chunk, enable UDP encapsulation for all those addresses.
This helps clients using a userland stack to support multihoming if
they are not behind a NAT.
MFC after: 1 week
This is currently only a code change without any functional
change. But this allows to set the remote encapsulation port
in a more detailed way, which will be provided in a follow-up
commit.
MFC after: 1 week
adds the new I-Data (Interleaved Data) message. This allows a user
to be able to have complete freedom from Head Of Line blocking that
was previously there due to the in-ability to send multiple large
messages without the TSN's being in sequence. The code as been
tested with Michaels various packet drill scripts as well as
inter-networking between the IETF's location in Argentina and Germany.
* When processing a cookie, use the number of
streams announced in the INIT-ACK.
* When sending an INIT-ACK for an existing
association, use the value from the association,
not from the end-point.
MFC after: 1 week
o Introduce a notion of "not ready" mbufs in socket buffers. These
mbufs are now being populated by some I/O in background and are
referenced outside. This forces following implications:
- An mbuf which is "not ready" can't be taken out of the buffer.
- An mbuf that is behind a "not ready" in the queue neither.
- If sockbet buffer is flushed, then "not ready" mbufs shouln't be
freed.
o In struct sockbuf the sb_cc field is split into sb_ccc and sb_acc.
The sb_ccc stands for ""claimed character count", or "committed
character count". And the sb_acc is "available character count".
Consumers of socket buffer API shouldn't already access them directly,
but use sbused() and sbavail() respectively.
o Not ready mbufs are marked with M_NOTREADY, and ready but blocked ones
with M_BLOCKED.
o New field sb_fnrdy points to the first not ready mbuf, to avoid linear
search.
o New function sbready() is provided to activate certain amount of mbufs
in a socket buffer.
A special note on SCTP:
SCTP has its own sockbufs. Unfortunately, FreeBSD stack doesn't yet
allow protocol specific sockbufs. Thus, SCTP does some hacks to make
itself compatible with FreeBSD: it manages sockbufs on its own, but keeps
sb_cc updated to inform the stack of amount of data in them. The new
notion of "not ready" data isn't supported by SCTP. Instead, only a
mechanical substitute is done: s/sb_cc/sb_ccc/.
A proper solution would be to take away struct sockbuf from struct
socket and allow protocols to implement their own socket buffers, like
SCTP already does. This was discussed with rrs@.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
This fixes a bug which resulted in a warning on the userland
stack, when compiled on Windows.
Thanks to Peter Kasting from Google for reporting the issue and
provinding a potential fix.
MFC after: 3 days
eliminiates some warnings when building in userland.
Thanks to Patrick Laimbock for reporting this issue.
Remove also some unnecessary casts.
There should be no functional change.
MFC after: 1 week
NRSACK extension. The default will still be off, since it
it not an RFC (yet).
Changing the sysctl name will be in a separate commit.
MFC after: 1 week
option for controlling ECN on future associations and get the
status on current associations.
A simialar pattern will be used for controlling SCTP extensions in
upcoming commits.
a source address was selected and cached, but it was not
stored that is was cached. This resulted in selecting
different source addresses for the INIT-ACK and COOKIE-ACK
when possible.
Thanks to Niu Zhixiong for reporting the issue.
MFC after: 1 week
reporting IP-addresses to the peer during the handshake, adding
addresses to the host, reporting the addresses via the sysctl
interface (used by netstat, for example) and reporting the
addresses to the application via socket options.
This issue was reported by Bernd Walter.
MFC after: 3 days
proprietary binary format.
* Add support for a diagnostic information error cause.
The code is sysctlable and the default is 0, which
means it is not sent.
This is joint work with rrs@.
MFC after: 1 week
http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/258221
I introduced a bug which initialized global locks
whenever the SCTP stack initialized. This was fixed in
http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/258574
by rodrigc@. He just initialized the locks for
the default vnet. This fix reverts to the old
behaviour before r258221, which explicitly makes
sure it is only called once, because this works also on
other platforms.
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC with: r258574.
In r208160, sctp_it_ctl was made a global variable, across all VNETs.
However, sctp_init() is called for every VNET that is created. This results
in the same global mutexes which are part of sctp_it_ctl being initialized. This can result
in crashes if many jails are created.
To reproduce the problem:
(1) Take a GENERIC kernel config, and add options for: VIMAGE, WITNESS,
INVARIANTS.
(2) Run this command in a loop:
jail -l -u root -c path=/ name=foo persist vnet && jexec foo ifconfig lo0 127.0.0.1/8 && jail -r foo
(see http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2010-November/021280.html )
Witness will warn about the same mutex being initialized.
Fix the problem by only initializing these mutexes in the default VNET.