additions.
* Add some new tracing events to aid in debugging.
* Add in a debugging mode to drop transmit and received frames, specifically
to test whether seeing or hearing heartbeats correctly cause LACP to
drop the port.
* Add in (and make default) a strict LACP mode, which requires the
heartbeat on a port to be heard before it's used. Sometimes vendor ports
will hang but the link layer stays up, resulting in hung traffic.
* Add logging the number of link status flaps, again to aid in debugging
badly behaving switch ports.
* Calculate the lagg interface port speed as the multiple of the
configured ports, rather than the largest.
Obtained from: Netflix
MFC after: 2 weeks
is initialized with !ND6_IFF_AUTO_LINKLOCAL && !ND6_IFF_ACCEPT_RTADV
regardless of net.inet6.ip6.accept_rtadv and net.inet6.ip6.auto_linklocal.
To configure an autoconfigured link-local address (RFC 4862), the
following rc.conf(5) configuration can be used:
ifconfig_bridge0_ipv6="inet6 auto_linklocal"
- if_bridge(4) now removes IPv6 addresses on a member interface to be
added when the parent interface or one of the existing member
interfaces has an IPv6 address. if_bridge(4) merges each link-local
scope zone which the member interfaces form respectively, so it causes
address scope violation. Removal of the IPv6 addresses prevents it.
- if_lagg(4) now removes IPv6 addresses on a member interfaces
unconditionally.
- Set reasonable flags to non-IPv6-capable interfaces. [*]
Submitted by: rpaulo [*]
MFC after: 1 week
inactive when upper layer tries to transmit packet. This
gives better feedback and meaningful errors for applications.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: thompsa
The lagg(4) is often used to bond high speed links, so basic per-packet +=
on statistics cause cache misses and statistics loss.
Perfect solution would be to convert ifnet(9) to counters(9), but this
requires much more work, and unfortunately ABI change, so temporarily
patch lagg(4) manually.
We store counters in the softc, and once per second push their values
to legacy ifnet counters.
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
now use function calls:
if_clone_simple()
if_clone_advanced()
to initialize a cloner, instead of macros that initialize if_clone
structure.
Discussed with: brooks, bz, 1 year ago
Currently, 'ifconfig laggX down' does not remove members from this
lagg(4) interface. So, 'service netif stop laggX' followed by
'service netif start laggX' will choke, because "stop" will leave
interfaces attached to the laggX and ifconfig from the "start" will
refuse to add already-existing interfaces.
The real-world case is when I am bundling together my Ethernet and
WiFi interfaces and using multiple profiles for accessing network in
different places: system being booted up with one profile, but later
this profile being exchanged to another one, followed by 'service
netif restart' will not add WiFi interface back to the lagg: the
"stop" action from 'service netif restart' will shut down my main WiFi
interface, so wlan0 that exists in the lagg0 will be destroyed and
purged from lagg0; the "start" action will try to re-add both
interfaces, but since Ethernet one is already in lagg0, ifconfig will
refuse to add the wlan0 from WiFi interface.
Since adding the interface to the lagg(4) when it is already here
should be an idempotent action: we're really not changing anything,
so this fix doesn't change the semantics of interface addition.
Approved by: thompsa
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Lagg(4) restricts the type of packet that may be sent directly to a child
port, to avoid undesired output from accidental misconfiguration.
Previously only ETHERTYPE_PAE was permitted.
BPF writes to a lagg(4) child port are presumably intentional, so just
allow them, while still blocking other packets that should take the
aggregation path.
PR: kern/138620
Approved by: thompsa@
are discarded, this is an issue because lacp drops the lock which may allow
network threads to access freed memory. Expand the lock coverage so the
detach/attach happen atomically.
Submitted by: Andrew Boyer (earlier version)
the traffic flow, this may not be the case giving poor traffic distribution.
Add a sysctl which allows us to fall back to our own flow hash code.
PR: kern/164901
Submitted by: Eugene Grosbein
MFC after: 1 week
if_alloctype was used to store the origional interface type. Take
advantage of this change by removing all existing uses of if_free_type()
in favor of if_free().
MFC after: 1 Month
The SYSCTL_NODE macro defines a list that stores all child-elements of
that node. If there's no SYSCTL_DECL macro anywhere else, there's no
reason why it shouldn't be static.
adding appropriate #ifdefs. For module builds the framework needs
adjustments for at least carp.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
address on an interface has changed. This lets stacked interfaces such as
vlan(4) detect that their lower interface has changed and adjust things in
order to keep working. Previously this situation broke at least vlan(4) and
lagg(4) configurations.
The EVENTHANDLER_INVOKE call was not placed within if_setlladdr() due to the
risk of a loop.
PR: kern/142927
Submitted by: Nikolay Denev
belongs solely to the driver.
We don't lose any statistics with this change, because in a error
case the drop counter on the interface output queue is always incremented.
Reviewed by: thompsa
this means that it no longer grabs the lagg rwlock. Use two port table arrays
which list the active ports for Tx and switch between them with an atomic op.
Now the lagg rwlock is only exclusively locked for management (ioctls) and
queuing of lacp control frames isnt needed.
administratively down (!IFF_UP)
- Use the same parameters to lagg_link_active() to get the backup port as in
the output path, this didnt actually matter in practice as sc_primary is
always the first on the port list.
MFC after: 3 days
as up if at least one of its ports also has a link up. This fixes using
carp+lagg together and any other system that relies on linkstate events.
PR: kern/113956
MFC after: 3 days