Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
fabient
d56170701e Optimisation in IPSEC(4):
- Remove contention on ISR during the crypto operation by using rwlock(9).
- Remove a second lookup of the SA in the callback.

Gain on 6 cores CPU with SHA1/AES128 can be up to 30%.

Reviewed by:	vanhu
MFC after:	1 month
2011-03-31 15:23:32 +00:00
vanhu
16c1346b9a Added support for NAT-Traversal (RFC 3948) in IPsec stack.
Thanks to (no special order) Emmanuel Dreyfus (manu@netbsd.org), Larry
Baird (lab@gta.com), gnn, bz, and other FreeBSD devs, Julien Vanherzeele
(julien.vanherzeele@netasq.com, for years of bug reporting), the PFSense
team, and all people who used / tried the NAT-T patch for years and
reported bugs, patches, etc...

X-MFC: never

Reviewed by:	bz
Approved by:	gnn(mentor)
Obtained from:	NETASQ
2009-06-12 15:44:35 +00:00
zec
8b1f38241a Introduce an infrastructure for dismantling vnet instances.
Vnet modules and protocol domains may now register destructor
functions to clean up and release per-module state.  The destructor
mechanisms can be triggered by invoking "vimage -d", or a future
equivalent command which will be provided via the new jail framework.

While this patch introduces numerous placeholder destructor functions,
many of those are currently incomplete, thus leaking memory or (even
worse) failing to stop all running timers.  Many of such issues are
already known and will be incrementaly fixed over the next weeks in
smaller incremental commits.

Apart from introducing new fields in structs ifnet, domain, protosw
and vnet_net, which requires the kernel and modules to be rebuilt, this
change should have no impact on nooptions VIMAGE builds, since vnet
destructors can only be called in VIMAGE kernels.  Moreover,
destructor functions should be in general compiled in only in
options VIMAGE builds, except for kernel modules which can be safely
kldunloaded at run time.

Bump __FreeBSD_version to 800097.
Reviewed by:	bz, julian
Approved by:	rwatson, kib (re), julian (mentor)
2009-06-08 17:15:40 +00:00
bz
a12cc82f1a key_gettunnel() has been unsued with FAST_IPSEC (now IPSEC).
KAME had explicit checks at one point using it, so just hide it behind
#if 0 for now until we are sure if we can completely dump it or not.

MFC after:	1 month
2009-04-27 21:04:16 +00:00
imp
a50ffc2912 /* -> /*- for license, minor formatting changes 2005-01-07 01:45:51 +00:00
sam
3234aae2af Add missing locking for secpolicy refcnt manipulations.
Submitted by:	Roselyn Lee
2004-09-30 01:08:02 +00:00
sam
7a8c89dde1 Locking and misc cleanups; most of which I've been running for >4 months:
o add locking
o strip irrelevant spl's
o split malloc types to better account for memory use
o remove unused IPSEC_NONBLOCK_ACQUIRE code
o remove dead code

Sponsored by:	FreeBSD Foundation
2003-09-01 05:35:55 +00:00
sam
f6bdcf8ff2 "Fast IPsec": this is an experimental IPsec implementation that is derived
from the KAME IPsec implementation, but with heavy borrowing and influence
of openbsd.  A key feature of this implementation is that it uses the kernel
crypto framework to do all crypto work so when h/w crypto support is present
IPsec operation is automatically accelerated.  Otherwise the protocol
implementations are rather differet while the SADB and policy management
code is very similar to KAME (for the moment).

Note that this implementation is enabled with a FAST_IPSEC option.  With this
you get all protocols; i.e. there is no FAST_IPSEC_ESP option.

FAST_IPSEC and IPSEC are mutually exclusive; you cannot build both into a
single system.

This software is well tested with IPv4 but should be considered very
experimental (i.e. do not deploy in production environments).  This software
does NOT currently support IPv6.  In fact do not configure FAST_IPSEC and
INET6 in the same system.

Obtained from:	KAME + openbsd
Supported by:	Vernier Networks
2002-10-16 02:10:08 +00:00