0db3d5551a
In kni_allocate_mbufs(), we alloc mbuf for alloc_q as this code. allocq_free = (kni->alloc_q->read - kni->alloc_q->write - 1) \ & (MAX_MBUF_BURST_NUM - 1); The value of allocq_free maybe zero, for example : The ring size is 1024. After init, write = read = 0. Then we fill kni->alloc_q to full. At this time, write = 1023, read = 0. Then the kernel send 32 packets to userspace. At this time, write = 1023, read = 32. And then the userspace receive this 32 packets. Then fill the kni->alloc_q, (32 - 1023 - 1) & 31 = 0, fill nothing. ... Then the kernel send 32 packets to userspace. At this time, write = 1023, read = 992. And then the userspace receive this 32 packets. Then fill the kni->alloc_q, (992 - 1023 - 1) & 31 = 0, fill nothing. Then the kernel send 32 packets to userspace. The kni->alloc_q only has 31 mbufs and will drop one packet. Absolutely, this is a special scene. Normally, it will fill some mbufs everytime, but may not enough for the kernel to use. In this patch, we always keep the kni->alloc_q to full for the kernel to use. Fixes: 49da4e82cf94 ("kni: allocate no more mbuf than empty slots in queue") Cc: stable@dpdk.org Signed-off-by: Cheng Liu <liucheng11@huawei.com> Signed-off-by: Yunjian Wang <wangyunjian@huawei.com> Acked-by: Ferruh Yigit <ferruh.yigit@intel.com> Acked-by: Ajit Khaparde <ajit.khaparde@broadcom.com>