by returning success on FIONBIO and FIOASYNC IOCTLs. The actual flags
handling is done by the kern_ioctl() function.
Reported by: Alex Bowden <alex.bowden@outlook.com>
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
In pathological situations where the master subnet manager becomes
unresponsive for an extended period, we may otherwise end up queuing all
of the system's mbufs while waiting for a response to a path record lookup.
This addresses the same issue as commit 1e85b806f9 in Linux.
Reviewed by: cem, ngie
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This addresses a regression from an earlier upstream change which caused
cma_acquire_dev() to bypass the port GID cache and instead query the HCA
for each entry in its GID table. These queries can become extremely slow on
multiport devices, which has a negative impact on connection setup times.
Discussed with: hselasky
Obtained from: Linux
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
SDP transmit and receive rings are always created in a sleepable context,
so we can use M_WAITOK and remove error checks.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The generic socket may be detached from the PCB before the completion
queue is drained and destroyed, so this change closes a race condition
in connection teardown.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
tunable SYSCTL's. Linux module parameters are associated with the
module they belong to. FreeBSD does not share this concept of a parent
module. Instead add macros which define the prefix to use for the
module parameters in the LinuxKPI consumers.
While at it convert all "bool" LinuxKPI module parameters to "byte"
type, because we don't have a "bool" type of SYSCTL in FreeBSD.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
- Added check that the SCOPE ID is only restored for IPv6 linklocal
addresses.
- Changes made by r237263 in the "cma_bind_addr()" function did not
check if the socket address was of type IPv6 and used the IPv4
socket address for IPv6 addresses. This caused the function to
fail. Fixed this.
- In the "rdma_gid2ip()" function and some other places the "sin6_len"
and "sin6_scope_id" fields were not set for IPv6 socket
addresses. Fixed this.
- The scope ID is not stored as part of the GID entries and must be
passed as an argument to "rdma_gid2ip()".
- Added new method to "struct ib_device" which returns a pointer to
the network interface which belongs to the given infiniband
device. This is needed to be able to get the scope ID for IPv6
addresses via the associated ethernet interface.
- Added convenience function, "rdma_get_ipv6_scope_id()", to get the
scope ID for IPv6 addresses.
- Implemented new "get_netdev" method for mlx4ib. Other IB controller
drivers which want to support IPv6 addresses needs to implement this
aswell.
- Bumped the FreeBSD version due to changing "struct ib_device".
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
This fixes a kernel panic when using IPoIB with VIMAGE and infiniband.
PR: 208957
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Tested by: Justin Clift <justin@postgresql.org>
MFC after: 1 week
IPv6 addresses has a scope ID which sometimes is stored in the
"sin6_scope_id" field of "struct sockaddr_in6" and sometimes as part
of the IPv6 address itself depending on the context. If the scope ID
is not in the expected location, the IPv6 address lookups in the
so-called GID table will fail. Some code factoring has been made to
achieve a clean exit of the "addr_resolve" function via a common
"done" label.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Submitted by: Shani Michaeli <shanim@mellanox.com>
MFC after: 1 week
The FreeBSD's TCP/IP stack assumes that the IP-header is 32-bits aligned
when decoding it. Else unaligned 32-bit memory access can happen, which
not all processor architectures support.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
When downing a mlxen network adapter we need to check the port_up variable
to ensure we don't continue to transmit data or restart timers which can
reside in freed memory.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
And factor out tcp_lro_rx_done, which deduplicates the same logic with
netinet/tcp_lro.c
Reviewed by: gallatin (1st version), hps, zbb, np, Dexuan Cui <decui microsoft com>
Sponsored by: Microsoft OSTC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5725
connection manager. Examining so_comp without synchronization with
iw_so_event_handler is a harmless race.
Submitted by: Krishnamraju Eraparaju @ Chelsio
Reviewed by: Steve Wise @ Open Grid Computing
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Use the Toeplitz hash value as source for the flowid. This makes the
hash value more suitable for so-called hash bucket algorithms which
are used in the FreeBSD's TCP/IP stack when RSS is enabled.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
ipoib module.
The bpfdetach() function is trying to turn off promiscious mode on the
network interface it is attached to while holding a mutex. The fix
consists of ignoring any further calls to the ipoib_ioctl() function
when the network interface is going to be detached. The ipoib_ioctl()
function might sleep.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
- Add some new hlist macros.
- Update existing hlist macros removing the need for a temporary
iteration variable.
- Properly define the RCU hlist macros to be SMP safe with regard
to RCU.
- Safe list macro arguments by adding a pair of parentheses.
- Prefix the _list_add() and _list_splice() functions with "linux"
to reflect they are LinuxKPI internal functions.
Obtained from: Linux
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
The iWARP Connection Manager (CM) on FreeBSD creates a TCP socket to
represent an iWARP endpoint when the connection is over TCP. For
servers the current approach is to invoke create_listen callback for
each iWARP RNIC registered with the CM. This doesn't work too well for
INADDR_ANY because a listen on any TCP socket already notifies all
hardware TOEs/RNICs of the new listener. This patch fixes the server
side of things for FreeBSD. We've tried to keep all these modifications
in the iWARP/TCP specific parts of the OFED infrastructure as much as
possible.
Submitted by: Krishnamraju Eraparaju @ Chelsio (with design inputs from Steve Wise)
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4801
The only piece of information that is required is rt_flags subset.
In particular, if_loop() requires RTF_REJECT and RTF_BLACKHOLE flags
to check if this particular mbuf needs to be dropped (and what
error should be returned).
Note that if_loop() will always return EHOSTUNREACH for "reject" routes
regardless of RTF_HOST flag existence. This is due to upcoming routing
changes where RTF_HOST value won't be available as lookup result.
All other functions require RTF_GATEWAY flag to check if they need
to return EHOSTUNREACH instead of EHOSTDOWN error.
There are 11 places where non-zero 'struct route' is passed to if_output().
For most of the callers (forwarding, bpf, arp) does not care about exact
error value. In fact, the only place where this result is propagated
is ip_output(). (ip6_output() passes NULL route to nd6_output_ifp()).
Given that, add 3 new 'struct route' flags (RT_REJECT, RT_BLACKHOLE and
RT_IS_GW) and inline function (rt_update_ro_flags()) to copy necessary
rte flags to ro_flags. Call this function in ip_output() after looking up/
verifying rte.
Reviewed by: ae
sbappendstream() does. Although, M_NOTREADY may appear only on SOCK_STREAM
sockets, due to sendfile(2) supporting only the latter, there is a corner
case of AF_UNIX/SOCK_STREAM socket, that still uses records for the sake
of control data, albeit being stream socket.
Provide private version of m_clrprotoflags(), which understands PRUS_NOTREADY,
similar to m_demote().
Add if_requestencap() interface method which is capable of calculating
various link headers for given interface. Right now there is support
for INET/INET6/ARP llheader calculation (IFENCAP_LL type request).
Other types are planned to support more complex calculation
(L2 multipath lagg nexthops, tunnel encap nexthops, etc..).
Reshape 'struct route' to be able to pass additional data (with is length)
to prepend to mbuf.
These two changes permits routing code to pass pre-calculated nexthop data
(like L2 header for route w/gateway) down to the stack eliminating the
need for other lookups. It also brings us closer to more complex scenarios
like transparently handling MPLS nexthops and tunnel interfaces.
Last, but not least, it removes layering violation introduced by flowtable
code (ro_lle) and simplifies handling of existing if_output consumers.
ARP/ND changes:
Make arp/ndp stack pre-calculate link header upon installing/updating lle
record. Interface link address change are handled by re-calculating
headers for all lles based on if_lladdr event. After these changes,
arpresolve()/nd6_resolve() returns full pre-calculated header for
supported interfaces thus simplifying if_output().
Move these lookups to separate ether_resolve_addr() function which ether
returs error or fully-prepared link header. Add <arp|nd6_>resolve_addr()
compat versions to return link addresses instead of pre-calculated data.
BPF changes:
Raw bpf writes occupied _two_ cases: AF_UNSPEC and pseudo_AF_HDRCMPLT.
Despite the naming, both of there have ther header "complete". The only
difference is that interface source mac has to be filled by OS for
AF_UNSPEC (controlled via BIOCGHDRCMPLT). This logic has to stay inside
BPF and not pollute if_output() routines. Convert BPF to pass prepend data
via new 'struct route' mechanism. Note that it does not change
non-optimized if_output(): ro_prepend handling is purely optional.
Side note: hackish pseudo_AF_HDRCMPLT is supported for ethernet and FDDI.
It is not needed for ethernet anymore. The only remaining FDDI user is
dev/pdq mostly untouched since 2007. FDDI support was eliminated from
OpenBSD in 2013 (sys/net/if_fddisubr.c rev 1.65).
Flowtable changes:
Flowtable violates layering by saving (and not correctly managing)
rtes/lles. Instead of passing lle pointer, pass pointer to pre-calculated
header data from that lle.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4102