o redefine the parameter 'is_syn' to 'flags', add TO_SYN flag and adjust its
usage accordingly
o update the comments to the tcp_dooptions() invocation in
tcp_input():after_listen to reflect reality
o move the logic checking the echoed timestamp out of tcp_dooptions() to the
only place that uses it next to the invocation described in the previous
item
o adjust parsing of TCPOPT_SACK_PERMITTED to use the same style as the others
o add comments in to struct tcpopt.to_flags #defines
No functional changes.
Sponsored by: TCP/IP Optimization Fundraise 2005
as possible for the syncache_add() case. The syncache timer no longer
aquires the tcpinfo lock and timeout/retransmit runs can happen in
parallel with bucket granularity.
On a P4 the additional locks cause a slight degression of 0.7% in tcp
connections per second. When IP and TCP input are deserialized and
can run in parallel this little overhead can be neglected. The syncookie
handling still leaves room for improvement and its random salts may be
moved to the syncache bucket head structures to remove the second lock
operation currently required for it. However this would be a more
involved change from the way syncookies work at the moment.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Tested by: rwatson, ps (earlier version)
Sponsored by: TCP/IP Optimization Fundraise 2005
pru_abort(), pru_detach(), and in_pcbdetach():
- Universally support and enforce the invariant that so_pcb is
never NULL, converting dozens of unnecessary NULL checks into
assertions, and eliminating dozens of unnecessary error handling
cases in protocol code.
- In some cases, eliminate unnecessary pcbinfo locking, as it is no
longer required to ensure so_pcb != NULL. For example, the receive
code no longer requires the pcbinfo lock, and the send code only
requires it if building a new connection on an otherwise unconnected
socket triggered via sendto() with an address. This should
significnatly reduce tcbinfo lock contention in the receive and send
cases.
- In order to support the invariant that so_pcb != NULL, it is now
necessary for the TCP code to not discard the tcpcb any time a
connection is dropped, but instead leave the tcpcb until the socket
is shutdown. This case is handled by setting INP_DROPPED, to
substitute for using a NULL so_pcb to indicate that the connection
has been dropped. This requires the inpcb lock, but not the pcbinfo
lock.
- Unlike all other protocols in the tree, TCP may need to retain access
to the socket after the file descriptor has been closed. Set
SS_PROTOREF in tcp_detach() in order to prevent the socket from being
freed, and add a flag, INP_SOCKREF, so that the TCP code knows whether
or not it needs to free the socket when the connection finally does
close. The typical case where this occurs is if close() is called on
a TCP socket before all sent data in the send socket buffer has been
transmitted or acknowledged. If INP_SOCKREF is found when the
connection is dropped, we release the inpcb, tcpcb, and socket instead
of flagging INP_DROPPED.
- Abort and detach protocol switch methods no longer return failures,
nor attempt to free sockets, as the socket layer does this.
- Annotate the existence of a long-standing race in the TCP timer code,
in which timers are stopped but not drained when the socket is freed,
as waiting for drain may lead to deadlocks, or have to occur in a
context where waiting is not permitted. This race has been handled
by testing to see if the tcpcb pointer in the inpcb is NULL (and vice
versa), which is not normally permitted, but may be true of a inpcb
and tcpcb have been freed. Add a counter to test how often this race
has actually occurred, and a large comment for each instance where
we compare potentially freed memory with NULL. This will have to be
fixed in the near future, but requires is to further address how to
handle the timer shutdown shutdown issue.
- Several TCP calls no longer potentially free the passed inpcb/tcpcb,
so no longer need to return a pointer to indicate whether the argument
passed in is still valid.
- Un-macroize debugging and locking setup for various protocol switch
methods for TCP, as it lead to more obscurity, and as locking becomes
more customized to the methods, offers less benefit.
- Assert copyright on tcp_usrreq.c due to significant modifications that
have been made as part of this work.
These changes significantly modify the memory management and connection
logic of our TCP implementation, and are (as such) High Risk Changes,
and likely to contain serious bugs. Please report problems to the
current@ mailing list ASAP, ideally with simple test cases, and
optionally, packet traces.
MFC after: 3 months
right from the beginning and partly clean up the differences in handling
between SYN_SENT and SYN_RCVD (syncache).
Further changes to this code to come. This is a first incremental step
to a general overhaul and streamlining of the TCP code.
PR: kern/15095
PR: kern/92690 (partly)
Reviewed by: qingli (and tested with ANVL)
Sponsored by: TCP/IP Optimization Fundraise 2005
threshold. Inflight doesn't make sense on a LAN as it has
trouble figuring out the maximal bandwidth because of the coarse
tick granularity.
The sysctl net.inet.tcp.inflight.rttthresh specifies the threshold
in milliseconds below which inflight will disengage. It defaults
to 10ms.
Tested by: Joao Barros <joao.barros-at-gmail.com>,
Rich Murphey <rich-at-whiteoaklabs.com>
Sponsored by: TCP/IP Optimization Fundraise 2005
processing is now done in the ACK processing case.
- Merge tcp_sack_option() and tcp_del_sackholes() into a new function
called tcp_sack_doack().
- Test (SEG.ACK < SND.MAX) before processing the ACK.
Submitted by: Noritoshi Demizu
Reveiewed by: Mohan Srinivasan, Raja Mukerji
Approved by: re
- Walks the scoreboard backwards from the tail to reduce the number of
comparisons for each sack option received.
- Introduce functions to add/remove sack scoreboard elements, making
the code more readable.
Submitted by: Noritoshi Demizu
Reviewed by: Raja Mukerji, Mohan Srinivasan
or to compute the total retransmitted bytes in this sack recovery
episode, the scoreboard is traversed. While in sack recovery, this
traversal occurs on every call to tcp_output(), every dupack and
every partial ack. The scoreboard could potentially get quite large,
making this traversal expensive.
This change optimizes this by storing hints (for the next hole to
retransmit and the total retransmitted bytes in this sack recovery
episode) reducing the complexity to find these values from O(n) to
constant time.
The debug code that sanity checks the hints against the computed
value will be removed eventually.
Submitted by: Mohan Srinivasan, Noritoshi Demizu, Raja Mukerji.
code readability and facilitates some anticipated optimizations in
tcp_sack_option().
- Remove tcp_print_holes() and TCP_SACK_DEBUG.
Submitted by: Raja Mukerji.
Reviewed by: Mohan Srinivasan, Noritoshi Demizu.
ineffective, depreciated and can be abused to degrade the performance
of active TCP sessions if spoofed.
Replace a bogus call to tcp_quench() in tcp_output() with the direct
equivalent tcpcb variable assignment.
Security: draft-gont-tcpm-icmp-attacks-03.txt Section 7.1
MFC after: 3 days
in flight in SACK recovery.
Found by: Noritoshi Demizu
Submitted by: Mohan Srinivasan <mohans at yahoo-inc dot com>
Noritoshi Demizu <demizu at dd dot ij4u dot or dot jp>
Raja Mukerji <raja at moselle dot com>
per-connection and globally. This eliminates potential DoS attacks
where SACK scoreboard elements tie up too much memory.
Submitted by: Raja Mukerji (raja at moselle dot com).
Reviewed by: Mohan Srinivasan (mohans at yahoo-inc dot com).
o Use SYSCTL_IN() macro instead of direct call of copyin(9).
Submitted by: ume
o Move sysctl_drop() implementation to sys/netinet/tcp_subr.c where
most of tcp sysctls live.
o There are net.inet[6].tcp[6].getcred sysctls already, no needs in
a separate struct tcp_ident_mapping.
Suggested by: ume
utility:
The tcpdrop command drops the TCP connection specified by the
local address laddr, port lport and the foreign address faddr,
port fport.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Reviewed by: rwatson (locking), ru (man page), -current
MFC after: 1 month
A complete rationale and discussion is given in this message
and the resulting discussion:
http://docs.freebsd.org/cgi/mid.cgi?4177C8AD.6060706
Note that this commit removes only the functional part of T/TCP
from the tcp_* related functions in the kernel. Other features
introduced with RFC1644 are left intact (socket layer changes,
sendmsg(2) on connection oriented protocols) and are meant to
be reused by a simpler and less intrusive reimplemention of the
previous T/TCP functionality.
Discussed on: -arch
to control the packets injected while in sack recovery (for both
retransmissions and new data).
- Cleanups to the sack codepaths in tcp_output.c and tcp_sack.c.
- Add a new sysctl (net.inet.tcp.sack.initburst) that controls the
number of sack retransmissions done upon initiation of sack recovery.
Submitted by: Mohan Srinivasan <mohans@yahoo-inc.com>
- Trailing tab/space cleanup
- Remove spurious spaces between or before tabs
This change avoids touching files that Andre likely has in his working
set for PFIL hooks changes for IPFW/DUMMYNET.
Approved by: re (scottl)
Submitted by: Xin LI <delphij@frontfree.net>
for the SYN|ACK packet and then letting in6_pcbconnect set the
flowlabel later. Arange for the syncache/syncookie code to set and
recall the flow label so that the flowlabel used for the SYN|ACK
is consistent. This is done by using some of the cookie (when tcp
cookies are enabeled) and by stashing the flowlabel in syncache.
Tested and Discovered by: Orla McGann <orly@cnri.dit.ie>
Approved by: ume, silby
MFC after: 1 month
originated on RELENG_4 and was ported to -CURRENT.
The scoreboarding code was obtained from OpenBSD, and many
of the remaining changes were inspired by OpenBSD, but not
taken directly from there.
You can enable/disable sack using net.inet.tcp.do_sack. You can
also limit the number of sack holes that all senders can have in
the scoreboard with net.inet.tcp.sackhole_limit.
Reviewed by: gnn
Obtained from: Yahoo! (Mohan Srinivasan, Jayanth Vijayaraghavan)
possible while maintaining compatibility with the widest range of TCP stacks.
The algorithm is as follows:
---
For connections in the ESTABLISHED state, only resets with
sequence numbers exactly matching last_ack_sent will cause a reset,
all other segments will be silently dropped.
For connections in all other states, a reset anywhere in the window
will cause the connection to be reset. All other segments will be
silently dropped.
---
The necessity of accepting all in-window resets was discovered
by jayanth and jlemon, both of whom have seen TCP stacks that
will respond to FIN-ACK packets with resets not meeting the
strict last_ack_sent check.
Idea by: Darren Reed
Reviewed by: truckman, jlemon, others(?)
TIME_WAIT recycling cases I was able to generate with http testing tools.
In short, as the old algorithm relied on ticks to create the time offset
component of an ISN, two connections with the exact same host, port pair
that were generated between timer ticks would have the exact same sequence
number. As a result, the second connection would fail to pass the TIME_WAIT
check on the server side, and the SYN would never be acknowledged.
I've "fixed" this by adding random positive increments to the time component
between clock ticks so that ISNs will *always* be increasing, no matter how
quickly the port is recycled.
Except in such contrived benchmarking situations, this problem should never
come up in normal usage... until networks get faster.
No MFC planned, 4.x is missing other optimizations that are needed to even
create the situation in which such quick port recycling will occur.
increased <netinet/tcp_var>'s already large set of prerequisites, and
this was handled badly. Just don't declare the complete syncache struct
unless <netinet/pcb.h> is included before <netinet/tcp_var.h>.
Approved by: jlemon (years ago, for a more invasive fix)
amount of segments it will hold.
The following tuneables and sysctls control the behaviour of the tcp
segment reassembly queue:
net.inet.tcp.reass.maxsegments (loader tuneable)
specifies the maximum number of segments all tcp reassemly queues can
hold (defaults to 1/16 of nmbclusters).
net.inet.tcp.reass.maxqlen
specifies the maximum number of segments any individual tcp session queue
can hold (defaults to 48).
net.inet.tcp.reass.cursegments (readonly)
counts the number of segments currently in all reassembly queues.
net.inet.tcp.reass.overflows (readonly)
counts how often either the global or local queue limit has been reached.
Tested by: bms, silby
Reviewed by: bms, silby
This is the first of two commits; bringing in the kernel support first.
This can be enabled by compiling a kernel with options TCP_SIGNATURE
and FAST_IPSEC.
For the uninitiated, this is a TCP option which provides for a means of
authenticating TCP sessions which came into being before IPSEC. It is
still relevant today, however, as it is used by many commercial router
vendors, particularly with BGP, and as such has become a requirement for
interconnect at many major Internet points of presence.
Several parts of the TCP and IP headers, including the segment payload,
are digested with MD5, including a shared secret. The PF_KEY interface
is used to manage the secrets using security associations in the SADB.
There is a limitation here in that as there is no way to map a TCP flow
per-port back to an SPI without polluting tcpcb or using the SPD; the
code to do the latter is unstable at this time. Therefore this code only
supports per-host keying granularity.
Whilst FAST_IPSEC is mutually exclusive with KAME IPSEC (and thus IPv6),
TCP_SIGNATURE applies only to IPv4. For the vast majority of prospective
users of this feature, this will not pose any problem.
This implementation is output-only; that is, the option is honoured when
responding to a host initiating a TCP session, but no effort is made
[yet] to authenticate inbound traffic. This is, however, sufficient to
interwork with Cisco equipment.
Tested with a Cisco 2501 running IOS 12.0(27), and Quagga 0.96.4 with
local patches. Patches for tcpdump to validate TCP-MD5 sessions are also
available from me upon request.
Sponsored by: sentex.net
resource exhaustion attacks.
For network link optimization TCP can adjust its MSS and thus
packet size according to the observed path MTU. This is done
dynamically based on feedback from the remote host and network
components along the packet path. This information can be
abused to pretend an extremely low path MTU.
The resource exhaustion works in two ways:
o during tcp connection setup the advertized local MSS is
exchanged between the endpoints. The remote endpoint can
set this arbitrarily low (except for a minimum MTU of 64
octets enforced in the BSD code). When the local host is
sending data it is forced to send many small IP packets
instead of a large one.
For example instead of the normal TCP payload size of 1448
it forces TCP payload size of 12 (MTU 64) and thus we have
a 120 times increase in workload and packets. On fast links
this quickly saturates the local CPU and may also hit pps
processing limites of network components along the path.
This type of attack is particularly effective for servers
where the attacker can download large files (WWW and FTP).
We mitigate it by enforcing a minimum MTU settable by sysctl
net.inet.tcp.minmss defaulting to 256 octets.
o the local host is reveiving data on a TCP connection from
the remote host. The local host has no control over the
packet size the remote host is sending. The remote host
may chose to do what is described in the first attack and
send the data in packets with an TCP payload of at least
one byte. For each packet the tcp_input() function will
be entered, the packet is processed and a sowakeup() is
signalled to the connected process.
For example an attack with 2 Mbit/s gives 4716 packets per
second and the same amount of sowakeup()s to the process
(and context switches).
This type of attack is particularly effective for servers
where the attacker can upload large amounts of data.
Normally this is the case with WWW server where large POSTs
can be made.
We mitigate this by calculating the average MSS payload per
second. If it goes below 'net.inet.tcp.minmss' and the pps
rate is above 'net.inet.tcp.minmssoverload' defaulting to
1000 this particular TCP connection is resetted and dropped.
MITRE CVE: CAN-2004-0002
Reviewed by: sam (mentor)
MFC after: 1 day
the routing table. Move all usage and references in the tcp stack
from the routing table metrics to the tcp hostcache.
It caches measured parameters of past tcp sessions to provide better
initial start values for following connections from or to the same
source or destination. Depending on the network parameters to/from
the remote host this can lead to significant speedups for new tcp
connections after the first one because they inherit and shortcut
the learning curve.
tcp_hostcache is designed for multiple concurrent access in SMP
environments with high contention and is hash indexed by remote
ip address.
It removes significant locking requirements from the tcp stack with
regard to the routing table.
Reviewed by: sam (mentor), bms
Reviewed by: -net, -current, core@kame.net (IPv6 parts)
Approved by: re (scottl)
previously only considered the send sequence space. Unfortunately,
some OSes (windows) still use a random positive increments scheme for
their syn-ack ISNs, so I must consider receive sequence space as well.
The value of 250000 bytes / second for Microsoft's ISN rate of increase
was determined by testing with an XP machine.
we will generate for a given ip/port tuple has advanced far enough
for the time_wait socket in question to be safely recycled.
- Have in_pcblookup_local use tcp_twrecycleable to determine if
time_Wait sockets which are hogging local ports can be safely
freed.
This change preserves proper TIME_WAIT behavior under normal
circumstances while allowing for safe and fast recycling whenever
ephemeral port space is scarce.
lastest rev of the spec. Use an explicit flag for Fast Recovery. [1]
Fix bug with exiting Fast Recovery on a retransmit timeout
diagnosed by Lu Guohan. [2]
Reviewed by: Thomas Henderson <thomas.r.henderson@boeing.com>
Reported and tested by: Lu Guohan <lguohan00@mails.tsinghua.edu.cn> [2]
Approved by: Thomas Henderson <thomas.r.henderson@boeing.com>,
Sally Floyd <floyd@acm.org> [1]
sure that the MAC label on TCP responses during TIMEWAIT is
properly set from either the socket (if available), or the mbuf
that it's responding to.
Unfortunately, this is made somewhat difficult by the TCP code,
as tcp_twstart() calls tcp_twrespond() after discarding the socket
but without a reference to the mbuf that causes the "response".
Passing both the socket and the mbuf works arounds this--eventually
it might be good to make sure the mbuf always gets passed in in
"response" scenarios but working through this provided to
complicate things too much.
Approved by: re (scottl)
Reviewed by: hsu
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
doing Limited Transmit. Only artificially inflate the congestion
window by 1 segment instead of the usual 3 to take into account
the 2 already sent by Limited Transmit.
Approved in principle by: Mark Allman <mallman@grc.nasa.gov>,
Hari Balakrishnan <hari@nms.lcs.mit.edu>, Sally Floyd <floyd@icir.org>
control block. Allow the socket and tcpcb structures to be freed
earlier than inpcb. Update code to understand an inp w/o a socket.
Reviewed by: hsu, silby, jayanth
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
routine does not require a tcpcb to operate. Since we no longer keep
template mbufs around, move pseudo checksum out of this routine, and
merge it with the length update.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs