Commit Graph

280 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Tuexen
7dc90a1de0 Fix a bug in the restart window computation of TCP New Reno
When implementing support for IW10, an update in the computation
of the restart window used after an idle phase was missed. To
minimize code duplication, implement the logic in tcp_compute_initwnd()
and call it. This fixes a bug in NewReno, which was not aware of
IW10.

Submitted by:		Richard Scheffenegger
Reviewed by:		tuexen@
MFC after:		1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18940
2019-01-25 13:57:09 +00:00
Randall Stewart
c28440db29 This change represents a substantial restructure of the way we
reassembly inbound tcp segments. The old algorithm just blindly
dropped in segments without coalescing. This meant that every
segment could take up greater and greater room on the linked list
of segments. This of course is now subject to a tighter limit (100)
of segments which in a high BDP situation will cause us to be a
lot more in-efficent as we drop segments beyond 100 entries that
we receive. What this restructure does is cause the reassembly
buffer to coalesce segments putting an emphasis on the two
common cases (which avoid walking the list of segments) i.e.
where we add to the back of the queue of segments and where we
add to the front. We also have the reassembly buffer supporting
a couple of debug options (black box logging as well as counters
for code coverage). These are compiled out by default but can
be added by uncommenting the defines.

Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16626
2018-08-20 12:43:18 +00:00
Michael Tuexen
8e02b4e00c Don't expose the uptime via the TCP timestamps.
The TCP client side or the TCP server side when not using SYN-cookies
used the uptime as the TCP timestamp value. This patch uses in all
cases an offset, which is the result of a keyed hash function taking
the source and destination addresses and port numbers into account.
The keyed hash function is the same a used for the initial TSN.

Reviewed by:		rrs@
MFC after:		1 month
Sponsored by:		Netflix, Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16636
2018-08-19 14:56:10 +00:00
Brooks Davis
f38b68ae8a Make struct xinpcb and friends word-size independent.
Replace size_t members with ksize_t (uint64_t) and pointer members
(never used as pointers in userspace, but instead as unique
idenitifiers) with kvaddr_t (uint64_t). This makes the structs
identical between 32-bit and 64-bit ABIs.

On 64-bit bit systems, the ABI is maintained. On 32-bit systems,
this is an ABI breaking change. The ABI of most of these structs
was previously broken in r315662.  This also imposes a small API
change on userspace consumers who must handle kernel pointers
becoming virtual addresses.

PR:		228301 (exp-run by antoine)
Reviewed by:	jtl, kib, rwatson (various versions)
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15386
2018-07-05 13:13:48 +00:00
Matt Macy
6573d7580b epoch(9): allow preemptible epochs to compose
- Add tracker argument to preemptible epochs
- Inline epoch read path in kernel and tied modules
- Change in_epoch to take an epoch as argument
- Simplify tfb_tcp_do_segment to not take a ti_locked argument,
  there's no longer any benefit to dropping the pcbinfo lock
  and trying to do so just adds an error prone branchfest to
  these functions
- Remove cases of same function recursion on the epoch as
  recursing is no longer free.
- Remove the the TAILQ_ENTRY and epoch_section from struct
  thread as the tracker field is now stack or heap allocated
  as appropriate.

Tested by: pho and Limelight Networks
Reviewed by: kbowling at llnw dot com
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16066
2018-07-04 02:47:16 +00:00
Randall Stewart
89e560f441 This commit brings in a new refactored TCP stack called Rack.
Rack includes the following features:
 - A different SACK processing scheme (the old sack structures are not used).
 - RACK (Recent acknowledgment) where counting dup-acks is no longer done
        instead time is used to knwo when to retransmit. (see the I-D)
 - TLP (Tail Loss Probe) where we will probe for tail-losses to attempt
        to try not to take a retransmit time-out. (see the I-D)
 - Burst mitigation using TCPHTPS
 - PRR (partial rate reduction) see the RFC.

Once built into your kernel, you can select this stack by either
socket option with the name of the stack is "rack" or by setting
the global sysctl so the default is rack.

Note that any connection that does not support SACK will be kicked
back to the "default" base  FreeBSD stack (currently known as "default").

To build this into your kernel you will need to enable in your
kernel:
   makeoptions WITH_EXTRA_TCP_STACKS=1
   options TCPHPTS

Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision:		https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15525
2018-06-07 18:18:13 +00:00
Randall Stewart
803a230592 This change re-arranges the fields within the tcp-pcb so that
they are more in order of cache line use as one passes
through the tcp_input/output paths (non-errors most likely path). This
helps speed up cache line optimization so that the tcp stack runs
a bit more efficently.

Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15136
2018-04-26 21:41:16 +00:00
Randall Stewart
3ee9c3c4eb This commit brings in the TCP high precision timer system (tcp_hpts).
It is the forerunner/foundational work of bringing in both Rack and BBR
which use hpts for pacing out packets. The feature is optional and requires
the TCPHPTS option to be enabled before the feature will be active. TCP
modules that use it must assure that the base component is compile in
the kernel in which they are loaded.

MFC after:	Never
Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15020
2018-04-19 13:37:59 +00:00
Jonathan T. Looney
f897951965 Add missing header change from r332381.
Sponsored by:	Netflix, Inc.
Pointy hat:	jtl
2018-04-10 17:00:37 +00:00
Jonathan T. Looney
2529f56ed3 Add the "TCP Blackbox Recorder" which we discussed at the developer
summits at BSDCan and BSDCam in 2017.

The TCP Blackbox Recorder allows you to capture events on a TCP connection
in a ring buffer. It stores metadata with the event. It optionally stores
the TCP header associated with an event (if the event is associated with a
packet) and also optionally stores information on the sockets.

It supports setting a log ID on a TCP connection and using this to correlate
multiple connections that share a common log ID.

You can log connections in different modes. If you are doing a coordinated
test with a particular connection, you may tell the system to put it in
mode 4 (continuous dump). Or, if you just want to monitor for errors, you
can put it in mode 1 (ring buffer) and dump all the ring buffers associated
with the connection ID when we receive an error signal for that connection
ID. You can set a default mode that will be applied to a particular ratio
of incoming connections. You can also manually set a mode using a socket
option.

This commit includes only basic probes. rrs@ has added quite an abundance
of probes in his TCP development work. He plans to commit those soon.

There are user-space programs which we plan to commit as ports. These read
the data from the log device and output pcapng files, and then let you
analyze the data (and metadata) in the pcapng files.

Reviewed by:	gnn (previous version)
Obtained from:	Netflix, Inc.
Relnotes:	yes
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11085
2018-03-22 09:40:08 +00:00
Patrick Kelsey
18a7530938 Greatly reduce the number of #ifdefs supporting the TCP_RFC7413 kernel option.
The conditional compilation support is now centralized in
tcp_fastopen.h and tcp_var.h. This doesn't provide the minimum
theoretical code/data footprint when TCP_RFC7413 is disabled, but
nearly all the TFO code should wind up being removed by the optimizer,
the additional footprint in the syncache entries is a single pointer,
and the additional overhead in the tcpcb is at the end of the
structure.

This enables the TCP_RFC7413 kernel option by default in amd64 and
arm64 GENERIC.

Reviewed by:	hiren
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Limelight Networks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14048
2018-02-26 03:03:41 +00:00
Patrick Kelsey
c560df6f12 This is an implementation of the client side of TCP Fast Open (TFO)
[RFC7413]. It also includes a pre-shared key mode of operation in
which the server requires the client to be in possession of a shared
secret in order to successfully open TFO connections with that server.

The names of some existing fastopen sysctls have changed (e.g.,
net.inet.tcp.fastopen.enabled -> net.inet.tcp.fastopen.server_enable).

Reviewed by:	tuexen
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Limelight Networks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14047
2018-02-26 02:53:22 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
66492fea49 Separate out send buffer autoscaling code into function, so that
alternative TCP stacks may reuse it instead of pasting.

Obtained from:	Netflix
2017-12-07 22:36:58 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
51369649b0 sys: further adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 3-Clause license.

The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.

Special thanks to Wind River for providing access to "The Duke of
Highlander" tool: an older (2014) run over FreeBSD tree was useful as a
starting point.
2017-11-20 19:43:44 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
3bdf4c4274 Declare more TCP globals in tcp_var.h, so that alternative TCP stacks
can use them.  Gather all TCP tunables in tcp_var.h in one place and
alphabetically sort them, to ease maintainance of the list.

Don't copy and paste declarations in tcp_stacks/fastpath.c.
2017-10-11 20:36:09 +00:00
Michael Tuexen
e5cccc35c3 Add support to print the TCP stack being used.
Sponsored by:	Netflix, Inc.
2017-09-12 13:34:43 +00:00
Sean Bruno
32a04bb81d Use counter(9) for PLPMTUD counters.
Remove unused PLPMTUD sysctl counters.

Bump UPDATING and FreeBSD Version to indicate a rebuild is required.

Submitted by:	kevin.bowling@kev009.com
Reviewed by:	jtl
Sponsored by:	Limelight Networks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12003
2017-08-25 19:41:38 +00:00
Jonathan T. Looney
dc6a41b936 Add the infrastructure to support loading multiple versions of TCP
stack modules.

It adds support for mangling symbols exported by a module by prepending
a string to them. (This avoids overlapping symbols in the kernel linker.)

It allows the use of a macro as the module name in the DECLARE_MACRO()
and MACRO_VERSION() macros.

It allows the code to register stack aliases (e.g. both a generic name
["default"] and version-specific name ["default_10_3p1"]).

With these changes, it is trivial to compile TCP stack modules with
the name defined in the Makefile and to load multiple versions of the
same stack simultaneously. This functionality can be used to enable
side-by-side testing of an old and new version of the same TCP stack.
It also could support upgrading the TCP stack without a reboot.

Reviewed by:	gnn, sjg (makefiles only)
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11086
2017-06-08 20:41:28 +00:00
Steven Hartland
e44c1887fd Use estimated RTT for receive buffer auto resizing instead of timestamps
Switched from using timestamps to RTT estimates when performing TCP receive
buffer auto resizing, as not all hosts support / enable TCP timestamps.

Disabled reset of receive buffer auto scaling when not in bulk receive mode,
which gives an extra 20% performance increase.

Also extracted auto resizing to a common method shared between standard and
fastpath modules.

With this AWS S3 downloads at ~17ms latency on a 1Gbps connection jump from
~3MB/s to ~100MB/s using the default settings.

Reviewed by:    lstewart, gnn
MFC after:      2 weeks
Relnotes:       Yes
Sponsored by:   Multiplay
Differential Revision:  https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9668
2017-04-10 08:19:35 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
cc65eb4e79 Hide struct inpcb, struct tcpcb from the userland.
This is a painful change, but it is needed.  On the one hand, we avoid
modifying them, and this slows down some ideas, on the other hand we still
eventually modify them and tools like netstat(1) never work on next version of
FreeBSD.  We maintain a ton of spares in them, and we already got some ifdef
hell at the end of tcpcb.

Details:
- Hide struct inpcb, struct tcpcb under _KERNEL || _WANT_FOO.
- Make struct xinpcb, struct xtcpcb pure API structures, not including
  kernel structures inpcb and tcpcb inside.  Export into these structures
  the fields from inpcb and tcpcb that are known to be used, and put there
  a ton of spare space.
- Make kernel and userland utilities compilable after these changes.
- Bump __FreeBSD_version.

Reviewed by:	rrs, gnn
Differential Revision:	D10018
2017-03-21 06:39:49 +00:00
Warner Losh
fbbd9655e5 Renumber copyright clause 4
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.

Submitted by:	Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request:	https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
2017-02-28 23:42:47 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
cfff3743cd Move tcp_fields_to_net() static inline into tcp_var.h, just below its
friend tcp_fields_to_host(). There is third party code that also uses
this inline.

Reviewed by:	ae
2017-02-10 17:46:26 +00:00
Andrey V. Elsukov
fcf596178b Merge projects/ipsec into head/.
Small summary
 -------------

o Almost all IPsec releated code was moved into sys/netipsec.
o New kernel modules added: ipsec.ko and tcpmd5.ko. New kernel
  option IPSEC_SUPPORT added. It enables support for loading
  and unloading of ipsec.ko and tcpmd5.ko kernel modules.
o IPSEC_NAT_T option was removed. Now NAT-T support is enabled by
  default. The UDP_ENCAP_ESPINUDP_NON_IKE encapsulation type
  support was removed. Added TCP/UDP checksum handling for
  inbound packets that were decapsulated by transport mode SAs.
  setkey(8) modified to show run-time NAT-T configuration of SA.
o New network pseudo interface if_ipsec(4) added. For now it is
  build as part of ipsec.ko module (or with IPSEC kernel).
  It implements IPsec virtual tunnels to create route-based VPNs.
o The network stack now invokes IPsec functions using special
  methods. The only one header file <netipsec/ipsec_support.h>
  should be included to declare all the needed things to work
  with IPsec.
o All IPsec protocols handlers (ESP/AH/IPCOMP protosw) were removed.
  Now these protocols are handled directly via IPsec methods.
o TCP_SIGNATURE support was reworked to be more close to RFC.
o PF_KEY SADB was reworked:
  - now all security associations stored in the single SPI namespace,
    and all SAs MUST have unique SPI.
  - several hash tables added to speed up lookups in SADB.
  - SADB now uses rmlock to protect access, and concurrent threads
    can do SA lookups in the same time.
  - many PF_KEY message handlers were reworked to reflect changes
    in SADB.
  - SADB_UPDATE message was extended to support new PF_KEY headers:
    SADB_X_EXT_NEW_ADDRESS_SRC and SADB_X_EXT_NEW_ADDRESS_DST. They
    can be used by IKE daemon to change SA addresses.
o ipsecrequest and secpolicy structures were cardinally changed to
  avoid locking protection for ipsecrequest. Now we support
  only limited number (4) of bundled SAs, but they are supported
  for both INET and INET6.
o INPCB security policy cache was introduced. Each PCB now caches
  used security policies to avoid SP lookup for each packet.
o For inbound security policies added the mode, when the kernel does
  check for full history of applied IPsec transforms.
o References counting rules for security policies and security
  associations were changed. The proper SA locking added into xform
  code.
o xform code was also changed. Now it is possible to unregister xforms.
  tdb_xxx structures were changed and renamed to reflect changes in
  SADB/SPDB, and changed rules for locking and refcounting.

Reviewed by:	gnn, wblock
Obtained from:	Yandex LLC
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	Yandex LLC
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9352
2017-02-06 08:49:57 +00:00
Maxim Sobolev
5e946c03c7 Fix slight type mismatch between so_options defined in sys/socketvar.h
and tw_so_options defined here which is supposed to be a copy of the
former (short vs u_short respectively).

Switch tw_so_options to be "signed short" to match the type of the field
it's inherited from.
2017-01-12 10:14:54 +00:00
Jonathan T. Looney
68bd7ed102 The TFO server-side code contains some changes that are not conditioned on
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
2016-10-12 19:06:50 +00:00
Jonathan T. Looney
bd79708dbf In the TCP stack, the hhook(9) framework provides hooks for kernel modules
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
2016-10-12 02:16:42 +00:00
Jonathan T. Looney
3ac125068a Remove "long" variables from the TCP stack (not including the modular
congestion control framework).

Reviewed by:	gnn, lstewart (partial)
Sponsored by:	Juniper Networks, Netflix
Differential Revision:	(multiple)
Tested by:	Limelight, Netflix
2016-10-06 16:28:34 +00:00
Jonathan T. Looney
55a429a6dc Remove declaration of un-defined function tcp_seq_subtract().
Reviewed by:	gnn
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Juniper Networks, Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7055
2016-10-06 15:57:15 +00:00
Lawrence Stewart
4b7b743c16 Pass the number of segments coalesced by LRO up the stack by repurposing the
tso_segsz pkthdr field during RX processing, and use the information in TCP for
more correct accounting and as a congestion control input. This is only a start,
and an audit of other uses for the data is left as future work.

Reviewed by:	gallatin, rrs
Sponsored by:	Netflix, Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7564
2016-08-25 13:33:32 +00:00
Randall Stewart
587d67c008 Here we update the modular tcp to be able to switch to an
alternate TCP stack in other then the closed state (pre-listen/connect).
The idea is that *if* that is supported by the alternate stack, it
is asked if its ok to switch. If it approves the "handoff" then we
allow the switch to happen. Also the fini() function now gets a flag
to tell if you are switching away *or* the tcb is destroyed. The
init() call into the alternate stack is moved to the end so the
tcb is more fully formed before the init transpires.

Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision:	D6790
2016-08-16 15:11:46 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
3f58662dd9 The pr_destroy field does not allow us to run the teardown code in a
specific order.  VNET_SYSUNINITs however are doing exactly that.
Thus remove the VIMAGE conditional field from the domain(9) protosw
structure and replace it with VNET_SYSUNINITs.
This also allows us to change some order and to make the teardown functions
file local static.
Also convert divert(4) as it uses the same mechanism ip(4) and ip6(4) use
internally.

Slightly reshuffle the SI_SUB_* fields in kernel.h and add a new ones, e.g.,
for pfil consumers (firewalls), partially for this commit and for others
to come.

Reviewed by:		gnn, tuexen (sctp), jhb (kernel.h)
Obtained from:		projects/vnet
MFC after:		2 weeks
X-MFC:			do not remove pr_destroy
Sponsored by:		The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6652
2016-06-01 10:14:04 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
f59d975e10 Tiny refactor of r294869/r296881: use defines to mask the VNET() macro.
Suggested by:	bz
2016-05-17 23:14:17 +00:00
Randall Stewart
5105a92c49 This small change adopts the excellent suggestion for using named
structures in the add of a new tcp-stack that came in late to me
via email after the last commit. It also makes it so that a new
stack may optionally get a callback during a retransmit
timeout. This allows the new stack to clear specific state (think
sack scoreboards or other such structures).

Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision:	http://reviews.freebsd.org/D6303
2016-05-17 09:53:22 +00:00
Randall Stewart
e5ad64562a This cleans up the timers code in TCP to start using the new
async_drain functionality. This as been tested in NF as well as
by Verisign. Still to do in here is to remove all the old flags. They
are currently left being maintained but probably are no longer needed.

Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision:	http://reviews.freebsd.org/D5924
2016-04-28 13:27:12 +00:00
Jonathan T. Looney
5d20f97461 to_flags is currently a 64-bit integer; however, we only use 7 bits.
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
2016-03-22 15:55:17 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
bf840a1707 Redo r294869. The array of counters for TCP states doesn't belong to
struct tcpstat, because the structure can be zeroed out by netstat(1) -z,
and of course running connection counts shouldn't be touched.

Place running connection counts into separate array, and provide
separate read-only sysctl oid for it.
2016-03-15 00:15:10 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
2f06d2ab91 Comment fix: statistics are not read-only. 2016-03-14 18:06:59 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
57a78e3bae Augment struct tcpstat with tcps_states[], which is used for book-keeping
the amount of TCP connections by state.  Provides a cheap way to get
connection count without traversing the whole pcb list.

Sponsored by:	Netflix
2016-01-27 00:45:46 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
d17d4c6b2a Provide TCPSTAT_DEC() and TCPSTAT_FETCH() macros. 2016-01-27 00:20:07 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
0c39d38d21 Historically we have two fields in tcpcb to describe sender MSS: t_maxopd,
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
2016-01-07 00:14:42 +00:00
Patrick Kelsey
281a0fd4f9 Implementation of server-side TCP Fast Open (TFO) [RFC7413].
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
2015-12-24 19:09:48 +00:00
Randall Stewart
55bceb1e2b First cut of the modularization of our TCP stack. Still
to do is to clean up the timer handling using the async-drain.
Other optimizations may be coming to go with this. Whats here
will allow differnet tcp implementations (one included).
Reviewed by:	jtl, hiren, transports
Sponsored by:	Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision:	D4055
2015-12-16 00:56:45 +00:00
Hiren Panchasara
4d16338223 Clean up unused bandwidth entry in the TCP hostcache.
Submitted by:		Jason Wolfe (j at nitrology dot com)
Reviewed by:		rrs, hiren
Sponsored by:		Limelight Networks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4154
2015-12-11 06:22:58 +00:00
Hiren Panchasara
b87170f210 r290122 added 4 bytes and removed 8 in struct sackhint. Add a pad entry of 4
bytes to restore the size.

Spotted by:	rrs
Reviewed by:	rrs
X-MFC with:	r290122
Sponsored by:	Limelight Networks
2015-12-10 03:20:10 +00:00
Hiren Panchasara
021eaf7996 One of the ways to detect loss is to count duplicate acks coming back from the
other end till it reaches predetermined threshold which is 3 for us right now.
Once that happens, we trigger fast-retransmit to do loss recovery.

Main problem with the current implementation is that we don't honor SACK
information well to detect whether an incoming ack is a dupack or not. RFC6675
has latest recommendations for that. According to it, dupack is a segment that
arrives carrying a SACK block that identifies previously unknown information
between snd_una and snd_max even if it carries new data, changes the advertised
window, or moves the cumulative acknowledgment point.

With the prevalence of Selective ACK (SACK) these days, improper handling can
lead to delayed loss recovery.

With the fix, new behavior looks like following:

0) th_ack < snd_una --> ignore
Old acks are ignored.
1) th_ack == snd_una, !sack_changed --> ignore
Acks with SACK enabled but without any new SACK info in them are ignored.
2) th_ack == snd_una, window == old_window --> increment
Increment on a good dupack.
3) th_ack == snd_una, window != old_window, sack_changed --> increment
When SACK enabled, it's okay to have advertized window changed if the ack has
new SACK info.
4) th_ack > snd_una --> reset to 0
Reset to 0 when left edge moves.
5) th_ack > snd_una, sack_changed --> increment
Increment if left edge moves but there is new SACK info.

Here, sack_changed is the indicator that incoming ack has previously unknown
SACK info in it.

Note: This fix is not fully compliant to RFC6675. That may require a few
changes to current implementation in order to keep per-sackhole dupack counter
and change to the way we mark/handle sack holes.

PR:			203663
Reviewed by:		jtl
MFC after:		3 weeks
Sponsored by:		Limelight Networks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4225
2015-12-08 21:21:48 +00:00
Hiren Panchasara
12eeb81fc1 Calculate the correct amount of bytes that are in-flight for a connection as
suggested by RFC 6675.

Currently differnt places in the stack tries to guess this in suboptimal ways.
The main problem is that current calculations don't take sacked bytes into
account. Sacked bytes are the bytes receiver acked via SACK option. This is
suboptimal because it assumes that network has more outstanding (unacked) bytes
than the actual value and thus sends less data by setting congestion window
lower than what's possible which in turn may cause slower recovery from losses.

As an example, one of the current calculations looks something like this:
snd_nxt - snd_fack + sackhint.sack_bytes_rexmit
New proposal from RFC 6675 is:
snd_max - snd_una - sackhint.sacked_bytes + sackhint.sack_bytes_rexmit
which takes sacked bytes into account which is a new addition to the sackhint
struct. Only thing we are missing from RFC 6675 is isLost() i.e. segment being
considered lost and thus adjusting pipe based on that which makes this
calculation a bit on conservative side.

The approach is very simple. We already process each ack with sack info in
tcp_sack_doack() and extract sack blocks/holes out of it. We'd now also track
this new variable sacked_bytes which keeps track of total sacked bytes reported.

One downside to this approach is that we may get incorrect count of sacked_bytes
if the other end decides to drop sack info in the ack because of memory pressure
or some other reasons. But in this (not very likely) case also the pipe
calculation would be conservative which is okay as opposed to being aggressive
in sending packets into the network.

Next step is to use this more accurate pipe estimation to drive congestion
window adjustments.

In collaboration with:	rrs
Reviewed by:		jason_eggnet dot com, rrs
MFC after:		2 weeks
Sponsored by:		Limelight Networks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3971
2015-10-28 22:57:51 +00:00
Hiren Panchasara
356c7958a4 Add sysctl tunable net.inet.tcp.initcwnd_segments to specify initial congestion
window in number of segments on fly. It is set to 10 segments by default.

Remove net.inet.tcp.experimental.initcwnd10 which is now redundant. Also remove
the parent node net.inet.tcp.experimental as it's not needed anymore and also
because it was not well thought out.

Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3858
In collaboration with:	lstewart
Reviewed by:		gnn (prev version), rwatson, allanjude, wblock (man page)
MFC after:		2 weeks
Relnotes:		yes
Sponsored by:		Limelight Networks
2015-10-27 09:43:05 +00:00
Hiren Panchasara
86a996e6bd There are times when it would be really nice to have a record of the last few
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
2015-10-14 00:35:37 +00:00
Alexander V. Chernikov
1558cb2448 Eliminate nd6_nud_hint() and its TCP bindings.
Initially function was introduced in r53541 (KAME initial commit) to
  "provide hints from upper layer protocols that indicate a connection
  is making "forward progress"" (quote from RFC 2461 7.3.1 Reachability
  Confirmation).
However, it was converted to do nothing (e.g. just return) in r122922
  (tcp_hostcache implementation) back in 2003. Some defines were moved
  to tcp_var.h in r169541. Then, it was broken (for non-corner cases)
  by r186119 (L2<>L3 split) in 2008 (NULL ifp in nd6_lookup). So,
  right now this code is broken and has no "real" base users.

Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3699
2015-09-27 05:29:34 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
24067db8ca Make tcp_mtudisc() static and void. No functional changes.
Sponsored by:	Nginx, Inc.
2015-09-04 12:02:12 +00:00