Remove lots'o'hacks.
looutput is now static.
Other callers who want to use loopback to allow shortcutting
should call the special entrypoint for this, if_simloop(), which is
specifically designed for this purpose. Using looutput for this purpose
was problematic, particularly with bpf and trying to keep track
of whether one should be using the charateristics of the loopback interface
or the interface (e.g. if_ethersubr.c) that was requesting the loopback.
There was a whole class of errors due to this mis-use each of which had
hacks to cover them up.
Consists largly of hack removal :-)
or unsigned int (this doesn't change the struct layout, size or
alignment in any of the files changed in this commit, at least for
gcc on i386's. Using bitfields of type u_char may affect size and
alignment but not packing)).
ifdef tangle. The previous commit to ip_fil.h didn't change the
one that actually applies to the current FreeBSD kernel, of course.
Fixed.
Fixed style bugs in previous commit to ip_fil.h.
FreeBSD/alpha. The most significant item is to change the command
argument to ioctl functions from int to u_long. This change brings us
inline with various other BSD versions. Driver writers may like to
use (__FreeBSD_version == 300003) to detect this change.
The prototype FreeBSD/alpha machdep will follow in a couple of days
time.
so that the new behaviour is now default.
Solves the "infinite loop in diversion" problem when more than one diversion
is active.
Man page changes follow.
The new code is in -stable as the NON default option.
net.inet.ip.icmp.bmcastecho = 0 by removing the extra check for the
address being a multicast address. The test now relies on the link
layer flags that indicate it was received via multicast. The previous
logic was broken and replied to ICMP echo/timestamp broadcasts even
when the sysctl option disallowed them.
Reviewed by: wollman
Prior to this change, Accidental recursion protection was done by
the diverted daemon feeding back the divert port number it got
the packet on, as the port number on a sendto(). IPFW knew not to
redivert a packet to this port (again). Processing of the ruleset
started at the beginning again, skipping that divert port.
The new semantic (which is how we should have done it the first time)
is that the port number in the sendto() is the rule number AFTER which
processing should restart, and on a recvfrom(), the port number is the
rule number which caused the diversion. This is much more flexible,
and also more intuitive. If the user uses the same sockaddr received
when resending, processing resumes at the rule number following that
that caused the diversion. The user can however select to resume rule
processing at any rule. (0 is restart at the beginning)
To enable the new code use
option IPFW_DIVERT_RESTART
This should become the default as soon as people have looked at it a bit
passed to the user process for incoming packets. When the sockaddr_in
is passed back to the divert socket later, use thi sas the primary
interface lookup and only revert to the IP address when the name fails.
This solves a long standing bug with divert sockets:
When two interfaces had the same address (P2P for example) the interface
"assigned" to the reinjected packet was sometimes incorect.
Probably we should define a "sockaddr_div" to officially hold this
extended information in teh same manner as sockaddr_dl.
of the TCP payload. See RFC1122 section 4.2.2.6 . This allows
Path MTU discovery to be used along with IP options.
PR: problem discovered by Kevin Lahey <kml@nas.nasa.gov>
so it must be adjusted (minus 1) before using it to do the length check.
I'm not sure who to give the credit to, but the bug was reported by
Jennifer Dawn Myers <jdm@enteract.com>, who also supplied a patch. It
was also fixed in OpenBSD previously by andreas.gunnarsson@emw.ericsson.se,
and of course I did the homework to verify that the fix was correct per
the specification.
PR: 6738
NetBSD, ported to FreeBSD by Pierre Beyssac <pb@fasterix.freenix.org> and
minorly tweaked by me.
This is a standard part of FreeBSD, but must be enabled with:
"sysctl -w net.inet.ip.fastforwarding=1" ...and of course forwarding must
also be enabled. This should probably be modified to use the zone
allocator for speed and space efficiency. The current algorithm also
appears to lose if the number of active paths exceeds IPFLOW_MAX (256),
in which case it wastes lots of time trying to figure out which cache
entry to drop.
Define a parameter which indicates the maximum number of sockets in a
system, and use this to size the zone allocators used for sockets and
for certain PCBs.
Convert PF_LOCAL PCB structures to be type-stable and add a version number.
Define an external format for infomation about socket structures and use
it in several places.
Define a mechanism to get all PF_LOCAL and PF_INET PCB lists through
sysctl(3) without blocking network interrupts for an unreasonable
length of time. This probably still has some bugs and/or race
conditions, but it seems to work well enough on my machines.
It is now possible for `netstat' to get almost all of its information
via the sysctl(3) interface rather than reading kmem (changes to follow).
---------
Make callers of namei() responsible for releasing references or locks
instead of having the underlying filesystems do it. This eliminates
redundancy in all terminal filesystems and makes it possible for stacked
transport layers such as umapfs or nullfs to operate correctly.
Quality testing was done with testvn, and lat_fs from the lmbench suite.
Some NFS client testing courtesy of Patrik Kudo.
vop_mknod and vop_symlink still release the returned vpp. vop_rename
still releases 4 vnode arguments before it returns. These remaining cases
will be corrected in the next set of patches.
---------
Submitted by: Michael Hancock <michaelh@cet.co.jp>
is believed to have been broken with the Brakmo/Peterson srtt
calculation changes. The result of this bug is that TCP connections
could time out extremely quickly (in 12 seconds).
Also backed out jdp's partial fix for this problem in rev 1.17 of
tcp_timer.c as it is obsoleted by this commit.
Bug was pointed out by Kevin Lehey <kml@roller.nas.nasa.gov>.
PR: 6068
ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/port-numbers
port numbers are divided into three ranges:
0 - 1023 Well Known Ports
1024 - 49151 Registered Ports
49152 - 65535 Dynamic and/or Private Ports
This patch changes the "local port range" from 40000-44999
to the range shown above (plus fix the comment in in_pcb.c).
WARNING: This may have an impact on firewall configurations!
PR: 5402
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Stephen J. Roznowski <sjr@home.net>
"time" wasn't a atomic variable, so splfoo() protection were needed
around any access to it, unless you just wanted the seconds part.
Most uses of time.tv_sec now uses the new variable time_second instead.
gettime() changed to getmicrotime(0.
Remove a couple of unneeded splfoo() protections, the new getmicrotime()
is atomic, (until Bruce sets a breakpoint in it).
A couple of places needed random data, so use read_random() instead
of mucking about with time which isn't random.
Add a new nfs_curusec() function.
Mark a couple of bogosities involving the now disappeard time variable.
Update ffs_update() to avoid the weird "== &time" checks, by fixing the
one remaining call that passwd &time as args.
Change profiling in ncr.c to use ticks instead of time. Resolution is
the same.
Add new function "tvtohz()" to avoid the bogus "splfoo(), add time, call
hzto() which subtracts time" sequences.
Reviewed by: bde
all the LKM load/unload junk, and don't forget to register the SYSINIT
so that the cdevsw entry is attached.
BTW: I think the way it builds it's /dev nodes on the fly as an LKM with
vnode ops is kinda cute - I guess that'd be one way to solve the devfs
persistance problems.. :-) (ie: have the drivers make the nodes in /dev
on disk directly if they are missing, but leave them alone if present).