actually destroyed. Also move call to knlist_init() into tapcreate(). This
should fix panic described in kern/95357.
PR: kern/95357
No response from: freebsd-current@
MFC after: 3 days
gateways which are unreachable except through the default router. For
example, assuming there is a default route configured, and inserting
a route
"route add 64.102.54.0/24 60.80.1.1"
is currently allowed even when 60.80.1.1 is only reachable through
the default route. However, an error is thrown when this route is
utilized, say,
"ping 64.102.54.1" will return an error
This type of route insertion should be disallowed becasue:
1) Let's say that somehow our code allowed this packet to flow to
the default router, and the default router knows the next hop is
60.80.1.1, then the question is why bother inserting this route in
the 1st place, just simply use the default route.
2) Since we're not talking about source routing here, the default
router could very well choose a different path than using 60.80.1.1
for the next hop, again it defeats the purpose of adding this route.
Reviewed by: ru, gnn, bz
Approved by: andre
destination. These checks are needed so we do not install
a route looking like this:
(0) 192.0.2.200 UH tun0 =>
When removing this route the kernel will start to walk
the address space which looks like a hang on 64bit platforms
because it'll take ages while on 32bit you should see a panic
when kernel debugging options are turned on.
The problem is in rtrequest1:
if (netmask) {
rt_maskedcopy(dst, ndst, netmask);
} else
bcopy(dst, ndst, dst->sa_len);
In both cases the len might be 0 if the application forgot to
set it. If so ndst will be all-zero leading to above
mentioned strange routes.
This is an application error but we must not fail/hang/panic
because of this.
Looks ok: gnn
No objections: net@ (silence)
MFC after: 8 weeks
The packet filter may reassemble the ip fragments and return a packet that is
larger than the MTU of the sending interface. There is no check for DF or icmp
replies as we can only get a large packet to fragment by reassembling a
previous fragment, and this only happens after a call to pfil(9).
Obtained from: OpenBSD (mostly)
Glanced at by: mlaier
MFC after: 1 month
protocols invoke after allocating a PCB, so so_pcb should be non-NULL.
It is only used by the two IPSEC implementations, so I didn't hit it in
my testing.
Reported by: pjd
MFC after: 3 months
the so_pcb pointer on the socket is always non-NULL. This eliminates
countless unnecessary error checks, replacing them with assertions.
MFC after: 3 months
rather than an error. Detaches do not "fail", they other occur or
the protocol flags SS_PROTOREF to take ownership of the socket.
soclose() no longer looks at so_pcb to see if it's NULL, relying
entirely on the protocol to decide whether it's time to free the
socket or not using SS_PROTOREF. so_pcb is now entirely owned and
managed by the protocol code. Likewise, no longer test so_pcb in
other socket functions, such as soreceive(), which have no business
digging into protocol internals.
Protocol detach routines no longer try to free the socket on detach,
this is performed in the socket code if the protocol permits it.
In rts_detach(), no longer test for rp != NULL in detach, and
likewise in other protocols that don't permit a NULL so_pcb, reduce
the incidence of testing for it during detach.
netinet and netinet6 are not fully updated to this change, which
will be in an upcoming commit. In their current state they may leak
memory or panic.
MFC after: 3 months
than an int, as an error here is not meaningful. Modify soabort() to
unconditionally free the socket on the return of pru_abort(), and
modify most protocols to no longer conditionally free the socket,
since the caller will do this.
This commit likely leaves parts of netinet and netinet6 in a situation
where they may panic or leak memory, as they have not are not fully
updated by this commit. This will be corrected shortly in followup
commits to these components.
MFC after: 3 months
details see PR kern/94448.
PR: kern/94448
Original patch: Eygene A. Ryabinkin <rea-fbsd at rea dot mbslab dot kiae dot ru>Final patch: thompsa@
Tested by: thompsa@, Eygene A. Ryabinkin
MFC after: 7 days
K&R style function declarations with ANSI style. Also fix endian bugs
accessing ioctl arguments that are passed by value.
PR: kern/93897
Submitted by: Vilmos Nebehaj < vili at huwico dot hu >
MFC after: 1 week
applications.
Open[BGP|OSPF]D make use of this to determine the link status of
interfaces to make the right routing descisions.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 3 days
- Allow RTM_CHANGE to change a number of route flags as specified by
RTF_FMASK.
- The unused rtm_use field in struct rt_msghdr is redesignated as
rtm_fmask field to communicate route flag changes in RTM_CHANGE
messages from userland. The use count of a route was moved to
rtm_rmx a long time ago. For source code compatibility reasons
a define of rtm_use to rtm_fmask is provided.
These changes faciliate running of multiple cooperating routing
daemons at the same time without causing undesired interference.
Open[BGP|OSPF]D make use of these features to have IGP routes
override EGP ones.
Obtained from: OpenBSD (claudio@)
MFC after: 3 days
will remain in the disabled state until another link event happens in the
future (if at all). Add a timer to periodically check the interface state and
recover.
Reported by: Nik Lam <freebsdnik j2d.lam.net.au>
MFC after: 3 days
re-organizing the monitor return logic. We perform interface monitoring
checks after we have determined if the CRC is still on the packet, if
it is, m_adj() is called which will adjust the packet length. This
ensures that we are not including CRC lengths in the byte counters for
each packet.
Discussed with: andre, glebius
that we might have address collisions, so make sure that this hardware address
isn't already in use on another bridge.
Submitted by: csjp
MFC after: 1 month
destination interface as a member of our bridge or this is a unicast packet,
push it through the bpf(4) machinery.
For broadcast or multicast packets, don't bother with the bpf(4) because it will
be re-injected into ether_input. We do this before we pass the packets through
the pfil(9) framework, as it is possible that pfil(9) will drop the packet or
possibly modify it, making it very difficult to debug firewall issues on the
bridge.
Further, implemented IFF_MONITOR for bridge interfaces. This does much the same
thing that it does for regular network interfaces: it pushes the packet to any
bpf(4) peers and then returns. This bypasses all of the bridge machinery,
saving mutex acquisitions, list traversals, and other operations performed by
the bridging code.
This change to the bridging code is useful in situations where individuals use a
bridge to multiplex RX/TX signals from two interfaces, as is required by some
network taps for de-multiplexing links and transmitting the RX/TX signals
out through two separate interfaces. This behaviour is quite common for network
taps monitoring links, especially for certain manufacturers.
Reviewed by: thompsa
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Seccuris Labs
- use the cu_bridge_id rather than the cu_rootid for the bridge address [1]
- the memcmp return value is not signed so the wrong interface may have been
selected
- fix up the calculation of sc_bridge_id
PR: kern/93909 [1]
MFC after: 3 days
and want to have crypto support loaded as KLD. By moving zlib to separate
module and adding MODULE_DEPEND directives, it is possible to use such
configuration without complication. Otherwise, since IPSEC is linked with
zlib (just like crypto.ko) you'll get following error:
interface zlib.1 already present in the KLD 'kernel'!
Approved by: cognet (mentor)
zero in this case.) A kernel driver has IFF_DRV_RUNNING
at its full disposal while IFF_UP may be toggled only by
humans or their daemonic deputies from the userland.
MFC after: 3 days
did not stop at the right node. Change the backtracking check from
smaller-than to smaller-or-equal to prevent this from happening.
While here fix one additional problem where the insertion of the
default route traversed the entire tree.
PR: kern/38752
Submitted by: qingli (before I became committer)
Reviewed by: andre
MFC after: 3 days
filtering mechanisms to use the new rwlock(9) locking API:
- Drop the variables stored in the phil_head structure which were specific to
conditions and the home rolled read/write locking mechanism.
- Drop some includes which were used for condition variables
- Drop the inline functions, and convert them to macros. Also, move these
macros into pfil.h
- Move pfil list locking macros intp phil.h as well
- Rename ph_busy_count to ph_nhooks. This variable will represent the number
of IN/OUT hooks registered with the pfil head structure
- Define PFIL_HOOKED macro which evaluates to true if there are any
hooks to be ran by pfil_run_hooks
- In the IP/IP6 stacks, change the ph_busy_count comparison to use the new
PFIL_HOOKED macro.
- Drop optimization in pfil_run_hooks which checks to see if there are any
hooks to be ran, and returns if not. This check is already performed by the
IP stacks when they call:
if (!PFIL_HOOKED(ph))
goto skip_hooks;
- Drop in assertion which makes sure that the number of hooks never drops
below 0 for good measure. This in theory should never happen, and if it
does than there are problems somewhere
- Drop special logic around PFIL_WAITOK because rw_wlock(9) does not sleep
- Drop variables which support home rolled read/write locking mechanism from
the IPFW firewall chain structure.
- Swap out the read/write firewall chain lock internal to use the rwlock(9)
API instead of our home rolled version
- Convert the inlined functions to macros
Reviewed by: mlaier, andre, glebius
Thanks to: jhb for the new locking API
- code expects memcmp() to return a signed value, our memcmp() returns 0 if
args are equal and > 0 if not.
- It's possible to hijack interface for static entry. If bridge recieves
packet from interface marked as learning it will replace the bridge_rtnode
entry for the source address even if such entry marked as static.
Submitted by: Gleb Kurtsov <k-gleb yandex.ru>
MFC after: 3 days
beginning and simply refuse to attach to a parent without either
flag.
Our network stack cannot handle well IFF_BROADCAST or IFF_MULTICAST
on an interface changing on the fly. E.g., IP will or won't assign
a broadcast address to an interface and join the all-hosts multicast
group on it depending on its IFF_BROADCAST and IFF_MULTICAST settings.
Should the flags alter later, IP will miss the change and keep using
bogus settings. This can lead to evil things like supplying an
invalid broadcast address or trying to leave a multicast group that
hasn't been joined. So just avoid touching the flags since an
interface was created. This has no practical purpose.
Discussed with: -net, glebius, oleg
MFC after: 1 week
work by yar, thompsa and myself. The checksum offloading part also involves
work done by Mihail Balikov.
The most important changes:
o Instead of global linked list of all vlan softc use a per-trunk
hash. The size of hash is dynamically adjusted, depending on
number of entries. This changes struct ifnet, replacing counter
of vlans with a pointer to trunk structure. This change is an
improvement for setups with big number of VLANs, several interfaces
and several CPUs. It is a small regression for a setup with a single
VLAN interface.
An alternative to dynamic hash is a per-trunk static array with
4096 entries, which is a compile time option - VLAN_ARRAY. In my
experiments the array is not an improvement, probably because such
a big trunk structure doesn't fit into CPU cache.
o Introduce an UMA zone for VLAN tags. Since drivers depend on it,
the zone is declared in kern_mbuf.c, not in optional vlan(4) driver.
This change is a big improvement for any setup utilizing vlan(4).
o Use rwlock(9) instead of mutex(9) for locking. We are the first
ones to do this! :)
o Some drivers can do hardware VLAN tagging + hardware checksum
offloading. Add an infrastructure for this. Whenever vlan(4) is
attached to a parent or parent configuration is changed, the flags
on vlan(4) interface are updated.
In collaboration with: yar, thompsa
In collaboration with: Mihail Balikov <mihail.balikov interbgc.com>
however IPv4-in-IPv4 tunnels are now stable on SMP. Details:
- Add per-softc mutex.
- Hold the mutex on output.
The main problem was the rtentry, placed in softc. It could be
freed by ip_output(). Meanwhile, another thread being in
in_gif_output() can read and write this rtentry.
Reported by: many
Tested by: Alexander Shiryaev <aixp mail.ru>