same as the host address. This already works fine for INET6 and ND6.
While here, remove two function pointers from struct lltable which are
only initialized but never used.
MFC after: 3 days
whether decapsulated IPsec packets will be passed to pfil again depending
on the setting of the net.ip6.ipsec6.filtertunnel sysctl.
PR: kern/157670
Submitted by: Manuel Kasper (mk neon1.net)
MFC after: 2 weeks
struct inpcbgroup. pcbgroups, or "connection groups", supplement the
existing inpcbinfo connection hash table, which when pcbgroups are
enabled, might now be thought of more usefully as a per-protocol
4-tuple reservation table.
Connections are assigned to connection groups base on a hash of their
4-tuple; wildcard sockets require special handling, and are members
of all connection groups. During a connection lookup, a
per-connection group lock is employed rather than the global pcbinfo
lock. By aligning connection groups with input path processing,
connection groups take on an effective CPU affinity, especially when
aligned with RSS work placement (see a forthcoming commit for
details). This eliminates cache line migration associated with
global, protocol-layer data structures in steady state TCP and UDP
processing (with the exception of protocol-layer statistics; further
commit to follow).
Elements of this approach were inspired by Willman, Rixner, and Cox's
2006 USENIX paper, "An Evaluation of Network Stack Parallelization
Strategies in Modern Operating Systems". However, there are also
significant differences: we maintain the inpcb lock, rather than using
the connection group lock for per-connection state.
Likewise, the focus of this implementation is alignment with NIC
packet distribution strategies such as RSS, rather than pure software
strategies. Despite that focus, software distribution is supported
through the parallel netisr implementation, and works well in
configurations where the number of hardware threads is greater than
the number of NIC input queues, such as in the RMI XLR threaded MIPS
architecture.
Another important difference is the continued maintenance of existing
hash tables as "reservation tables" -- these are useful both to
distinguish the resource allocation aspect of protocol name management
and the more common-case lookup aspect. In configurations where
connection tables are aligned with hardware hashes, it is desirable to
use the traditional lookup tables for loopback or encapsulated traffic
rather than take the expense of hardware hashes that are hard to
implement efficiently in software (such as RSS Toeplitz).
Connection group support is enabled by compiling "options PCBGROUP"
into your kernel configuration; for the time being, this is an
experimental feature, and hence is not enabled by default.
Subject to the limited MFCability of change dependencies in inpcb,
and its change to the inpcbinfo init function signature, this change
in principle could be merged to FreeBSD 8.x.
Reviewed by: bz
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
an explicit action for INET6 configuration happens. The changes are:
1. When an ND6 flag is changed via SIOCSIFINFO_FLAGS ioctl,
setting ND6_IFF_ACCEPT_RTADV and/or ND6_IFF_AUTO_LINKLOCAL now triggers
an attempt to clear the ND6_IFF_IFDISABLED flag.
2. When an AF_INET6 address is added successfully to an interface and
it is marked as ND6_IFF_IFDISABLED, an attempt to clear the
ND6_IFF_IFDISABLED happens.
This simplifies ND6_IFF_IFDISABLED flag manipulation by users via ifconfig(8);
in most cases manual configuration is no longer needed.
- When ND6_IFF_AUTO_LINKLOCAL is set and no link-local address is assigned to
an interface, SIOCSIFINFO_FLAGS ioctl now calls in6_ifattach() to configure
a link-local address.
This change ensures link-local address configuration when "ifconfig IF inet6"
command is invoked. For example, "ifconfig IF inet6 auto_linklocal" now
always try to configure an LL addr even if ND6_IFF_AUTO_LINKLOCAL is already
set to 1 (i.e. down/up cycle is no longer needed).
Reviewed by: bz
- A new per-interface knob IFF_ND6_NO_RADR and sysctl IPV6CTL_NO_RADR.
This controls if accepting a route in an RA message as the default route.
The default value for each interface can be set by net.inet6.ip6.no_radr.
The system wide default value is 0.
- A new sysctl: net.inet6.ip6.norbit_raif. This controls if setting R-bit in
NA on RA accepting interfaces. The default is 0 (R-bit is set based on
net.inet6.ip6.forwarding).
Background:
IPv6 host/router model suggests a router sends an RA and a host accepts it for
router discovery. Because of that, KAME implementation does not allow
accepting RAs when net.inet6.ip6.forwarding=1. Accepting RAs on a router can
make the routing table confused since it can change the default router
unintentionally.
However, in practice there are cases where we cannot distinguish a host from
a router clearly. For example, a customer edge router often works as a host
against the ISP, and as a router against the LAN at the same time. Another
example is a complex network configurations like an L2TP tunnel for IPv6
connection to Internet over an Ethernet link with another native IPv6 subnet.
In this case, the physical interface for the native IPv6 subnet works as a
host, and the pseudo-interface for L2TP works as the default IP forwarding
route.
Problem:
Disabling processing RA messages when net.inet6.ip6.forwarding=1 and
accepting them when net.inet6.ip6.forward=0 cause the following practical
issues:
- A router cannot perform SLAAC. It becomes a problem if a box has
multiple interfaces and you want to use SLAAC on some of them, for
example. A customer edge router for IPv6 Internet access service
using an IPv6-over-IPv6 tunnel sometimes needs SLAAC on the
physical interface for administration purpose; updating firmware
and so on (link-local addresses can be used there, but GUAs by
SLAAC are often used for scalability).
- When a host has multiple IPv6 interfaces and it receives multiple RAs on
them, controlling the default route is difficult. Router preferences
defined in RFC 4191 works only when the routers on the links are
under your control.
Details of Implementation Changes:
Router Advertisement messages will be accepted even when
net.inet6.ip6.forwarding=1. More precisely, the conditions are as
follow:
(ACCEPT_RTADV && !NO_RADR && !ip6.forwarding)
=> Normal RA processing on that interface. (as IPv6 host)
(ACCEPT_RTADV && (NO_RADR || ip6.forwarding))
=> Accept RA but add the router to the defroute list with
rtlifetime=0 unconditionally. This effectively prevents
from setting the received router address as the box's
default route.
(!ACCEPT_RTADV)
=> No RA processing on that interface.
ACCEPT_RTADV and NO_RADR are per-interface knob. In short, all interface
are classified as "RA-accepting" or not. An RA-accepting interface always
processes RA messages regardless of ip6.forwarding. The difference caused by
NO_RADR or ip6.forwarding is whether the RA source address is considered as
the default router or not.
R-bit in NA on the RA accepting interfaces is set based on
net.inet6.ip6.forwarding. While RFC 6204 W-1 rule (for CPE case) suggests
a router should disable the R-bit completely even when the box has
net.inet6.ip6.forwarding=1, I believe there is no technical reason with
doing so. This behavior can be set by a new sysctl net.inet6.ip6.norbit_raif
(the default is 0).
Usage:
# ifconfig fxp0 inet6 accept_rtadv
=> accept RA on fxp0
# ifconfig fxp0 inet6 accept_rtadv no_radr
=> accept RA on fxp0 but ignore default route information in it.
# sysctl net.inet6.ip6.norbit_no_radr=1
=> R-bit in NAs on RA accepting interfaces will always be set to 0.
hash install, etc. For now, these are arguments are unused, but as we add
RSS support, we will want to use hashes extracted from mbufs, rather than
manually calculated hashes of header fields, due to the expensive of the
software version of Toeplitz (and similar hashes).
Add notes that it would be nice to be able to pass mbufs into lookup
routines in pf(4), optimising firewall lookup in the same way, but the
code structure there doesn't facilitate that currently.
(In principle there is no reason this couldn't be MFCed -- the change
extends rather than modifies the KBI. However, it won't be useful without
other previous possibly less MFCable changes.)
Reviewed by: bz
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
- The existing ipi_lock continues to protect the global inpcb list and
inpcb counter. This lock is now relegated to a small number of
allocation and free operations, and occasional operations that walk
all connections (including, awkwardly, certain UDP multicast receive
operations -- something to revisit).
- A new ipi_hash_lock protects the two inpcbinfo hash tables for
looking up connections and bound sockets, manipulated using new
INP_HASH_*() macros. This lock, combined with inpcb locks, protects
the 4-tuple address space.
Unlike the current ipi_lock, ipi_hash_lock follows the individual inpcb
connection locks, so may be acquired while manipulating a connection on
which a lock is already held, avoiding the need to acquire the inpcbinfo
lock preemptively when a binding change might later be required. As a
result, however, lookup operations necessarily go through a reference
acquire while holding the lookup lock, later acquiring an inpcb lock --
if required.
A new function in_pcblookup() looks up connections, and accepts flags
indicating how to return the inpcb. Due to lock order changes, callers
no longer need acquire locks before performing a lookup: the lookup
routine will acquire the ipi_hash_lock as needed. In the future, it will
also be able to use alternative lookup and locking strategies
transparently to callers, such as pcbgroup lookup. New lookup flags are,
supplementing the existing INPLOOKUP_WILDCARD flag:
INPLOOKUP_RLOCKPCB - Acquire a read lock on the returned inpcb
INPLOOKUP_WLOCKPCB - Acquire a write lock on the returned inpcb
Callers must pass exactly one of these flags (for the time being).
Some notes:
- All protocols are updated to work within the new regime; especially,
TCP, UDPv4, and UDPv6. pcbinfo ipi_lock acquisitions are largely
eliminated, and global hash lock hold times are dramatically reduced
compared to previous locking.
- The TCP syncache still relies on the pcbinfo lock, something that we
may want to revisit.
- Support for reverting to the FreeBSD 7.x locking strategy in TCP input
is no longer available -- hash lookup locks are now held only very
briefly during inpcb lookup, rather than for potentially extended
periods. However, the pcbinfo ipi_lock will still be acquired if a
connection state might change such that a connection is added or
removed.
- Raw IP sockets continue to use the pcbinfo ipi_lock for protection,
due to maintaining their own hash tables.
- The interface in6_pcblookup_hash_locked() is maintained, which allows
callers to acquire hash locks and perform one or more lookups atomically
with 4-tuple allocation: this is required only for TCPv6, as there is no
in6_pcbconnect_setup(), which there should be.
- UDPv6 locking remains significantly more conservative than UDPv4
locking, which relates to source address selection. This needs
attention, as it likely significantly reduces parallelism in this code
for multithreaded socket use (such as in BIND).
- In the UDPv4 and UDPv6 multicast cases, we need to revisit locking
somewhat, as they relied on ipi_lock to stablise 4-tuple matches, which
is no longer sufficient. A second check once the inpcb lock is held
should do the trick, keeping the general case from requiring the inpcb
lock for every inpcb visited.
- This work reminds us that we need to revisit locking of the v4/v6 flags,
which may be accessed lock-free both before and after this change.
- Right now, a single lock name is used for the pcbhash lock -- this is
undesirable, and probably another argument is required to take care of
this (or a char array name field in the pcbinfo?).
This is not an MFC candidate for 8.x due to its impact on lookup and
locking semantics. It's possible some of these issues could be worked
around with compatibility wrappers, if necessary.
Reviewed by: bz
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
feature_present(3) to dynamically decide whether to use one or the
other family.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 10 days
in_pcb_lport(), in_pcblookup_local(), and in_pcblookup_hash(), and similarly
for IPv6 functions. In the future, we would like to support other flags
relating to locking strategy.
This change doesn't appear to modify the KBI in practice, as callers already
passed in INPLOOKUP_WILDCARD rather than a simple boolean.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Reviewed by: bz
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
interface is brought down, even though the interface address is still
valid. This patch maintains the permanent ARP entries as long as the
interface address (having the same prefix as that of the ARP entries)
is valid.
Reviewed by: delphij
MFC after: 5 days
Some bugs where fixed while doing this:
* ASCONF-ACK messages might use wrong port number when using
IPv6.
* Checking for additional addresses takes the correct address
into account and also does not do more comparisons than
necessary.
This patch is based on one received from bz@ who was
sponsored by The FreeBSD Foundation and iXsystems.
MFC after: 1 week
as well compiling out most functions adding or extending #ifdef INET
coverage.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
Unfold the IPSEC_COMMON_INPUT_CB() macro in xform_{ah,esp,ipcomp}.c
to not need three different versions depending on INET, INET6 or both.
Mark two places preparing for not yet supported functionality with IPv6.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
Not compiling in and not initializing from inetsw from in_proto.c for
IPv6 only, we need to initialize upper layer protocols from inet6sw.
Make sure to not initialize them twice in a Dual-Stack
environment but only conditionally on no INET as we have done for
TCP for a long time. Otherwise we would leak resources.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 3 days
passing the cached proxydl reference (sockaddr_dl initialized or not) to
nd6_na_output(). nd6_na_output() will thus assume a proxy NA. Revert to
conditionally passing either &proxydl or NULL if no proxy case desired.
Tested by: ipv6gw and ref9-i386
Reported by: Pete French (petefrench ingresso.co.uk on stable)
Reported by: bz, simon on Y! cluster
Reported by: kib
PR: kern/151908
MFC after: 3 days
working. We store v4 and v6 addresses as a union but for v4-mapped
addresses only store the 32bits w/o the ::ffff: word. That failed the
check as for example 127.0.0.1 would be ::7f00:1 rather than ::ffff:7f00:1
and the IN6_IS_ADDR_V4MAPPED() never worked here. Given we can hardly get
here with an unbound local address or invalid inp_vflags remove the check.
Reported by: tuexen
Reviewed by: tuexen
MFC after: 3 days
some more. Similar to what we do for TCP check for v4-mapped
addresses and then handle them or the normal v6 address case.
For either set inp_vflags before calling into the pcb connect
function so that we have an unambiguous view in case we need to
set the local address or port.
Looked at: tuexen (as part of more)
MFC after: 3 days
callers. This also fixes a problem when the prison call could set
the inp->in6p_laddr (laddr) and a following priv_check_cred() call
would return an error and will allow us to merge the IPv4 and IPv6
implementation.
MFC after: 2 weeks
even after dropping the reference and unlocking. Previously we
have dereferenced a NULL pointer (after r121765).
Simply unlocking after the block does not work either because of
lock ordering (see r121765) and in addition we would still hold
a pointer to something that might be gone by the time we access it.
Thus take a copy of the value rather than just caching the pointer.
PR: kern/151908
Submitted by: chenyl (netstar2008 126.com) (initial version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
* Store the flowid when receiving an SCTP/IPv6 packet.
* Store the flowid when receiving an SCTP packet with wrong CRC.
* Initilize flowid correctly.
* Put test code under INVARIANTS.
MFC after: 3 months.
Call the handler function with the lock held, return unlocked as we
might free the entry. Rework functions later in the call graph to be
either called with the lock held or, only if needed, unlocked.
Place asserts to document and tighten assumptions on various lle locking,
which were not always true before.
We call nd6_ns_output() unlocked and the assignment of ip6->ip6_src was
decentralized to minimize possible complexity introduced with the formerly
missing locking there. This also resulted in a push down of local
variable scopes into smaller blocks.
Reported by: many
PR: kern/148857
Submitted by: Dmitrij Tejblum (tejblum yandex-team.ru) (original version)
MFC After: 4 days
DPCPU_DEFINE and VNET_DEFINE macros, as these cause problems for various
people working on the affected files. A better long-term solution is
still being considered. This reversal may give some modules empty
set_pcpu or set_vnet sections, but these are harmless.
Changes reverted:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
r215318 | dim | 2010-11-14 21:40:55 +0100 (Sun, 14 Nov 2010) | 4 lines
Instead of unconditionally emitting .globl's for the __start_set_xxx and
__stop_set_xxx symbols, only emit them when the set_vnet or set_pcpu
sections are actually defined.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
r215317 | dim | 2010-11-14 21:38:11 +0100 (Sun, 14 Nov 2010) | 3 lines
Apply the STATIC_VNET_DEFINE and STATIC_DPCPU_DEFINE macros throughout
the tree.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
r215316 | dim | 2010-11-14 21:23:02 +0100 (Sun, 14 Nov 2010) | 2 lines
Add macros to define static instances of VNET_DEFINE and DPCPU_DEFINE.
Consistently use the LLE_ prefix for lla_lookup() and the ND6_ prefix
for nd6_lookup() even though both are defined the same. Use the right
flag variable when checking each.
No real functional change.
MFC after: 4 days
legacy and IPv6 route destination address.
Previously in case of IPv6, there was a memory overwrite due to not enough
space for the IPv6 address.
PR: kern/122565
MFC After: 2 weeks
un-expiring.
The previous version of code have no locking when testing rt_refcnt.
The result of the lack of locking may result in a condition where
a routing entry have a reference count but at the same time have
RTPRF_OURS bit set and an expiration timer. These would eventually
lead to a panic:
panic: rtqkill route really not free
When the system have ICMP redirects accepted from local gateway
in a moderate frequency, for instance.
Commit this workaround for now until we have some better solution.
PR: kern/149804
Reviewed by: bz
Tested by: Zhao Xin, Pete French
MFC after: 2 weeks
In protosw we define pr_protocol as short, while on the wire
it is an uint8_t. That way we can have "internal" protocols
like DIVERT, SEND or gaps for modules (PROTO_SPACER).
Switch ipproto_{un,}register to accept a short protocol number(*)
and do an upfront check for valid boundries. With this we
also consistently report EPROTONOSUPPORT for out of bounds
protocols, as we did for proto == 0. This allows a caller
to not error for this case, which is especially important
if we want to automatically call these from domain handling.
(*) the functions have been without any in-tree consumer
since the initial introducation, so this is considered save.
Implement ip6proto_{un,}register() similarly to their legacy IP
counter parts to allow modules to hook up dynamically.
Reviewed by: philip, will
MFC after: 1 week
Fix the switching on/off of PF and NR-SACKs using sysctl.
Add minor improvement in handling malloc failures.
Improve the address checks when sending.
MFC after: 4 weeks
Add kernel side support for Secure Neighbor Discovery (SeND), RFC 3971.
The implementation consists of a kernel module that gets packets from
the nd6 code, sends them to user space on a dedicated socket and reinjects
them back for further processing.
Hooks are used from nd6 code paths to divert relevant packets to the
send implementation for processing in user space. The hooks are only
triggered if the send module is loaded. In case no user space
application is connected to the send socket, processing continues
normaly as if the module would not be loaded. Unloading the module
is not possible at this time due to missing nd6 locking.
The native SeND socket is similar to a raw IPv6 socket but with its own,
internal pseudo-protocol.
Approved by: bz (mentor)
and go to the next iteration early if multicast filtering would decide that
this socket shall not receive the data.
Unlock the pcb in that case or we leak the read lock and next time trying
to get a write lock, would hang forever.
PR: kern/149608
Submitted by: Chris Luke (chrisy flirble.org)
MFC after: 3 days
bridge(4), lagg(4) etc. and make use of function pointers and
pf_proto_register() to hook carp into the network stack.
Currently, because of the uncertainty about whether the unload path is free
of race condition panics, unloads are disallowed by default. Compiling with
CARPMOD_CAN_UNLOAD in CFLAGS removes this anti foot shooting measure.
This commit requires IP6PROTOSPACER, introduced in r211115.
Reviewed by: bz, simon
Approved by: ken (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Add proto spacers to inet6sw like we have for legacy IP. This allows us
to dynamically pf_proto_register() for INET6 from modules, needed by
upcoming CARP changes and SeND.
MC and SCTP could make use of it as well in theory in the future after
upcoming VIMAGE vnet teardown work.
Discussed with: will, anchie
MFC after: 10 days
nd6_llinfo_timer() functions with a KASSERT().
Note: there is no need to return after panic.
In the legacy IP case, only assign the arg after the check,
in the IPv6 case, remove the extra checks for the table and
interface as they have to be there unless we freed and forgot
to cancel the timer. It doesn't matter anyway as we would
panic on the NULL pointer deref immediately and the bug is
elsewhere.
This unifies the code of both address families to some extend.
Reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 6 days
working anymore. In addition more checks and operations were missing.
In case lla_lookup results in a match, get the ifaddr to update the
statistics counters, and check that the address is neither tentative,
duplicate or otherwise invalid before accepting the packet. If ok,
record the address information in the mbuf. [ as is done in case
lla_lookup does not return a result and we go through the FIB ].
Reported by: remko
Tested by: remko
MFC after: 2 weeks
We do not respect rules 3 and 4 in the required list:
1. omit leading zeros
2. "::" used to their maximum extent whenever possible
3. "::" used where shortens address the most
4. "::" used in the former part in case of a tie breaker
5. do not shorten one 16 bit 0 field
6. use lower case
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-6man-text-addr-representation-04.html
Submitted by: Kalluru Abhiram @ Juniper Networks
Obtained from: Juniper Networks
Reviewed by: hrs, dougb
"Whitspace" churn after the VIMAGE/VNET whirls.
Remove the need for some "init" functions within the network
stack, like pim6_init(), icmp_init() or significantly shorten
others like ip6_init() and nd6_init(), using static initialization
again where possible and formerly missed.
Move (most) variables back to the place they used to be before the
container structs and VIMAGE_GLOABLS (before r185088) and try to
reduce the diff to stable/7 and earlier as good as possible,
to help out-of-tree consumers to update from 6.x or 7.x to 8 or 9.
This also removes some header file pollution for putatively
static global variables.
Revert VIMAGE specific changes in ipfilter::ip_auth.c, that are
no longer needed.
Reviewed by: jhb
Discussed with: rwatson
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: CK Software GmbH
MFC after: 6 days
that we allow all possible jail IPs as source address rather than
forcing the "primary". While IPv6 naturally has source address
selection, for legacy IP we do not go through the pain in case
IP_HDRINCL was not set. People should bind(2) for that.
This will, for example, allow ping(|6) -S to work correctly for
non-primary addresses.
Reported by: (ten 211.ru)
Tested by: (ten 211.ru)
MFC after: 4 days
addresses while walking the IPv6 address list if in the jail case
something is connecting to ::1.
Reported by: Pieter de Boer (pieter thedarkside.nl)
Tested by: Pieter de Boer (pieter thedarkside.nl)
MFC after: 4 days
prevented the link-layer entry from being freed.
In both in.c and in6.c (though that code path seems to be basically dead)
plug a reference leak in case of a pending callout being drained.
In if_ether.c consistently add a reference before resetting the callout
and in case we canceled a pending one remove the reference for that.
In the final case in arptimer, before freeing the expired entry, remove
the reference again and explicitly call callout_stop() to clear the active
flag.
In nd6.c:nd6_free() we are only ever called from the callout function and
thus need to remove the reference there as well before calling into
llentry_free().
In if_llatbl.c when freeing entire tables make sure that in case we cancel
a pending callout to remove the reference as well.
Reviewed by: qingli (earlier version)
MFC after: 10 days
Problem observed, patch tested by: simon on ipv6gw.f.o,
Christian Kratzer (ck cksoft.de),
Evgenii Davidov (dado korolev-net.ru)
PR: kern/144564
Configurations still affected: with options FLOWTABLE
being embedded is in fact link-local, before attempting to embed it.
Note that this operation is a side-effect of trying to avoid recursion on
the IN6 scope lock.
PR: 144560
Submitted by: Petr Lampa
MFC after: 3 days
* Fix handling of mapping arrays when draining mbufs or processing
FORWARD-TSN chunks.
* Cleanup code (no duplicate code anymore for SACKs and NR-SACKs).
Part of this code was developed together with rrs.
MFC after: 2 weeks.
have the delayed function take an argument as to the offset
to the SCTP header. This allows it to work for V4 and V6.
This of course means changing all callers of the function
to either pass the header len, if they have it, or create
it (ip_hl << 2 or sizeof(ip6_hdr)).
PR: 144529
MFC after: 2 weeks
no delayed checksum was added to the ip6 output code. This
causes cards that do not support SCTP checksum offload to
have SCTP packets that are IPv6 NOT have the sctp checksum
performed. Thus you could not communicate with a peer. This
adds the missing bits to make the checksum happen for these cards.
PR: 144529
MFC after: 2 weeks
whether to use source address selection (default) or the primary
jail address for unbound outgoing connections.
This is intended to be used by people upgrading from single-IP
jails to multi-IP jails but not having to change firewall rules,
application ACLs, ... but to force their connections (unless
otherwise changed) to the primry jail IP they had been used for
years, as well as for people prefering to implement similar policies.
Note that for IPv6, if configured incorrectly, this might lead to
scope violations, which single-IPv6 jails could as well, as by the
design of jails. [1]
Reviewed by: jamie, hrs (ipv6 part)
Pointed out by: hrs [1]
MFC After: 2 weeks
Asked for by: Jase Thew (bazerka beardz.net)
for the interface address. This marker is necessary to properly support
PPP types of links where multiple links can have the same local end
IP address. The IFA_RTSELF flag bit maps to the RTF_HOST value, which
was combined into the route flag bits during prefix installation in
IPv6. This inclusion causing the prefix route to be unusable. This
patch fixes this bug by excluding the IFA_RTSELF flag during route
installation.
MFC after: 5 days
same interface. The first address will install the prefix route into
the kernel routing table and that prefix will be marked as on-link.
Without RADIX_MPATH enabled, the other address aliases of the same
prefix will update the prefix reference count but no other routes
will be installed. Consequently the prefixes associated with these
addresses would not be marked as on-link. As such, incoming packets
destined to these address aliases will fail the ND6 on-link check
on input. This patch fixes the above problem by searching the kernel
routing table and try to find an on-link prefix on the given interface.
MFC after: 5 days
IFF_POINTOPOINT link types. The reason was due to the routing
entry returned from the kernel covering the remote end is of an
interface type that does not support ARP. This patch fixes this
problem by providing a hint to the kernel routing code, which
indicates the prefix route instead of the PPP host route should
be returned to the caller. Since a host route to the local end
point is also added into the routing table, and there could be
multiple such instantiations due to multiple PPP links can be
created with the same local end IP address, this patch also fixes
the loopback route installation failure problem observed prior to
this patch. The reference count of loopback route to local end would
be either incremented or decremented. The first instantiation would
create the entry and the last removal would delete the route entry.
MFC after: 5 days
with SSM MLDv2 by default.
This is current practice and complies with RFC 4604, as well as being
required by production IPv6 networks in Japan.
The behaviour may be disabled by setting the net.inet6.mld.use_allow
sysctl/tunable to 0.
Requested by: Hideki Yamamoto
MFC after: 1 week
if (jailed(cred))
left. If you are running with a vnet (virtual network stack) those will
return true and defer you to classic IP-jails handling and thus things
will be "denied" or returned with an error.
Work around this problem by introducing another "jailed()" function,
jailed_without_vnet(), that also takes vnets into account, and permits
the calls, should the jail from the given cred have its own virtual
network stack.
We cannot change the classic jailed() call to do that, as it is used
outside the network stack as well.
Discussed with: julian, zec, jamie, rwatson (back in Sept)
MFC after: 5 days
Don't allow joins w/o source on an existing group.
This is almost always pilot error.
We don't need to check for group filter UNDEFINED state at t1,
because we only ever allocate filters with their groups, so we
unconditionally reject such calls with EINVAL.
Trying to change the active filter mode w/o going through IPV6_MSFILTER
is also disallowed.
MFC after: 1 day
Tighten input checking in in6p_join_group():
* Don't try to use the source address, when its family is unspecified.
* If we get a join without a source, on an existing inclusive
mode group, this is an error, as it would change the filter mode.
Fix a problem with the handling of in6_mfilter for new memberships:
* Do not rely on im6f being NULL; it is explicitly initialized to a
non-NULL pointer when constructing a membership.
* Explicitly initialize *im6f to EX mode when the source address
is unspecified.
This fixes a problem with in_mfilter slot recycling in the join path.
MFC after: 1 day
Fix an obvious logic error in the IPv4 multicast leave processing,
where the filter mode vector was not updated correctly after the leave.
MFC after: 1 day
we did not add. Call LLE_REMREF() only when callout_stop()
actually canceled a pending callout.
- callout_reset() may cancel a pending callout. When
callout_reset() canceled a pending callout, call LLE_REMREF()
to drop a reference for the canceled callout.
MFC after: 1 week
Adding a tentative address is useless.
- Comment out a confused warning message when
in6_ifattach_linklocal() fails. This can occur when the
interface does not support ioctl(SIOCAIFADDR) (interfaces
associated with 802.11 wireless network device drivers, for
example).
packet filters. ALso allows ipfw to be enabled on on ejail and disabled
on another. In 8.0 it's a global setting.
Sitting aroung in tree waiting to commit for: 2 months
MFC after: 2 months
Note that when the interface has ND6_IFF_IFDISABLED, a newly-added
address is always marked as IN6_IFF_TENTATIVE so that the interface
can perform DAD after the ND6_IFF_IFDISABLED is cleared.
and address aliases. After an interface is brought down and brought
back up again, those self pointing routes disappeared. This patch
ensures after an interface is brought back up, the loopback routes
are reinstalled properly.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: immediately
automatic link-local address configuration:
- Convert a sysctl net.inet6.ip6.accept_rtadv to one for the
default value of a per-IF flag ND6_IFF_ACCEPT_RTADV, not a
global knob. The default value of the sysctl is 0.
- Add a new per-IF flag ND6_IFF_AUTO_LINKLOCAL and convert a
sysctl net.inet6.ip6.auto_linklocal to one for its default
value. The default value of the sysctl is 1.
- Make ND6_IFF_IFDISABLED more robust. It can be used to disable
IPv6 functionality of an interface now.
- Receiving RA is allowed if ip6_forwarding==0 *and*
ND6_IFF_ACCEPT_RTADV is set on that interface. The former
condition will be revisited later to support a "host + router" box
like IPv6 CPE router. The current behavior is compatible with
the older releases of FreeBSD.
- The ifconfig(8) now supports these ND6 flags as well as "nud",
"prefer_source", and "disabled" in ndp(8). The ndp(8) now
supports "auto_linklocal".
Discussed with: bz and jinmei
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 3 days
scenario where an anycast address is assigned on one interface,
and a global address with the same scope is assigned on another
interface. In other words, the interface owns the anycast
address has only the link-local address as one other address.
Without this patch, "ping6" the anycast address from another
station will observe the source address of the returned ICMP6
echo reply has the link-local address, not the global address
that exists on the other interface in the same node.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: immediately
- Interface link-local address is not reachable within the
node that owns the interface, this is due to the mismatch
in address scope as the result of the installed interface
address loopback route. Therefore for each interface
address loopback route, the rt_gateway field (of AF_LINK
type) will be used to track which interface a given
address belongs to. This will aid the address source to
use the proper interface for address scope/zone validation.
- The loopback address is not reachable. The root cause is
the same as the above.
- Empty nd6 entries are created for the IPv6 loopback addresses
only for validation reason. Doing so will eliminate as much
of the special case (loopback addresses) handling code
as possible, however, these empty nd6 entries should not
be returned to the userland applications such as the
"ndp" command.
Since both of the above issues contain common files, these
files are committed together.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: immediately
configured prefixes. Since these statically configured prefixes
do not have any associated advertising routers, these prefixes
are treated as unreachable and those prefix routes are deleted
from the routing table. Therefore bypass prefixes that are not
learned from router advertisements during prefix on-link check.
Reviewed by: hrs
an IPv6 address assigned to it, and if an incoming packet received on
one interface has a packet destination address that belongs to another
interface, the routing table is consulted to determine how to reach this
packet destination. Since the packet destination is an interface address,
the route table will return a host route with the loopback interface as
rt_ifp. The input code must recognize this fact, instead of using the
loopback interface, the input code performs a search to find the right
interface that owns the given IPv6 address.
Reviewed by: bz, gnn, kmacy
MFC after: immediately
list/index locks, to protect link layer address tables. This avoids
lock order issues during interface teardown, but maintains the bug that
sysctl copy routines may be called while a non-sleepable lock is held.
Reviewed by: bz, kmacy
MFC after: 3 days
several critical bugs, including race conditions and lock order issues:
Replace the single rwlock, ifnet_lock, with two locks, an rwlock and an
sxlock. Either can be held to stablize the lists and indexes, but both
are required to write. This allows the list to be held stable in both
network interrupt contexts and sleepable user threads across sleeping
memory allocations or device driver interactions. As before, writes to
the interface list must occur from sleepable contexts.
Reviewed by: bz, julian
MFC after: 3 days
address is configured with a /128 prefix. This is no longer necessary due
to r192011. In fact that code conflicts with r192011. This patch removes
the host route installation when detecting the /128 prefix, and instead
let the code added by r192011 to install the loopback route for that IPv6
interface address.
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: re
all pertinent statatistics for the subsystem. These structures are
sometimes "borrowed" by kernel modules that require a place to store
statistics for similar events.
Add KPI accessor functions for statistics structures referenced by kernel
modules so that they no longer encode certain specifics of how the data
structures are named and stored. This change is intended to make it
easier to move to per-CPU network stats following 8.0-RELEASE.
The following modules are affected by this change:
if_bridge
if_cxgb
if_gif
ip_mroute
ipdivert
pf
In practice, most of these statistics consumers should, in fact, maintain
their own statistics data structures rather than borrowing structures
from the base network stack. However, that change is too agressive for
this point in the release cycle.
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: re (kib)
vnet.h, we now use jails (rather than vimages) as the abstraction
for virtualization management, and what remained was specific to
virtual network stacks. Minor cleanups are done in the process,
and comments updated to reflect these changes.
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: re (vimage blanket)
- Allow loopback route to be installed for address assigned to
interface of IFF_POINTOPOINT type.
- Install loopback route for an IPv4 interface addreess when the
"useloopback" sysctl variable is enabled. Similarly, install
loopback route for an IPv6 interface address when the sysctl variable
"nd6_useloopback" is enabled. Deleting loopback routes for interface
addresses is unconditional in case these sysctl variables were
disabled after an interface address has been assigned.
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: re
network stacks, VNET_SYSINIT:
- Add VNET_SYSINIT and VNET_SYSUNINIT macros to declare events that will
occur each time a network stack is instantiated and destroyed. In the
!VIMAGE case, these are simply mapped into regular SYSINIT/SYSUNINIT.
For the VIMAGE case, we instead use SYSINIT's to track their order and
properties on registration, using them for each vnet when created/
destroyed, or immediately on module load for already-started vnets.
- Remove vnet_modinfo mechanism that existed to serve this purpose
previously, as well as its dependency scheme: we now just use the
SYSINIT ordering scheme.
- Implement VNET_DOMAIN_SET() to allow protocol domains to declare that
they want init functions to be called for each virtual network stack
rather than just once at boot, compiling down to DOMAIN_SET() in the
non-VIMAGE case.
- Walk all virtualized kernel subsystems and make use of these instead
of modinfo or DOMAIN_SET() for init/uninit events. In some cases,
convert modular components from using modevent to using sysinit (where
appropriate). In some cases, do minor rejuggling of SYSINIT ordering
to make room for or better manage events.
Portions submitted by: jhb (VNET_SYSINIT), bz (cleanup)
Discussed with: jhb, bz, julian, zec
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: re (VIMAGE blanket)
non-vrtiualized sysctls so we cannot used one common function.
Add a macro to convert the arg1 in the virtualized case to
vnet.h to not expose the maths to all over the code.
Add a wrapper for the single virtualized call, properly handling
arg1 and call the default implementation from there.
Convert the two over places to use the new macro.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Approved by: re (kib)
nor destructors, as there's no actual work to do.
In most cases, the constructors weren't needed because of the existing
protocol initialization functions run by net_init_domain() as part of
VNET_MOD_NET, or they were eliminated when support for static
initialization of virtualized globals was added.
Garbage collect dependency references to modules without constructors or
destructors, notably VNET_MOD_INET and VNET_MOD_INET6.
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: re (vimage blanket)
unused custom mutex/condvar-based sleep locks with two locks: an
rwlock (for non-sleeping use) and sxlock (for sleeping use). Either
acquired for read is sufficient to stabilize the vnet list, but both
must be acquired for write to modify the list.
Replace previous no-op read locking macros, used in various places
in the stack, with actual locking to prevent race conditions. Callers
must declare when they may perform unbounded sleeps or not when
selecting how to lock.
Refactor vnet sysinits so that the vnet list and locks are initialized
before kernel modules are linked, as the kernel linker will use them
for modules loaded by the boot loader.
Update various consumers of these KPIs based on whether they may sleep
or not.
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: re (kib)
a valid zone ID or interface identifier in a v6 multicast leave, would
trigger a fairly paranoid KASSERT().
Observed with Boost++ regression tests on ref8.freebsd.org.
Approved by: re (kib)
(DPCPU), as suggested by Peter Wemm, and implement a new per-virtual
network stack memory allocator. Modify vnet to use the allocator
instead of monolithic global container structures (vinet, ...). This
change solves many binary compatibility problems associated with
VIMAGE, and restores ELF symbols for virtualized global variables.
Each virtualized global variable exists as a "reference copy", and also
once per virtual network stack. Virtualized global variables are
tagged at compile-time, placing the in a special linker set, which is
loaded into a contiguous region of kernel memory. Virtualized global
variables in the base kernel are linked as normal, but those in modules
are copied and relocated to a reserved portion of the kernel's vnet
region with the help of a the kernel linker.
Virtualized global variables exist in per-vnet memory set up when the
network stack instance is created, and are initialized statically from
the reference copy. Run-time access occurs via an accessor macro, which
converts from the current vnet and requested symbol to a per-vnet
address. When "options VIMAGE" is not compiled into the kernel, normal
global ELF symbols will be used instead and indirection is avoided.
This change restores static initialization for network stack global
variables, restores support for non-global symbols and types, eliminates
the need for many subsystem constructors, eliminates large per-subsystem
structures that caused many binary compatibility issues both for
monitoring applications (netstat) and kernel modules, removes the
per-function INIT_VNET_*() macros throughout the stack, eliminates the
need for vnet_symmap ksym(2) munging, and eliminates duplicate
definitions of virtualized globals under VIMAGE_GLOBALS.
Bump __FreeBSD_version and update UPDATING.
Portions submitted by: bz
Reviewed by: bz, zec
Discussed with: gnn, jamie, jeff, jhb, julian, sam
Suggested by: peter
Approved by: re (kensmith)
to a non loopback/ppp link type) through the loopback interface. Prior
to the new L2/L3 rewrite, this host route was explicitly created when
processing the IPv6 address assignment. This loopback host route is
deleted when that IPv6 address is removed from the interface.
Reviewed by: bz, gnn
Approved by: re
in one additional case, avoiding an ifaddr reference leak.
Defer releasing the in6_ifaddr's in6_ifaddrhead reference until the
end of in6_unlink_ifa(), as callers are inconsistent regarding whether
or not they hold a reference across the call. This avoids using the
ifaddr after it may have been freed.
Reported by: tegge
Reviewed by: tegge
Approved by: re (blanket)
MFC after: 6 weeks
for in_ifaddrhead, we stick with an rwlock for the time being, which
we will revisit in the future with a possible move to rmlocks.
Some pieces of code require significant further reworking to be
safe from all classes of writer-writer races.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 6 weeks
in particular, add a reference for in6_ifaddrhead since we do remove a
reference for it when an IPv6 address is removed. This fixes ifconfig
delete of an IPv6 alias.
Reported by: tegge
MFC after: 6 weeks
for the global IPv6 address list (in6_ifaddr -> in6_ifaddrhead). Adopt
the code styles and conventions present in netinet where possible.
Reviewed by: gnn, bz
MFC after: 6 weeks (possibly not MFCable?)
to save the selected source address rather than returning an
unreferenced copy to a pointer that might long be gone by the
time we use the pointer for anything meaningful.
Asked for by: rwatson
Reviewed by: rwatson
rather than pointers, requiring callers to properly dispose of those
references. The following routines now return references:
ifaddr_byindex
ifa_ifwithaddr
ifa_ifwithbroadaddr
ifa_ifwithdstaddr
ifa_ifwithnet
ifaof_ifpforaddr
ifa_ifwithroute
ifa_ifwithroute_fib
rt_getifa
rt_getifa_fib
IFP_TO_IA
ip_rtaddr
in6_ifawithifp
in6ifa_ifpforlinklocal
in6ifa_ifpwithaddr
in6_ifadd
carp_iamatch6
ip6_getdstifaddr
Remove unused macro which didn't have required referencing:
IFP_TO_IA6
This closes many small races in which changes to interface
or address lists while an ifaddr was in use could lead to use of freed
memory (etc). In a few cases, add missing if_addr_list locking
required to safely acquire references.
Because of a lack of deep copying support, we accept a race in which
an in6_ifaddr pointed to by mbuf tags and extracted with
ip6_getdstifaddr() doesn't hold a reference while in transmit. Once
we have mbuf tag deep copy support, this can be fixed.
Reviewed by: bz
Obtained from: Apple, Inc. (portions)
MFC after: 6 weeks (portions)
- Unify reference count and lock initialization in a single function,
ifa_init().
- Move tear-down from a macro (IFAFREE) to a function ifa_free().
- Move reference count bump from a macro (IFAREF) to a function ifa_ref().
- Instead of using a u_int protected by a mutex to refcount(9) for
reference count management.
The ifa_mtx is now used for exactly one ioctl, and possibly should be
removed.
MFC after: 3 weeks
the ROUTETABLES kernel option thus there is no need to include opt_route.h
anymore in all consumers of vnet.h and no longer depend on it for module
builds.
Remove the hidden include in flowtable.h as well and leave the two
explicit #includes in ip_input.c and ip_output.c.
Vnet modules and protocol domains may now register destructor
functions to clean up and release per-module state. The destructor
mechanisms can be triggered by invoking "vimage -d", or a future
equivalent command which will be provided via the new jail framework.
While this patch introduces numerous placeholder destructor functions,
many of those are currently incomplete, thus leaking memory or (even
worse) failing to stop all running timers. Many of such issues are
already known and will be incrementaly fixed over the next weeks in
smaller incremental commits.
Apart from introducing new fields in structs ifnet, domain, protosw
and vnet_net, which requires the kernel and modules to be rebuilt, this
change should have no impact on nooptions VIMAGE builds, since vnet
destructors can only be called in VIMAGE kernels. Moreover,
destructor functions should be in general compiled in only in
options VIMAGE builds, except for kernel modules which can be safely
kldunloaded at run time.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to 800097.
Reviewed by: bz, julian
Approved by: rwatson, kib (re), julian (mentor)
version field sent via gif(4)+if_bridge(4). The EtherIP
implementation found on FreeBSD 6.1, 6.2, 6.3, 7.0, 7.1, and 7.2 had
an interoperability issue because it sent the incorrect EtherIP
packets and discarded the correct ones.
This change introduces the following two flags to gif(4):
accept_rev_ethip_ver: accepts both correct EtherIP packets and ones
with reversed version field, if enabled. If disabled, the gif
accepts the correct packets only. This flag is enabled by
default.
send_rev_ethip_ver: sends EtherIP packets with reversed version field
intentionally, if enabled. If disabled, the gif sends the correct
packets only. This flag is disabled by default.
These flags are stored in struct gif_softc and can be set by
ifconfig(8) on per-interface basis.
Note that this is an incompatible change of EtherIP with the older
FreeBSD releases. If you need to interoperate older FreeBSD boxes and
new versions after this commit, setting "send_rev_ethip_ver" is
needed.
Reviewed by: thompsa and rwatson
Spotted by: Shunsuke SHINOMIYA
PR: kern/125003
MFC after: 2 weeks
and used in a large number of files, but also because an increasing number
of incorrect uses of MAC calls were sneaking in due to copy-and-paste of
MAC-aware code without the associated opt_mac.h include.
Discussed with: pjd
an accessor function to get the correct rnh pointer back.
Update netstat to get the correct pointer using kvm_read()
as well.
This not only fixes the ABI problem depending on the kernel
option but also permits the tunable to overwrite the kernel
option at boot time up to MAXFIBS, enlarging the number of
FIBs without having to recompile. So people could just use
GENERIC now.
Reviewed by: julian, rwatson, zec
X-MFC: not possible
threads:
- Support up to one netisr thread per CPU, each processings its own
workstream, or set of per-protocol queues. Threads may be bound
to specific CPUs, or allowed to migrate, based on a global policy.
In the future it would be desirable to support topology-centric
policies, such as "one netisr per package".
- Allow each protocol to advertise an ordering policy, which can
currently be one of:
NETISR_POLICY_SOURCE: packets must maintain ordering with respect to
an implicit or explicit source (such as an interface or socket).
NETISR_POLICY_FLOW: make use of mbuf flow identifiers to place work,
as well as allowing protocols to provide a flow generation function
for mbufs without flow identifers (m2flow). Falls back on
NETISR_POLICY_SOURCE if now flow ID is available.
NETISR_POLICY_CPU: allow protocols to inspect and assign a CPU for
each packet handled by netisr (m2cpuid).
- Provide utility functions for querying the number of workstreams
being used, as well as a mapping function from workstream to CPU ID,
which protocols may use in work placement decisions.
- Add explicit interfaces to get and set per-protocol queue limits, and
get and clear drop counters, which query data or apply changes across
all workstreams.
- Add a more extensible netisr registration interface, in which
protocols declare 'struct netisr_handler' structures for each
registered NETISR_ type. These include name, handler function,
optional mbuf to flow ID function, optional mbuf to CPU ID function,
queue limit, and ordering policy. Padding is present to allow these
to be expanded in the future. If no queue limit is declared, then
a default is used.
- Queue limits are now per-workstream, and raised from the previous
IFQ_MAXLEN default of 50 to 256.
- All protocols are updated to use the new registration interface, and
with the exception of netnatm, default queue limits. Most protocols
register as NETISR_POLICY_SOURCE, except IPv4 and IPv6, which use
NETISR_POLICY_FLOW, and will therefore take advantage of driver-
generated flow IDs if present.
- Formalize a non-packet based interface between interface polling and
the netisr, rather than having polling pretend to be two protocols.
Provide two explicit hooks in the netisr worker for start and end
events for runs: netisr_poll() and netisr_pollmore(), as well as a
function, netisr_sched_poll(), to allow the polling code to schedule
netisr execution. DEVICE_POLLING still embeds single-netisr
assumptions in its implementation, so for now if it is compiled into
the kernel, a single and un-bound netisr thread is enforced
regardless of tunable configuration.
In the default configuration, the new netisr implementation maintains
the same basic assumptions as the previous implementation: a single,
un-bound worker thread processes all deferred work, and direct dispatch
is enabled by default wherever possible.
Performance measurement shows a marginal performance improvement over
the old implementation due to the use of batched dequeue.
An rmlock is used to synchronize use and registration/unregistration
using the framework; currently, synchronized use is disabled
(replicating current netisr policy) due to a measurable 3%-6% hit in
ping-pong micro-benchmarking. It will be enabled once further rmlock
optimization has taken place. However, in practice, netisrs are
rarely registered or unregistered at runtime.
A new man page for netisr will follow, but since one doesn't currently
exist, it hasn't been updated.
This change is not appropriate for MFC, although the polling shutdown
handler should be merged to 7-STABLE.
Bump __FreeBSD_version.
Reviewed by: bz
with OpenBSD (and BSD/OS originally). We can't easly do it SOL_SOCKET option
as there is no more space for more SOL_SOCKET options, but this option also
fits better as an IP socket option, it seems.
- Implement this functionality also for IPv6 and RAW IP sockets.
- Always compile it in (don't use additional kernel options).
- Remove sysctl to turn this functionality on and off.
- Introduce new privilege - PRIV_NETINET_BINDANY, which allows to use this
functionality (currently only unjail root can use it).
Discussed with: julian, adrian, jhb, rwatson, kmacy
The system hostname is now stored in prison0, and the global variable
"hostname" has been removed, as has the hostname_mtx mutex. Jails may
have their own host information, or they may inherit it from the
parent/system. The proper way to read the hostname is via
getcredhostname(), which will copy either the hostname associated with
the passed cred, or the system hostname if you pass NULL. The system
hostname can still be accessed directly (and without locking) at
prison0.pr_host, but that should be avoided where possible.
The "similar information" referred to is domainname, hostid, and
hostuuid, which have also become prison parameters and had their
associated global variables removed.
Approved by: bz (mentor)
ip6_input.c, in6.h:
* Add netinet6-specific mbuf flag M_RTALERT_MLD, shadowing M_PROTO6.
* Always set this flag if HBH Router Alert option is present for MLD,
even when not forwarding.
icmp6.c:
* In icmp6_input(), spell m->m_pkthdr.rcvif as ifp to be consistent.
* Use scope ID for verifying input. Do not apply SSM filters here, no inpcb.
* Check for M_RTALERT_MLD when validating MLD traffic, as we can't see
IPv6 hop options outside of ip6_input().
in6_mcast.c:
* Use KAME scope/zone ID in in6_multi.
* Update net.inet6.ip6.mcast.filters implementation to use scope IDs
for comparisons.
* Fix scope ID treatment in multicast socket option processing.
Scope IDs passed in from userland will be ignored as other less
ambiguous APIs exist for specifying the link.
* Tighten userland input checks in IPv6 SSM delta and full-state ops.
* Source filter embedded scope IDs need to be revisited, for now
just clear them and ignore them on input.
* Adapt KAME behaviour of looking up the scope ID in the default zone
for multicast leaves, when the interface is ambiguous.
mld6.c:
* Tighten origin checks on MLD traffic as per RFC3810 Section 6.2:
* ip6_src MAY be the unspecified address for MLDv1 reports.
* ip6_src MAY have link-local address scope for MLDv1 reports,
MLDv1 queries, and MLDv2 queries.
* Perform address field validation *before* accepting queries.
* Use KAME scope/zone ID in query/report processing.
* Break const correctness for mld_v1_input_report(), mld_v1_input_query()
as we temporarily modify the input mbuf chain.
* Clear the scope ID before handoff to userland MLD daemon.
* Fix MLDv1 old querier present timer processing.
With the protocol defaults, hosts should revert to MLDv2 after 260s.
* Add net.inet6.mld.v1enable sysctl, default to on.
ifmcstat.c:
* Use sysctl by default; -K requests kvm(3) if so compiled.
mld.4:
* Connect man page to build.
Tested using PCS.
by creating a child jail, which is visible to that jail and to any
parent jails. Child jails may be restricted more than their parents,
but never less. Jail names reflect this hierarchy, being MIB-style
dot-separated strings.
Every thread now points to a jail, the default being prison0, which
contains information about the physical system. Prison0's root
directory is the same as rootvnode; its hostname is the same as the
global hostname, and its securelevel replaces the global securelevel.
Note that the variable "securelevel" has actually gone away, which
should not cause any problems for code that properly uses
securelevel_gt() and securelevel_ge().
Some jail-related permissions that were kept in global variables and
set via sysctls are now per-jail settings. The sysctls still exist for
backward compatibility, used only by the now-deprecated jail(2) system
call.
Approved by: bz (mentor)
So far the udp_tun_func_t had been (ab)using inp_ppcb for udp in kernel
tunneling callbacks. Move that into the udpcb and add a field for flags
there to be used by upcoming changes instead of sticking udp only flags
into in_pcb flags2.
Bump __FreeBSD_version for ports to detect it and because of vnet* struct
size changes.
Submitted by: jhb (7.x version)
Reviewed by: rwatson
kernel option.
This also permits tuning of the option per virtual network stack, as
well as separately per inet, inet6.
The kernel option is left for a transition period, marked deprecated,
and will be removed soon.
Initially requested by: phk (1 year 1 day ago)
MFC after: 4 weeks
route is also being deleted, the link-layer address table
(arp or nd6) will flush those L2 llinfo entries that match
the removed prefix.
Reviewed by: kmacy
-- A routing socket message is not generated when an IPv6 address is
either inserted or deleted from an interface. The missing routing
message problem was discovered by Randall Stewart and Michael Tuxen
during SCTP testing.
-- Previously when an IPv6 address is configured on an interface, if the
prefix length is /128, then a host route is instaleld in the kernel
for this address. But this host route is not deleted when that IPv6
address is removed from the interface.
-- Routes to the link-local all-nodes multicast address and the
interface-local all-nodes multicast address are not removed when
the last IPv6 address is removed from an interface.
Reviewed by: bz, gnn
(i.e. seems to be) already set.
This should reduce console noise due to curvnet recursion reports.
This change has no impact on nooptions VIMAGE builds.
Approved by: julian (mentor)
previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a
dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context
should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros,
and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions
on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged.
This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE
kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace.
The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an
indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related
operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet
context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's
m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so
far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking
aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other
vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another.
The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros
was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to
reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing
the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the
alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry.
In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when
processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the
kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers
to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing
timer-driven networking functions.
This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all
vnet instances.
Approved by: julian (mentor)
active network stack instance. Turning on options VIMAGE at compile
time yields the following changes relative to default kernel build:
1) V_ accessor macros for virtualized variables resolve to structure
fields via base pointers, instead of being resolved as fields in global
structs or plain global variables. As an example, V_ifnet becomes:
options VIMAGE: ((struct vnet_net *) vnet_net)->_ifnet
default build: vnet_net_0._ifnet
options VIMAGE_GLOBALS: ifnet
2) INIT_VNET_* macros will declare and set up base pointers to be used
by V_ accessor macros, instead of resolving to whitespace:
INIT_VNET_NET(ifp->if_vnet); becomes
struct vnet_net *vnet_net = (ifp->if_vnet)->mod_data[VNET_MOD_NET];
3) Memory for vnet modules registered via vnet_mod_register() is now
allocated at run time in sys/kern/kern_vimage.c, instead of per vnet
module structs being declared as globals. If required, vnet modules
can now request the framework to provide them with allocated bzeroed
memory by filling in the vmi_size field in their vmi_modinfo structures.
4) structs socket, ifnet, inpcbinfo, tcpcb and syncache_head are
extended to hold a pointer to the parent vnet. options VIMAGE builds
will fill in those fields as required.
5) curvnet is introduced as a new global variable in options VIMAGE
builds, always pointing to the default and only struct vnet.
6) struct sysctl_oid has been extended with additional two fields to
store major and minor virtualization module identifiers, oid_v_subs and
oid_v_mod. SYSCTL_V_* family of macros will fill in those fields
accordingly, and store the offset in the appropriate vnet container
struct in oid_arg1.
In sysctl handlers dealing with virtualized sysctls, the
SYSCTL_RESOLVE_V_ARG1() macro will compute the address of the target
variable and make it available in arg1 variable for further processing.
Unused fields in structs vnet_inet, vnet_inet6 and vnet_ipfw have
been deleted.
Reviewed by: bz, rwatson
Approved by: julian (mentor)
import from p4 bms_netdev. Summary of changes:
* Connect netinet6/in6_mcast.c to build.
The legacy KAME KPIs are mostly preserved.
* Eliminate now dead code from ip6_output.c.
Don't do mbuf bingo, we are not going to do RFC 2292 style
CMSG tricks for multicast options as they are not required
by any current IPv6 normative reference.
* Refactor transports (UDP, raw_ip6) to do own mcast filtering.
SCTP, TCP unaffected by this change.
* Add ip6_msource, in6_msource structs to in6_var.h.
* Hookup mld_ifinfo state to in6_ifextra, allocate from
domifattach path.
* Eliminate IN6_LOOKUP_MULTI(), it is no longer referenced.
Kernel consumers which need this should use in6m_lookup().
* Refactor IPv6 socket group memberships to use a vector (like IPv4).
* Update ifmcstat(8) for IPv6 SSM.
* Add witness lock order for IN6_MULTI_LOCK.
* Move IN6_MULTI_LOCK out of lower ip6_output()/ip6_input() paths.
* Introduce IP6STAT_ADD/SUB/INC/DEC as per rwatson's IPv4 cleanup.
* Update carp(4) for new IPv6 SSM KPIs.
* Virtualize ip6_mrouter socket.
Changes mostly localized to IPv6 MROUTING.
* Don't do a local group lookup in MROUTING.
* Kill unused KAME prototypes in6_purgemkludge(), in6_restoremkludge().
* Preserve KAME DAD timer jitter behaviour in MLDv1 compatibility mode.
* Bump __FreeBSD_version to 800084.
* Update UPDATING.
NOTE WELL:
* This code hasn't been tested against real MLDv2 queriers
(yet), although the on-wire protocol has been verified in Wireshark.
* There are a few unresolved issues in the socket layer APIs to
do with scope ID propagation.
* There is a LOR present in ip6_output()'s use of
in6_setscope() which needs to be resolved. See comments in mld6.c.
This is believed to be benign and can't be avoided for the moment
without re-introducing an indirect netisr.
This work was mostly derived from the IGMPv3 implementation, and
has been sponsored by a third party.
for use by MLDv2.
Add IPv6 SSM socket layer membership vector size constants and
tree bounds.
Remove unreferenced struct ipv6_mreq_source; SSM for IPv6 goes
straight to the RFC 3678 socket options.
rearrange / replace / adjust several INIT_VNET_* initializer
macros, all of which currently resolve to whitespace.
Reviewed by: bz (an older version of the patch)
Approved by: julian (mentor)
iterate the interface address list. Marginally expand IF_ADDR_LOCK()
coverage in mld6.c to make sure it's held when IFP_TO_IA6() is called.
MFC after: 2 weeks
macros: ICMPSTAT_ADD(), ICMPSTAT_INC(), ICMP6STAT_ADD(), and
ICMP6STAT_INC(), rather than directly manipulating the fields
of these structures across the kernel. This will make it
easier to change the implementation of these statistics,
such as using per-CPU versions of the data structures.
In on case, icmp6stat members are manipulated indirectly, by
icmp6_errcount(), and this will require further work to fix
for per-CPU stats.
MFC after: 3 days
Update stats in struct udpstat using two new macros, UDPSTAT_ADD()
and UDPSTAT_INC(), rather than directly manipulating the fields
across the kernel. This will make it easier to change the
implementation of these statistics, such as using per-CPU versions
of the data structures.
MFC after: 3 days
dependency tracking and ordering enforcement.
With this change, per-vnet initialization functions introduced with
r190787 are no longer directly called from traditional initialization
functions (which cc in most cases inlined to pre-r190787 code), but are
instead registered via the vnet framework first, and are invoked only
after all prerequisite modules have been initialized. In the long run,
this framework should allow us to both initialize and dismantle
multiple vnet instances in a correct order.
The problem this change aims to solve is how to replay the
initialization sequence of various network stack components, which
have been traditionally triggered via different mechanisms (SYSINIT,
protosw). Note that this initialization sequence was and still can be
subtly different depending on whether certain pieces of code have been
statically compiled into the kernel, loaded as modules by boot
loader, or kldloaded at run time.
The approach is simple - we record the initialization sequence
established by the traditional mechanisms whenever vnet_mod_register()
is called for a particular vnet module. The vnet_mod_register_multi()
variant allows a single initializer function to be registered multiple
times but with different arguments - currently this is only used in
kern/uipc_domain.c by net_add_domain() with different struct domain *
as arguments, which allows for protosw-registered initialization
routines to be invoked in a correct order by the new vnet
initialization framework.
For the purpose of identifying vnet modules, each vnet module has to
have a unique ID, which is statically assigned in sys/vimage.h.
Dynamic assignment of vnet module IDs is not supported yet.
A vnet module may specify a single prerequisite module at registration
time by filling in the vmi_dependson field of its vnet_modinfo struct
with the ID of the module it depends on. Unless specified otherwise,
all vnet modules depend on VNET_MOD_NET (container for ifnet list head,
rt_tables etc.), which thus has to and will always be initialized
first. The framework will panic if it detects any unresolved
dependencies before completing system initialization. Detection of
unresolved dependencies for vnet modules registered after boot
(kldloaded modules) is not provided.
Note that the fact that each module can specify only a single
prerequisite may become problematic in the long run. In particular,
INET6 depends on INET being already instantiated, due to TCP / UDP
structures residing in INET container. IPSEC also depends on INET,
which will in turn additionally complicate making INET6-only kernel
configs a reality.
The entire registration framework can be compiled out by turning on the
VIMAGE_GLOBALS kernel config option.
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: julian (mentor)
from existing functions for initializing global state.
At this stage, the new per-vnet initializer functions are
directly called from the existing global initialization code,
which should in most cases result in compiler inlining those
new functions, hence yielding a near-zero functional change.
Modify the existing initializer functions which are invoked via
protosw, like ip_init() et. al., to allow them to be invoked
multiple times, i.e. per each vnet. Global state, if any,
is initialized only if such functions are called within the
context of vnet0, which will be determined via the
IS_DEFAULT_VNET(curvnet) check (currently always true).
While here, V_irtualize a few remaining global UMA zones
used by net/netinet/netipsec networking code. While it is
not yet clear to me or anybody else whether this is the right
thing to do, at this stage this makes the code more readable,
and makes it easier to track uncollected UMA-zone-backed
objects on vnet removal. In the long run, it's quite possible
that some form of shared use of UMA zone pools among multiple
vnets should be considered.
Bump __FreeBSD_version due to changes in layout of structs
vnet_ipfw, vnet_inet and vnet_net.
Approved by: julian (mentor)
This is purely a forwarding plane cleanup; no control plane
code is involved.
Summary:
* Split IPv4 and IPv6 MROUTING support. The static compile-time
kernel option remains the same, however, the modules may now
be built for IPv4 and IPv6 separately as ip_mroute_mod and
ip6_mroute_mod.
* Clean up the IPv4 multicast forwarding code to use BSD queue
and hash table constructs. Don't build our own timer abstractions
when ratecheck() and timevalclear() etc will do.
* Expose the multicast forwarding cache (MFC) and virtual interface
table (VIF) as sysctls, to reduce netstat's dependence on libkvm
for this information for running kernels.
* bandwidth meters however still require libkvm.
* Make the MFC hash table size a boot/load-time tunable ULONG,
net.inet.ip.mfchashsize (defaults to 256).
* Remove unused members from struct vif and struct mfc.
* Kill RSVP support, as no current RSVP implementation uses it.
These stubs could be moved to raw_ip.c.
* Don't share locks or initialization between IPv4 and IPv6.
* Don't use a static struct route_in6 in ip6_mroute.c.
The v6 code is still using a cached struct route_in6, this is
moved to mif6 for the time being.
* More cleanup remains to be merged from ip_mroute.c to ip6_mroute.c.
v4 path tested using ports/net/mcast-tools.
v6 changes are mostly mechanical locking and *have not* been tested.
As these changes partially break some kernel ABIs, they will not
be MFCed. There is a lot more work to be done here.
Reviewed by: Pavlin Radoslavov
in FreeBSD 5.x to allow network device drivers to run with Giant
despite the network stack being Giant-free. This significantly
simplifies calls into ioctl() on network interfaces, especially
in the multicast code, as well as eliminates deferred invocation
of interface if_start routines.
Disable the build on device drivers still depending on
IFF_NEEDSGIANT as they no longer compile. They will be removed
in a few weeks if they haven't been made MPSAFE in that time.
Disabled drivers:
if_ar
if_axe
if_aue
if_cdce
if_cue
if_kue
if_ray
if_rue
if_rum
if_sr
if_udav
if_ural
if_zyd
Drivers that were already disabled because of tty changes:
if_ppp
if_sl
Discussed on: arch@
certain flags that should have been in inp_flags ended up in inp_vflag,
meaning that they were inconsistently locked, and in one case,
interpreted. Move the following flags from inp_vflag to gaps in the
inp_flags space (and clean up the inp_flags constants to make gaps
more obvious to future takers):
INP_TIMEWAIT
INP_SOCKREF
INP_ONESBCAST
INP_DROPPED
Some aspects of this change have no effect on kernel ABI at all, as these
are UDP/TCP/IP-internal uses; however, netstat and sockstat detect
INP_TIMEWAIT when listing TCP sockets, so any MFC will need to take this
into account.
MFC after: 1 week (or after dependencies are MFC'd)
Reviewed by: bz
RH0 was deprecated by RFC 5095.
While most of the code had been disabled by #if 0 already, leave a
bit of infrastructure for possible RH2 code and a log message under
BURN_BRIDGES in case a user still tries to send RH0 packets.
Reviewed by: gnn (a bit back, earlier version)
which are not in a module of their own like gif.
Single kernel compiles and universe will fail if the size of the struct
changes. Th expected values are given in sys/vimage.h.
See the comments where how to handle this.
Requested by: peter
net/route.h.
Remove the hidden include of opt_route.h and net/route.h from net/vnet.h.
We need to make sure that both opt_route.h and net/route.h are included
before net/vnet.h because of the way MRT figures out the number of FIBs
from the kernel option. If we do not, we end up with the default number
of 1 when including net/vnet.h and array sizes are wrong.
This does not change the list of files which depend on opt_route.h
but we can identify them now more easily.
(duplicate) code in sys/netipsec/ipsec.c and fold it into
common, INET/6 independent functions.
The file local functions ipsec4_setspidx_inpcb() and
ipsec6_setspidx_inpcb() were 1:1 identical after the change
in r186528. Rename to ipsec_setspidx_inpcb() and remove the
duplicate.
Public functions ipsec[46]_get_policy() were 1:1 identical.
Remove one copy and merge in the factored out code from
ipsec_get_policy() into the other. The public function left
is now called ipsec_get_policy() and callers were adapted.
Public functions ipsec[46]_set_policy() were 1:1 identical.
Rename file local ipsec_set_policy() function to
ipsec_set_policy_internal().
Remove one copy of the public functions, rename the other
to ipsec_set_policy() and adapt callers.
Public functions ipsec[46]_hdrsiz() were logically identical
(ignoring one questionable assert in the v6 version).
Rename the file local ipsec_hdrsiz() to ipsec_hdrsiz_internal(),
the public function to ipsec_hdrsiz(), remove the duplicate
copy and adapt the callers.
The v6 version had been unused anyway. Cleanup comments.
Public functions ipsec[46]_in_reject() were logically identical
apart from statistics. Move the common code into a file local
ipsec46_in_reject() leaving vimage+statistics in small AF specific
wrapper functions. Note: unfortunately we already have a public
ipsec_in_reject().
Reviewed by: sam
Discussed with: rwatson (renaming to *_internal)
MFC after: 26 days
X-MFC: keep wrapper functions for public symbols?
in udp6_connect (td is already dereferenced elsewhere without such a
check). This makes the conversion from a sockaddr to a sockaddr_in6
always happen, so convert once at the beginning of the function rather
than twice in the middle.
Approved by: bz (mentor)
return zero on success and an error code otherwise. The possible errors
are EADDRNOTAVAIL if an address being checked for doesn't match the
prison, and EAFNOSUPPORT if the prison doesn't have any addresses in
that address family. For most callers of these functions, use the
returned error code instead of e.g. a hard-coded EADDRNOTAVAIL or
EINVAL.
Always include a jailed() check in these functions, where a non-jailed
cred always returns success (and makes no changes). Remove the explicit
jailed() checks that preceded many of the function calls.
Approved by: bz (mentor)
defrouter_select(), NULL the cached llentry after unlocking
as we are no longer interested in it and with the second
iteration would try to unlock it again resulting in
panic: Lock (rw) lle not locked @ ...
Reported by: Mark Atkinson <m.atkinson@f5.com>
Tested by: Mark Atkinson <m.atkinson@f5.com>
PR: kern/128247 (in follow-up, unrelated to original report)