from the FreeBSD network code. The flag is still kept around in the
"sys/mbuf.h" header file, but does no longer have any users. Instead
the "m_pkthdr.rsstype" field in the mbuf structure is now used to
decide the meaning of the "m_pkthdr.flowid" field. To modify the
"m_pkthdr.rsstype" field please use the existing "M_HASHTYPE_XXX"
macros as defined in the "sys/mbuf.h" header file.
This patch introduces new behaviour in the transmit direction.
Previously network drivers checked if "M_FLOWID" was set in "m_flags"
before using the "m_pkthdr.flowid" field. This check has now now been
replaced by checking if "M_HASHTYPE_GET(m)" is different from
"M_HASHTYPE_NONE". In the future more hashtypes will be added, for
example hashtypes for hardware dedicated flows.
"M_HASHTYPE_OPAQUE" indicates that the "m_pkthdr.flowid" value is
valid and has no particular type. This change removes the need for an
"if" statement in TCP transmit code checking for the presence of a
valid flowid value. The "if" statement mentioned above is now a direct
variable assignment which is then later checked by the respective
network drivers like before.
Additional notes:
- The SCTP code changes will be committed as a separate patch.
- Removal of the "M_FLOWID" flag will also be done separately.
- The FreeBSD version has been bumped.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Update route MTU in case of ifnet MTU change.
Add new RTF_FIXEDMTU to track explicitly specified MTU.
Old behavior:
ifconfig em0 mtu 1500->9000 -> all routes traversing em0 do not change MTU.
User has to manually update all routes.
ifconfig em0 mtu 9000->1500 -> all routes traversing em0 do not change MTU.
However, if ip[6]_output finds route with rt_mtu > interface mtu, rt_mtu
gets updated.
New behavior:
ifconfig em0 mtu 1500->9000 -> all interface routes in all fibs gets updated
with new MTU unless RTF_FIXEDMTU flag set on them.
ifconfig em0 mtu 9000->1500 -> all routes in all fibs gets updated with new
MTU unless RTF_FIXEDMTU flag set on them AND rt_mtu is less than ifp mtu.
route add ... -mtu XXX automatically sets RTF_FIXEDMTU flag.
route change .. -mtu 0 automatically removes RTF_FIXEDMTU flag.
PR: 194238
MFC after: 1 month
CR: D1125
have chosen different (and more traditional) stateless/statuful
NAT64 as translation mechanism. Last non-trivial commits to both
faith(4) and faithd(8) happened more than 12 years ago, so I assume
it is time to drop RFC3142 in FreeBSD.
No objections from: net@
gcc requires variables to be initialised in two places. One of them
is correctly used only under the same conditional though.
For module builds properly check if the kernel supports INET or INET6,
as otherwise various mips kernels without IPv6 support would fail to build.
Split it into two modules: if_gre(4) for GRE encapsulation and
if_me(4) for minimal encapsulation within IP.
gre(4) changes:
* convert to if_transmit;
* rework locking: protect access to softc with rmlock,
protect from concurrent ioctls with sx lock;
* correct interface accounting for outgoing datagramms (count only payload size);
* implement generic support for using IPv6 as delivery header;
* make implementation conform to the RFC 2784 and partially to RFC 2890;
* add support for GRE checksums - calculate for outgoing datagramms and check
for inconming datagramms;
* add support for sending sequence number in GRE header;
* remove support of cached routes. This fixes problem, when gre(4) doesn't
work at system startup. But this also removes support for having tunnels with
the same addresses for inner and outer header.
* deprecate support for various GREXXX ioctls, that doesn't used in FreeBSD.
Use our standard ioctls for tunnels.
me(4):
* implementation conform to RFC 2004;
* use if_transmit;
* use the same locking model as gre(4);
PR: 164475
Differential Revision: D1023
No objections from: net@
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
it, except Ethernet, where it carried ng_ether(4) pointer.
For now carry the pointer in if_l2com directly.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
Some virtual if drivers has (ab)used ifa ifa_rtrequest hook to enforce
route MTU to be not bigger that interface MTU. While ifa_rtrequest hooking
might be an option in some situation, it is not feasible to do MTU checks
there: generic (or per-domain) routing code is perfectly capable of doing
this.
We currrently have 3 places where MTU is altered:
1) route addition.
In this case domain overrides radix _addroute callback (in[6]_addroute)
and all necessary checks/fixes are/can be done there.
2) route change (especially, GW change).
In this case, there are no explicit per-domain calls, but one can
override rte by setting ifa_rtrequest hook to domain handler
(inet6 does this).
3) ifconfig ifaceX mtu YYYY
In this case, we have no callbacks, but ip[6]_output performes runtime
checks and decreases rt_mtu if necessary.
Generally, the goals are to be able to handle all MTU changes in
control plane, not in runtime part, and properly deal with increased
interface MTU.
This commit changes the following:
* removes hooks setting MTU from drivers side
* adds proper per-doman MTU checks for case 1)
* adds generic MTU check for case 2)
* The latter is done by using new dom_ifmtu callback since
if_mtu denotes L3 interface MTU, e.g. maximum trasmitted _packet_ size.
However, IPv6 mtu might be different from if_mtu one (e.g. default 1280)
for some cases, so we need an abstract way to know maximum MTU size
for given interface and domain.
* moves rt_setmetrics() before MTU/ifa_rtrequest hooks since it copies
user-supplied data which must be checked.
* removes RT_LOCK_ASSERT() from other ifa_rtrequest hooks to be able to
use this functions on new non-inserted rte.
More changes will follow soon.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
This code has had an extensive rewrite and a good series of reviews, both by the author and other parties. This means a lot of code has been simplified. Pluggable structures for high-rate entropy generators are available, and it is most definitely not the case that /dev/random can be driven by only a hardware souce any more. This has been designed out of the device. Hardware sources are stirred into the CSPRNG (Yarrow, Fortuna) like any other entropy source. Pluggable modules may be written by third parties for additional sources.
The harvesting structures and consequently the locking have been simplified. Entropy harvesting is done in a more general way (the documentation for this will follow). There is some GREAT entropy to be had in the UMA allocator, but it is disabled for now as messing with that is likely to annoy many people.
The venerable (but effective) Yarrow algorithm, which is no longer supported by its authors now has an alternative, Fortuna. For now, Yarrow is retained as the default algorithm, but this may be changed using a kernel option. It is intended to make Fortuna the default algorithm for 11.0. Interested parties are encouraged to read ISBN 978-0-470-47424-2 "Cryptography Engineering" By Ferguson, Schneier and Kohno for Fortuna's gory details. Heck, read it anyway.
Many thanks to Arthur Mesh who did early grunt work, and who got caught in the crossfire rather more than he deserved to.
My thanks also to folks who helped me thresh this out on whiteboards and in the odd "Hallway track", or otherwise.
My Nomex pants are on. Let the feedback commence!
Reviewed by: trasz,des(partial),imp(partial?),rwatson(partial?)
Approved by: so(des)
directly accessed. Although this will work on some platforms, it can
throw an exception if the pointer is invalid and then panic the kernel.
Add a missing SYSCTL_IN() of "SCTP_BASE_STATS" structure.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
vxlan creates a virtual LAN by encapsulating the inner Ethernet frame in
a UDP packet. This implementation is based on RFC7348.
Currently, the IPv6 support is not fully compliant with the specification:
we should be able to receive UPDv6 packets with a zero checksum, but we
need to support RFC6935 first. Patches for this should come soon.
Encapsulation protocols such as vxlan emphasize the need for the FreeBSD
network stack to support batching, GRO, and GSO. Each frame has to make
two trips through the network stack, and each frame will be at most MTU
sized. Performance suffers accordingly.
Some latest generation NICs have begun to support vxlan HW offloads that
we should also take advantage of. VIMAGE support should also be added soon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D384
Reviewed by: gnn
Relnotes: yes
o convert to if_transmit;
o use rmlock to protect access to gif_softc;
o use sx lock to protect from concurrent ioctls;
o remove a lot of unneeded and duplicated code;
o remove cached route support (it won't work with concurrent io);
o style fixes.
Reviewed by: melifaro
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
is added to return EEXIST when only "b" interface exists---this can happen
when epair<N>b is moved to a vnet jail and then "ifconfig epair<N> create"
is invoked there.
outer header, consider it as new packet and clear the protocols flags.
This fixes problems when IPSEC traffic goes through various tunnels and router
doesn't send ICMP/ICMPv6 errors.
PR: 174602
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
LOR of softc rmlock in iflladdr_event handlers.
- Call if_delmulti_ifma() after LACP_UNLOCK(). This fixes another LOR.
- Fix a panic in lacp_transit_expire().
- Fix a panic in lagg_input() upon shutting down a port.
if_lagg(4) interfaces which were cloned in a vnet jail.
Sysctl nodes which are dynamically generated for each cloned interface
(net.link.lagg.N.*) have been removed, and use_flowid and flowid_shift
ifconfig(8) parameters have been added instead. Flags and per-interface
statistics counters are displayed in "ifconfig -v".
CR: D842
This is temporary commit to be merged to 10.
Other approach (like hash table) should be used
to store different masks.
PR: 194078
Submitted by: Rumen Telbizov
MFC after: 3 days
This seems to allow us to pass a universe with either clang or gcc
after r272244 (and r272260) and probably makes it easier to untabgle
these chained #includes in the future.
if_var.h has the expected on and if_var.h include ifq.h and thus we get
duplicates. It seems only one cavium ethernet file actually includes ifq.h
directly which might be another cleanup to be done but need to test first.
then drop lock, run the attach routines, and then set it to specific
proto. This removes tons of WITNESS warnings.
- Make lagg protocol attach handlers not failing and allocate memory
with M_WAITOK.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
The current TSO limitation feature only takes the total number of
bytes in an mbuf chain into account and does not limit by the number
of mbufs in a chain. Some kinds of hardware is limited by two
factors. One is the fragment length and the second is the fragment
count. Both of these limits need to be taken into account when doing
TSO. Else some kinds of hardware might have to drop completely valid
mbuf chains because they cannot loaded into the given hardware's DMA
engine. The new way of doing TSO limitation has been made backwards
compatible as input from other FreeBSD developers and will use
defaults for values not set.
Reviewed by: adrian, rmacklem
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
struct ifnet if_oqdrops.
Some netgraph modules used ifqueue w/o ifnet. Accounting of queue drops
is simply removed from them. There were no API to read this statistic.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
imporant moments that we discussed with Marcel and Anuranjan was that
a converted driver should return false for 'grep ifnet if_driver.c' :)
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
The compat counters will go away, but the function will remain in its place,
and in all places where it is going to be called.
Discussed with: melifaro
and receives frames on any port of the lagg(4).
Phabric: D549
Reviewed by: glebius, thompsa
Approved by: glebius
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Sponsored by: QNAP Systems Inc.
The current TSO limitation feature only takes the total number of
bytes in an mbuf chain into account and does not limit by the number
of mbufs in a chain. Some kinds of hardware is limited by two
factors. One is the fragment length and the second is the fragment
count. Both of these limits need to be taken into account when doing
TSO. Else some kinds of hardware might have to drop completely valid
mbuf chains because they cannot loaded into the given hardware's DMA
engine. The new way of doing TSO limitation has been made backwards
compatible as input from other FreeBSD developers and will use
defaults for values not set.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
ifa_ifwithdstaddr. For the sake of backwards compatibility, the new
arguments were added to new functions named ifa_ifwithnet_fib and
ifa_ifwithdstaddr_fib, while the old functions became wrappers around the
new ones that passed RT_ALL_FIBS for the fib argument. However, the
backwards compatibility is not desired for FreeBSD 11, because there are
numerous other incompatible changes to the ifnet(9) API. We therefore
decided to remove it from head but leave it in place for stable/9 and
stable/10. In addition, this commit adds the fib argument to
ifa_ifwithbroadaddr for consistency's sake.
sys/sys/param.h
Increment __FreeBSD_version
sys/net/if.c
sys/net/if_var.h
sys/net/route.c
Add fibnum argument to ifa_ifwithbroadaddr, and remove the _fib
versions of ifa_ifwithdstaddr, ifa_ifwithnet, and ifa_ifwithroute.
sys/net/route.c
sys/net/rtsock.c
sys/netinet/in_pcb.c
sys/netinet/ip_options.c
sys/netinet/ip_output.c
sys/netinet6/nd6.c
Fixup calls of modified functions.
share/man/man9/ifnet.9
Document changed API.
CR: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D458
MFC after: Never
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
with no RSS hash.
When doing RSS:
* Create a new IPv4 netisr which expects the frames to have been verified;
it just directly dispatches to the IPv4 input path.
* Once IPv4 reassembly is done, re-calculate the RSS hash with the new
IP and L3 header; then reinject it as appropriate.
* Update the IPv4 netisr to be a CPU affinity netisr with the RSS hash
function (rss_soft_m2cpuid) - this will do a software hash if the
hardware doesn't provide one.
NICs that don't implement hardware RSS hashing will now benefit from RSS
distribution - it'll inject into the correct destination netisr.
Note: the netisr distribution doesn't work out of the box - netisr doesn't
query RSS for how many CPUs and the affinity setup. Yes, netisr likely
shouldn't really be doing CPU stuff anymore and should be "some kind of
'thing' that is a workqueue that may or may not have any CPU affinity";
that's for a later commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D527
Reviewed by: grehan
and keep both converted to drvapi and non-converted drivers
compilable.
o Make if_t typedef to struct ifnet *.
o Remove shim functions.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
for route(4) socket and ifmib(4) sysctl.
o Move fields from if_data to ifnet, but keep all statistic counters
separate, since they should disappear later.
o Provide function if_data_copy() to fill if_data, utilize it in routing
socket and ifmib handler.
o Provide overridable ifnet(9) method to fetch counters. If no provided,
if_get_counters_compat() would be used, that returns old counters.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
via net.link.generic.IFMIB_IFDATA.*.IFDATA_GENERAL sysctl. Reasons
for removal are:
- No code in tree uses this possibility.
- The documentation ifmib(4) doesn't say that such possibility
exist. The example provided in manual page only reads data.
- On many interfaces the feature simply doesn't work, since they
do accounting in hardware, and overwrite if_data on tick.
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
* Convert ixgbe to use this ioctl
* Convert ifconfig to use generic i2c handler for "ix" interfaces.
Approved by: Eric Joyner (ixgbe part)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
QSFP+ data via i2c inteface. These constants has been taken
from SFF-8436 "QSFP+ 10 Gbs 4X PLUGGABLE TRANSCEIVER" standard
rev 4.8.
* Add support for printing QSFP+ information from 40G NICs
such as Chelsio T5.
This commit does not contain ioctl changes necessary for this
functionality work, there will be another commit soon.
Example:
cxl1: flags=8843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> metric 0 mtu 1500
options=ec07bb<RXCSUM,TXCSUM,VLAN_MTU,VLAN_HWTAGGING,JUMBO_MTU,.....>
ether 00:07:43:28:ad:08
nd6 options=29<PERFORMNUD,IFDISABLED,AUTO_LINKLOCAL>
media: Ethernet 40Gbase-LR4 <full-duplex>
status: active
plugged: QSFP+ 40GBASE-LR4 (MPO Parallel Optic)
vendor: OEM PN: OP-QSFP-40G-LR4 SN: 20140318001 DATE: 2014-03-18
module temperature: 64.06 C voltage: 3.26 Volts
lane 1: RX: 0.47 mW (-3.21 dBm) TX: 2.78 mW (4.46 dBm)
lane 2: RX: 0.20 mW (-6.94 dBm) TX: 2.80 mW (4.47 dBm)
lane 3: RX: 0.18 mW (-7.38 dBm) TX: 2.79 mW (4.47 dBm)
lane 4: RX: 0.90 mW (-0.45 dBm) TX: 2.80 mW (4.48 dBm)
Tested on: Chelsio T5
Tested on: Mellanox/Huawei passive/active cables/transceivers.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months,
so this is a 10.1 candidate.
Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h).
In detail:
1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode.
Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps
with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode.
2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can
better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access
to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional
argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer
addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes
are mechanical and trivial
3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync()
driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical.
4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring
port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic
present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully.
5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features,
experimental and disabled by default.
Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1].
Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the
numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm,
we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps).
A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files
in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing
of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts.
Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes
and to support more of the existing features.
This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline.
A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI,
including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella.
MFC after: 3 days.
This is needed to prevent having interfaces with ifp->if_addr == NULL
on bridge interfaces. Moving the notification event handlers up makes
sure the interfaces are removed before doing any more cleanup.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: melifaro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D598
net/if.c
- Move interface removal notification up in if_detach_internal.
- Do not count global number of states and of src_nodes,
use uma_zone_get_cur() to obtain values.
- Struct pf_status becomes merely an ioctl API structure,
and moves to netpfil/pf/pf.h with its constants.
- V_pf_status is now of type struct pf_kstatus.
Submitted by: Kajetan Staszkiewicz <vegeta tuxpowered.net>
Sponsored by: InnoGames GmbH
These changes prevent sysctl(8) from returning proper output,
such as:
1) no output from sysctl(8)
2) erroneously returning ENOMEM with tools like truss(1)
or uname(1)
truss: can not get etype: Cannot allocate memory
there is an environment variable which shall initialize the SYSCTL
during early boot. This works for all SYSCTL types both statically and
dynamically created ones, except for the SYSCTL NODE type and SYSCTLs
which belong to VNETs. A new flag, CTLFLAG_NOFETCH, has been added to
be used in the case a tunable sysctl has a custom initialisation
function allowing the sysctl to still be marked as a tunable. The
kernel SYSCTL API is mostly the same, with a few exceptions for some
special operations like iterating childrens of a static/extern SYSCTL
node. This operation should probably be made into a factored out
common macro, hence some device drivers use this. The reason for
changing the SYSCTL API was the need for a SYSCTL parent OID pointer
and not only the SYSCTL parent OID list pointer in order to quickly
generate the sysctl path. The motivation behind this patch is to avoid
parameter loading cludges inside the OFED driver subsystem. Instead of
adding special code to the OFED driver subsystem to post-load tunables
into dynamically created sysctls, we generalize this in the kernel.
Other changes:
- Corrected a possibly incorrect sysctl name from "hw.cbb.intr_mask"
to "hw.pcic.intr_mask".
- Removed redundant TUNABLE statements throughout the kernel.
- Some minor code rewrites in connection to removing not needed
TUNABLE statements.
- Added a missing SYSCTL_DECL().
- Wrapped two very long lines.
- Avoid malloc()/free() inside sysctl string handling, in case it is
called to initialize a sysctl from a tunable, hence malloc()/free() is
not ready when sysctls from the sysctl dataset are registered.
- Bumped FreeBSD version to indicate SYSCTL API change.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
the queue where to enqueue pages that are going to be unwired.
- Add stronger checks to the enqueue/dequeue for the pagequeues when
adding and removing pages to them.
Of course, for unmanaged pages the queue parameter of vm_page_unwire() will
be ignored, just as the active parameter today.
This makes adding new pagequeues quicker.
This change effectively modifies the KPI. __FreeBSD_version will be,
however, bumped just when the full cache of free pages will be
evicted.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division
Reviewed by: alc
Tested by: pho
Direct bpf(4) consumers should now work fine with this tunable turned on.
In fact, the only case when optimized_writers can change program
behavior is direct bpf(4) consumer setting its read filter to
catch-all one.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
- stdio.h is needed for fprint()
- make memsize uint32_t to avoid errors due to overflow
- honor the *XPOLL flagg in NIOCREGIF requests
- mmap fails wit MAP_FAILED, not NULL.
MFC after: 3 days
interface allows the ifnet structure to be defined as an opaque
type in NIC drivers. This then allows the ifnet structure to be
changed without a need to change or recompile NIC drivers.
Put differently, NIC drivers can be written and compiled once and
be used with different network stack implementations, provided of
course that those network stack implementations have an API and
ABI compatible interface.
This commit introduces the 'if_t' type to replace 'struct ifnet *'
as the type of a network interface. The 'if_t' type is defined as
'void *' to enable the compiler to perform type conversion to
'struct ifnet *' and vice versa where needed and without warnings.
The functions that implement the API are the only functions that
need to have an explicit cast.
The MII code has been converted to use the driver API to avoid
unnecessary code churn. Code churn comes from having to work with
both converted and unconverted drivers in correlation with having
callback functions that take an interface. By converting the MII
code first, the callback functions can be defined so that the
compiler will perform the typecasts automatically.
As soon as all drivers have been converted, the if_t type can be
redefined as needed and the API functions can be fix to not need
an explicit cast.
The immediate benefactors of this change are:
1. Juniper Networks - The network stack implementation in Junos
is entirely different from FreeBSD's one and this change
allows Juniper to build "stock" NIC drivers that can be used
in combination with both the FreeBSD and Junos stacks.
2. FreeBSD - This change opens the door towards changing ifnet
and implementing new features and optimizations in the network
stack without it requiring a change in the many NIC drivers
FreeBSD has.
Submitted by: Anuranjan Shukla <anshukla@juniper.net>
Reviewed by: glebius@
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
ifa_ifwithnet() and ifa_ifwithdstaddr() The legacy functions will call the
_fib() versions with RT_ALL_FIBS, preserving legacy behavior.
sys/net/if_var.h
sys/net/if.c
Add legacy-compatible functions as described above. Ensure legacy
behavior when RT_ALL_FIBS is passed as fibnum.
sys/netinet/in_pcb.c
sys/netinet/ip_output.c
sys/netinet/ip_options.c
sys/net/route.c
sys/net/rtsock.c
sys/netinet6/nd6.c
Call with _fib() functions if we must use a specific fib, or the
legacy functions otherwise.
tests/sys/netinet/fibs_test.sh
tests/sys/netinet/udp_dontroute.c
Improve the udp_dontroute test. The bug that this test exercises is
that ifa_ifwithnet() will return the wrong address, if multiple
interfaces have addresses on the same subnet but with different
fibs. The previous version of the test only considered one possible
failure mode: that ifa_ifwithnet_fib() might fail to find any
suitable address at all. The new version also checks whether
ifa_ifwithnet_fib() finds the correct address by checking where the
ARP request goes.
Reported by: bz, hrs
Reviewed by: hrs
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC-with: 264905
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
birthday-paradox style address collisions when
bhyve VMs are connected to the same broadcoast
domain and are using pseudo-random allocations.
Reviewed by: gnn
MFC after: 1 week
Since radix has been ignoring sa_family in passed sockaddrs,
no one ever has bothered filling valid sa_family in netmasks.
Additionally, radix adjusts sa_len field in every netmask not to
compare zero bytes at all.
This leads us to rt_mask with sa_family of AF_UNSPEC (-1) and
arbitrary sa_len field (0 for default route, for example).
However, rtsock have been passing that rt_mask intact for ages,
requiring all rtsock consumers to make ther own local hacks.
We even have unfixed on in base:
do `route -n monitor` in one window and issue `route -n get addr`
for some directly-connected address. You will probably see the following:
got message of size 304 on Thu May 8 15:06:06 2014
RTM_GET: Report Metrics: len 304, pid: 30493, seq 1, errno 0, flags:<UP,DONE,PINNED>
locks: inits:
sockaddrs: <DST,GATEWAY,NETMASK,IFP,IFA>
10.0.0.0 link#1 (255) ffff ffff ff em0:8.0.27.c5.29.d4 10.0.0.92
_________________^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
after the change:
got message of size 312 on Thu May 8 15:44:07 2014
RTM_GET: Report Metrics: len 312, pid: 2895, seq 1, errno 0, flags:<UP,DONE,PINNED>
locks: inits:
sockaddrs: <DST,GATEWAY,NETMASK,IFP,IFA>
10.0.0.0 link#1 255.255.255.0 em0:8.0.27.c5.29.d4 10.0.0.92
_________________^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 1 month
It looks like current consumers are either unaware
of MRT (and uses RT_DEFAULT_FIB implicitly) or
know what thay are doing, In latter case they
will be either hit by KASSERT or ESCRH will be returned
due to NULL rnh.
The thread that is destroying the lagg has already set sc->sc_psc=NULL when
the "ifconfig -am" thread gets to lacp_req(). It tries to dereference
sc->sc_psc and panics. The solution is for lacp_req() to check the value of
sc->sc_psc. If NULL, harmlessly return an lacp_opreq structure full of
zeros. Full details in GNATS.
PR: kern/189003
Reviewed by: timeout on freebsd-net@
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
All rtsock-initiated rte creation/modification are now
performed in route.c holding radix tree write lock.
This reduces the need for per-rte mutex.
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 1 month
* memory is now allocated as early as possible, without holding locks.
* sysctl users are now guaranteed to get a response (M_WAITOK buffer prealloc).
* socket users are more likely to use on-stack buffer for replies.
* standard kernel malloc/free functions are now used instead of radix wrappers.
rt_msg2() has been renamed to rtsock_msg_buffer().
MFC after: 1 month
RTM_CHANGE is now handled inside route.c:rtrequest1_fib() as it should be.
Note change change handler is a separate function rtrequest1_fib_change().
MFC after: 1 month
These two bugs are closely related. The root cause is that ifa_ifwithnet
does not consider FIBs when searching for an interface address.
sys/net/if_var.h
sys/net/if.c
Add a fib argument to ifa_ifwithnet and ifa_ifwithdstadddr. Those
functions will only return an address whose interface fib equals the
argument.
sys/net/route.c
Update calls to ifa_ifwithnet and ifa_ifwithdstaddr with fib
arguments.
sys/netinet/in.c
Update in_addprefix to consider the interface fib when adding
prefixes. This will prevent it from not adding a subnet route when
one already exists on a different fib.
sys/net/rtsock.c
sys/netinet/in_pcb.c
sys/netinet/ip_output.c
sys/netinet/ip_options.c
sys/netinet6/nd6.c
Add RT_DEFAULT_FIB arguments to ifa_ifwithdstaddr and ifa_ifwithnet.
In some cases it there wasn't a clear specific fib number to use.
In others, I was unable to test those functions so I chose
RT_DEFAULT_FIB to minimize divergence from current behavior. I will
fix some of the latter changes along with PR kern/187553.
tests/sys/netinet/fibs_test.sh
tests/sys/netinet/udp_dontroute.c
tests/sys/netinet/Makefile
Revert r263738. The udp_dontroute test was right all along.
However, bugs kern/187550 and kern/187553 cancelled each other out
when it came to this test. Because of kern/187553, ifa_ifwithnet
searched the default fib instead of the requested one, but because
of kern/187550, there was an applicable subnet route on the default
fib. The new test added in r263738 doesn't work right, however. I
can verify with dtrace that ifa_ifwithnet returned the wrong address
before I applied this commit, but route(8) miraculously found the
correct interface to use anyway. I don't know how.
Clear expected failure messages for kern/187550 and kern/187552.
PR: kern/187550
PR: kern/187552
Reviewed by: melifaro
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
sys/net/route.c
In rtinit1, use the interface fib instead of the process fib. The
latter wasn't very useful because ifconfig(8) is usually invoked
with the default process fib. Changing ifconfig(8) to use setfib(2)
would be redundant, because it already sets the interface fib.
tests/sys/netinet/fibs_test.sh
Clear the expected ATF failure
sys/net/if.c
Pass the interface fib in calls to rtrequest1_fib and rtalloc1_fib
sys/netinet/in.c
sys/net/if_var.h
Add a fibnum argument to ifa_switch_loopback_route, a subroutine of
in_scrubprefix. Pass it the interface fib.
PR: kern/187549
Reviewed by: melifaro
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
De-virtualize UMA zone pf_mtag_z and move to global initialization part.
The m_tag struct does not know about vnet context and the pf_mtag_free()
callback is called unaware of current vnet. This causes a panic.
MFC after: 1 week
network interfaces limited to 32 transmit segments, there
are two known issues.
The more serious one is that for an I/O of slightly less than 64K,
the net device driver prepends an ethernet header, resulting in a
TSO segment slightly larger than 64K. Since m_defrag() copies this
into 33 mbuf clusters, the transmit fails with EFBIG.
A tester indicated observing a similar failure using iSCSI.
The second less critical problem is that the network
device driver must copy the mbuf chain via m_defrag()
(m_collapse() is not sufficient), resulting in measurable overhead.
This patch reduces the default size of if_hw_tsomax
slightly, so that the first issue is avoided.
Fixing the second issue will require a way for the
network device driver to inform tcp_output() that it
is limited to 32 transmit segments.
Reported and tested by: csforgeron@gmail.com, markus.gebert@hostpoint.ch
MFC after: 2 weeks
was stacked on top of a network interface that set if_hw_tsomax,
tcp_output() would see the default value instead of the value
set by the network interface. This patch modifies vlan so that
it sets if_hw_tsomax to the value of the parent interface.
Reviewed by: glebius
MFC after: 2 weeks
was stacked on top of network interfaces that set if_hw_tsomax,
tcp_output() would see the default value instead of the value
set by the network interface(s). This patch modifies lagg so that
it sets if_hw_tsomax to the minimum of the value(s) for the
underlying network interfaces.
Reviewed by: glebius
MFC after: 2 weeks
This KASSERT() existed as a sanity check that upper layers in the network
stack (e.g. inet, inet6) had released their reference to the underlying
driver's multicast memberships (ifmultiaddr{}). However it assumes the
lifecycle of the driver membership corresponds to the lifecycle of the
network layer membership.
In the submitter's case, ieee80211_ioctl_updatemulti() attempts to
reprogram the (parent, physical) ifnet{} memberships in response
to a change in membership on the (child, virtual) VAP ifnet, using
a batched update mechanism. These updates happen independently from
the network layer, causing a "false negative" assertion failure.
There are possibly other use cases where this KASSERT() may be triggered
by other networking stack activity (e.g. where a nesting relationship
exists between multiple ifnet{} instances). This suggests that further
review of FreeBSD's approach to nested ifnet relationships is needed.
MFC after: 6 weeks
Submitted by: adrian@
ifi_oqdrops. This is a temporary workaround until ifqueue(9) vanishes.
While here, remove the pointless ifi_vhid assignment. It has
sense only when we are exporting ifaddrs, not ifnets.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
linking NIC Receive Side Scaling (RSS) to the network stack's
connection-group implementation. This prototype (and derived patches)
are in use at Juniper and several other FreeBSD-using companies, so
despite some reservations about its maturity, merge the patch to the
base tree so that it can be iteratively refined in collaboration rather
than maintained as a set of gradually diverging patch sets.
(1) Merge a software implementation of the Toeplitz hash specified in
RSS implemented by David Malone. This is used to allow suitable
pcbgroup placement of connections before the first packet is
received from the NIC. Software hashing is generally avoided,
however, due to high cost of the hash on general-purpose CPUs.
(2) In in_rss.c, maintain authoritative versions of RSS state intended
to be pushed to each NIC, including keying material, hash
algorithm/ configuration, and buckets. Provide software-facing
interfaces to hash 2- and 4-tuples for IPv4 and IPv6 using both
the RSS standardised Toeplitz and a 'naive' variation with a hash
efficient in software but with poor distribution properties.
Implement rss_m2cpuid()to be used by netisr and other load
balancing code to look up the CPU on which an mbuf should be
processed.
(3) In the Ethernet link layer, allow netisr distribution using RSS as
a source of policy as an alternative to source ordering; continue
to default to direct dispatch (i.e., don't try and requeue packets
for processing on the 'right' CPU if they arrive in a directly
dispatchable context).
(4) Allow RSS to control tuning of connection groups in order to align
groups with RSS buckets. If a packet arrives on a protocol using
connection groups, and contains a suitable hardware-generated
hash, use that hash value to select the connection group for pcb
lookup for both IPv4 and IPv6. If no hardware-generated Toeplitz
hash is available, we fall back on regular PCB lookup risking
contention rather than pay the cost of Toeplitz in software --
this is a less scalable but, at my last measurement, faster
approach. As core counts go up, we may want to revise this
strategy despite CPU overhead.
Where device drivers suitably configure NICs, and connection groups /
RSS are enabled, this should avoid both lock and line contention during
connection lookup for TCP. This commit does not modify any device
drivers to tune device RSS configuration to the global RSS
configuration; patches are in circulation to do this for at least
Chelsio T3 and Intel 1G/10G drivers. Currently, the KPI for device
drivers is not particularly robust, nor aware of more advanced features
such as runtime reconfiguration/rebalancing. This will hopefully prove
a useful starting point for refinement.
No MFC is scheduled as we will first want to nail down a more mature
and maintainable KPI/KBI for device drivers.
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks (original work)
Sponsored by: EMC/Isilon (patch update and merge)
AppleTalk was a network transport protocol for Apple Macintosh devices
in 80s and then 90s. Starting with Mac OS X in 2000 the AppleTalk was
a legacy protocol and primary networking protocol is TCP/IP. The last
Mac OS X release to support AppleTalk happened in 2009. The same year
routing equipment vendors (namely Cisco) end their support.
Thus, AppleTalk won't be supported in FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE.
IPX was a network transport protocol in Novell's NetWare network operating
system from late 80s and then 90s. The NetWare itself switched to TCP/IP
as default transport in 1998. Later, in this century the Novell Open
Enterprise Server became successor of Novell NetWare. The last release
that claimed to still support IPX was OES 2 in 2007. Routing equipment
vendors (e.g. Cisco) discontinued support for IPX in 2011.
Thus, IPX won't be supported in FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE.
interface, in the r241616 a crutch was provided. It didn't work well, and
finally we decided that it is time to break ABI and simply make if_baudrate
a 64-bit value. Meanwhile, the entire struct if_data was reviewed.
o Remove the if_baudrate_pf crutch.
o Make all fields of struct if_data fixed machine independent size. The
notion of data (packet counters, etc) are by no means MD. And it is a
bug that on amd64 we've got a 64-bit counters, while on i386 32-bit,
which at modern speeds overflow within a second.
This also removes quite a lot of COMPAT_FREEBSD32 code.
o Give 16 bit for the ifi_datalen field. This field was provided to
make future changes to if_data less ABI breaking. Unfortunately the
8 bit size of it had effectively limited sizeof if_data to 256 bytes.
o Give 32 bits to ifi_mtu and ifi_metric.
o Give 64 bits to the rest of fields, since they are counters.
__FreeBSD_version bumped.
Discussed with: emax
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
after r262763 it started to return locked mutexes to UMA. To fix that,
conditionally unlock the mutex in the destructor.
Tested by: "Sergey V. Dyatko" <sergey.dyatko@gmail.com>
- Use counter(9) for rt_pksent (former rt_rmx.rmx_pksent). This
removes another cache trashing ++ from packet forwarding path.
- Create zini/fini methods for the rtentry UMA zone. Via initialize
mutex and counter in them.
- Fix reporting of rmx_pksent to routing socket.
- Fix netstat(1) to report "Use" both in kvm(3) and sysctl(3) mode.
The change is mostly targeted for stable/10 merge. For head,
rt_pksent is expected to just disappear.
Discussed with: melifaro
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
RADIX_NODE_HEAD_LOCK as grabbing the write lock,
but RADIX_NODE_HEAD_LOCK_ASSERT as checking the read lock.
Submitted by: Vijay Singh <vijju.singh at gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 month
were primarily used to size the sysctl name list macros that were removed
in r254295. A few other constants either did not have an associated
sysctl node, or the associated node used OID_AUTO instead.
PR: ports/184525 (exp-run)
tested and is unfinished. However, I've tested my version,
it works okay. As before it is unfinished: timeout aren't
driven by TCP session state. To enable the HASH_ALL mode,
one needs in kernel config:
options FLOWTABLE_HASH_ALL
o Reduce the alignment on flentry to 64 bytes. Without
the FLOWTABLE_HASH_ALL option, twice less memory would
be consumed by flows.
o API to ip_output()/ip6_output() got even more thin: 1 liner.
o Remove unused unions. Simply use fle->f_key[].
o Merge all IPv4 code into flowtable_lookup_ipv4(), and do same
flowtable_lookup_ipv6(). Stop copying data to on stack
sockaddr structures, simply use key[] on stack.
o Move code from flowtable_lookup_common() that actually works
on insertion into flowtable_insert().
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
- netmap pipes, providing bidirectional blocking I/O while moving
100+ Mpps between processes using shared memory channels
(no mistake: over one hundred million. But mind you, i said
*moving* not *processing*);
- kqueue support (BHyVe needs it);
- improved user library. Just the interface name lets you select a NIC,
host port, VALE switch port, netmap pipe, and individual queues.
The upcoming netmap-enabled libpcap will use this feature.
- optional extra buffers associated to netmap ports, for applications
that need to buffer data yet don't want to make copies.
- segmentation offloading for the VALE switch, useful between VMs.
and a number of bug fixes and performance improvements.
My colleagues Giuseppe Lettieri and Vincenzo Maffione did a substantial
amount of work on these features so we owe them a big thanks.
There are some external repositories that can be of interest:
https://code.google.com/p/netmap
our public repository for netmap/VALE code, including
linux versions and other stuff that does not belong here,
such as python bindings.
https://code.google.com/p/netmap-libpcap
a clone of the libpcap repository with netmap support.
With this any libpcap client has access to most netmap
feature with no recompilation. E.g. tcpdump can filter
packets at 10-15 Mpps.
https://code.google.com/p/netmap-ipfw
a userspace version of ipfw+dummynet which uses netmap
to send/receive packets. Speed is up in the 7-10 Mpps
range per core for simple rulesets.
Both netmap-libpcap and netmap-ipfw will be merged upstream at some
point, but while this happens it is useful to have access to them.
And yes, this code will be merged soon. It is infinitely better
than the version currently in 10 and 9.
MFC after: 3 days
insert flow entry. During the route lookup the critical section is
exited. It may happen, that after route lookup we will be executed
on an other CPU that already has such flowentry. Before this change
we simply freed the flowentry and returned to ip_output() with
failure.
Actually there is nothing wrong with using previously allocated
flow entry, updating it properly. Thus, make flowentry_insert()
return the new either old fle, and make use of it.
Count reuses as "collisions" and real inserts as "inserts".
Reviewed by: adrian
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
race prone. Some just gather statistics, but some are later used in
different calculations.
A real problem was the race provoked underflow of the states_cur counter
on a rule. Once it goes below zero, it wraps to UINT32_MAX. Later this
value is used in pf_state_expires() and any state created by this rule
is immediately expired.
Thus, make fields states_cur, states_tot and src_nodes of struct
pf_rule be counter(9)s.
Thanks to Dennis for providing me shell access to problematic box and
his help with reproducing, debugging and investigating the problem.
Thanks to: Dennis Yusupoff <dyr smartspb.net>
Also reported by: dumbbell, pgj, Rambler
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
Some of the collisions that are occuring are due to flowtable lookups
that succeed but have an invalid lle - typically because the L2 adjacency
lookup hasn't completed. This would lead to a follow-up insert which
would then fail (ie, collision) and the code would fall through to doing
a slow-path L2/L3 lookup in the netinet/netinet6 code.
This patch simply aborts storing a new flowtable entry if the lle isn't
yet valid.
Whilst I'm here, add a new pcpu counter for the item so the number of
failures can be tracked separately from generic "collisions."
Reviewed by: glebius
MFC after: 10 days
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc.
and probably is a leftover from first prototyping by Kip. The
non-pcpu implementation used mutexes, so it doubtfully worked
better than simple routing lookup.
o Use UMA_ZONE_PCPU zone for pointers instead of [MAXCPU] arrays,
use zpcpu_get() to access data in there.
o Substitute own single list implementation with SLIST(). This
has two functional side effects:
- new flows go into head of a list, before they went to tail.
- a bug when incorrect flow was deleted in flow cleaner is
fixed.
o Due to cache line alignment, there is no reason to keep
different zones for IPv4 and IPv6 flows. Both consume one
cache line, real size of allocation is equal.
o Rely on that f_hash, f_rt, f_lle are stable during fle
lifetime, remove useless volatile quilifiers.
o More INET/INET6 splitting.
Reviewed by: adrian
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
- ip_output() and ip_output6() simply call flowtable_lookup(),
passing mbuf and address family. That's the only code under
#ifdef FLOWTABLE in the protocols code now.
o Revamp statistics gathering and export.
- Remove hand made pcpu stats, and utilize counter(9).
- Snapshot of statistics is available via 'netstat -rs'.
- All sysctls are moved into net.flowtable namespace, since
spreading them over net.inet isn't correct.
o Properly separate at compile time INET and INET6 parts.
o General cleanup.
- Remove chain of multiple flowtables. We simply have one for
IPv4 and one for IPv6.
- Flowtables are allocated in flowtable.c, symbols are static.
- With proper argument to SYSINIT() we no longer need flowtable_ready.
- Hash salt doesn't need to be per-VNET.
- Removed rudimentary debugging, which use quite useless in dtrace era.
The runtime behavior of flowtable shouldn't be changed by this commit.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
in the sysctl_root().
Note: SYSCTL_VNET_* macros can be removed as well. All is
needed to virtualize a sysctl oid is set CTLFLAG_VNET on it.
But for now keep macros in place to avoid large code churn.
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
callback providers. link_init_sdl() function can be used to
fill most of the parameters. Use caller stack instead of
allocation / freing memory for each request. Do not drop support
for extra-long (probably non-existing) link-layer protocols by
introducing link_alloc_sdl() (used by if_resolvemulti() callback)
and link_free_sdl() (used by caller).
Since this change breaks KBI, MFC requires slightly different approach
(link_init_sdl() auto-allocating buffer if necessary to handle cases
with unmodified if_resolvemulti() callers).
MFC after: 2 weeks
has the same prefix as some other alias on the same interface, use
newly-added rt_addrmsg() instead of hand-rolled in_addralias_rtmsg().
This eliminates the following rtsock messages:
Pinned RTM_ADD for prefix (for alias addition).
Pinned RTM_DELETE for prefix (for alias withdrawal).
Example (got 10.0.0.1/24 on vlan4, playing with 10.0.0.2/24):
before commit, addition:
got message of size 116 on Fri Jan 10 14:13:15 2014
RTM_NEWADDR: address being added to iface: len 116, metric 0, flags:
sockaddrs: <NETMASK,IFP,IFA,BRD>
255.255.255.0 vlan4:8.0.27.c5.29.d4 10.0.0.2 10.0.0.255
got message of size 192 on Fri Jan 10 14:13:15 2014
RTM_ADD: Add Route: len 192, pid: 0, seq 0, errno 0, flags:<UP,PINNED>
locks: inits:
sockaddrs: <DST,GATEWAY,NETMASK>
10.0.0.0 10.0.0.2 (255) ffff ffff ff
after commit, addition:
got message of size 116 on Fri Jan 10 13:56:26 2014
RTM_NEWADDR: address being added to iface: len 116, metric 0, flags:
sockaddrs: <NETMASK,IFP,IFA,BRD>
255.255.255.0 vlan4:8.0.27.c5.29.d4 14.0.0.2 14.0.0.255
before commit, wihdrawal:
got message of size 192 on Fri Jan 10 13:58:59 2014
RTM_DELETE: Delete Route: len 192, pid: 0, seq 0, errno 0, flags:<UP,PINNED>
locks: inits:
sockaddrs: <DST,GATEWAY,NETMASK>
10.0.0.0 10.0.0.2 (255) ffff ffff ff
got message of size 116 on Fri Jan 10 13:58:59 2014
RTM_DELADDR: address being removed from iface: len 116, metric 0, flags:
sockaddrs: <NETMASK,IFP,IFA,BRD>
255.255.255.0 vlan4:8.0.27.c5.29.d4 10.0.0.2 10.0.0.255
adter commit, withdrawal:
got message of size 116 on Fri Jan 10 14:14:11 2014
RTM_DELADDR: address being removed from iface: len 116, metric 0, flags:
sockaddrs: <NETMASK,IFP,IFA,BRD>
255.255.255.0 vlan4:8.0.27.c5.29.d4 10.0.0.2 10.0.0.255
Sending both RTM_ADD/RTM_DELETE messages to rtsock is completely wrong
(and requires some hacks to keep prefix in route table on RTM_DELETE).
I've tested this change with quagga (no change) and bird (*).
bird alias handling is already broken in *BSD sysdep code, so nothing
changes here, too.
I'm going to MFC this change if there will be no complains about behavior
change.
While here, fix some style(9) bugs introduced by r260488
(pointed by glebius and bde).
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 4 weeks
Adding/deleting interface addresses involves access to 3 different subsystems,
int different parts of code. Each call can fail, so reporting successful
operation by rtsock in the middle of the process error-prone.
Further split routing notification API and actual rtsock calls via creating
public-available rt_addrmsg() / rt_routemsg() functions with "private"
rtsock_* backend.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Remove old bits of data concat for 'ascii' field.
Remove special SIOCGIFSTATUS handling from if.c (which Coverity yells at).
Reported by: Coverity
Coverity CID: 1147174
MFC after: 2 weeks
Most relevant features:
- netmap emulation on any NIC, even those without native netmap support.
On the ixgbe we have measured about 4Mpps/core/queue in this mode,
which is still a lot more than with sockets/bpf.
- seamless interconnection of VALE switch, NICs and host stack.
If you disable accelerations on your NIC (say em0)
ifconfig em0 -txcsum -txcsum
you can use the VALE switch to connect the NIC and the host stack:
vale-ctl -h valeXX:em0
allowing sharing the NIC with other netmap clients.
- THE USER API HAS SLIGHTLY CHANGED (head/cur/tail pointers
instead of pointers/count as before). This was unavoidable to support,
in the future, multiple threads operating on the same rings.
Netmap clients require very small source code changes to compile again.
On the plus side, the new API should be easier to understand
and the internals are a lot simpler.
The manual page has been updated extensively to reflect the current
features and give some examples.
This is the result of work of several people including Giuseppe Lettieri,
Vincenzo Maffione, Michio Honda and myself, and has been financially
supported by EU projects CHANGE and OPENLAB, from NetApp University
Research Fund, NEC, and of course the Universita` di Pisa.
it performs exact match search, regardless of netmask existance.
This simplifies most of rnh_lookup() consumers.
Fix panic triggered by deleting non-existent host route.
PR: kern/185092
Submitted by: Nikolay Denev <ndenev at gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 month