Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Gleb Smirnoff
eb1b1807af Mechanically substitute flags from historic mbuf allocator with
malloc(9) flags within sys.

Exceptions:

- sys/contrib not touched
- sys/mbuf.h edited manually
2012-12-05 08:04:20 +00:00
Andrey V. Elsukov
ffdbf9da3b Remove the recently added sysctl variable net.pfil.forward.
Instead, add protocol specific mbuf flags M_IP_NEXTHOP and
M_IP6_NEXTHOP. Use them to indicate that the mbuf's chain
contains the PACKET_TAG_IPFORWARD tag. And do a tag lookup
only when this flag is set.

Suggested by:	andre
2012-11-02 01:20:55 +00:00
Andrey V. Elsukov
c1de64a495 Remove the IPFIREWALL_FORWARD kernel option and make possible to turn
on the related functionality in the runtime via the sysctl variable
net.pfil.forward. It is turned off by default.

Sponsored by:	Yandex LLC
Discussed with:	net@
MFC after:	2 weeks
2012-10-25 09:39:14 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
8f134647ca Switch the entire IPv4 stack to keep the IP packet header
in network byte order. Any host byte order processing is
done in local variables and host byte order values are
never[1] written to a packet.

  After this change a packet processed by the stack isn't
modified at all[2] except for TTL.

  After this change a network stack hacker doesn't need to
scratch his head trying to figure out what is the byte order
at the given place in the stack.

[1] One exception still remains. The raw sockets convert host
byte order before pass a packet to an application. Probably
this would remain for ages for compatibility.

[2] The ip_input() still subtructs header len from ip->ip_len,
but this is planned to be fixed soon.

Reviewed by:	luigi, Maxim Dounin <mdounin mdounin.ru>
Tested by:	ray, Olivier Cochard-Labbe <olivier cochard.me>
2012-10-22 21:09:03 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
8f35d5f3e9 Catch up with r241245 and do not return packet back in host byte order. 2012-10-08 22:58:28 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
21d172a3f1 A step in resolving mess with byte ordering for AF_INET. After this change:
- All packets in NETISR_IP queue are in net byte order.
  - ip_input() is entered in net byte order and converts packet
    to host byte order right _after_ processing pfil(9) hooks.
  - ip_output() is entered in host byte order and converts packet
    to net byte order right _before_ processing pfil(9) hooks.
  - ip_fragment() accepts and emits packet in net byte order.
  - ip_forward(), ip_mloopback() use host byte order (untouched actually).
  - ip_fastforward() no longer modifies packet at all (except ip_ttl).
  - Swapping of byte order there and back removed from the following modules:
    pf(4), ipfw(4), enc(4), if_bridge(4).
  - Swapping of byte order added to ipfilter(4), based on __FreeBSD_version
  - __FreeBSD_version bumped.
  - pfil(9) manual page updated.

Reviewed by:	ray, luigi, eri, melifaro
Tested by:	glebius (LE), ray (BE)
2012-10-06 10:02:11 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
3b3a8eb937 o Create directory sys/netpfil, where all packet filters should
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
2012-09-14 11:51:49 +00:00