It was lost when tryforward appeared. Now ip[6]_tryforward will be enabled
only when sending redirects for corresponding IP version is disabled via
sysctl. Otherwise will be used default forwarding function.
PR: 221137
Submitted by: mckay@
MFC after: 2 weeks
The timespecadd(3) family of macros were imported from NetBSD back in
r35029. However, they were initially guarded by #ifdef _KERNEL. In the
meantime, we have grown at least 28 syscalls that use timespecs in some
way, leading many programs both inside and outside of the base system to
redefine those macros. It's better just to make the definitions public.
Our kernel currently defines two-argument versions of timespecadd and
timespecsub. NetBSD, OpenBSD, and FreeDesktop.org's libbsd, however, define
three-argument versions. Solaris also defines a three-argument version, but
only in its kernel. This revision changes our definition to match the
common three-argument version.
Bump _FreeBSD_version due to the breaking KPI change.
Discussed with: cem, jilles, ian, bde
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14725
Forwarded packets passed through PFIL_OUT, which made it difficult for
firewalls to figure out if they were forwarding or producing packets. This in
turn is an issue for pf for IPv6 fragment handling: it needs to call
ip6_output() or ip6_forward() to handle the fragments. Figuring out which was
difficult (and until now, incorrect).
Having pfil distinguish the two removes an ugly piece of code from pf.
Introduce a new variant of the netpfil callbacks with a flags variable, which
has PFIL_FWD set for forwarded packets. This allows pf to reliably work out if
a packet is forwarded.
Reviewed by: ae, kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13715
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 3-Clause license.
The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.
Special thanks to Wind River for providing access to "The Duke of
Highlander" tool: an older (2014) run over FreeBSD tree was useful as a
starting point.
and other similar socket options.
Provide new control message SCM_TIME_INFO to supply information about
timestamp. Currently it indicates that the timestamp was
hardware-assisted and high-precision, for software timestamps the
message is not returned. Reserved fields are added to ABI to report
additional info about it, it is expected that raw hardware clock value
might be useful for some applications.
Reviewed by: gallatin (previous version), hselasky
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12638
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.
Submitted by: Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
Small summary
-------------
o Almost all IPsec releated code was moved into sys/netipsec.
o New kernel modules added: ipsec.ko and tcpmd5.ko. New kernel
option IPSEC_SUPPORT added. It enables support for loading
and unloading of ipsec.ko and tcpmd5.ko kernel modules.
o IPSEC_NAT_T option was removed. Now NAT-T support is enabled by
default. The UDP_ENCAP_ESPINUDP_NON_IKE encapsulation type
support was removed. Added TCP/UDP checksum handling for
inbound packets that were decapsulated by transport mode SAs.
setkey(8) modified to show run-time NAT-T configuration of SA.
o New network pseudo interface if_ipsec(4) added. For now it is
build as part of ipsec.ko module (or with IPSEC kernel).
It implements IPsec virtual tunnels to create route-based VPNs.
o The network stack now invokes IPsec functions using special
methods. The only one header file <netipsec/ipsec_support.h>
should be included to declare all the needed things to work
with IPsec.
o All IPsec protocols handlers (ESP/AH/IPCOMP protosw) were removed.
Now these protocols are handled directly via IPsec methods.
o TCP_SIGNATURE support was reworked to be more close to RFC.
o PF_KEY SADB was reworked:
- now all security associations stored in the single SPI namespace,
and all SAs MUST have unique SPI.
- several hash tables added to speed up lookups in SADB.
- SADB now uses rmlock to protect access, and concurrent threads
can do SA lookups in the same time.
- many PF_KEY message handlers were reworked to reflect changes
in SADB.
- SADB_UPDATE message was extended to support new PF_KEY headers:
SADB_X_EXT_NEW_ADDRESS_SRC and SADB_X_EXT_NEW_ADDRESS_DST. They
can be used by IKE daemon to change SA addresses.
o ipsecrequest and secpolicy structures were cardinally changed to
avoid locking protection for ipsecrequest. Now we support
only limited number (4) of bundled SAs, but they are supported
for both INET and INET6.
o INPCB security policy cache was introduced. Each PCB now caches
used security policies to avoid SP lookup for each packet.
o For inbound security policies added the mode, when the kernel does
check for full history of applied IPsec transforms.
o References counting rules for security policies and security
associations were changed. The proper SA locking added into xform
code.
o xform code was also changed. Now it is possible to unregister xforms.
tdb_xxx structures were changed and renamed to reflect changes in
SADB/SPDB, and changed rules for locking and refcounting.
Reviewed by: gnn, wblock
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9352
sources to return timestamps when SO_TIMESTAMP is enabled. Two additional
clock sources are:
o nanosecond resolution realtime clock (equivalent of CLOCK_REALTIME);
o nanosecond resolution monotonic clock (equivalent of CLOCK_MONOTONIC).
In addition to this, this option provides unified interface to get bintime
(equivalent of using SO_BINTIME), except it also supported with IPv6 where
SO_BINTIME has never been supported. The long term plan is to depreciate
SO_BINTIME and move everything to using SO_TS_CLOCK.
Idea for this enhancement has been briefly discussed on the Net session
during dev summit in Ottawa last June and the general input was positive.
This change is believed to benefit network benchmarks/profiling as well
as other scenarios where precise time of arrival measurement is necessary.
There are two regression test cases as part of this commit: one extends unix
domain test code (unix_cmsg) to test new SCM_XXX types and another one
implementis totally new test case which exchanges UDP packets between two
processes using both conventional methods (i.e. calling clock_gettime(2)
before recv(2) and after send(2)), as well as using setsockopt()+recv() in
receive path. The resulting delays are checked for sanity for all supported
clock types.
Reviewed by: adrian, gnn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9171
This can lead to change of mbuf pointer (packet filter could do m_pullup(),
NAT, etc). Also in case of change of destination address, tryforward can
decide that packet should be handled by local system. In this case modified
mbuf can be returned to the ip[6]_input(). To handle this correctly, check
M_FASTFWD_OURS flag after return from ip[6]_tryforward. And if it is present,
update variables that depend from mbuf pointer and skip another inbound
firewall processing.
No objection from: #network
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8764
than removing the network interfaces first. This change is rather larger
and convoluted as the ordering requirements cannot be separated.
Move the pfil(9) framework to SI_SUB_PROTO_PFIL, move Firewalls and
related modules to their own SI_SUB_PROTO_FIREWALL.
Move initialization of "physical" interfaces to SI_SUB_DRIVERS,
move virtual (cloned) interfaces to SI_SUB_PSEUDO.
Move Multicast to SI_SUB_PROTO_MC.
Re-work parts of multicast initialisation and teardown, not taking the
huge amount of memory into account if used as a module yet.
For interface teardown we try to do as many of them as we can on
SI_SUB_INIT_IF, but for some this makes no sense, e.g., when tunnelling
over a higher layer protocol such as IP. In that case the interface
has to go along (or before) the higher layer protocol is shutdown.
Kernel hhooks need to go last on teardown as they may be used at various
higher layers and we cannot remove them before we cleaned up the higher
layers.
For interface teardown there are multiple paths:
(a) a cloned interface is destroyed (inside a VIMAGE or in the base system),
(b) any interface is moved from a virtual network stack to a different
network stack ("vmove"), or (c) a virtual network stack is being shut down.
All code paths go through if_detach_internal() where we, depending on the
vmove flag or the vnet state, make a decision on how much to shut down;
in case we are destroying a VNET the individual protocol layers will
cleanup their own parts thus we cannot do so again for each interface as
we end up with, e.g., double-frees, destroying locks twice or acquiring
already destroyed locks.
When calling into protocol cleanups we equally have to tell them
whether they need to detach upper layer protocols ("ulp") or not
(e.g., in6_ifdetach()).
Provide or enahnce helper functions to do proper cleanup at a protocol
rather than at an interface level.
Approved by: re (hrs)
Obtained from: projects/vnet
Reviewed by: gnn, jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6747
Add accessor functions to toggle the state per VNET.
The base system (vnet0) will always enable itself with the normal
registration. We will share the registered protocol handlers in all
VNETs minimising duplication and management.
Upon disabling netisr processing for a VNET drain the netisr queue from
packets for that VNET.
Update netisr consumers to (de)register on a per-VNET start/teardown using
VNET_SYS(UN)INIT functionality.
The change should be transparent for non-VIMAGE kernels.
Reviewed by: gnn (, hiren)
Obtained from: projects/vnet
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6691
specific order. VNET_SYSUNINITs however are doing exactly that.
Thus remove the VIMAGE conditional field from the domain(9) protosw
structure and replace it with VNET_SYSUNINITs.
This also allows us to change some order and to make the teardown functions
file local static.
Also convert divert(4) as it uses the same mechanism ip(4) and ip6(4) use
internally.
Slightly reshuffle the SI_SUB_* fields in kernel.h and add a new ones, e.g.,
for pfil consumers (firewalls), partially for this commit and for others
to come.
Reviewed by: gnn, tuexen (sctp), jhb (kernel.h)
Obtained from: projects/vnet
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC: do not remove pr_destroy
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6652
It does not cause any real issues because the variable is overwritten
only when the packet is forwarded (and the variable is not used anymore).
Obtained from: pfSense
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications (Netgate)
ip_dooptions(), icmp6_redirect_input(), in6_lltable_rtcheck(),
in6p_lookup_mcast_ifp() and in6_selecthlim() use new routing api.
Eliminate now-unused ip_rtaddr().
Fix lookup key fib6_lookup_nh_basic() which was lost diring merge.
Make fib6_lookup_nh_basic() and fib6_lookup_nh_extended() always
return IPv6 destination address with embedded scope. Currently
rw_gateway has it scope embedded, do the same for non-gatewayed
destinations.
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Use hhook(9) framework to achieve ability of loading and unloading
if_enc(4) kernel module. INET and INET6 code on initialization registers
two helper hooks points in the kernel. if_enc(4) module uses these helper
hook points and registers its hooks. IPSEC code uses these hhook points
to call helper hooks implemented in if_enc(4).
sysctl and will always be on. The former split between default and
fast forwarding is removed by this commit while preserving the ability
to use all network stack features.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4042
Reviewed by: ae, melifaro, olivier, rwatson
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications (Netgate)
because the RSS hash may need to be recalculated.
Submitted by: Tiwei Bie <btw@mail.ustc.edu.cn>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3564
Both are used to protect access to IP addresses lists and they can be
acquired for reading several times per packet. To reduce lock contention
it is better to use rmlock here.
Reviewed by: gnn (previous version)
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3149
apparently neither clang nor gcc complain about this.
But clang intis the var to NULL correctly while gcc on at least mips does not.
Correct the undefined behavior by initializing the variable properly.
PR: 201371
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3036
Reviewed by: gnn
Approved by: gnn(mentor)
ip_forward() does a route lookup for testing this packet can be sent to a known destination,
it also can do another route lookup if it detects that an ICMP redirect is needed,
it forgets all of this and handovers to ip_output() to do the same lookup yet again.
This optimisation just does one route lookup during the forwarding path and handovers that to be considered by ip_output().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2964
Approved by: ae, gnn(mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
function names have changed and comments are reformatted or added, but
there is no functional change.
Claim copyright for me and Adrian.
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
of allocations in V_nipq is racy. To fix that, we would simply stop doing
book-keeping ourselves, and rely on UMA doing that. There could be a
slight overcommit due to caches, but that isn't a big deal.
o V_nipq and V_maxnipq go away.
o net.inet.ip.fragpackets is now just SYSCTL_UMA_CUR()
o net.inet.ip.maxfragpackets could have been just SYSCTL_UMA_MAX(), but
historically it has special semantics about values of 0 and -1, so
provide sysctl_maxfragpackets() to handle these special cases.
o If zone limit lowers either due to net.inet.ip.maxfragpackets or due to
kern.ipc.nmbclusters, then new function ipq_drain_tomax() goes over
buckets and frees the oldest packets until we are in the limit.
The code that (incorrectly) did that in ip_slowtimo() is removed.
o ip_reass() doesn't check any limits and calls uma_zalloc(M_NOWAIT).
If it fails, a new function ipq_reuse() is called. This function will
find the oldest packet in the currently locked bucket, and if there is
none, it will search in other buckets until success.
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
free a fragment, provide two inline functions that do that for us:
ipq_drop() and ipq_timeout().
o Rename ip_free_f() to ipq_free() to match the name scheme of IP reassembly.
o Remove assertion from ipq_free(), since it requires extra argument to be
passed, but locking scheme is simple enough and function is static.
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
This significantly improves performance on multi-core servers where there
is any kind of IPv4 reassembly going on.
glebius@ would like to see the locking moved to be attached to the reassembly
bucket, which would make it per-bucket + per-VNET, instead of being global.
I decided to keep it global for now as it's the minimal useful change;
if people agree / wish to migrate it to be per-bucket / per-VNET then please
do feel free to do so. I won't complain.
Thanks to Norse Corp for giving me access to much larger servers
to test this at across the 4 core boxes I have at home.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2095
Reviewed by: glebius (initial comments incorporated into this patch)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc (hardware)
where we want to create a new IP datagram.
o Add support for RFC6864, which allows to set IP ID for atomic IP
datagrams to any value, to improve performance. The behaviour is
controlled by net.inet.ip.rfc6864 sysctl knob, which is enabled by
default.
o In case if we generate IP ID, use counter(9) to improve performance.
o Gather all code related to IP ID into ip_id.c.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2177
Reviewed by: adrian, cy, rpaulo
Tested by: Emeric POUPON <emeric.poupon stormshield.eu>
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
Relnotes: yes
bits.
The motivation here is to eventually teach netisr and potentially
other networking subsystems a bit more about how RSS work queues / buckets
are configured so things have a hope of auto-configuring in the future.
* net/rss_config.[ch] takes care of the generic bits for doing
configuration, hash function selection, etc;
* topelitz.[ch] is now in net/ rather than netinet/;
* (and would be in libkern if it didn't directly include RSS_KEYSIZE;
that's a later thing to fix up.)
* netinet/in_rss.[ch] now just contains the IPv4 specific methods;
* and netinet/in6_rss.[ch] now just contains the IPv6 specific methods.
This should have no functional impact on anyone currently using
the RSS support.
Differential Revision: D1383
Reviewed by: gnn, jfv (intel driver bits)
Remove check for presence PACKET_TAG_IPSEC_IN_DONE mbuf tag from
ip_ipsec_fwd(). PACKET_TAG_IPSEC_IN_DONE tag means that packet is
already handled by IPSEC code. This means that before IPSEC processing
it was destined to our address and security policy was checked in
the ip_ipsec_input(). After IPSEC processing packet has new IP
addresses and destination address isn't our own. So, anyway we can't
check security policy from the mbuf tag, because it corresponds
to different addresses.
We should check security policy that corresponds to packet
attributes in both cases - when it has a mbuf tag and when it has not.
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
security policy. The changed block of code in ip*_ipsec_input() is
called when packet has ESP/AH header. Presence of
PACKET_TAG_IPSEC_IN_DONE mbuf tag in the same time means that
packet was already handled by IPSEC and reinjected in the netisr,
and it has another ESP/AH headers (encrypted twice?).
Since it was already processed by IPSEC code, the AH/ESP headers
was already stripped (and probably outer IP header was stripped too)
and security policy from the tdb_ident was applied to those headers.
It is incorrect to apply this security policy to current headers.
Also make ip_ipsec_input() prototype similar to ip6_ipsec_input().
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
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
Initially in_matrote() in_clsroute() in their current state was introduced by
r4105 20 years ago. Instead of deleting inactive routes immediately, we kept them
in route table, setting RTPRF_OURS flag and some expire time. After that, either
GC came or RTPRF_OURS got removed on first-packet. It was a good solution
in that days (and probably another decade after that) to keep TCP metrics.
However, after moving metrics to TCP hostcache in r122922, most of in_rmx
functionality became unused. It might had been used for flushing icmp-originated
routes before rte mutexes/refcounting, but I'm not sure about that.
So it looks like this is nearly impossible to make GC do its work nowadays:
in_rtkill() ignores non-RTPRF_OURS routes.
route can only become RTPRF_OURS after dropping last reference via rtfree()
which calls in_clsroute(), which, it turn, ignores UP and non-RTF_DYNAMIC routes.
Dynamic routes can still be installed via received redirect, but they
have default lifetime (no specific rt_expire) and no one has another trie walker
to call RTFREE() on them.
So, the changelist:
* remove custom rnh_match / rnh_close matching function.
* remove all GC functions
* partially revert r256695 (proto3 is no more used inside kernel,
it is not possible to use rt_expire from user point of view, proto3 support
is not complete)
* Finish r241884 (similar to this commit) and remove remaining IPv6 parts
MFC after: 1 month
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@
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
information as part of recvmsg().
This is primarily used for debugging/verification of the various
processing paths in the IP, PCB and driver layers.
Unfortunately the current implementation of the control message path
results in a ~10% or so drop in UDP frame throughput when it's used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D527
Reviewed by: grehan