ad758b Much delayed but now present: RFC 1948 style sequence numbers
In order to ensure security and functionality, RFC 1948 style
initial sequence number generation has been implemented.  Barring
any major crypographic breakthroughs, this algorithm should be
unbreakable.  In addition, the problems with TIME_WAIT recycling
which affect our currently used algorithm are not present.

Reviewed by: jesper
2001-08-22 00:58:16 +00:00
Mike Silbersack
2d610a5028 Temporary feature: Runtime tuneable tcp initial sequence number
generation scheme.  Users may now select between the currently used
OpenBSD algorithm and the older random positive increment method.

While the OpenBSD algorithm is more secure, it also breaks TIME_WAIT
handling; this is causing trouble for an increasing number of folks.

To switch between generation schemes, one sets the sysctl
net.inet.tcp.tcp_seq_genscheme.  0 = random positive increments,
1 = the OpenBSD algorithm.  1 is still the default.

Once a secure _and_ compatible algorithm is implemented, this sysctl
will be removed.

Reviewed by: jlemon
Tested by: numerous subscribers of -net
2001-07-08 02:20:47 +00:00
Mike Silbersack
08517d530e Eliminate the allocation of a tcp template structure for each
connection.  The information contained in a tcptemp can be
reconstructed from a tcpcb when needed.

Previously, tcp templates required the allocation of one
mbuf per connection.  On large systems, this change should
free up a large number of mbufs.

Reviewed by:	bmilekic, jlemon, ru
MFC after: 2 weeks
2001-06-23 03:21:46 +00:00
Jesper Skriver
7ceb778366 Disable rfc1323 and rfc1644 TCP extensions if we havn't got
any response to our third SYN to work-around some broken
terminal servers (most of which have hopefully been retired)
that have bad VJ header compression code which trashes TCP
segments containing unknown-to-them TCP options.

PR:		kern/1689
Submitted by:	jesper
Reviewed by:	wollman
MFC after:	2 weeks
2001-05-31 19:24:49 +00:00
Jesper Skriver
d1745f454d Say goodbye to TCP_COMPAT_42
Reviewed by:	wollman
Requested by:	wollman
2001-04-20 11:58:56 +00:00
Kris Kennaway
f0a04f3f51 Randomize the TCP initial sequence numbers more thoroughly.
Obtained from:	OpenBSD
Reviewed by:	jesper, peter, -developers
2001-04-17 18:08:01 +00:00