99 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jamie Gritton
b89e82dd87 Standardize the various prison_foo_ip[46] functions and prison_if to
return zero on success and an error code otherwise.  The possible errors
are EADDRNOTAVAIL if an address being checked for doesn't match the
prison, and EAFNOSUPPORT if the prison doesn't have any addresses in
that address family.  For most callers of these functions, use the
returned error code instead of e.g. a hard-coded EADDRNOTAVAIL or
EINVAL.

Always include a jailed() check in these functions, where a non-jailed
cred always returns success (and makes no changes).  Remove the explicit
jailed() checks that preceded many of the function calls.

Approved by:	bz (mentor)
2009-02-05 14:06:09 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
2e730bea0a Like with r185713 make sure to not leak a lock as rtalloc1(9) returns
a locked route. Thus we have to use RTFREE_LOCKED(9) to get it unlocked
and rtfree(9)d rather than just rtfree(9)d.

Since the PR was filed, new places with the same problem were added
with new code.  Also check that the rt is valid before freeing it
either way there.

PR:		kern/129793
Submitted by:	Dheeraj Reddy <dheeraj@ece.gatech.edu>
MFC after:	2 weeks
Committed from:	Bugathon #6
2009-01-31 10:48:02 +00:00
Qing Li
14981d8057 Revive the RTF_LLINFO flag in route.h. The kernel code is guarded
by the new kernel option COMPAT_ROUTE_FLAGS for binary backward
compatibility. The RTF_LLDATA flag maps to the same value as RTF_LLINFO.
RTF_LLDATA is used by the arp and ndp utilities. The RTF_LLDATA flag is
always returned to the userland regardless whether the COMPAT_ROUTE_FLAGS
is defined.
2009-01-12 11:24:32 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
813dd6ae5e Restrict arp, ndp and theoretically the FIB listing (if not
read with libkvm) to the addresses of a prison, when inside a
jail. [1]
As the patch from the PR was pre-'new-arp', add checks to the
llt_dump handlers as well.

While touching RTM_GET in route_output(), consistently use
curthread credentials rather than the creds from the socket
there. [2]

PR:		kern/68189
Submitted by:	Mark Delany <sxcg2-fuwxj@qmda.emu.st> [1]
Discussed with:	rwatson [2]
Reviewed by:	rwatson
MFC after:	4 weeks
2009-01-09 21:57:49 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
5ce0eb7f08 Make SIOCGIFADDR and related, as well as SIOCGIFADDR_IN6 and related
jail-aware. Up to now we returned the first address of the interface
for SIOCGIFADDR w/o an ifr_addr in the query. This caused problems for
programs querying for an address but running inside a jail, as the
address returned usually did not belong to the jail.
Like for v6, if there was an ifr_addr given on v4, you could probe
for more addresses on the interfaces that you were not allowed to see
from inside a jail. Return an error (EADDRNOTAVAIL) in that case
now unless the address is on the given interface and valid for the
jail.

PR:		kern/114325
Reviewed by:	rwatson
MFC after:	4 weeks
2009-01-09 13:06:56 +00:00
Qing Li
dc49549713 Some modules such as SCTP supplies a valid route entry as an input argument
to ip_output(). The destionation is represented in a sockaddr{} object
that may contain other pieces of information, e.g., port number. This
same destination sockaddr{} object may be passed into L2 code, which
could be used to create a L2 entry. Since there exists a L2 table per
address family, the L2 lookup function can make address family specific
comparison instead of the generic bcmp() operation over the entire
sockaddr{} structure.

Note in the IPv6 case the sin6_scope_id is not compared because the
address is currently stored in the embedded form inside the kernel.
The in6_lltable_lookup() has to account for the scope-id if this
storage format were to change in the future.
2009-01-03 00:27:28 +00:00
Qing Li
8eca593c5a This checkin addresses a couple of issues:
1. The "route" command allows route insertion through the interface-direct
   option "-iface". During if_attach(), an sockaddr_dl{} entry is created
   for the interface and is part of the interface address list. This
   sockaddr_dl{} entry describes the interface in detail. The "route"
   command selects this entry as the "gateway" object when the "-iface"
   option is present. The "arp" and "ndp" commands also interact with the
   kernel through the routing socket when adding and removing static L2
   entries. The static L2 information is also provided through the
   "gateway" object with an AF_LINK family type, similar to what is
   provided by the "route" command. In order to differentiate between
   these two types of operations, a RTF_LLDATA flag is introduced. This
   flag is set by the "arp" and "ndp" commands when issuing the add and
   delete commands. This flag is also set in each L2 entry returned by the
   kernel. The "arp" and "ndp" command follows a convention where a RTM_GET
   is issued first followed by a RTM_ADD/DELETE. This RTM_GET request fills
   in the fields for a "rtm" object, which is reinjected into the kernel by
   a subsequent RTM_ADD/DELETE command. The entry returend from RTM_GET
   is a prefix route, so the RTF_LLDATA flag must be specified when issuing
   the RTM_ADD/DELETE messages.

2. Enforce the convention that NET_RT_FLAGS with a 0 w_arg is the
   specification for retrieving L2 information. Also optimized the
   code logic.

Reviewed by:   julian
2008-12-26 19:45:24 +00:00
Qing Li
ebf1c74403 Similar to the INET case, do not destroy the nd6 entries for
interface addresses until those addresses are removed. I already
made the patch in INET but forgot to bring the code over for
INET6.
2008-12-22 07:11:15 +00:00
Qing Li
f16e1269b4 A couple of files were not meant to be committed. 2008-12-17 10:19:53 +00:00
Qing Li
bbd8aebaba in6_clsroute() was applied to prefix routes causing some
of them to expire. in6_clsroute() was only applied to
cloned routes that are no longer applicable after the
arp-v2 commit.
2008-12-17 10:03:49 +00:00
Kip Macy
688d079b2d check return from lla_lookup against NULL not zero 2008-12-16 02:30:42 +00:00
Kip Macy
fbc2ca1bef unlock and destroy an llentry's lock before freeing
Found by: sam
2008-12-16 00:20:49 +00:00
Qing Li
6e6b3f7cbc This main goals of this project are:
1. separating L2 tables (ARP, NDP) from the L3 routing tables
2. removing as much locking dependencies among these layers as
   possible to allow for some parallelism in the search operations
3. simplify the logic in the routing code,

The most notable end result is the obsolescent of the route
cloning (RTF_CLONING) concept, which translated into code reduction
in both IPv4 ARP and IPv6 NDP related modules, and size reduction in
struct rtentry{}. The change in design obsoletes the semantics of
RTF_CLONING, RTF_WASCLONE and RTF_LLINFO routing flags. The userland
applications such as "arp" and "ndp" have been modified to reflect
those changes. The output from "netstat -r" shows only the routing
entries.

Quite a few developers have contributed to this project in the
past: Glebius Smirnoff, Luigi Rizzo, Alessandro Cerri, and
Andre Oppermann. And most recently:

- Kip Macy revised the locking code completely, thus completing
  the last piece of the puzzle, Kip has also been conducting
  active functional testing
- Sam Leffler has helped me improving/refactoring the code, and
  provided valuable reviews
- Julian Elischer setup the perforce tree for me and has helped
  me maintaining that branch before the svn conversion
2008-12-15 06:10:57 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
4b79449e2f Rather than using hidden includes (with cicular dependencies),
directly include only the header files needed. This reduces the
unneeded spamming of various headers into lots of files.

For now, this leaves us with very few modules including vnet.h
and thus needing to depend on opt_route.h.

Reviewed by:	brooks, gnn, des, zec, imp
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2008-12-02 21:37:28 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
1ede983cc9 Retire the MALLOC and FREE macros. They are an abomination unto style(9).
MFC after:	3 months
2008-10-23 15:53:51 +00:00
Marko Zec
8b615593fc Step 1.5 of importing the network stack virtualization infrastructure
from the vimage project, as per plan established at devsummit 08/08:
http://wiki.freebsd.org/Image/Notes200808DevSummit

Introduce INIT_VNET_*() initializer macros, VNET_FOREACH() iterator
macros, and CURVNET_SET() context setting macros, all currently
resolving to NOPs.

Prepare for virtualization of selected SYSCTL objects by introducing a
family of SYSCTL_V_*() macros, currently resolving to their global
counterparts, i.e. SYSCTL_V_INT() == SYSCTL_INT().

Move selected #defines from sys/sys/vimage.h to newly introduced header
files specific to virtualized subsystems (sys/net/vnet.h,
sys/netinet/vinet.h etc.).

All the changes are verified to have zero functional impact at this
point in time by doing MD5 comparision between pre- and post-change
object files(*).

(*) netipsec/keysock.c did not validate depending on compile time options.

Implemented by:	julian, bz, brooks, zec
Reviewed by:	julian, bz, brooks, kris, rwatson, ...
Approved by:	julian (mentor)
Obtained from:	//depot/projects/vimage-commit2/...
X-MFC after:	never
Sponsored by:	NLnet Foundation, The FreeBSD Foundation
2008-10-02 15:37:58 +00:00
Julian Elischer
5ed3800e41 Fix some of the formatting fixes.. It's amazing how some thing stand out
in a commit message.
2008-08-20 01:24:55 +00:00
Julian Elischer
ac957cd271 A bunch of formatting fixes brough to light by, or created by the Vimage commit
a few days ago.
2008-08-20 01:05:56 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
603724d3ab Commit step 1 of the vimage project, (network stack)
virtualization work done by Marko Zec (zec@).

This is the first in a series of commits over the course
of the next few weeks.

Mark all uses of global variables to be virtualized
with a V_ prefix.
Use macros to map them back to their global names for
now, so this is a NOP change only.

We hope to have caught at least 85-90% of what is needed
so we do not invalidate a lot of outstanding patches again.

Obtained from:	//depot/projects/vimage-commit2/...
Reviewed by:	brooks, des, ed, mav, julian,
		jamie, kris, rwatson, zec, ...
		(various people I forgot, different versions)
		md5 (with a bit of help)
Sponsored by:	NLnet Foundation, The FreeBSD Foundation
X-MFC after:	never
V_Commit_Message_Reviewed_By:	more people than the patch
2008-08-17 23:27:27 +00:00
Robert Watson
4f7d1876d5 Introduce a new lock, hostname_mtx, and use it to synchronize access
to global hostname and domainname variables.  Where necessary, copy
to or from a stack-local buffer before performing copyin() or
copyout().  A few uses, such as in cd9660 and daemon_saver, remain
under-synchronized and will require further updates.

Correct a bug in which a failed copyin() of domainname would leave
domainname potentially corrupted.

MFC after:	3 weeks
2008-07-05 13:10:10 +00:00
Julian Elischer
8b07e49a00 Add code to allow the system to handle multiple routing tables.
This particular implementation is designed to be fully backwards compatible
and to be MFC-able to 7.x (and 6.x)

Currently the only protocol that can make use of the multiple tables is IPv4
Similar functionality exists in OpenBSD and Linux.

From my notes:

-----

  One thing where FreeBSD has been falling behind, and which by chance I
  have some time to work on is "policy based routing", which allows
  different
  packet streams to be routed by more than just the destination address.

  Constraints:
  ------------

  I want to make some form of this available in the 6.x tree
  (and by extension 7.x) , but FreeBSD in general needs it so I might as
  well do it in -current and back port the portions I need.

  One of the ways that this can be done is to have the ability to
  instantiate multiple kernel routing tables (which I will now
  refer to as "Forwarding Information Bases" or "FIBs" for political
  correctness reasons). Which FIB a particular packet uses to make
  the next hop decision can be decided by a number of mechanisms.
  The policies these mechanisms implement are the "Policies" referred
  to in "Policy based routing".

  One of the constraints I have if I try to back port this work to
  6.x is that it must be implemented as a EXTENSION to the existing
  ABIs in 6.x so that third party applications do not need to be
  recompiled in timespan of the branch.

  This first version will not have some of the bells and whistles that
  will come with later versions. It will, for example, be limited to 16
  tables in the first commit.
  Implementation method, Compatible version. (part 1)
  -------------------------------
  For this reason I have implemented a "sufficient subset" of a
  multiple routing table solution in Perforce, and back-ported it
  to 6.x. (also in Perforce though not  always caught up with what I
  have done in -current/P4). The subset allows a number of FIBs
  to be defined at compile time (8 is sufficient for my purposes in 6.x)
  and implements the changes needed to allow IPV4 to use them. I have not
  done the changes for ipv6 simply because I do not need it, and I do not
  have enough knowledge of ipv6 (e.g. neighbor discovery) needed to do it.

  Other protocol families are left untouched and should there be
  users with proprietary protocol families, they should continue to work
  and be oblivious to the existence of the extra FIBs.

  To understand how this is done, one must know that the current FIB
  code starts everything off with a single dimensional array of
  pointers to FIB head structures (One per protocol family), each of
  which in turn points to the trie of routes available to that family.

  The basic change in the ABI compatible version of the change is to
  extent that array to be a 2 dimensional array, so that
  instead of protocol family X looking at rt_tables[X] for the
  table it needs, it looks at rt_tables[Y][X] when for all
  protocol families except ipv4 Y is always 0.
  Code that is unaware of the change always just sees the first row
  of the table, which of course looks just like the one dimensional
  array that existed before.

  The entry points rtrequest(), rtalloc(), rtalloc1(), rtalloc_ign()
  are all maintained, but refer only to the first row of the array,
  so that existing callers in proprietary protocols can continue to
  do the "right thing".
  Some new entry points are added, for the exclusive use of ipv4 code
  called in_rtrequest(), in_rtalloc(), in_rtalloc1() and in_rtalloc_ign(),
  which have an extra argument which refers the code to the correct row.

  In addition, there are some new entry points (currently called
  rtalloc_fib() and friends) that check the Address family being
  looked up and call either rtalloc() (and friends) if the protocol
  is not IPv4 forcing the action to row 0 or to the appropriate row
  if it IS IPv4 (and that info is available). These are for calling
  from code that is not specific to any particular protocol. The way
  these are implemented would change in the non ABI preserving code
  to be added later.

  One feature of the first version of the code is that for ipv4,
  the interface routes show up automatically on all the FIBs, so
  that no matter what FIB you select you always have the basic
  direct attached hosts available to you. (rtinit() does this
  automatically).

  You CAN delete an interface route from one FIB should you want
  to but by default it's there. ARP information is also available
  in each FIB. It's assumed that the same machine would have the
  same MAC address, regardless of which FIB you are using to get
  to it.

  This brings us as to how the correct FIB is selected for an outgoing
  IPV4 packet.

  Firstly, all packets have a FIB associated with them. if nothing
  has been done to change it, it will be FIB 0. The FIB is changed
  in the following ways.

  Packets fall into one of a number of classes.

  1/ locally generated packets, coming from a socket/PCB.
     Such packets select a FIB from a number associated with the
     socket/PCB. This in turn is inherited from the process,
     but can be changed by a socket option. The process in turn
     inherits it on fork. I have written a utility call setfib
     that acts a bit like nice..

         setfib -3 ping target.example.com # will use fib 3 for ping.

     It is an obvious extension to make it a property of a jail
     but I have not done so. It can be achieved by combining the setfib and
     jail commands.

  2/ packets received on an interface for forwarding.
     By default these packets would use table 0,
     (or possibly a number settable in a sysctl(not yet)).
     but prior to routing the firewall can inspect them (see below).
     (possibly in the future you may be able to associate a FIB
     with packets received on an interface..  An ifconfig arg, but not yet.)

  3/ packets inspected by a packet classifier, which can arbitrarily
     associate a fib with it on a packet by packet basis.
     A fib assigned to a packet by a packet classifier
     (such as ipfw) would over-ride a fib associated by
     a more default source. (such as cases 1 or 2).

  4/ a tcp listen socket associated with a fib will generate
     accept sockets that are associated with that same fib.

  5/ Packets generated in response to some other packet (e.g. reset
     or icmp packets). These should use the FIB associated with the
     packet being reponded to.

  6/ Packets generated during encapsulation.
     gif, tun and other tunnel interfaces will encapsulate using the FIB
     that was in effect withthe proces that set up the tunnel.
     thus setfib 1 ifconfig gif0 [tunnel instructions]
     will set the fib for the tunnel to use to be fib 1.

  Routing messages would be associated with their
  process, and thus select one FIB or another.
  messages from the kernel would be associated with the fib they
  refer to and would only be received by a routing socket associated
  with that fib. (not yet implemented)

  In addition Netstat has been edited to be able to cope with the
  fact that the array is now 2 dimensional. (It looks in system
  memory using libkvm (!)). Old versions of netstat see only the first FIB.

  In addition two sysctls are added to give:
  a) the number of FIBs compiled in (active)
  b) the default FIB of the calling process.

  Early testing experience:
  -------------------------

  Basically our (IronPort's) appliance does this functionality already
  using ipfw fwd but that method has some drawbacks.

  For example,
  It can't fully simulate a routing table because it can't influence the
  socket's choice of local address when a connect() is done.

  Testing during the generating of these changes has been
  remarkably smooth so far. Multiple tables have co-existed
  with no notable side effects, and packets have been routes
  accordingly.

  ipfw has grown 2 new keywords:

  setfib N ip from anay to any
  count ip from any to any fib N

  In pf there seems to be a requirement to be able to give symbolic names to the
  fibs but I do not have that capacity. I am not sure if it is required.

  SCTP has interestingly enough built in support for this, called VRFs
  in Cisco parlance. it will be interesting to see how that handles it
  when it suddenly actually does something.

  Where to next:
  --------------------

  After committing the ABI compatible version and MFCing it, I'd
  like to proceed in a forward direction in -current. this will
  result in some roto-tilling in the routing code.

  Firstly: the current code's idea of having a separate tree per
  protocol family, all of the same format, and pointed to by the
  1 dimensional array is a bit silly. Especially when one considers that
  there is code that makes assumptions about every protocol having the
  same internal structures there. Some protocols don't WANT that
  sort of structure. (for example the whole idea of a netmask is foreign
  to appletalk). This needs to be made opaque to the external code.

  My suggested first change is to add routing method pointers to the
  'domain' structure, along with information pointing the data.
  instead of having an array of pointers to uniform structures,
  there would be an array pointing to the 'domain' structures
  for each protocol address domain (protocol family),
  and the methods this reached would be called. The methods would have
  an argument that gives FIB number, but the protocol would be free
  to ignore it.

  When the ABI can be changed it raises the possibilty of the
  addition of a fib entry into the "struct route". Currently,
  the structure contains the sockaddr of the desination, and the resulting
  fib entry. To make this work fully, one could add a fib number
  so that given an address and a fib, one can find the third element, the
  fib entry.

  Interaction with the ARP layer/ LL layer would need to be
  revisited as well. Qing Li has been working on this already.

  This work was sponsored by Ironport Systems/Cisco

Reviewed by:    several including rwatson, bz and mlair (parts each)
Obtained from:  Ironport systems/Cisco
2008-05-09 23:03:00 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
79ba395267 Replace the last susers calls in netinet6/ with privilege checks.
Introduce a new privilege allowing to set certain IP header options
(hop-by-hop, routing headers).

Leave a few comments to be addressed later.

Reviewed by:	rwatson (older version, before addressing his comments)
2008-01-24 08:25:59 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
9233d8f3ad un-__P() 2008-01-08 19:08:58 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
b48287a32a Clean up VCS Ids. 2007-12-10 16:03:40 +00:00
Julian Elischer
dbec798a76 Remove more dup'd code
MFC After: 1 week
2007-12-06 22:48:24 +00:00
Julian Elischer
90b3552e6e remove duped code
Reviewed By: gnn
MRC after: 1 week
2007-12-06 22:44:24 +00:00
Xin LI
2a463222be Space cleanup
Approved by:	re (rwatson)
2007-07-05 16:29:40 +00:00
Xin LI
1272577e22 ANSIfy[1] plus some style cleanup nearby.
Discussed with:	gnn, rwatson
Submitted by:	Karl Sj?dahl - dunceor <dunceor gmail com> [1]
Approved by:	re (rwatson)
2007-07-05 16:23:49 +00:00
JINMEI Tatuya
09a52a5532 fixed memory leak for IPv6 multicast membership information associated
with interface addresses.

Approved by:	gnn (mentor)
MFC after:	1 week
2007-06-02 08:02:36 +00:00
JINMEI Tatuya
99124467fc simplified the fix in rev. 1.69 by replacing RT_REMREF+RT_UNLOCK with
RTFREE_LOCKED.

Approved by:	gnn (mentor)
2007-06-02 07:27:02 +00:00
JINMEI Tatuya
6abdc89958 do not directly call rtfree() to meet an assumption in the callee.
(this fix suppresses a warning message appearing in the boot time on
IPv6-enabled systems)

Approved by:	gnn (mentor)
2007-05-25 06:44:00 +00:00
Bruce M Simpson
6be2e366d6 Make IPv6 multicast forwarding dynamically loadable from a GENERIC kernel.
It is built in the same module as IPv4 multicast forwarding, i.e. ip_mroute.ko,
if and only if IPv6 support is enabled for loadable modules.
Export IPv6 forwarding structs to userland netstat(1) via sysctl(9).
2007-02-24 11:38:47 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
e521ae0c64 In ip6_sprintf print the addresses in a more common/readable
format eliminating leading zeros like in :0001 -> :1.

Reviewed by:	mlaier
2006-12-16 14:15:31 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
1d54aa3ba9 MFp4: 92972, 98913 + one more change
In ip6_sprintf no longer use and return one of eight static buffers
for printing/logging ipv6 addresses.
The caller now has to hand in a sufficiently large buffer as first
argument.
2006-12-12 12:17:58 +00:00
Robert Watson
acd3428b7d Sweep kernel replacing suser(9) calls with priv(9) calls, assigning
specific privilege names to a broad range of privileges.  These may
require some future tweaking.

Sponsored by:           nCircle Network Security, Inc.
Obtained from:          TrustedBSD Project
Discussed on:           arch@
Reviewed (at least in part) by: mlaier, jmg, pjd, bde, ceri,
                        Alex Lyashkov <umka at sevcity dot net>,
                        Skip Ford <skip dot ford at verizon dot net>,
                        Antoine Brodin <antoine dot brodin at laposte dot net>
2006-11-06 13:42:10 +00:00
SUZUKI Shinsuke
831c32014e fixed a bug that IPv6 packets arriving to stf are not accepted.
(a degrade introduced in in6.c Rev 1.61)

PR: kern/103415
Submitted by: JINMEI Tatuya
MFC after: 1 week
2006-09-22 01:42:22 +00:00
Brooks Davis
43bc7a9c62 With exception of the if_name() macro, all definitions in net_osdep.h
were unused or already in if_var.h so add if_name() to if_var.h and
remove net_osdep.h along with all references to it.

Longer term we may want to kill off if_name() entierly since all modern
BSDs have if_xname variables rendering it unnecessicary.
2006-08-04 21:27:40 +00:00
Yaroslav Tykhiy
4b97d7affd There is a consensus that ifaddr.ifa_addr should never be NULL,
except in places dealing with ifaddr creation or destruction; and
in such special places incomplete ifaddrs should never be linked
to system-wide data structures.  Therefore we can eliminate all the
superfluous checks for "ifa->ifa_addr != NULL" and get ready
to the system crashing honestly instead of masking possible bugs.

Suggested by:	glebius, jhb, ru
2006-06-29 19:22:05 +00:00
George V. Neville-Neil
a59af512d4 Fix spurious warnings from neighbor discovery when working with IPv6 over
point to point tunnels (gif).

PR:		93220
Submitted by:	Jinmei Tatuya
MFC after:	1 week
2006-06-08 00:31:17 +00:00
George V. Neville-Neil
f2b1bd14dc Fix for an inappropriate bzero of the ICMPv6 stats. The code was zero'ing the wrong structure member but setting the correct one.
Submitted by:	James dot Juran at baesystems dot com
Reviewed by:	gnn
MFC after:	1 week
2006-02-08 07:16:46 +00:00
SUZUKI Shinsuke
797df30d75 statically configured IPv6 address is properly added/deleted now
Obtained from: KAME
Reported in: freebsd-net@freebsd
MFC after: 1 day
2005-10-31 23:06:04 +00:00
SUZUKI Shinsuke
36dc24e61e fixed a compilation failure on amd64/sparc64/ia64
Submitted by: max
MFC after: 2 month
2005-10-22 05:07:16 +00:00
SUZUKI Shinsuke
743eee666f sync with KAME regarding NDP
- introduced fine-grain-timer to manage ND-caches and IPv6 Multicast-Listeners
- supports Router-Preference <draft-ietf-ipv6-router-selection-07.txt>
- better prefix lifetime management
- more spec-comformant DAD advertisement
- updated RFC/internet-draft revisions

Obtained from: KAME
Reviewed by: ume, gnn
MFC after: 2 month
2005-10-21 16:23:01 +00:00
SUZUKI Shinsuke
b9204379a1 added an ioctl option in kernel so that ndp/rtadvd can change some NDP-related kernel variables based on their configurations (RFC2461 p.43 6.2.1 mandates this for IPv6 routers)
Obtained from: KAME
Reviewd by: ume, gnn
MFC after: 2 weeks
2005-10-19 15:05:42 +00:00
SUZUKI Shinsuke
2ce62dce17 sync with KAME in the following points:
- fixed typos
- improved some comment descriptions
- use NULL, instead of 0, to denote a NULL pointer
- avoid embedding a magic number in the code
- use nd6log() instead of log() to record NDP-specific logs
- nuked an unnecessay white space

Obtained from: KAME
MFC after:  1 day
2005-10-19 10:09:19 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
7ba26d99d8 IPv6 was improperly defining its malloc type the same as IPv4 (M_IPMADDR,
M_IPMOPTS, M_MRTABLE).  Thus we had conflicting instantiations.
Create an IPv6-specific type to overcome this.
2005-09-07 10:11:49 +00:00
Robert Watson
13f4c340ae Propagate rename of IFF_OACTIVE and IFF_RUNNING to IFF_DRV_OACTIVE and
IFF_DRV_RUNNING, as well as the move from ifnet.if_flags to
ifnet.if_drv_flags.  Device drivers are now responsible for
synchronizing access to these flags, as they are in if_drv_flags.  This
helps prevent races between the network stack and device driver in
maintaining the interface flags field.

Many __FreeBSD__ and __FreeBSD_version checks maintained and continued;
some less so.

Reviewed by:	pjd, bz
MFC after:	7 days
2005-08-09 10:20:02 +00:00
Hajimu UMEMOTO
a1f7e5f8ee scope cleanup. with this change
- most of the kernel code will not care about the actual encoding of
  scope zone IDs and won't touch "s6_addr16[1]" directly.
- similarly, most of the kernel code will not care about link-local
  scoped addresses as a special case.
- scope boundary check will be stricter.  For example, the current
  *BSD code allows a packet with src=::1 and dst=(some global IPv6
  address) to be sent outside of the node, if the application do:
    s = socket(AF_INET6);
    bind(s, "::1");
    sendto(s, some_global_IPv6_addr);
  This is clearly wrong, since ::1 is only meaningful within a single
  node, but the current implementation of the *BSD kernel cannot
  reject this attempt.

Submitted by:	JINMEI Tatuya <jinmei__at__isl.rdc.toshiba.co.jp>
Obtained from:	KAME
2005-07-25 12:31:43 +00:00
Ian Dowse
ba5da2a06f Use IFF_LOCKGIANT/IFF_UNLOCKGIANT around calls to the interface
if_ioctl routine. This should fix a number of code paths through
soo_ioctl() that could call into Giant-locked network drivers without
first acquiring Giant.
2005-06-02 00:04:08 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
a97719482d Add CARP (Common Address Redundancy Protocol), which allows multiple
hosts to share an IP address, providing high availability and load
balancing.

Original work on CARP done by Michael Shalayeff, with many
additions by Marco Pfatschbacher and Ryan McBride.

FreeBSD port done solely by Max Laier.

Patch by:	mlaier
Obtained from:	OpenBSD (mickey, mcbride)
2005-02-22 13:04:05 +00:00