dangerous. Those wanting data from an mbuf should use DTrace itself to get
the data.
PR: 203409
Reviewed by: hiren
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9035
in6p_options to check that. That is incorrect as we carry ip options in
in6p_outputopts. Also, just checking for in6p_outputopts being NULL won't
suffice as we combine ip options and ip header fields both in that one field.
The commit fixes this by using ip6_optlen() which correctly calculates length
of only ip options for IPv6.
Reviewed by: ae, bz
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
the TCP_RFC7413 kernel option. This change removes those few instructions
from the packet processing path.
While not strictly necessary, for the sake of consistency, I applied the
new IS_FASTOPEN macro to all places in the packet processing path that
used the (t_flags & TF_FASTOPEN) check.
Reviewed by: hiren
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8219
to add actions that run when a TCP frame is sent or received on a TCP
session in the ESTABLISHED state. In the base tree, this functionality is
only used for the h_ertt module, which is used by the cc_cdg, cc_chd, cc_hd,
and cc_vegas congestion control modules.
Presently, we incur overhead to check for hooks each time a TCP frame is
sent or received on an ESTABLISHED TCP session.
This change adds a new compile-time option (TCP_HHOOK) to determine whether
to include the hhook(9) framework for TCP. To retain backwards
compatibility, I added the TCP_HHOOK option to every configuration file that
already defined "options INET". (Therefore, this patch introduces no
functional change. In order to see a functional difference, you need to
compile a custom kernel without the TCP_HHOOK option.) This change will
allow users to easily exclude this functionality from their kernel, should
they wish to do so.
Note that any users who use a custom kernel configuration and use one of the
congestion control modules listed above will need to add the TCP_HHOOK
option to their kernel configuration.
Reviewed by: rrs, lstewart, hiren (previous version), sjg (makefiles only)
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8185
In the persist case, take the SYN and FIN flags into account when updating
the sequence space sent.
Reviewed by: gnn
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7075
Tested by: Limelight, Netflix
If the connection was persistent and receiving-only, several (12)
sporadic device insufficient buffers would cause the connection be
dropped prematurely:
Upon ENOBUFS in tcp_output() for an ACK, retransmission timer is
started. No one will stop this retransmission timer for receiving-
only connection, so the retransmission timer promises to expire and
t_rxtshift is promised to be increased. And t_rxtshift will not be
reset to 0, since no RTT measurement will be done for receiving-only
connection. If this receiving-only connection lived long enough
(e.g. >350sec, given the RTO starts from 200ms), and it suffered 12
sporadic device insufficient buffers, i.e. t_rxtshift >= 12, this
receiving-only connection would be dropped prematurely by the
retransmission timer.
We now assert that for data segments, SYNs or FINs either rexmit or
persist timer was wired upon ENOBUFS. And don't set rexmit timer
for other cases, i.e. ENOBUFS upon ACKs.
Discussed with: lstewart, hiren, jtl, Mike Karels
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Microsoft OSTC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5872
control to a three way setting.
0 - Totally disable ECN. (no change)
1 - Enable ECN if incoming connections request it. Outgoing
connections will request ECN. (no change from present != 0 setting)
2 - Enable ECN if incoming connections request it. Outgoing
conections will not request ECN.
Change the default value of net.inet.tcp.ecn.enable from 0 to 2.
Linux version 2.4.20 and newer, Solaris, and Mac OS X 10.5 and newer have
similar capabilities. The actual values above match Linux, and the default
matches the current Linux default.
Reviewed by: eadler
MFC after: 1 month
MFH: yes
Sponsored by: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6386
route caching for TCP, with some improvements. In particular, invalidate
the route cache if a new route is added, which might be a better match.
The cache is automatically invalidated if the old route is deleted.
Submitted by: Mike Karels
Reviewed by: gnn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4306
Furthermore, there is no reason this needs to be a 64-bit integer
for the forseeable future.
Also, there is an inconsistency between to_flags and the mask in
tcp_addoptions(). Before r195654, to_flags was a u_long and the mask in
tcp_addoptions() was a u_int. r195654 changed to_flags to be a u_int64_t
but left the mask in tcp_addoptions() as a u_int, meaning that these
variables will only be the same width on platforms with 64-bit integers.
Convert both to_flags and the mask in tcp_addoptions() to be explicitly
32-bit variables. This may save a few cycles on 32-bit platforms, and
avoids unnecessarily mixing types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5584
Reviewed by: hiren
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
for output and drop; connect didn't always fire a user probe
some probes were missing in fastpath
Submitted by: Hannes Mehnert
Sponsored by: REMS, EPSRC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5525
60 seconds, respectively. Turn them into sysctls that can be tuned live. The
default values of 5 seconds and 60 seconds have been retained.
Submitted by: Jason Wolfe (j at nitrology dot com)
Reviewed by: gnn, rrs, hiren, bz
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5024
(RFC 2385/TCP-MD5) kernel option.
If a tcpcb has TF_NOOPT flag, then tcp_addoptions() is not called,
and to.to_signature is an uninitialized stack variable. The value
is later used as write offset, which leads to writing to random
address.
Submitted by: rstone, jtl
Security: SA-16:05.tcp
and t_maxseg. This dualism emerged with T/TCP, but was not properly cleaned
up after T/TCP removal. After all permutations over the years the result is
that t_maxopd stores a minimum of peer offered MSS and MTU reduced by minimum
protocol header. And t_maxseg stores (t_maxopd - TCPOLEN_TSTAMP_APPA) if
timestamps are in action, or is equal to t_maxopd otherwise. That's a very
rough estimate of MSS reduced by options length. Throughout the code it
was used in places, where preciseness was not important, like cwnd or
ssthresh calculations.
With this change:
- t_maxopd goes away.
- t_maxseg now stores MSS not adjusted by options.
- new function tcp_maxseg() is provided, that calculates MSS reduced by
options length. The functions gives a better estimate, since it takes
into account SACK state as well.
Reviewed by: jtl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3593
TFO is disabled by default in the kernel build. See the top comment
in sys/netinet/tcp_fastopen.c for implementation particulars.
Reviewed by: gnn, jch, stas
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Verisign, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4350
packets and/or state transitions from each TCP socket. That would help with
narrowing down certain problems we see in the field that are hard to reproduce
without understanding the history of how we got into a certain state. This
change provides just that.
It saves copies of the last N packets in a list in the tcpcb. When the tcpcb is
destroyed, the list is freed. I thought this was likely to be more
performance-friendly than saving copies of the tcpcb. Plus, with the packets,
you should be able to reverse-engineer what happened to the tcpcb.
To enable the feature, you will need to compile a kernel with the TCPPCAP
option. Even then, the feature defaults to being deactivated. You can activate
it by setting a positive value for the number of captured packets. You can do
that on either a global basis or on a per-socket basis (via a setsockopt call).
There is no way to get the packets out of the kernel other than using kmem or
getting a coredump. I thought that would help some of the legal/privacy concerns
regarding such a feature. However, it should be possible to add a future effort
to export them in PCAP format.
I tested this at low scale, and found that there were no mbuf leaks and the peak
mbuf usage appeared to be unchanged with and without the feature.
The main performance concern I can envision is the number of mbufs that would be
used on systems with a large number of sockets. If you save five packets per
direction per socket and have 3,000 sockets, that will consume at least 30,000
mbufs just to keep these packets. I tried to reduce the concerns associated with
this by limiting the number of clusters (not mbufs) that could be used for this
feature. Again, in my testing, that appears to work correctly.
Differential Revision: D3100
Submitted by: Jonathan Looney <jlooney at juniper dot net>
Reviewed by: gnn, hiren
To make driver programming easier the TSO limits are changed to
reflect the values used in the BUSDMA tag a network adapter driver is
using. The TCP/IP network stack will subtract space for all linklevel
and protocol level headers and ensure that the full mbuf chain passed
to the network adapter fits within the given limits.
Implementation notes:
If a network adapter driver needs to fixup the first mbuf in order to
support VLAN tag insertion, the size of the VLAN tag should be
subtracted from the TSO limit. Else not.
Network adapters which typically inline the complete header mbuf could
technically transmit one more segment. This patch does not implement a
mechanism to recover the last segment for data transmission. It is
believed when sufficiently large mbuf clusters are used, the segment
limit will not be reached and recovering the last segment will not
have any effect.
The current TSO algorithm tries to send MTU-sized packets, where the
MTU typically is 1500 bytes, which gives 1448 bytes of TCP data
payload per packet for IPv4. That means if the TSO length limitiation
is set to 65536 bytes, there will be a data payload remainder of
(65536 - 1500) mod 1448 bytes which is equal to 324 bytes. Trying to
recover total TSO length due to inlining mbuf header data will not
have any effect, because adding or removing the ETH/IP/TCP headers
to or from 324 bytes will not cause more or less TCP payload to be
TSO'ed.
Existing network adapter limits will be updated separately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3458
Reviewed by: rmacklem
MFC after: 2 weeks
to provide the TCPDEBUG functionality with pure DTrace.
Reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: D3530
condition.
If you send a 0-length packet, but there is data is the socket buffer, and
neither the rexmt or persist timer is already set, then activate the persist
timer.
PR: 192599
Differential Revision: D2946
Submitted by: jlott at averesystems dot com
Reviewed by: jhb, jch, gnn, hiren
Tested by: jlott at averesystems dot com, jch
MFC after: 2 weeks
the knowledge of mbuf layout, and in particular constants such as M_EXT,
MLEN, MHLEN, and so on, in mbuf consumers by unifying various alignment
utility functions (M_ALIGN(), MH_ALIGN(), MEXT_ALIGN() in a single
M_ALIGN() macro, implemented by a now-inlined m_align() function:
- Move m_align() from uipc_mbuf.c to mbuf.h; mark as __inline.
- Reimplement M_ALIGN(), MH_ALIGN(), and MEXT_ALIGN() using m_align().
- Update consumers around the tree to simply use M_ALIGN().
This change eliminates a number of cases where mbuf consumers must be aware
of whether or not mbufs returned by the allocator use external storage, but
also assumptions about the size of the returned mbuf. This will make it
easier to introduce changes in how we use external storage, as well as
features such as variable-size mbufs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1436
Reviewed by: glebius, trasz, gnn, bz
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
sb_cc member of struct sockbuf to a couple of inline functions:
sbavail() and sbused()
Right now they are equal, but once notion of "not ready socket buffer data",
will be checked in, they are going to be different.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
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
The current TSO limitation feature only takes the total number of
bytes in an mbuf chain into account and does not limit by the number
of mbufs in a chain. Some kinds of hardware is limited by two
factors. One is the fragment length and the second is the fragment
count. Both of these limits need to be taken into account when doing
TSO. Else some kinds of hardware might have to drop completely valid
mbuf chains because they cannot loaded into the given hardware's DMA
engine. The new way of doing TSO limitation has been made backwards
compatible as input from other FreeBSD developers and will use
defaults for values not set.
Reviewed by: adrian, rmacklem
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
The current TSO limitation feature only takes the total number of
bytes in an mbuf chain into account and does not limit by the number
of mbufs in a chain. Some kinds of hardware is limited by two
factors. One is the fragment length and the second is the fragment
count. Both of these limits need to be taken into account when doing
TSO. Else some kinds of hardware might have to drop completely valid
mbuf chains because they cannot loaded into the given hardware's DMA
engine. The new way of doing TSO limitation has been made backwards
compatible as input from other FreeBSD developers and will use
defaults for values not set.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
- Use counter(9) for rt_pksent (former rt_rmx.rmx_pksent). This
removes another cache trashing ++ from packet forwarding path.
- Create zini/fini methods for the rtentry UMA zone. Via initialize
mutex and counter in them.
- Fix reporting of rmx_pksent to routing socket.
- Fix netstat(1) to report "Use" both in kvm(3) and sysctl(3) mode.
The change is mostly targeted for stable/10 merge. For head,
rt_pksent is expected to just disappear.
Discussed with: melifaro
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
In its stead use the Solaris / illumos approach of emulating '-' (dash)
in probe names with '__' (two consecutive underscores).
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 3 weeks
option, unbreak the lock tracing release semantic by embedding
calls to LOCKSTAT_PROFILE_RELEASE_LOCK() direclty in the inlined
version of the releasing functions for mutex, rwlock and sxlock.
Failing to do so skips the lockstat_probe_func invokation for
unlocking.
- As part of the LOCKSTAT support is inlined in mutex operation, for
kernel compiled without lock debugging options, potentially every
consumer must be compiled including opt_kdtrace.h.
Fix this by moving KDTRACE_HOOKS into opt_global.h and remove the
dependency by opt_kdtrace.h for all files, as now only KDTRACE_FRAMES
is linked there and it is only used as a compile-time stub [0].
[0] immediately shows some new bug as DTRACE-derived support for debug
in sfxge is broken and it was never really tested. As it was not
including correctly opt_kdtrace.h before it was never enabled so it
was kept broken for a while. Fix this by using a protection stub,
leaving sfxge driver authors the responsibility for fixing it
appropriately [1].
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division
Discussed with: rstone
[0] Reported by: rstone
[1] Discussed with: philip
dynamic translation so that their arguments match the definitions for
these providers in Solaris and illumos. Thus, existing scripts for these
providers should work unmodified on FreeBSD.
Tested by: gnn, hiren
MFC after: 1 month
limited in the amount of data they can handle at once.
Drivers can set ifp->if_hw_tsomax before calling ether_ifattach() to
change the limit.
The lowest allowable size is IP_MAXPACKET / 8 (8192 bytes) as anything
less wouldn't be very useful anymore. The upper limit is still at
IP_MAXPACKET (65536 bytes). Raising it requires further auditing of
the IPv4/v6 code path's as the length field in the IP header would
overflow leading to confusion in firewalls and others packet handler on
the real size of the packet.
The placement into "struct ifnet" is a bit hackish but the best place
that was found. When the stack/driver boundary is updated it should
be handled in a better way.
Submitted by: cperciva (earlier version)
Reviewed by: cperciva
Tested by: cperciva
MFC after: 1 week (using spare struct members to preserve ABI)
mbuf allocation fails, as in a case when ip_output() returns error.
To achieve that, move large block of code that updates tcpcb below
the out: label.
This fixes a panic, that requires the following sequence to happen:
1) The SYN was sent to the network, tp->snd_nxt = iss + 1, tp->snd_una = iss
2) The retransmit timeout happened for the SYN we had sent,
tcp_timer_rexmt() sets tp->snd_nxt = tp->snd_una, and calls tcp_output().
In tcp_output m_get() fails.
3) Later on the SYN|ACK for the SYN sent in step 1) came,
tcp_input sets tp->snd_una += 1, which leads to
tp->snd_una > tp->snd_nxt inconsistency, that later panics in
socket buffer code.
For reference, this bug fixed in DragonflyBSD repo:
http://gitweb.dragonflybsd.org/dragonfly.git/commitdiff/1ff9b7d322dc5a26f7173aa8c38ecb79da80e419
Reviewed by: andre
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
PR: kern/177456
Submitted by: HouYeFei&XiBoLiu <lglion718 163.com>
Defer sending an independent window update if a delayed ACK is pending
saving a packet. The window update then gets piggy-backed on the next
already scheduled ACK.
Added grammar fixes as well.
MFC after: 2 weeks
doing small reads on a (partially) filled receive socket buffer.
Normally one would a send a window update every time the available
space in the socket buffer increases by two times MSS. This leads
to a flurry of window updates that do not provide any meaningful
new information to the sender. There still is available space in
the window and the sender can continue sending data. All window
updates then get carried by the regular ACKs. Only when the socket
buffer was (almost) full and the window closed accordingly a window
updates delivery new information and allows the sender to start
sending more data again.
Send window updates only every two MSS when the socket buffer
has less than 1/8 space available, or the available space in the
socket buffer increased by 1/4 its full capacity, or the socket
buffer is very small. The next regular data ACK will carry and
report the exact window size again.
Reported by: sbruno
Tested by: darrenr
Tested by: Darren Baginski
PR: kern/116335
MFC after: 2 weeks