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freebsd/sbin/ipfw/altq.c

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/*-
* Copyright (c) 2002-2003 Luigi Rizzo
* Copyright (c) 1996 Alex Nash, Paul Traina, Poul-Henning Kamp
* Copyright (c) 1994 Ugen J.S.Antsilevich
*
* Idea and grammar partially left from:
* Copyright (c) 1993 Daniel Boulet
*
* Redistribution and use in source forms, with and without modification,
* are permitted provided that this entire comment appears intact.
*
* Redistribution in binary form may occur without any restrictions.
* Obviously, it would be nice if you gave credit where credit is due
* but requiring it would be too onerous.
*
* This software is provided ``AS IS'' without any warranties of any kind.
*
* NEW command line interface for IP firewall facility
*
* $FreeBSD$
*
* altq interface
*/
Extended pf(4) ioctl interface and pfctl(8) to allow bandwidths of 2^32 bps or greater to be used. Prior to this, bandwidth parameters would simply wrap at the 2^32 boundary. The computations in the HFSC scheduler and token bucket regulator have been modified to operate correctly up to at least 100 Gbps. No other algorithms have been examined or modified for correct operation above 2^32 bps (some may have existing computation resolution or overflow issues at rates below that threshold). pfctl(8) will now limit non-HFSC bandwidth parameters to 2^32 - 1 before passing them to the kernel. The extensions to the pf(4) ioctl interface have been made in a backwards-compatible way by versioning affected data structures, supporting all versions in the kernel, and implementing macros that will cause existing code that consumes that interface to use version 0 without source modifications. If version 0 consumers of the interface are used against a new kernel that has had bandwidth parameters of 2^32 or greater configured by updated tools, such bandwidth parameters will be reported as 2^32 - 1 bps by those old consumers. All in-tree consumers of the pf(4) interface have been updated. To update out-of-tree consumers to the latest version of the interface, define PFIOC_USE_LATEST ahead of any includes and use the code of pfctl(8) as a guide for the ioctls of interest. PR: 211730 Reviewed by: jmallett, kp, loos MFC after: 2 weeks Relnotes: yes Sponsored by: RG Nets Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16782
2018-08-22 19:38:48 +00:00
#define PFIOC_USE_LATEST
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/sockio.h>
#include "ipfw2.h"
#include <err.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sysexits.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <net/if.h> /* IFNAMSIZ */
#include <net/pfvar.h>
Bring in the most recent version of ipfw and dummynet, developed and tested over the past two months in the ipfw3-head branch. This also happens to be the same code available in the Linux and Windows ports of ipfw and dummynet. The major enhancement is a completely restructured version of dummynet, with support for different packet scheduling algorithms (loadable at runtime), faster queue/pipe lookup, and a much cleaner internal architecture and kernel/userland ABI which simplifies future extensions. In addition to the existing schedulers (FIFO and WF2Q+), we include a Deficit Round Robin (DRR or RR for brevity) scheduler, and a new, very fast version of WF2Q+ called QFQ. Some test code is also present (in sys/netinet/ipfw/test) that lets you build and test schedulers in userland. Also, we have added a compatibility layer that understands requests from the RELENG_7 and RELENG_8 versions of the /sbin/ipfw binaries, and replies correctly (at least, it does its best; sometimes you just cannot tell who sent the request and how to answer). The compatibility layer should make it possible to MFC this code in a relatively short time. Some minor glitches (e.g. handling of ipfw set enable/disable, and a workaround for a bug in RELENG_7's /sbin/ipfw) will be fixed with separate commits. CREDITS: This work has been partly supported by the ONELAB2 project, and mostly developed by Riccardo Panicucci and myself. The code for the qfq scheduler is mostly from Fabio Checconi, and Marta Carbone and Francesco Magno have helped with testing, debugging and some bug fixes.
2010-03-02 17:40:48 +00:00
#include <netinet/in.h> /* in_addr */
#include <netinet/ip_fw.h>
/*
* Map between current altq queue id numbers and names.
*/
static TAILQ_HEAD(, pf_altq) altq_entries =
TAILQ_HEAD_INITIALIZER(altq_entries);
void
altq_set_enabled(int enabled)
{
int pffd;
pffd = open("/dev/pf", O_RDWR);
if (pffd == -1)
err(EX_UNAVAILABLE,
"altq support opening pf(4) control device");
if (enabled) {
if (ioctl(pffd, DIOCSTARTALTQ) != 0 && errno != EEXIST)
err(EX_UNAVAILABLE, "enabling altq");
} else {
if (ioctl(pffd, DIOCSTOPALTQ) != 0 && errno != ENOENT)
err(EX_UNAVAILABLE, "disabling altq");
}
close(pffd);
}
static void
altq_fetch(void)
{
struct pfioc_altq pfioc;
struct pf_altq *altq;
int pffd;
unsigned int mnr;
static int altq_fetched = 0;
if (altq_fetched)
return;
altq_fetched = 1;
pffd = open("/dev/pf", O_RDONLY);
if (pffd == -1) {
warn("altq support opening pf(4) control device");
return;
}
bzero(&pfioc, sizeof(pfioc));
Extended pf(4) ioctl interface and pfctl(8) to allow bandwidths of 2^32 bps or greater to be used. Prior to this, bandwidth parameters would simply wrap at the 2^32 boundary. The computations in the HFSC scheduler and token bucket regulator have been modified to operate correctly up to at least 100 Gbps. No other algorithms have been examined or modified for correct operation above 2^32 bps (some may have existing computation resolution or overflow issues at rates below that threshold). pfctl(8) will now limit non-HFSC bandwidth parameters to 2^32 - 1 before passing them to the kernel. The extensions to the pf(4) ioctl interface have been made in a backwards-compatible way by versioning affected data structures, supporting all versions in the kernel, and implementing macros that will cause existing code that consumes that interface to use version 0 without source modifications. If version 0 consumers of the interface are used against a new kernel that has had bandwidth parameters of 2^32 or greater configured by updated tools, such bandwidth parameters will be reported as 2^32 - 1 bps by those old consumers. All in-tree consumers of the pf(4) interface have been updated. To update out-of-tree consumers to the latest version of the interface, define PFIOC_USE_LATEST ahead of any includes and use the code of pfctl(8) as a guide for the ioctls of interest. PR: 211730 Reviewed by: jmallett, kp, loos MFC after: 2 weeks Relnotes: yes Sponsored by: RG Nets Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16782
2018-08-22 19:38:48 +00:00
pfioc.version = PFIOC_ALTQ_VERSION;
if (ioctl(pffd, DIOCGETALTQS, &pfioc) != 0) {
warn("altq support getting queue list");
close(pffd);
return;
}
mnr = pfioc.nr;
for (pfioc.nr = 0; pfioc.nr < mnr; pfioc.nr++) {
if (ioctl(pffd, DIOCGETALTQ, &pfioc) != 0) {
if (errno == EBUSY)
break;
warn("altq support getting queue list");
close(pffd);
return;
}
if (pfioc.altq.qid == 0)
continue;
altq = safe_calloc(1, sizeof(*altq));
*altq = pfioc.altq;
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&altq_entries, altq, entries);
}
close(pffd);
}
u_int32_t
altq_name_to_qid(const char *name)
{
struct pf_altq *altq;
altq_fetch();
TAILQ_FOREACH(altq, &altq_entries, entries)
if (strcmp(name, altq->qname) == 0)
break;
if (altq == NULL)
errx(EX_DATAERR, "altq has no queue named `%s'", name);
return altq->qid;
}
2009-03-05 08:01:19 +00:00
static const char *
altq_qid_to_name(u_int32_t qid)
{
struct pf_altq *altq;
altq_fetch();
TAILQ_FOREACH(altq, &altq_entries, entries)
if (qid == altq->qid)
break;
if (altq == NULL)
return NULL;
return altq->qname;
}
void
print_altq_cmd(struct buf_pr *bp, ipfw_insn_altq *altqptr)
{
if (altqptr) {
const char *qname;
qname = altq_qid_to_name(altqptr->qid);
if (qname == NULL)
bprintf(bp, " altq ?<%u>", altqptr->qid);
else
bprintf(bp, " altq %s", qname);
}
}