draft-ietf-6man-enhanced-dad-13.
This basically adds a random nonce option (RFC 3971) to NS messages
for DAD probe to detect a looped back packet. This looped back packet
prevented DAD on some pseudo-interfaces which aggregates multiple L2 links
such as lagg(4).
The length of the nonce is set to 6 bytes. This algorithm can be disabled by
setting net.inet6.ip6.dad_enhanced sysctl to 0 in a per-vnet basis.
Reported by: hiren
Reviewed by: ae
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1835
of packets. When the data payload length excluding any headers, of an
outgoing IPv4 packet exceeds PAGE_SIZE bytes, a special case in
ip_fragment() can kick in to optimise the outgoing payload(s). The
code which was added in r98849 as part of zero copy socket support
assumes that the beginning of any MTU sized payload is aligned to
where a MBUF's "m_data" pointer points. This is not always the case
and can sometimes cause large IPv4 packets, as part of ping replies,
to be split more than needed.
Instead of iterating the MBUFs to figure out how much data is in the
current chain, use the value already in the "m_pkthdr.len" field of
the first MBUF in the chain.
Reviewed by: ken @
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1893
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Previous __alignment(4) allowed compiler to assume that operations are
performed on aligned region. On ARM processor, this led to alignment fault
as shown below:
trapframe: 0xda9e5b10
FSR=00000001, FAR=a67b680e, spsr=60000113
r0 =00000000, r1 =00000068, r2 =0000007c, r3 =00000000
r4 =a67b6826, r5 =a67b680e, r6 =00000014, r7 =00000068
r8 =00000068, r9 =da9e5bd0, r10=00000011, r11=da9e5c10
r12=da9e5be0, ssp=da9e5b60, slr=a054f164, pc =a054f2cc
<...>
udp_input+0x264: ldmia r5, {r0-r3, r6}
udp_input+0x268: stmia r12, {r0-r3, r6}
This was due to instructions which do not support unaligned access,
whereas for __alignment(2) compiler replaced ldmia/stmia with some
logically equivalent memcpy operations.
In fact, the assumption that 'struct ip' is always 4-byte aligned
is definitely false, as we have no impact on data alignment of packet
stream received.
Another possible solution would be to explicitely perform memcpy()
on objects of 'struct ip' type, which, however, would suffer from
performance drop, and be merely a problem hiding.
Please, note that this has nothing to do with
ARM32_DISABLE_ALIGNMENT_FAULTS option, but is related strictly to
compiler behaviour.
Submitted by: Wojciech Macek <wma@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: glebius, ian
Obtained from: Semihalf
represents a context.
- Preserve name 'struct igmp_ifinfo' for a new structure, that will be stable
API between userland and kernel.
- Make sysctl_igmp_ifinfo() return the new 'struct igmp_ifinfo', instead of
old one, which had a bunch of internal kernel structures in it.
- Move all above declarations from in_var.h to igmp_var.h, since they are
private to IGMP code.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
and arp were being used. They basically would pass in the
mutex to the callout_init. Because they used this method
to the callout system, it was possible to "stop" the callout.
When flushing the table and you stopped the running callout, the
callout_stop code would return 1 indicating that it was going
to stop the callout (that was about to run on the callout_wheel blocked
by the function calling the stop). Now when 1 was returned, it would
lower the reference count one extra time for the stopped timer, then
a few lines later delete the memory. Of course the callout_wheel was
stuck in the lock code and would then crash since it was accessing
freed memory. By using callout_init(c, 1) we always get a 0 back
and the reference counting bug does not rear its head. We do have
to make a few adjustments to the callouts themselves though to make
sure it does the proper thing if rescheduled as well as gets the lock.
Commented upon by hiren and sbruno
See Phabricator D1777 for more details.
Commented upon by hiren and sbruno
Reviewed by: adrian, jhb and bz
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
when fragmenting IP packets to preserve the order of the packets in a
stream. Else the resulting fragments can be sent out of order when the
hardware supports multiple transmit rings.
Reviewed by: glebius @
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
This fixes what seems like a simple oversight when the function was added in
r253210.
Reported by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1628
Reviewed by: gnn
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
We would like to acknowledge Gerasimos Dimitriadis who reported
the issue and Michael Tuexen who analyzed and provided the
fix.
Security: FreeBSD-SA-15:03.sctp
Security: CVE-2014-8613
Submitted by: tuexen
We would like to acknowledge Clement LECIGNE from Google Security Team and
Francisco Falcon from Core Security Technologies who discovered the issue
independently and reported to the FreeBSD Security Team.
Security: FreeBSD-SA-15:02.kmem
Security: CVE-2014-8612
Submitted by: tuexen
sys/netinet/ip_carp.c:
Add a "reason" string parameter to carp_set_state() and
carp_master_down_locked() allowing more specific logging
information to be passed into these apis.
Refactor existing state transition logging into a single
log call in carp_set_state().
Update all calls to carp_set_state() and
carp_master_down_locked() to pass an appropriate reason
string. For state transitions that were previously logged,
the output should be unchanged.
Submitted by: gibbs (original), asomers (updated)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFSpectraBSD: 1039697 on 2014/02/11 (original)
1049992 on 2014/03/21 (updated)
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)
use ifqueue at all. Second, there is no point in this lockless check.
Either positive or negative result of the check could be incorrect after
a tick.
Reviewed by: tuexen
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
a) assumed that ifqueue length is measured in bytes, instead of packets
b) assumed that any interface has working ifqueue
c) incremented global counter instead of ifi_oqdrops
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
DCTCP congestion control algorithm aims to maximise throughput and minimise
latency in data center networks by utilising the proportion of Explicit
Congestion Notification (ECN) marked packets received from capable hardware as a
congestion signal.
Highlights:
Implemented as a mod_cc(4) module.
ECN (Explicit congestion notification) processing is done differently from
RFC3168.
Takes one-sided DCTCP into consideration where only one of the sides is using
DCTCP and other is using standard ECN.
IETF draft: http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-bensley-tcpm-dctcp-00
Thesis report by Midori Kato: https://eggert.org/students/kato-thesis.pdf
Submitted by: Midori Kato <katoon@sfc.wide.ad.jp> and
Lars Eggert <lars@netapp.com>
with help and modifications from
hiren
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D604
Reviewed by: gnn
handle it in arc_output() instead of nd6_storelladdr().
* Remove IFT_ARCNET check from arpresolve() since arc_output() does not
use arpresolve() to handle broadcast/multicast. This check was there
since r84931. It looks like it was not used since r89099 (initial
import of Arcnet support where multicast is handled separately).
* Remove IFT_IEEE1394 case from nd6_storelladdr() since firewire_output()
calles nd6_storelladdr() for unicast addresses only.
* Remove IFT_ARCNET case from nd6_storelladdr() since arc_output() now
handles multicast by itself.
As a result, we have the following pattern: all non-ethernet-style
media have their own multicast map handling inside their appropriate
routines. On the other hand, arpresolve() (and nd6_storelladdr()) which
meant to be 'generic' ones de-facto handles ethernet-only multicast maps.
MFC after: 3 weeks
CARP devices are created with advskew set to '0' and once you set it to
any other value in the valid range (0..254) you can't set it back to zero.
The code in question is also used to prevent that zeroed values overwrite
the CARP defaults when a new CARP device is created. Since advskew already
defaults to '0' for newly created devices and the new value is guaranteed
to be within the valid range, it is safe to overwrite it here.
PR: 194672
Reported by: cmb@pfsense.org
In collaboration with: garga
Tested by: garga
MFC after: 2 weeks
the knowledge of mbuf layout, and in particular constants such as M_EXT,
MLEN, MHLEN, and so on, in mbuf consumers by unifying various alignment
utility functions (M_ALIGN(), MH_ALIGN(), MEXT_ALIGN() in a single
M_ALIGN() macro, implemented by a now-inlined m_align() function:
- Move m_align() from uipc_mbuf.c to mbuf.h; mark as __inline.
- Reimplement M_ALIGN(), MH_ALIGN(), and MEXT_ALIGN() using m_align().
- Update consumers around the tree to simply use M_ALIGN().
This change eliminates a number of cases where mbuf consumers must be aware
of whether or not mbufs returned by the allocator use external storage, but
also assumptions about the size of the returned mbuf. This will make it
easier to introduce changes in how we use external storage, as well as
features such as variable-size mbufs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1436
Reviewed by: glebius, trasz, gnn, bz
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
rather than passing them in by value.
The eventual aim is to do incremental hash construction rather than
all of the memcpy()'ing into a contiguous buffer for the hash
function, which does show up as taking quite a bit of CPU during
profiling.
Tested:
* a variety of laptops/desktop setups I have, with v6 connectivity
Differential Revision: D1404
Reviewed by: bz, rpaulo
(UTC) rather than the archaic (GMT) in comments. Except where the
comments are making fun of people doing this (and pedants who insist
on the new terms).