Commit Graph

1032 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
luigi
a86f01c717 Extend the interface to ether_input(): a NULL eh pointer means that
the mbuf contains the ethernet header (eh) as well, which ether_input()
will strip off as needed.

This permits the removal (in a backward compatible way) of the
header removal code which right now is replicated in all drivers,
sometimes in an inconsistent way. Also, because many functions
called after ether_input() require the eh in the mbuf, eventually
we can propagate the interface and handle outdated drivers just
in ether_input().

Individual driver changes to use the new interface will follow as
we have a chance to touch them.

NOTE THAT THIS CHANGE IS FULLY BACKWARD COMPATIBLE AND DOES NOT BREAK
BINARY COMPATIBILITY FOR DRIVERS.

MFC after: 3 days
2002-08-04 23:55:06 +00:00
rwatson
c8a80b5f85 Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

Introduce two ioctls, SIOCGIFMAC, SIOCSIFMAC, which permit user
processes to manage the MAC labels on network interfaces.  Note
that this is part of the user process API/ABI that will be revised
prior to 5.0-RELEASE.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-01 21:15:53 +00:00
rwatson
7408d5f6aa Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

Add MAC support for if_ppp.  Label packets as they are removed from
the raw PPP mbuf queue.  Preserve the mbuf MAC label across various
PPP data-munging and reconstitution operations.  Perform access
control checks on mbufs to be transmitted via the interface.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-01 21:13:47 +00:00
rwatson
861c05896d Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

Label packets generated by the gif virtual interface.

Perform access control on packets delivered to gif virtual interfaces.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-08-01 21:00:05 +00:00
rwatson
b53ba9c2dc Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

Label mbufs received via kernel tunnel device interfaces by invoking
appropriate MAC framework entry points.

Perform access control checks on out-going mbufs delivered via tunnel
interfaces by invoking appropriate MAC entry points:

NOTE: Currently the label for a tunnel interface is not derived from
the label of the process that opened the tunnel interface.  It
probably should be.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-07-31 16:23:42 +00:00
rwatson
3597c60ec8 Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

Label mbufs received via ethernet-based interfaces by invoking
appropriate MAC framework entry points.

Perform access control checks on out-going mbufs delivered via
ethernet-based interfaces by invoking appropriate MAC entry
points.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-07-31 16:22:02 +00:00
rwatson
afe9331e20 Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

Instrument the interface management code so that MAC labels are
properly maintained on network interfaces (struct ifnet).  In
particular, invoke entry points when interfaces are created and
removed.  MAC policies may initialized the label interface based
on a variety of factors, including the interface name.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-07-31 16:16:03 +00:00
rwatson
699db787dc Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

When decompressing data from one mbuf into another mbuf, preserve the
mbuf label by copying it to the new mbuf.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-07-31 16:13:13 +00:00
rwatson
7a94e47d73 Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

Invoke a MAC framework entry point to authorize reception of an
incoming mbuf by the BPF descriptor, permitting MAC policies to
limit the visibility of packets delivered to particular BPF
descriptors.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-07-31 16:11:32 +00:00
rwatson
21c15b4271 Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

Instrument BPF so that MAC labels are properly maintained on BPF
descriptors.  MAC framework entry points are invoked at BPF
instantiation and allocation, permitting the MAC framework to
derive the BPF descriptor label from the credential authorizing
the device open.  Also enter the MAC framework to label mbufs
created using the BPF device.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-07-31 16:09:38 +00:00
rwatson
f476cee602 Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

Label network interface structures, permitting security features to
be maintained on those objects.  if_label will be used to authorize
data flow using the network interface.  if_label will be protected
using the same synchronization primitives as other mutable entries
in struct ifnet.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-07-30 23:06:07 +00:00
rwatson
86902a1ff2 Introduce support for Mandatory Access Control and extensible
kernel access control.

Label BPF descriptor objects, permitting security features to be
maintained on those objects.  bd_label will be used to authorize
data flow from network interfaces to user processes.  BPF
labels are protected using the same synchronization model as other
mutable data in the BPF descriptor.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, NAI Labs
2002-07-30 23:03:29 +00:00
rwatson
719db048ab Slight whitespace cleanup. Whitespace sync to MAC tree. 2002-07-27 19:53:02 +00:00
kbyanc
636e436f26 Add some additional 802.11 media definitions.
Reviewed by:	imp
2002-07-14 21:58:19 +00:00
luigi
bc68bebfac Remove 0 initializers for global/static variables, so they end up in
BSS instead of DATA. This marginally reduces the kernel image size, though
the difference is almost irrelevant for compressed kernels.
2002-07-07 22:42:57 +00:00
peter
abbe9dfbe5 Turn on BPF_ALIGN for all non-i386 platforms, instead of having an
ifdef list that currently lists all the non-i386 platforms that bpf
currently works on.
2002-07-05 00:06:08 +00:00
maxim
a3c4374bc3 Remove trailing whitespaces.
Approved by:	luigi
2002-07-03 11:04:17 +00:00
maxim
2c468fd2ee o Strict interface names comparison. The old code assumed "fxp1" == "fxp11".
o Use an appropriate constant for interface name buffer.

Reviewed by:	luigi
Approved by:	luigi
MFC after:	1 month
2002-07-03 11:00:55 +00:00
mini
4f90d44b0d Check retifma for NULL before using it.
PR:		kern/9391
Submitted by:	Assar Westerlund <assar@sics.se>
MFC after:	3 days
2002-07-02 08:23:00 +00:00
luigi
9180e65944 Remove one useless variable. 2002-06-30 08:02:38 +00:00
ken
0d3a835f3f At long last, commit the zero copy sockets code.
MAKEDEV:	Add MAKEDEV glue for the ti(4) device nodes.

ti.4:		Update the ti(4) man page to include information on the
		TI_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT and TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS kernel options,
		and also include information about the new character
		device interface and the associated ioctls.

man9/Makefile:	Add jumbo.9 and zero_copy.9 man pages and associated
		links.

jumbo.9:	New man page describing the jumbo buffer allocator
		interface and operation.

zero_copy.9:	New man page describing the general characteristics of
		the zero copy send and receive code, and what an
		application author should do to take advantage of the
		zero copy functionality.

NOTES:		Add entries for ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS, TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS,
		TI_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT, MSIZE, and MCLSHIFT.

conf/files:	Add uipc_jumbo.c and uipc_cow.c.

conf/options:	Add the 5 options mentioned above.

kern_subr.c:	Receive side zero copy implementation.  This takes
		"disposable" pages attached to an mbuf, gives them to
		a user process, and then recycles the user's page.
		This is only active when ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS is turned on
		and the kern.ipc.zero_copy.receive sysctl variable is
		set to 1.

uipc_cow.c:	Send side zero copy functions.  Takes a page written
		by the user and maps it copy on write and assigns it
		kernel virtual address space.  Removes copy on write
		mapping once the buffer has been freed by the network
		stack.

uipc_jumbo.c:	Jumbo disposable page allocator code.  This allocates
		(optionally) disposable pages for network drivers that
		want to give the user the option of doing zero copy
		receive.

uipc_socket.c:	Add kern.ipc.zero_copy.{send,receive} sysctls that are
		enabled if ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS is turned on.

		Add zero copy send support to sosend() -- pages get
		mapped into the kernel instead of getting copied if
		they meet size and alignment restrictions.

uipc_syscalls.c:Un-staticize some of the sf* functions so that they
		can be used elsewhere.  (uipc_cow.c)

if_media.c:	In the SIOCGIFMEDIA ioctl in ifmedia_ioctl(), avoid
		calling malloc() with M_WAITOK.  Return an error if
		the M_NOWAIT malloc fails.

		The ti(4) driver and the wi(4) driver, at least, call
		this with a mutex held.  This causes witness warnings
		for 'ifconfig -a' with a wi(4) or ti(4) board in the
		system.  (I've only verified for ti(4)).

ip_output.c:	Fragment large datagrams so that each segment contains
		a multiple of PAGE_SIZE amount of data plus headers.
		This allows the receiver to potentially do page
		flipping on receives.

if_ti.c:	Add zero copy receive support to the ti(4) driver.  If
		TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS is not defined, it now uses the
		jumbo(9) buffer allocator for jumbo receive buffers.

		Add a new character device interface for the ti(4)
		driver for the new debugging interface.  This allows
		(a patched version of) gdb to talk to the Tigon board
		and debug the firmware.  There are also a few additional
		debugging ioctls available through this interface.

		Add header splitting support to the ti(4) driver.

		Tweak some of the default interrupt coalescing
		parameters to more useful defaults.

		Add hooks for supporting transmit flow control, but
		leave it turned off with a comment describing why it
		is turned off.

if_tireg.h:	Change the firmware rev to 12.4.11, since we're really
		at 12.4.11 plus fixes from 12.4.13.

		Add defines needed for debugging.

		Remove the ti_stats structure, it is now defined in
		sys/tiio.h.

ti_fw.h:	12.4.11 firmware.

ti_fw2.h:	12.4.11 firmware, plus selected fixes from 12.4.13,
		and my header splitting patches.  Revision 12.4.13
		doesn't handle 10/100 negotiation properly.  (This
		firmware is the same as what was in the tree previously,
		with the addition of header splitting support.)

sys/jumbo.h:	Jumbo buffer allocator interface.

sys/mbuf.h:	Add a new external mbuf type, EXT_DISPOSABLE, to
		indicate that the payload buffer can be thrown away /
		flipped to a userland process.

socketvar.h:	Add prototype for socow_setup.

tiio.h:		ioctl interface to the character portion of the ti(4)
		driver, plus associated structure/type definitions.

uio.h:		Change prototype for uiomoveco() so that we'll know
		whether the source page is disposable.

ufs_readwrite.c:Update for new prototype of uiomoveco().

vm_fault.c:	In vm_fault(), check to see whether we need to do a page
		based copy on write fault.

vm_object.c:	Add a new function, vm_object_allocate_wait().  This
		does the same thing that vm_object allocate does, except
		that it gives the caller the opportunity to specify whether
		it should wait on the uma_zalloc() of the object structre.

		This allows vm objects to be allocated while holding a
		mutex.  (Without generating WITNESS warnings.)

		vm_object_allocate() is implemented as a call to
		vm_object_allocate_wait() with the malloc flag set to
		M_WAITOK.

vm_object.h:	Add prototype for vm_object_allocate_wait().

vm_page.c:	Add page-based copy on write setup, clear and fault
		routines.

vm_page.h:	Add page based COW function prototypes and variable in
		the vm_page structure.

Many thanks to Drew Gallatin, who wrote the zero copy send and receive
code, and to all the other folks who have tested and reviewed this code
over the years.
2002-06-26 03:37:47 +00:00
imp
fdf567f0f6 Add kernel print bits #define for the IEEE80211_CAPINFO bits. 2002-06-24 04:40:12 +00:00
luigi
16aa922293 fix indentation, whitespace and a few comments. 2002-06-23 11:19:53 +00:00
luigi
5259888148 Remove (almost all) global variables that were used to hold
packet forwarding state ("annotations") during ip processing.
The code is considerably cleaner now.

The variables removed by this change are:

        ip_divert_cookie        used by divert sockets
        ip_fw_fwd_addr          used for transparent ip redirection
        last_pkt                used by dynamic pipes in dummynet

Removal of the first two has been done by carrying the annotations
into volatile structs prepended to the mbuf chains, and adding
appropriate code to add/remove annotations in the routines which
make use of them, i.e. ip_input(), ip_output(), tcp_input(),
bdg_forward(), ether_demux(), ether_output_frame(), div_output().

On passing, remove a bug in divert handling of fragmented packet.
Now it is the fragment at offset 0 which sets the divert status of
the whole packet, whereas formerly it was the last incoming fragment
to decide.

Removal of last_pkt required a change in the interface of ip_fw_chk()
and dummynet_io(). On passing, use the same mechanism for dummynet
annotations and for divert/forward annotations.

option IPFIREWALL_FORWARD is effectively useless, the code to
implement it is very small and is now in by default to avoid the
obfuscation of conditionally compiled code.

NOTES:
 * there is at least one global variable left, sro_fwd, in ip_output().
   I am not sure if/how this can be removed.

 * I have deliberately avoided gratuitous style changes in this commit
   to avoid cluttering the diffs. Minor stule cleanup will likely be
   necessary

 * this commit only focused on the IP layer. I am sure there is a
   number of global variables used in the TCP and maybe UDP stack.

 * despite the number of files touched, there are absolutely no API's
   or data structures changed by this commit (except the interfaces of
   ip_fw_chk() and dummynet_io(), which are internal anyways), so
   an MFC is quite safe and unintrusive (and desirable, given the
   improved readability of the code).

MFC after: 10 days
2002-06-22 11:51:02 +00:00
fenner
63a52d217d Update for libpcap 0.7.1
Originally-committed-to-wrong-repository by:	fenner
2002-06-21 05:29:40 +00:00
tanimura
cb3347e926 Remove so*_locked(), which were backed out by mistake. 2002-06-18 07:42:02 +00:00
tanimura
e6fa9b9e92 Back out my lats commit of locking down a socket, it conflicts with hsu's work.
Requested by:	hsu
2002-05-31 11:52:35 +00:00
silby
1f97abe190 Ensure that packet counts are always reset to 0 when
a route is cloned.  Previously, they took on the count
of their parent route (which was sometimes nonzero.)

Submitted by:	Andre Oppermann <oppermann@pipeline.ch>
MFC after:	5 days
2002-05-31 04:27:51 +00:00
phk
4383144a9a Add one copy of crc32() and crc32_tab[] in libkern, and remove it two other
places.

Comment out crc32 related definitions in zlib.h, we don't seem to have the
corresponding code in our kernel.
2002-05-29 20:24:09 +00:00
brooks
9380aef83f Make discard devices clonable and unloadable. Also, change the
interface name from ds# to disc#.
2002-05-25 20:20:35 +00:00
brooks
6cfd5a5a1d Move all unit number management cloned interfaces into the cloning
code.  The reverts the API change which made the <if>_clone_destory()
functions return an int instead of void bringing us into closer
alignment with NetBSD.

Reviewed by:	net (a long time ago)
2002-05-25 20:17:04 +00:00
peter
d51203783b Fix warning; remove unused arg that was passed through uninitialized. 2002-05-24 06:10:25 +00:00
bde
553d6172dc Include <sys.systm.h> for the declaration of some atomic functions -- don't
depend on namespace pollution in <sys/mutex.h>.
2002-05-22 06:26:44 +00:00
iedowse
5e19174e4e Avoid exposing struct if_clone and the sys/queue.h macros to userland
programs by restricting these to the case where _KERNEL is defined.

Reviewed by:	brooks (ages ago)
2002-05-20 22:48:39 +00:00
tanimura
92d8381dd5 Lock down a socket, milestone 1.
o Add a mutex (sb_mtx) to struct sockbuf. This protects the data in a
  socket buffer. The mutex in the receive buffer also protects the data
  in struct socket.

o Determine the lock strategy for each members in struct socket.

o Lock down the following members:

  - so_count
  - so_options
  - so_linger
  - so_state

o Remove *_locked() socket APIs.  Make the following socket APIs
  touching the members above now require a locked socket:

 - sodisconnect()
 - soisconnected()
 - soisconnecting()
 - soisdisconnected()
 - soisdisconnecting()
 - sofree()
 - soref()
 - sorele()
 - sorwakeup()
 - sotryfree()
 - sowakeup()
 - sowwakeup()

Reviewed by:	alfred
2002-05-20 05:41:09 +00:00
trhodes
28d42899b7 More s/file system/filesystem/g 2002-05-16 21:28:32 +00:00
luigi
2afce45ffc Add ipfw hooks to ether_demux() and ether_output_frame().
Ipfw processing of frames at layer 2 can be enabled by the sysctl variable

	net.link.ether.ipfw=1

Consider this feature experimental, because right now, the firewall
is invoked in the places indicated below, and controlled by the
sysctl variables listed on the right.  As a consequence, a packet
can be filtered from 1 to 4 times depending on the path it follows,
which might make a ruleset a bit hard to follow.

I will add an ipfw option to tell if we want a given rule to apply
to ether_demux() and ether_output_frame(), but we have run out of
flags in the struct ip_fw so i need to think a bit on how to implement
this.

		to upper layers
	     |			     |
	     +----------->-----------+
	     ^			     V
	[ip_input]		[ip_output]	net.inet.ip.fw.enable=1
	     |			     |
	     ^			     V
	[ether_demux]      [ether_output_frame]	net.link.ether.ipfw=1
	     |			     |
	     +->- [bdg_forward]-->---+		net.link.ether.bridge_ipfw=1
	     ^			     V
	     |			     |
		 to devices
2002-05-13 10:37:19 +00:00
kbyanc
4cc86e854d Fix logic inversion bug. 2002-05-11 06:27:24 +00:00
joerg
8dc69a6709 Fix a misplaced break statement within a switch that accidentally made
it into an "#ifdef INET6" block.  This caused a (harmless but annoying)
EINVAL return value to be sent even though the operation completed
successfully.

PR:		kern/37786
Submitted by:	Ari Suutari <ari.suutari@syncrontech.com>,David Malone <dwmalone@maths.tcd.ie>
MFC after:	1 day
2002-05-10 12:48:09 +00:00
luigi
23cf222c81 Cleanup the interface to ip_fw_chk, two of the input arguments
were totally useless and have been removed.

ip_input.c, ip_output.c:
    Properly initialize the "ip" pointer in case the firewall does an
    m_pullup() on the packet.

    Remove some debugging code forgotten long ago.

ip_fw.[ch], bridge.c:
    Prepare the grounds for matching MAC header fields in bridged packets,
    so we can have 'etherfw' functionality without a lot of kernel and
    userland bloat.
2002-05-09 10:34:57 +00:00
kbyanc
85be496b99 Roll my own min() (named ISO88025_MIN() so as to not cause conflicts) so
that this header may be included from userland where min() may not be
declared (or worse, declared differently).  I open to alternative
solutions.
2002-05-08 01:08:26 +00:00
kbyanc
cc607e6c2d Move ISO88025 source routing information into sockaddr_dl's sdl_data
field.  This returns the sdl_data field to a variable-length field.  More
importantly, this prevents a easily-reproduceable data-corruption bug when
the interface name plus the hardware address exceed the sdl_data field's
original 12 byte limit.  However, token-ring interfaces may still overflow
the new sdl_data field's 46 byte limit if the interface name exceeds 6
characters (since 6 characters for interface name plus 6 for hardware
address plus 34 for source routing = the size of sdl_data).  Further
refinements could overcome this limitation but would break binary
compatibility; this commit only addresses fixing the bug for
commonly-occuring cases without breaking binary compatibility with the
intention that the functionality can be MFC'ed to -stable.

  See message ID's (both send to -arch):
	20020421013332.F87395-100000@gateway.posi.net
	20020430181359.G11009-300000@gateway.posi.net
  for a more thorough description of the bug addressed and how to
reproduce it.

Approved by:	silence on -arch and -net
Sponsored by:	NTT Multimedia Communications Labs
MFC after:	1 week
2002-05-07 22:14:06 +00:00
imp
95ebf4bebb MFOpenBSD: ibss and ibss-master.
ibss is the modern ad-hoc mode.  ibss-master is the same, except that
it creates the ibss network.  This distinction is necessary because
some supported cards (symbol) support the former without supporting
the latter.

A seprate commit will introduce a demo-adhoc mode so that we can
disentwingle the multiple, mutually exclusive meandings of adhoc in
the present state of affairs.

Submitted by: jhay
2002-05-07 18:16:39 +00:00
imp
186864a31c Minor style nit 2002-05-07 18:11:55 +00:00
alfred
d1e340364b Make funsetown() take a 'struct sigio **' so that the locking can
be done internally.

Ensure that no one can fsetown() to a dying process/pgrp.  We need
to check the process for P_WEXIT to see if it's exiting.  Process
groups are already safe because there is no such thing as a pgrp
zombie, therefore the proctree lock completely protects the pgrp
from having sigio structures associated with it after it runs
funsetownlst.

Add sigio lock to witness list under proctree and allproc, but over
proc and pgrp.

Seigo Tanimura helped with this.
2002-05-06 19:31:28 +00:00
alfred
798c53d495 Redo the sigio locking.
Turn the sigio sx into a mutex.

Sigio lock is really only needed to protect interrupts from dereferencing
the sigio pointer in an object when the sigio itself is being destroyed.

In order to do this in the most unintrusive manner change pgsigio's
sigio * argument into a **, that way we can lock internally to the
function.
2002-05-01 20:44:46 +00:00
obrien
81dea2aac7 "pointers are not permitted as case values", so force the macros to ints. 2002-05-01 04:18:36 +00:00
tanimura
89ec521d91 Revert the change of #includes in sys/filedesc.h and sys/socketvar.h.
Requested by:	bde

Since locking sigio_lock is usually followed by calling pgsigio(),
move the declaration of sigio_lock and the definitions of SIGIO_*() to
sys/signalvar.h.

While I am here, sort include files alphabetically, where possible.
2002-04-30 01:54:54 +00:00
phk
d6fb98dc45 Move us yet closer to IFM_* definitions in NetBSD. 2002-04-29 05:32:44 +00:00
phk
e67296b3b0 Follow NetBSD and s/IFM_1000_TX/IFM_1000_T/ 2002-04-28 20:34:20 +00:00