m_pullup. icmp6_notify_error continued to use the old pointer,
which after the m_pullup is not suitable as a packet header any
longer (see m_move_pkthdr).
and this is what causes the kernel panic in sbappendaddr later on.
PR: kern/77934
Submitted by: Gerd Rausch <gerd@juniper.net>
MFC after: 2 days
code requires it to be 0 when a jumbo payload option is contained.
PR: kern/77934
Submitted by: Gerd Rausch <gerd@juniper.net>
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 2 days
hosts to share an IP address, providing high availability and load
balancing.
Original work on CARP done by Michael Shalayeff, with many
additions by Marco Pfatschbacher and Ryan McBride.
FreeBSD port done solely by Max Laier.
Patch by: mlaier
Obtained from: OpenBSD (mickey, mcbride)
Approved by: Robert Watson <rwatson@freebsd.org>
Add locking to the IPv6 scoping code.
All spl() like calls have also been removed.
Cleaning up the handling of ifnet data will happen at a later date.
(sorele()/sotryfree()):
- This permits the caller to acquire the accept mutex before the socket
mutex, avoiding sofree() having to drop the socket mutex and re-order,
which could lead to races permitting more than one thread to enter
sofree() after a socket is ready to be free'd.
- This also covers clearing of the so_pcb weak socket reference from
the protocol to the socket, preventing races in clearing and
evaluation of the reference such that sofree() might be called more
than once on the same socket.
This appears to close a race I was able to easily trigger by repeatedly
opening and resetting TCP connections to a host, in which the
tcp_close() code called as a result of the RST raced with the close()
of the accepted socket in the user process resulting in simultaneous
attempts to de-allocate the same socket. The new locking increases
the overhead for operations that may potentially free the socket, so we
will want to revise the synchronization strategy here as we normalize
the reference counting model for sockets. The use of the accept mutex
in freeing of sockets that are not listen sockets is primarily
motivated by the potential need to remove the socket from the
incomplete connection queue on its parent (listen) socket, so cleaning
up the reference model here may allow us to substantially weaken the
synchronization requirements.
RELENG_5_3 candidate.
MFC after: 3 days
Reviewed by: dwhite
Discussed with: gnn, dwhite, green
Reported by: Marc UBM Bocklet <ubm at u-boot-man dot de>
Reported by: Vlad <marchenko at gmail dot com>
Discussed extensively with KAME. The API author's intent isn't clear at this
point, so rather than remove the code entirely, #if 0 out and put a big
comment in for now. The IPV6_RECVPATHMTU sockopt is available if the
application wants to be notified of the path MTU to optimize packet sizes.
Thanks to JINMEI Tatuya <jinmei@isl.rdc.toshiba.co.jp> for putting up
with my incessant badgering on this issue, and fenner for pointing out
the API issue and suggesting solutions.
passing along socket information. This is required to work around a LOR with
the socket code which results in an easy reproducible hard lockup with
debug.mpsafenet=1. This commit does *not* fix the LOR, but enables us to do
so later. The missing piece is to turn the filter locking into a leaf lock
and will follow in a seperate (later) commit.
This will hopefully be MT5'ed in order to fix the problem for RELENG_5 in
forseeable future.
Suggested by: rwatson
A lot of work by: csjp (he'd be even more helpful w/o mentor-reviews ;)
Reviewed by: rwatson, csjp
Tested by: -pf, -ipfw, LINT, csjp and myself
MFC after: 3 days
LOR IDs: 14 - 17 (not fixed yet)
the flags field will be improperly initialized resulting in inconsistent
operation (sometimes with Giant, sometimes without, et al).
RELENG_5 candidate.
operation using NET_NEEDS_GIANT(). This will result in a boot-time
restoration of Giant-enabled network operation, or run-time warning on
dynamic load (applicable only to the Netgraph component). Additional
components will likely need to be marked with this in the future.
its users.
netisr_queue() now returns (0) on success and ERRNO on failure. At the
moment ENXIO (netisr queue not functional) and ENOBUFS (netisr queue full)
are supported.
Previously it would return (1) on success but the return value of IF_HANDOFF()
was interpreted wrongly and (0) was actually returned on success. Due to this
schednetisr() was never called to kick the scheduling of the isr. However this
was masked by other normal packets coming through netisr_dispatch() causing the
dequeueing of waiting packets.
PR: kern/70988
Found by: MOROHOSHI Akihiko <moro@remus.dti.ne.jp>
MFC after: 3 days
compile option. All FreeBSD packet filters now use the PFIL_HOOKS API and
thus it becomes a standard part of the network stack.
If no hooks are connected the entire packet filter hooks section and related
activities are jumped over. This removes any performance impact if no hooks
are active.
Both OpenBSD and DragonFlyBSD have integrated PFIL_HOOKS permanently as well.
The prefix management code currently resides in nd6, leaving only the
unused router renumbering capability in the in6_prefix files. Removing
it will make it easier for us to provide locking for the remainder of
IPv6 by reducing the number of objects requiring synchronized access.
This functionality has also been removed from NetBSD and OpenBSD.
Submitted by: George Neville-Neil <gnn at neville-neil.com>
Discussed with/approved by: suz, keiichi at kame.net, core at kame.net
result of the notify() function to decide if we need to unlock the
in6pcb or not, rather than always unlocking. Otherwise, we may unlock
and already unlocked in6pcb.
Reported by: kuriyama, Gordon Bergling <gbergling at 0xfce3.net>
Tested by: kuriyama, Gordon Bergling <gbergling at 0xfce3.net>
Discussed with: mdodd
have already done this, so I have styled the patch on their work:
1) introduce a ip_newid() static inline function that checks
the sysctl and then decides if it should return a sequential
or random IP ID.
2) named the sysctl net.inet.ip.random_id
3) IPv6 flow IDs and fragment IDs are now always random.
Flow IDs and frag IDs are significantly less common in the
IPv6 world (ie. rarely generated per-packet), so there should
be smaller performance concerns.
The sysctl defaults to 0 (sequential IP IDs).
Reviewed by: andre, silby, mlaier, ume
Based on: NetBSD
MFC after: 2 months
structures, allowing in6_pcbnotify() to lock the pcbinfo and each
inpcb that it notifies of ICMPv6 events. This prevents inpcb
assertions from firing when IPv6 generates and delievers event
notifications for inpcbs.
Reported by: kuriyama
Tested by: kuriyama
Alice is too lazy to write a server application in PF-independent
manner. Therefore she knocks up the server using PF_INET6 only
and allows the IPv6 socket to accept mapped IPv4 as well. An evil
hacker known on IRC as cheshire_cat has an account in the same
system. He starts a process listening on the same port as used
by Alice's server, but in PF_INET. As a consequence, cheshire_cat
will distract all IPv4 traffic supposed to go to Alice's server.
Such sort of port theft was initially enabled by copying the code that
implemented the RFC 2553 semantics on IPv4/6 sockets (see inet6(4)) for
the implied case of the same owner for both connections. After this
change, the above scenario will be impossible. In the same setting,
the user who attempts to start his server last will get EADDRINUSE.
Of course, using IPv4 mapped to IPv6 leads to security complications
in the first place, but there is no reason to make it even more unsafe.
This change doesn't apply to KAME since it affects a FreeBSD-specific
part of the code. It doesn't modify the out-of-box behaviour of the
TCP/IP stack either as long as mapping IPv4 to IPv6 is off by default.
MFC after: 1 month
synchronizing IPv6 protocol control blocks and lists. These changes
are modeled on the inpcb locking for IPv4, submitted by Jennifer Yang,
and committed by Jeffrey Hsu. With these locking changes, IPv6 use of
inpcbs is now substantially more MPSAFE, and permits IPv4 inpcb locking
assertions to be run in the presence of IPv6 compiled into the kernel.
(i.e. with the foreign address being not wildcard) when checking
for possible port theft since such connections cannot be stolen.
The port theft check is FreeBSD-specific and isn't in the KAME tree.
PR: bin/65928 (in the audit trail)
Reviewed by: -net, -hackers (silence)
Tested by: Nick Leuta <skynick at mail.sc.ru>
MFC after: 1 month
somewhat clearer, but more importantly allows for a consistent naming
scheme for suser_cred flags.
The old name is still defined, but will be removed in a few days (unless I
hear any complaints...)
Discussed with: rwatson, scottl
Requested by: jhb
for unknown events.
A number of modules return EINVAL in this instance, and I have left
those alone for now and instead taught MOD_QUIESCE to accept this
as "didn't do anything".
your (network) modules as well as any userland that might make sense of
sizeof(struct ifnet).
This does not change the queueing yet. These changes will follow in a
seperate commit. Same with the driver changes, which need case by case
evaluation.
__FreeBSD_version bump will follow.
Tested-by: (i386)LINT
before calling sotryfree().
-- Body of earlier bulk commit this belonged with --
Log:
Extend coverage of SOCK_LOCK(so) to include so_count, the socket
reference count:
- Assert SOCK_LOCK(so) macros that directly manipulate so_count:
soref(), sorele().
- Assert SOCK_LOCK(so) in macros/functions that rely on the state of
so_count: sofree(), sotryfree().
- Acquire SOCK_LOCK(so) before calling these functions or macros in
various contexts in the stack, both at the socket and protocol
layers.
- In some cases, perform soisdisconnected() before sotryfree(), as
this could result in frobbing of a non-present socket if
sotryfree() actually frees the socket.
- Note that sofree()/sotryfree() will release the socket lock even if
they don't free the socket.
Submitted by: sam
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
Obtained from: BSD/OS
Wind River. In the IPv4 output path, one of the tests in ip_output()
checks how many slots are actually available in the interface output
queue before attempting to send a packet. If, for example, we need
to transmit a packet of 32K bytes over an interface with an MTU of
1500, we know it's going to take about 21 fragments to do it. If
there's less than 21 slots left in the output queue, there's no point
in transmitting anything at all: IP does not do retransmission, so
sending only some of the fragments would just be a waste of bandwidth.
(In an extreme case, if you're sending a heavy stream of fragmented
packets, you might find yourself sending nothing by the first fragment
of all your packets.) So if ip_output() notices there's not enough
room in the output queue to send the frame, it just dumps the packet
and returns ENOBUFS to the app.
It turns out ip6_output() lacks this code. Consequently, this caused
the netperf UDPIPV6_STREAM test to produce very poor results with large
write sizes. This commit adds code to check the remaining space in the
output queue and junk fragmented packets if they're too big to be
sent, just like with IPv4. (I can't imagine anyone's running an NFS
server using UDP over IPv6, but if they are, this will likely make them
a lot happier. :)