freebsd-skq/usr.bin/netstat/mroute.c

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/*-
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-4-Clause
*
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* Copyright (c) 1989 Stephen Deering
* Copyright (c) 1992, 1993
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
*
* This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
* Stephen Deering of Stanford University.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
* must display the following acknowledgement:
* This product includes software developed by the University of
* California, Berkeley and its contributors.
* 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
* may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
* without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*
1996-01-14 23:33:13 +00:00
* @(#)mroute.c 8.2 (Berkeley) 4/28/95
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*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
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/*
* Print multicast routing structures and statistics.
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*
* MROUTING 1.0
*/
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/queue.h>
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#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/socketvar.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
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#include <sys/protosw.h>
#include <sys/mbuf.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
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#include <net/if.h>
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#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <netinet/igmp.h>
#include <net/route.h>
#define _KERNEL 1
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#include <netinet/ip_mroute.h>
#undef _KERNEL
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#include <err.h>
#include <stdint.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <libxo/xo.h>
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#include "netstat.h"
#include "nl_defs.h"
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
static void print_bw_meter(struct bw_meter *, int *);
static void print_mfc(struct mfc *, int, int *);
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static void
print_bw_meter(struct bw_meter *bw_meter, int *banner_printed)
{
char s1[256], s2[256], s3[256];
struct timeval now, end, delta;
gettimeofday(&now, NULL);
if (! *banner_printed) {
xo_open_list("bandwidth-meter");
xo_emit(" {T:Bandwidth Meters}\n");
xo_emit(" {T:/%-30s}", "Measured(Start|Packets|Bytes)");
xo_emit(" {T:/%s}", "Type");
xo_emit(" {T:/%-30s}", "Thresh(Interval|Packets|Bytes)");
xo_emit(" {T:Remain}");
xo_emit("\n");
*banner_printed = 1;
}
xo_open_instance("bandwidth-meter");
/* The measured values */
if (bw_meter->bm_flags & BW_METER_UNIT_PACKETS) {
snprintf(s1, sizeof(s1), "%ju",
(uintmax_t)bw_meter->bm_measured.b_packets);
xo_emit("{e:measured-packets/%ju}",
(uintmax_t)bw_meter->bm_measured.b_packets);
} else
strcpy(s1, "?");
if (bw_meter->bm_flags & BW_METER_UNIT_BYTES) {
snprintf(s2, sizeof(s2), "%ju",
(uintmax_t)bw_meter->bm_measured.b_bytes);
xo_emit("{e:measured-bytes/%ju}",
(uintmax_t)bw_meter->bm_measured.b_bytes);
} else
strcpy(s2, "?");
xo_emit(" {[:-30}{:start-time/%lu.%06lu}|{q:measured-packets/%s}"
"|{q:measured-bytes%s}{]:}",
(u_long)bw_meter->bm_start_time.tv_sec,
(u_long)bw_meter->bm_start_time.tv_usec, s1, s2);
/* The type of entry */
xo_emit(" {t:type/%-3s}", (bw_meter->bm_flags & BW_METER_GEQ) ? ">=" :
(bw_meter->bm_flags & BW_METER_LEQ) ? "<=" : "?");
/* The threshold values */
if (bw_meter->bm_flags & BW_METER_UNIT_PACKETS) {
snprintf(s1, sizeof(s1), "%ju",
(uintmax_t)bw_meter->bm_threshold.b_packets);
xo_emit("{e:threshold-packets/%ju}",
(uintmax_t)bw_meter->bm_threshold.b_packets);
} else
strcpy(s1, "?");
if (bw_meter->bm_flags & BW_METER_UNIT_BYTES) {
snprintf(s2, sizeof(s2), "%ju",
(uintmax_t)bw_meter->bm_threshold.b_bytes);
xo_emit("{e:threshold-bytes/%ju}",
(uintmax_t)bw_meter->bm_threshold.b_bytes);
} else
strcpy(s2, "?");
xo_emit(" {[:-30}{:threshold-time/%lu.%06lu}|{q:threshold-packets/%s}"
"|{q:threshold-bytes%s}{]:}",
(u_long)bw_meter->bm_threshold.b_time.tv_sec,
(u_long)bw_meter->bm_threshold.b_time.tv_usec, s1, s2);
/* Remaining time */
timeradd(&bw_meter->bm_start_time,
&bw_meter->bm_threshold.b_time, &end);
if (timercmp(&now, &end, <=)) {
timersub(&end, &now, &delta);
snprintf(s3, sizeof(s3), "%lu.%06lu",
(u_long)delta.tv_sec,
(u_long)delta.tv_usec);
} else {
/* Negative time */
timersub(&now, &end, &delta);
snprintf(s3, sizeof(s3), "-%lu.06%lu",
(u_long)delta.tv_sec,
(u_long)delta.tv_usec);
}
xo_emit(" {:remaining-time/%s}", s3);
xo_open_instance("bandwidth-meter");
xo_emit("\n");
}
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Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
static void
print_mfc(struct mfc *m, int maxvif, int *banner_printed)
{
struct sockaddr_in sin;
struct sockaddr *sa = (struct sockaddr *)&sin;
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
struct bw_meter bw_meter, *bwm;
int bw_banner_printed;
int error;
vifi_t vifi;
bw_banner_printed = 0;
memset(&sin, 0, sizeof(sin));
sin.sin_len = sizeof(sin);
sin.sin_family = AF_INET;
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
if (! *banner_printed) {
xo_open_list("multicast-forwarding-entry");
xo_emit("\n{T:IPv4 Multicast Forwarding Table}\n"
" {T:Origin} {T:Group} "
" {T:Packets In-Vif} {T:Out-Vifs:Ttls}\n");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
*banner_printed = 1;
}
memcpy(&sin.sin_addr, &m->mfc_origin, sizeof(sin.sin_addr));
xo_emit(" {:origin-address/%-15.15s}", routename(sa, numeric_addr));
memcpy(&sin.sin_addr, &m->mfc_mcastgrp, sizeof(sin.sin_addr));
xo_emit(" {:group-address/%-15.15s}",
routename(sa, numeric_addr));
xo_emit(" {:sent-packets/%9lu}", m->mfc_pkt_cnt);
xo_emit(" {:parent/%3d} ", m->mfc_parent);
xo_open_list("vif-ttl");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
for (vifi = 0; vifi <= maxvif; vifi++) {
if (m->mfc_ttls[vifi] > 0) {
xo_open_instance("vif-ttl");
xo_emit(" {k:vif/%u}:{:ttl/%u}", vifi,
m->mfc_ttls[vifi]);
xo_close_instance("vif-ttl");
}
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
}
xo_close_list("vif-ttl");
xo_emit("\n");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
/*
* XXX We break the rules and try to use KVM to read the
* bandwidth meters, they are not retrievable via sysctl yet.
*/
bwm = m->mfc_bw_meter;
while (bwm != NULL) {
error = kread((u_long)bwm, (char *)&bw_meter,
sizeof(bw_meter));
if (error)
break;
print_bw_meter(&bw_meter, &bw_banner_printed);
bwm = bw_meter.bm_mfc_next;
}
if (banner_printed)
xo_close_list("bandwidth-meter");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
}
void
mroutepr()
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
{
struct sockaddr_in sin;
struct sockaddr *sa = (struct sockaddr *)&sin;
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
struct vif viftable[MAXVIFS];
struct vif *v;
struct mfc *m;
u_long pmfchashtbl, pmfctablesize, pviftbl;
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
int banner_printed;
int saved_numeric_addr;
size_t len;
vifi_t vifi, maxvif;
saved_numeric_addr = numeric_addr;
numeric_addr = 1;
memset(&sin, 0, sizeof(sin));
sin.sin_len = sizeof(sin);
sin.sin_family = AF_INET;
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
/*
* TODO:
* The VIF table will move to hanging off the struct if_info for
* each IPv4 configured interface. Currently it is statically
* allocated, and retrieved either using KVM or an opaque SYSCTL.
*
* This can't happen until the API documented in multicast(4)
* is itself refactored. The historical reason why VIFs use
* a separate ifindex space is entirely due to the legacy
* capability of the MROUTING code to create IPIP tunnels on
* the fly to support DVMRP. When gif(4) became available, this
* functionality was deprecated, as PIM does not use it.
*/
maxvif = 0;
pmfchashtbl = pmfctablesize = pviftbl = 0;
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
len = sizeof(viftable);
if (live) {
if (sysctlbyname("net.inet.ip.viftable", viftable, &len, NULL,
0) < 0) {
xo_warn("sysctl: net.inet.ip.viftable");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
return;
}
} else {
pmfchashtbl = nl[N_MFCHASHTBL].n_value;
pmfctablesize = nl[N_MFCTABLESIZE].n_value;
pviftbl = nl[N_VIFTABLE].n_value;
if (pmfchashtbl == 0 || pmfctablesize == 0 || pviftbl == 0) {
xo_warnx("No IPv4 MROUTING kernel support.");
return;
}
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
kread(pviftbl, (char *)viftable, sizeof(viftable));
}
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
banner_printed = 0;
for (vifi = 0, v = viftable; vifi < MAXVIFS; ++vifi, ++v) {
if (v->v_lcl_addr.s_addr == 0)
continue;
maxvif = vifi;
if (!banner_printed) {
xo_emit("\n{T:IPv4 Virtual Interface Table\n"
" Vif Thresh Local-Address "
"Remote-Address Pkts-In Pkts-Out}\n");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
banner_printed = 1;
xo_open_list("vif");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
}
xo_open_instance("vif");
memcpy(&sin.sin_addr, &v->v_lcl_addr, sizeof(sin.sin_addr));
xo_emit(" {:vif/%2u} {:threshold/%6u} {:route/%-15.15s}",
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
/* opposite math of add_vif() */
vifi, v->v_threshold,
routename(sa, numeric_addr));
memcpy(&sin.sin_addr, &v->v_rmt_addr, sizeof(sin.sin_addr));
xo_emit(" {:source/%-15.15s}", (v->v_flags & VIFF_TUNNEL) ?
routename(sa, numeric_addr) : "");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
xo_emit(" {:received-packets/%9lu} {:sent-packets/%9lu}\n",
v->v_pkt_in, v->v_pkt_out);
xo_close_instance("vif");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
}
if (banner_printed)
xo_close_list("vif");
else
xo_emit("\n{T:IPv4 Virtual Interface Table is empty}\n");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
banner_printed = 0;
/*
* TODO:
* The MFC table will move into the AF_INET radix trie in future.
* In 8.x, it becomes a dynamically allocated structure referenced
* by a hashed LIST, allowing more than 256 entries w/o kernel tuning.
*
* If retrieved via opaque SYSCTL, the kernel will coalesce it into
* a static table for us.
* If retrieved via KVM, the hash list pointers must be followed.
*/
if (live) {
struct mfc *mfctable;
len = 0;
if (sysctlbyname("net.inet.ip.mfctable", NULL, &len, NULL,
0) < 0) {
xo_warn("sysctl: net.inet.ip.mfctable");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
return;
}
mfctable = malloc(len);
if (mfctable == NULL) {
xo_warnx("malloc %lu bytes", (u_long)len);
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
return;
}
if (sysctlbyname("net.inet.ip.mfctable", mfctable, &len, NULL,
0) < 0) {
free(mfctable);
xo_warn("sysctl: net.inet.ip.mfctable");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
return;
}
m = mfctable;
while (len >= sizeof(*m)) {
print_mfc(m++, maxvif, &banner_printed);
len -= sizeof(*m);
}
if (banner_printed)
xo_close_list("multicast-forwarding-entry");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
if (len != 0)
xo_warnx("print_mfc: %lu trailing bytes", (u_long)len);
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
free(mfctable);
} else {
LIST_HEAD(, mfc) *mfchashtbl;
u_long i, mfctablesize;
struct mfc mfc;
int error;
error = kread(pmfctablesize, (char *)&mfctablesize,
sizeof(u_long));
if (error) {
xo_warn("kread: mfctablesize");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
return;
}
len = sizeof(*mfchashtbl) * mfctablesize;
mfchashtbl = malloc(len);
if (mfchashtbl == NULL) {
xo_warnx("malloc %lu bytes", (u_long)len);
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
return;
}
kread(pmfchashtbl, (char *)&mfchashtbl, len);
for (i = 0; i < mfctablesize; i++) {
LIST_FOREACH(m, &mfchashtbl[i], mfc_hash) {
kread((u_long)m, (char *)&mfc, sizeof(mfc));
print_mfc(m, maxvif, &banner_printed);
}
}
if (banner_printed)
xo_close_list("multicast-forwarding-entry");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
free(mfchashtbl);
}
if (!banner_printed)
xo_emit("\n{T:IPv4 Multicast Forwarding Table is empty}\n");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
xo_emit("\n");
Introduce a number of changes to the MROUTING code. 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
2009-03-19 01:43:03 +00:00
numeric_addr = saved_numeric_addr;
}
1994-05-27 12:33:43 +00:00
void
mrt_stats()
1994-05-27 12:33:43 +00:00
{
struct mrtstat mrtstat;
u_long mstaddr;
mstaddr = nl[N_MRTSTAT].n_value;
if (mstaddr == 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "No IPv4 MROUTING kernel support.\n");
return;
}
if (fetch_stats("net.inet.ip.mrtstat", mstaddr, &mrtstat,
sizeof(mrtstat), kread_counters) != 0)
return;
Restore netstat -M functionality for most statistics on core dumps. In general, when support was added to netstat for fetching data using sysctl, no provision was left for fetching equivalent data from a core dump, and in fact, netstat would _always_ fetch data from the live kernel using sysctl even when -M was specified resulting in the user believing they were getting data from coredumps when they actually weren't. Some specific changes: - Add a global 'live' variable that is true if netstat is running against the live kernel and false if -M has been specified. - Stop abusing the sysctl flag in the protocol tables to hold the protocol number. Instead, the protocol is now its own field in the tables, and it is passed as a separate parameter to the PCB and stat routines rather than overloading the KVM offset parameter. - Don't run PCB or stats functions who don't have a namelist offset if we are being run against a crash dump (!live). - For the inet and unix PCB routines, we generate the same buffer from KVM that the sysctl usually generates complete with the header and trailer. - Don't run bpf stats for !live (before it would just silently always run live). - kread() no longer trashes memory when opening the buffer if there is an error on open and the passed in buffer is smaller than _POSIX2_LINE_MAX. - The multicast routing code doesn't fallback to kvm on live kernels if the sysctl fails. Keeping this made the code rather hairy, and netstat is already tied to the kernel ABI anyway (even when using sysctl's since things like xinpcb contain an inpcb) so any kernels this is run against that have the multicast routing stuff should have the sysctls. - Don't try to dig around in the kernel linker in the netgraph PCB routine for core dumps. Other notes: - sctp's PCB routine only works on live kernels, it looked rather complicated to generate all the same stuff via KVM. Someone can always add it later if desired though. - Fix the ipsec removal bug where N_xxx for IPSEC stats weren't renumbered. - Use sysctlbyname() everywhere rather than hardcoded mib values. MFC after: 1 week Approved by: re (rwatson)
2007-07-16 17:15:55 +00:00
xo_emit("{T:IPv4 multicast forwarding}:\n");
#define p(f, m) if (mrtstat.f || sflag <= 1) \
xo_emit(m, (uintmax_t)mrtstat.f, plural(mrtstat.f))
#define p2(f, m) if (mrtstat.f || sflag <= 1) \
xo_emit(m, (uintmax_t)mrtstat.f, plurales(mrtstat.f))
xo_open_container("multicast-statistics");
p(mrts_mfc_lookups, "\t{:cache-lookups/%ju} "
"{N:/multicast forwarding cache lookup%s}\n");
p2(mrts_mfc_misses, "\t{:cache-misses/%ju} "
"{N:/multicast forwarding cache miss%s}\n");
p(mrts_upcalls, "\t{:upcalls-total/%ju} "
"{N:/upcall%s to multicast routing daemon}\n");
p(mrts_upq_ovflw, "\t{:upcall-overflows/%ju} "
"{N:/upcall queue overflow%s}\n");
p(mrts_upq_sockfull,
"\t{:upcalls-dropped-full-buffer/%ju} "
"{N:/upcall%s dropped due to full socket buffer}\n");
p(mrts_cache_cleanups, "\t{:cache-cleanups/%ju} "
"{N:/cache cleanup%s}\n");
p(mrts_no_route, "\t{:dropped-no-origin/%ju} "
"{N:/datagram%s with no route for origin}\n");
p(mrts_bad_tunnel, "\t{:dropped-bad-tunnel/%ju} "
"{N:/datagram%s arrived with bad tunneling}\n");
p(mrts_cant_tunnel, "\t{:dropped-could-not-tunnel/%ju} "
"{N:/datagram%s could not be tunneled}\n");
p(mrts_wrong_if, "\t{:dropped-wrong-incoming-interface/%ju} "
"{N:/datagram%s arrived on wrong interface}\n");
p(mrts_drop_sel, "\t{:dropped-selectively/%ju} "
"{N:/datagram%s selectively dropped}\n");
p(mrts_q_overflow, "\t{:dropped-queue-overflow/%ju} "
"{N:/datagram%s dropped due to queue overflow}\n");
p(mrts_pkt2large, "\t{:dropped-too-large/%ju} "
"{N:/datagram%s dropped for being too large}\n");
#undef p2
#undef p
1994-05-27 12:33:43 +00:00
}