1
0
mirror of https://git.FreeBSD.org/src.git synced 2024-12-27 11:55:06 +00:00
Commit Graph

321 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Randall Stewart
1966e5b5a1 The proper fix for the delayed SCTP checksum is to
have the delayed function take an argument as to the offset
to the SCTP header. This allows it to work for V4 and V6.
This of course means changing all callers of the function
to either pass the header len, if they have it, or create
it (ip_hl << 2 or sizeof(ip6_hdr)).
PR:		144529
MFC after:	2 weeks
2010-03-12 22:58:52 +00:00
Kip Macy
d4121a02c0 - restructure flowtable to support ipv6
- add a name argument to flowtable_alloc for printing with ddb commands
- extend ddb commands to print destination address or 4-tuples
- don't parse ports in ulp header if FL_HASH_ALL is not passed
- add kern_flowtable_insert to enable more generic use of flowtable
  (e.g. system calls for adding entries)
- don't hash loopback addresses
- cleanup whitespace
- keep statistics per-cpu for per-cpu flowtables to avoid cache line contention
- add sysctls to accumulate stats and report aggregate

MFC after:	7 days
2010-03-12 05:03:26 +00:00
Qing Li
c7ea0aa648 One of the advantages of enabling ECMP (a.k.a RADIX_MPATH) is to
allow for connection load balancing across interfaces. Currently
the address alias handling method is colliding with the ECMP code.
For example, when two interfaces are configured on the same prefix,
only one prefix route is installed. So connection load balancing
among the available interfaces is not possible.

The other advantage of ECMP is for failover. The issue with the
current code, is that the interface link-state is not reflected
in the route entry. For example, if there are two interfaces on
the same prefix, the cable on one interface is unplugged, new and
existing connections should switch over to the other interface.
This is not done today and packets go into a black hole.

Also, there is a small bug in the kernel where deleting ECMP routes
in the userland will always return an error even though the command
is successfully executed.

MFC after:	5 days
2010-03-09 01:11:45 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
fc74d005d9 Make the compiler happy after r201125:
- + remove two unnecessary initializations in ip_output;
+ + remove one unnecessary initializations in ip_output;
2009-12-28 21:14:18 +00:00
Luigi Rizzo
ec396e61ed introduce a local variable rte acting as a cache of ro->ro_rt
within ip_output, achieving (in random order of importance):
- a reduction of the number of 'r's in the source code;
- improved legibility;
- a reduction of 64 bytes in the .text
2009-12-28 14:48:32 +00:00
Luigi Rizzo
ca8b83b0fa + remove an unused #define print_ip;
+ remove two unnecessary initializations in ip_output;
+ localize 'len';
+ introduce a temporary variable n to count the number of fragments,
  the compiler seems unable to identify a common subexpression
  (written 3 times, used twice);
+ document some assumptions on ip_len and ip_hl
2009-12-28 14:09:46 +00:00
Edward Tomasz Napierala
4f7418a09f Remove ifdefed out part of code, which seems to have originated a decade ago
in OpenBSD.  As it is now, there is no way for this to be useful, since IPsec
is free to forward packets via whatever interface it wants, so checking
capabilities of the interface passed from ip_output (fetched from the routing
table) serves no purpose.

Discussed with:	sam@
2009-11-09 19:53:34 +00:00
Julian Elischer
0b4b0b0fee Virtualize the pfil hooks so that different jails may chose different
packet filters. ALso allows ipfw to be enabled on on ejail and disabled
on another. In 8.0 it's a global setting.

Sitting aroung in tree waiting to commit for: 2 months
MFC after:	2 months
2009-10-11 05:59:43 +00:00
Qing Li
0437a93339 Do not try to free the rt_lle entry of the cached route in
ip_output() if the cached route was not initialized from the
flow-table. The rt_lle entry is invalid unless it has been
initialized through the flow-table.

Reviewed by:	kmacy, rwatson
MFC after:	immediately
2009-08-28 05:37:31 +00:00
Kip Macy
3ee42584f9 - change the interface to flowtable_lookup so that we don't rely on
the mbuf for obtaining the fib index
 - check that a cached flow corresponds to the same fib index as the
   packet for which we are doing the lookup
 - at interface detach time flush any flows referencing stale rtentrys
   associated with the interface that is going away (fixes reported
   panics)
 - reduce the time between cleans in case the cleaner is running at
   the time the eventhandler is called and the wakeup is missed less
   time will elapse before the eventhandler returns
 - separate per-vnet initialization from global initialization
   (pointed out by jeli@)

Reviewed by:	sam@
Approved by:	re@
2009-08-18 20:28:58 +00:00
Qing Li
3ef5e21d01 In function ip_output(), the cached route is flushed when there is a
mismatch between the cached entry and the intended destination. The
cached rtentry{} is flushed but the associated llentry{} is not. This
causes the wrong destination MAC address being used in the output
packets. The fix is to flush the llentry{} when rtentry{} is cleared.

Reviewed by:	kmacy, rwatson
Approved by:	re
2009-08-14 23:44:59 +00:00
Robert Watson
530c006014 Merge the remainder of kern_vimage.c and vimage.h into vnet.c and
vnet.h, we now use jails (rather than vimages) as the abstraction
for virtualization management, and what remained was specific to
virtual network stacks.  Minor cleanups are done in the process,
and comments updated to reflect these changes.

Reviewed by:	bz
Approved by:	re (vimage blanket)
2009-08-01 19:26:27 +00:00
Robert Watson
eddfbb763d Build on Jeff Roberson's linker-set based dynamic per-CPU allocator
(DPCPU), as suggested by Peter Wemm, and implement a new per-virtual
network stack memory allocator.  Modify vnet to use the allocator
instead of monolithic global container structures (vinet, ...).  This
change solves many binary compatibility problems associated with
VIMAGE, and restores ELF symbols for virtualized global variables.

Each virtualized global variable exists as a "reference copy", and also
once per virtual network stack.  Virtualized global variables are
tagged at compile-time, placing the in a special linker set, which is
loaded into a contiguous region of kernel memory.  Virtualized global
variables in the base kernel are linked as normal, but those in modules
are copied and relocated to a reserved portion of the kernel's vnet
region with the help of a the kernel linker.

Virtualized global variables exist in per-vnet memory set up when the
network stack instance is created, and are initialized statically from
the reference copy.  Run-time access occurs via an accessor macro, which
converts from the current vnet and requested symbol to a per-vnet
address.  When "options VIMAGE" is not compiled into the kernel, normal
global ELF symbols will be used instead and indirection is avoided.

This change restores static initialization for network stack global
variables, restores support for non-global symbols and types, eliminates
the need for many subsystem constructors, eliminates large per-subsystem
structures that caused many binary compatibility issues both for
monitoring applications (netstat) and kernel modules, removes the
per-function INIT_VNET_*() macros throughout the stack, eliminates the
need for vnet_symmap ksym(2) munging, and eliminates duplicate
definitions of virtualized globals under VIMAGE_GLOBALS.

Bump __FreeBSD_version and update UPDATING.

Portions submitted by:  bz
Reviewed by:            bz, zec
Discussed with:         gnn, jamie, jeff, jhb, julian, sam
Suggested by:           peter
Approved by:            re (kensmith)
2009-07-14 22:48:30 +00:00
Robert Watson
8c0fec805f Modify most routines returning 'struct ifaddr *' to return references
rather than pointers, requiring callers to properly dispose of those
references.  The following routines now return references:

  ifaddr_byindex
  ifa_ifwithaddr
  ifa_ifwithbroadaddr
  ifa_ifwithdstaddr
  ifa_ifwithnet
  ifaof_ifpforaddr
  ifa_ifwithroute
  ifa_ifwithroute_fib
  rt_getifa
  rt_getifa_fib
  IFP_TO_IA
  ip_rtaddr
  in6_ifawithifp
  in6ifa_ifpforlinklocal
  in6ifa_ifpwithaddr
  in6_ifadd
  carp_iamatch6
  ip6_getdstifaddr

Remove unused macro which didn't have required referencing:

  IFP_TO_IA6

This closes many small races in which changes to interface
or address lists while an ifaddr was in use could lead to use of freed
memory (etc).  In a few cases, add missing if_addr_list locking
required to safely acquire references.

Because of a lack of deep copying support, we accept a race in which
an in6_ifaddr pointed to by mbuf tags and extracted with
ip6_getdstifaddr() doesn't hold a reference while in transmit.  Once
we have mbuf tag deep copy support, this can be fixed.

Reviewed by:	bz
Obtained from:	Apple, Inc. (portions)
MFC after:	6 weeks (portions)
2009-06-23 20:19:09 +00:00
Marko Zec
fa057b15bd V_irtualize flowtable state.
This change should make options VIMAGE kernel builds usable again,
to some extent at least.

Note that the size of struct vnet_inet has changed, though in
accordance with one-bump-per-day policy we didn't update the
__FreeBSD_version number, given that it has already been touched
by r194640 a few hours ago.
Reviewed by:	bz
Approved by:	julian (mentor)
2009-06-22 21:19:24 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
53be8fca00 Move the kernel option FLOWTABLE chacking from the header file to the
actual implementation.
Remove the accessor functions for the compiled out case, just returning
"unavail" values. Remove the kernel conditional from the header file as
it is no longer needed, only leaving the externs.
Hide the improperly virtualized SYSCTL/TUNABLE for the flowtable size
under the kernel option as well.

Reviewed by:	rwatson
2009-06-12 20:46:36 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
42a3613305 Only four out of nine arguments for ip_ipsec_output() are actually used.
Kill unused arguments except for 'ifp' as it might be used in the future
for detecting IPsec-capable interfaces.
2009-06-05 23:53:17 +00:00
Robert Watson
bcf11e8d00 Move "options MAC" from opt_mac.h to opt_global.h, as it's now in GENERIC
and used in a large number of files, but also because an increasing number
of incorrect uses of MAC calls were sneaking in due to copy-and-paste of
MAC-aware code without the associated opt_mac.h include.

Discussed with:	pjd
2009-06-05 14:55:22 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
f44270e764 - Rename IP_NONLOCALOK IP socket option to IP_BINDANY, to be more consistent
with OpenBSD (and BSD/OS originally). We can't easly do it SOL_SOCKET option
  as there is no more space for more SOL_SOCKET options, but this option also
  fits better as an IP socket option, it seems.
- Implement this functionality also for IPv6 and RAW IP sockets.
- Always compile it in (don't use additional kernel options).
- Remove sysctl to turn this functionality on and off.
- Introduce new privilege - PRIV_NETINET_BINDANY, which allows to use this
  functionality (currently only unjail root can use it).

Discussed with:	julian, adrian, jhb, rwatson, kmacy
2009-06-01 10:30:00 +00:00
Robert Watson
62e1ba833c Consolidate and clean up the first section of ip_output.c in light of the
last year or two's work on routing:

- Combine iproute initialization and flowtable lookup blocks, eliminating
  unnecessary tests for known-zero'd iproute fields.

- Add a comment indicating (a) why the route entry returned by the
  flowtable is considered stable and (b) that the flowtable lookup must
  occur after the setup of the mbuf flow ID.

- Assert the inpcb lock before any use of inpcb fields.

Reviewed by:	kmacy
2009-05-21 09:45:47 +00:00
Edward Tomasz Napierala
1a4998162e Don't require packet to match a route (any route; this information wasn't
used anyway, so a typical workaround was to add a dummy route) if it's going
to be sent through IPSec tunnel.

Reviewed by:	bz
2009-04-28 11:10:33 +00:00
Kip Macy
65111ec7aa - Allocate a small flowtable in ip_input.c (changeable by tuneable)
- Use for accelerating ip_output
2009-04-19 04:44:05 +00:00
Kip Macy
279aa3d419 Change if_output to take a struct route as its fourth argument in order
to allow passing a cached struct llentry * down to L2

Reviewed by:	rwatson
2009-04-16 20:30:28 +00:00
Robert Watson
86425c62a0 Update stats in struct ipstat using four new macros, IPSTAT_ADD(),
IPSTAT_INC(), IPSTAT_SUB(), and IPSTAT_DEC(), rather than directly
manipulating the fields across the kernel.  This will make it easier
to change the implementation of these statistics, such as using
per-CPU versions of the data structures.

MFC after:	3 days
2009-04-11 23:35:20 +00:00
Kip Macy
80cb9f211a Import "flowid" support for serializing flows across transmit queues
Reviewed by:	rwatson and jeli
2009-04-10 06:16:14 +00:00
Bruce M Simpson
8b889dbb9e In ip_output(), do not acquire the IN_MULTI_LOCK(),
and do not attempt to perform a group lookup.
This is a socket layer lock, and the bottom half of IP
really has no business taking it.

Use the value of the in_mcast_loop sysctl to determine
if we should loop back by default, in the absence of
any multicast socket options. Because the check on
group membership is now deferred to the input path,
an m_copym() is now required.

This should increase multicast send performance where the
source has not requested loopback, although this has not been
benchmarked or measured.

It is also a necessary change for IN_MULTI_LOCK to become
non-recursive, which is required in order to implement IGMPv3
in a thread-safe way.
2009-03-04 03:45:34 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
33553d6e99 For all files including net/vnet.h directly include opt_route.h and
net/route.h.

Remove the hidden include of opt_route.h and net/route.h from net/vnet.h.

We need to make sure that both opt_route.h and net/route.h are included
before net/vnet.h because of the way MRT figures out the number of FIBs
from the kernel option. If we do not, we end up with the default number
of 1 when including net/vnet.h and array sizes are wrong.

This does not change the list of files which depend on opt_route.h
but we can identify them now more easily.
2009-02-27 14:12:05 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
97aa4a517a Try to remove/assimilate as much of formerly IPv4/6 specific
(duplicate) code in sys/netipsec/ipsec.c and fold it into
common, INET/6 independent functions.

The file local functions ipsec4_setspidx_inpcb() and
ipsec6_setspidx_inpcb() were 1:1 identical after the change
in r186528. Rename to ipsec_setspidx_inpcb() and remove the
duplicate.

Public functions ipsec[46]_get_policy() were 1:1 identical.
Remove one copy and merge in the factored out code from
ipsec_get_policy() into the other. The public function left
is now called ipsec_get_policy() and callers were adapted.

Public functions ipsec[46]_set_policy() were 1:1 identical.
Rename file local ipsec_set_policy() function to
ipsec_set_policy_internal().
Remove one copy of the public functions, rename the other
to ipsec_set_policy() and adapt callers.

Public functions ipsec[46]_hdrsiz() were logically identical
(ignoring one questionable assert in the v6 version).
Rename the file local ipsec_hdrsiz() to ipsec_hdrsiz_internal(),
the public function to ipsec_hdrsiz(), remove the duplicate
copy and adapt the callers.
The v6 version had been unused anyway. Cleanup comments.

Public functions ipsec[46]_in_reject() were logically identical
apart from statistics. Move the common code into a file local
ipsec46_in_reject() leaving vimage+statistics in small AF specific
wrapper functions. Note: unfortunately we already have a public
ipsec_in_reject().

Reviewed by:	sam
Discussed with:	rwatson (renaming to *_internal)
MFC after:	26 days
X-MFC:		keep wrapper functions for public symbols?
2009-02-08 09:27:07 +00:00
Randall Stewart
2f4afd2125 Adds support for SCTP checksum offload. This means
we, like TCP and UDP, move the checksum calculation
into the IP routines when there is no hardware support
we call into the normal SCTP checksum routine.

The next round of SCTP updates will use
this functionality. Of course the IGB driver needs
a few updates to support the new intel controller set
that actually does SCTP csum offload too.

Reviewed by:	gnn, rwatson, kmacy
2009-02-03 11:00:43 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
cef2729493 Fix indentation; add FALLTHROUGH.
Thanks Max!
2009-01-09 17:21:22 +00:00
Adrian Chadd
be9347e3fe Implement a new IP option (not compiled/enabled by default) to allow
applications to specify a non-local IP address when bind()'ing a socket
to a local endpoint.

This allows applications to spoof the client IP address of connections
if (obviously!) they somehow are able to receive the traffic normally
destined to said clients.

This patch doesn't include any changes to ipfw or the bridging code to
redirect the client traffic through the PCB checks so TCP gets a shot
at it. The normal behaviour is that packets with a non-local destination
IP address are not handled locally. This can be dealth with some IPFW hackery;
modifications to IPFW to make this less hacky will occur in subsequent
commmits.

Thanks to Julian Elischer and others at Ironport. This work was approved
and donated before Cisco acquired them.

Obtained from:	Julian Elischer and others
MFC after:	2 weeks
2009-01-09 16:02:19 +00:00
Robert Watson
a603c811f8 Allow the IP_MINTTL socket option to be set to 0 so that it can be
disabled entirely, which is its default state before set to a
non-zero value.

PR:		128790
Submitted by:	Nick Hilliard <nick at foobar dot org>
MFC after:	3 weeks
2009-01-03 11:35:31 +00:00
Qing Li
6e6b3f7cbc This main goals of this project are:
1. separating L2 tables (ARP, NDP) from the L3 routing tables
2. removing as much locking dependencies among these layers as
   possible to allow for some parallelism in the search operations
3. simplify the logic in the routing code,

The most notable end result is the obsolescent of the route
cloning (RTF_CLONING) concept, which translated into code reduction
in both IPv4 ARP and IPv6 NDP related modules, and size reduction in
struct rtentry{}. The change in design obsoletes the semantics of
RTF_CLONING, RTF_WASCLONE and RTF_LLINFO routing flags. The userland
applications such as "arp" and "ndp" have been modified to reflect
those changes. The output from "netstat -r" shows only the routing
entries.

Quite a few developers have contributed to this project in the
past: Glebius Smirnoff, Luigi Rizzo, Alessandro Cerri, and
Andre Oppermann. And most recently:

- Kip Macy revised the locking code completely, thus completing
  the last piece of the puzzle, Kip has also been conducting
  active functional testing
- Sam Leffler has helped me improving/refactoring the code, and
  provided valuable reviews
- Julian Elischer setup the perforce tree for me and has helped
  me maintaining that branch before the svn conversion
2008-12-15 06:10:57 +00:00
Marko Zec
385195c062 Conditionally compile out V_ globals while instantiating the appropriate
container structures, depending on VIMAGE_GLOBALS compile time option.

Make VIMAGE_GLOBALS a new compile-time option, which by default will not
be defined, resulting in instatiations of global variables selected for
V_irtualization (enclosed in #ifdef VIMAGE_GLOBALS blocks) to be
effectively compiled out.  Instantiate new global container structures
to hold V_irtualized variables: vnet_net_0, vnet_inet_0, vnet_inet6_0,
vnet_ipsec_0, vnet_netgraph_0, and vnet_gif_0.

Update the VSYM() macro so that depending on VIMAGE_GLOBALS the V_
macros resolve either to the original globals, or to fields inside
container structures, i.e. effectively

#ifdef VIMAGE_GLOBALS
#define V_rt_tables rt_tables
#else
#define V_rt_tables vnet_net_0._rt_tables
#endif

Update SYSCTL_V_*() macros to operate either on globals or on fields
inside container structs.

Extend the internal kldsym() lookups with the ability to resolve
selected fields inside the virtualization container structs.  This
applies only to the fields which are explicitly registered for kldsym()
visibility via VNET_MOD_DECLARE() and vnet_mod_register(), currently
this is done only in sys/net/if.c.

Fix a few broken instances of MODULE_GLOBAL() macro use in SCTP code,
and modify the MODULE_GLOBAL() macro to resolve to V_ macros, which in
turn result in proper code being generated depending on VIMAGE_GLOBALS.

De-virtualize local static variables in sys/contrib/pf/net/pf_subr.c
which were prematurely V_irtualized by automated V_ prepending scripts
during earlier merging steps.  PF virtualization will be done
separately, most probably after next PF import.

Convert a few variable initializations at instantiation to
initialization in init functions, most notably in ipfw.  Also convert
TUNABLE_INT() initializers for V_ variables to TUNABLE_FETCH_INT() in
initializer functions.

Discussed at:	devsummit Strassburg
Reviewed by:	bz, julian
Approved by:	julian (mentor)
Obtained from:	//depot/projects/vimage-commit2/...
X-MFC after:	never
Sponsored by:	NLnet Foundation, The FreeBSD Foundation
2008-12-10 23:12:39 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
4b79449e2f Rather than using hidden includes (with cicular dependencies),
directly include only the header files needed. This reduces the
unneeded spamming of various headers into lots of files.

For now, this leaves us with very few modules including vnet.h
and thus needing to depend on opt_route.h.

Reviewed by:	brooks, gnn, des, zec, imp
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2008-12-02 21:37:28 +00:00
Marko Zec
97021c2464 Merge more of currently non-functional (i.e. resolving to
whitespace) macros from p4/vimage branch.

Do a better job at enclosing all instantiations of globals
scheduled for virtualization in #ifdef VIMAGE_GLOBALS blocks.

De-virtualize and mark as const saorder_state_alive and
saorder_state_any arrays from ipsec code, given that they are never
updated at runtime, so virtualizing them would be pointless.

Reviewed by:  bz, julian
Approved by:  julian (mentor)
Obtained from:        //depot/projects/vimage-commit2/...
X-MFC after:  never
Sponsored by: NLnet Foundation, The FreeBSD Foundation
2008-11-26 22:32:07 +00:00
Julian Elischer
bc97ba5100 Fix a scope problem in the multiple routing table code that stopped the
SO_SETFIB socket option from working correctly.

Obtained from:	Ironport
MFC after:	3 days
2008-11-19 19:19:30 +00:00
Marko Zec
44e33a0758 Change the initialization methodology for global variables scheduled
for virtualization.

Instead of initializing the affected global variables at instatiation,
assign initial values to them in initializer functions.  As a rule,
initialization at instatiation for such variables should never be
introduced again from now on.  Furthermore, enclose all instantiations
of such global variables in #ifdef VIMAGE_GLOBALS blocks.

Essentialy, this change should have zero functional impact.  In the next
phase of merging network stack virtualization infrastructure from
p4/vimage branch, the new initialization methology will allow us to
switch between using global variables and their counterparts residing in
virtualization containers with minimum code churn, and in the long run
allow us to intialize multiple instances of such container structures.

Discussed at:	devsummit Strassburg
Reviewed by:	bz, julian
Approved by:	julian (mentor)
Obtained from:	//depot/projects/vimage-commit2/...
X-MFC after:	never
Sponsored by:	NLnet Foundation, The FreeBSD Foundation
2008-11-19 09:39:34 +00:00
Marko Zec
8b615593fc Step 1.5 of importing the network stack virtualization infrastructure
from the vimage project, as per plan established at devsummit 08/08:
http://wiki.freebsd.org/Image/Notes200808DevSummit

Introduce INIT_VNET_*() initializer macros, VNET_FOREACH() iterator
macros, and CURVNET_SET() context setting macros, all currently
resolving to NOPs.

Prepare for virtualization of selected SYSCTL objects by introducing a
family of SYSCTL_V_*() macros, currently resolving to their global
counterparts, i.e. SYSCTL_V_INT() == SYSCTL_INT().

Move selected #defines from sys/sys/vimage.h to newly introduced header
files specific to virtualized subsystems (sys/net/vnet.h,
sys/netinet/vinet.h etc.).

All the changes are verified to have zero functional impact at this
point in time by doing MD5 comparision between pre- and post-change
object files(*).

(*) netipsec/keysock.c did not validate depending on compile time options.

Implemented by:	julian, bz, brooks, zec
Reviewed by:	julian, bz, brooks, kris, rwatson, ...
Approved by:	julian (mentor)
Obtained from:	//depot/projects/vimage-commit2/...
X-MFC after:	never
Sponsored by:	NLnet Foundation, The FreeBSD Foundation
2008-10-02 15:37:58 +00:00
George V. Neville-Neil
e4762f75c3 Fix a bug whereby multicast packets that are looped back locally
wind up with the incorrect checksum on the wire when transmitted via
devices that do checksum offloading.

PR:		kern/119635
Reviewed by:	rwatson
MFC after:	5 days
2008-08-29 20:42:58 +00:00
Robert Watson
5060346d0b Remove comments and #ifdef notyet'd code relating to directly dispatching
the IP multicast input code from the output path; we don't allow
reentrance of the input path from the IP output path, it must use the
netisr due to potential lock recursion.

MFC after:	3 days
2008-08-21 17:24:49 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
603724d3ab Commit step 1 of the vimage project, (network stack)
virtualization work done by Marko Zec (zec@).

This is the first in a series of commits over the course
of the next few weeks.

Mark all uses of global variables to be virtualized
with a V_ prefix.
Use macros to map them back to their global names for
now, so this is a NOP change only.

We hope to have caught at least 85-90% of what is needed
so we do not invalidate a lot of outstanding patches again.

Obtained from:	//depot/projects/vimage-commit2/...
Reviewed by:	brooks, des, ed, mav, julian,
		jamie, kris, rwatson, zec, ...
		(various people I forgot, different versions)
		md5 (with a bit of help)
Sponsored by:	NLnet Foundation, The FreeBSD Foundation
X-MFC after:	never
V_Commit_Message_Reviewed_By:	more people than the patch
2008-08-17 23:27:27 +00:00
Julian Elischer
8b07e49a00 Add code to allow the system to handle multiple routing tables.
This particular implementation is designed to be fully backwards compatible
and to be MFC-able to 7.x (and 6.x)

Currently the only protocol that can make use of the multiple tables is IPv4
Similar functionality exists in OpenBSD and Linux.

From my notes:

-----

  One thing where FreeBSD has been falling behind, and which by chance I
  have some time to work on is "policy based routing", which allows
  different
  packet streams to be routed by more than just the destination address.

  Constraints:
  ------------

  I want to make some form of this available in the 6.x tree
  (and by extension 7.x) , but FreeBSD in general needs it so I might as
  well do it in -current and back port the portions I need.

  One of the ways that this can be done is to have the ability to
  instantiate multiple kernel routing tables (which I will now
  refer to as "Forwarding Information Bases" or "FIBs" for political
  correctness reasons). Which FIB a particular packet uses to make
  the next hop decision can be decided by a number of mechanisms.
  The policies these mechanisms implement are the "Policies" referred
  to in "Policy based routing".

  One of the constraints I have if I try to back port this work to
  6.x is that it must be implemented as a EXTENSION to the existing
  ABIs in 6.x so that third party applications do not need to be
  recompiled in timespan of the branch.

  This first version will not have some of the bells and whistles that
  will come with later versions. It will, for example, be limited to 16
  tables in the first commit.
  Implementation method, Compatible version. (part 1)
  -------------------------------
  For this reason I have implemented a "sufficient subset" of a
  multiple routing table solution in Perforce, and back-ported it
  to 6.x. (also in Perforce though not  always caught up with what I
  have done in -current/P4). The subset allows a number of FIBs
  to be defined at compile time (8 is sufficient for my purposes in 6.x)
  and implements the changes needed to allow IPV4 to use them. I have not
  done the changes for ipv6 simply because I do not need it, and I do not
  have enough knowledge of ipv6 (e.g. neighbor discovery) needed to do it.

  Other protocol families are left untouched and should there be
  users with proprietary protocol families, they should continue to work
  and be oblivious to the existence of the extra FIBs.

  To understand how this is done, one must know that the current FIB
  code starts everything off with a single dimensional array of
  pointers to FIB head structures (One per protocol family), each of
  which in turn points to the trie of routes available to that family.

  The basic change in the ABI compatible version of the change is to
  extent that array to be a 2 dimensional array, so that
  instead of protocol family X looking at rt_tables[X] for the
  table it needs, it looks at rt_tables[Y][X] when for all
  protocol families except ipv4 Y is always 0.
  Code that is unaware of the change always just sees the first row
  of the table, which of course looks just like the one dimensional
  array that existed before.

  The entry points rtrequest(), rtalloc(), rtalloc1(), rtalloc_ign()
  are all maintained, but refer only to the first row of the array,
  so that existing callers in proprietary protocols can continue to
  do the "right thing".
  Some new entry points are added, for the exclusive use of ipv4 code
  called in_rtrequest(), in_rtalloc(), in_rtalloc1() and in_rtalloc_ign(),
  which have an extra argument which refers the code to the correct row.

  In addition, there are some new entry points (currently called
  rtalloc_fib() and friends) that check the Address family being
  looked up and call either rtalloc() (and friends) if the protocol
  is not IPv4 forcing the action to row 0 or to the appropriate row
  if it IS IPv4 (and that info is available). These are for calling
  from code that is not specific to any particular protocol. The way
  these are implemented would change in the non ABI preserving code
  to be added later.

  One feature of the first version of the code is that for ipv4,
  the interface routes show up automatically on all the FIBs, so
  that no matter what FIB you select you always have the basic
  direct attached hosts available to you. (rtinit() does this
  automatically).

  You CAN delete an interface route from one FIB should you want
  to but by default it's there. ARP information is also available
  in each FIB. It's assumed that the same machine would have the
  same MAC address, regardless of which FIB you are using to get
  to it.

  This brings us as to how the correct FIB is selected for an outgoing
  IPV4 packet.

  Firstly, all packets have a FIB associated with them. if nothing
  has been done to change it, it will be FIB 0. The FIB is changed
  in the following ways.

  Packets fall into one of a number of classes.

  1/ locally generated packets, coming from a socket/PCB.
     Such packets select a FIB from a number associated with the
     socket/PCB. This in turn is inherited from the process,
     but can be changed by a socket option. The process in turn
     inherits it on fork. I have written a utility call setfib
     that acts a bit like nice..

         setfib -3 ping target.example.com # will use fib 3 for ping.

     It is an obvious extension to make it a property of a jail
     but I have not done so. It can be achieved by combining the setfib and
     jail commands.

  2/ packets received on an interface for forwarding.
     By default these packets would use table 0,
     (or possibly a number settable in a sysctl(not yet)).
     but prior to routing the firewall can inspect them (see below).
     (possibly in the future you may be able to associate a FIB
     with packets received on an interface..  An ifconfig arg, but not yet.)

  3/ packets inspected by a packet classifier, which can arbitrarily
     associate a fib with it on a packet by packet basis.
     A fib assigned to a packet by a packet classifier
     (such as ipfw) would over-ride a fib associated by
     a more default source. (such as cases 1 or 2).

  4/ a tcp listen socket associated with a fib will generate
     accept sockets that are associated with that same fib.

  5/ Packets generated in response to some other packet (e.g. reset
     or icmp packets). These should use the FIB associated with the
     packet being reponded to.

  6/ Packets generated during encapsulation.
     gif, tun and other tunnel interfaces will encapsulate using the FIB
     that was in effect withthe proces that set up the tunnel.
     thus setfib 1 ifconfig gif0 [tunnel instructions]
     will set the fib for the tunnel to use to be fib 1.

  Routing messages would be associated with their
  process, and thus select one FIB or another.
  messages from the kernel would be associated with the fib they
  refer to and would only be received by a routing socket associated
  with that fib. (not yet implemented)

  In addition Netstat has been edited to be able to cope with the
  fact that the array is now 2 dimensional. (It looks in system
  memory using libkvm (!)). Old versions of netstat see only the first FIB.

  In addition two sysctls are added to give:
  a) the number of FIBs compiled in (active)
  b) the default FIB of the calling process.

  Early testing experience:
  -------------------------

  Basically our (IronPort's) appliance does this functionality already
  using ipfw fwd but that method has some drawbacks.

  For example,
  It can't fully simulate a routing table because it can't influence the
  socket's choice of local address when a connect() is done.

  Testing during the generating of these changes has been
  remarkably smooth so far. Multiple tables have co-existed
  with no notable side effects, and packets have been routes
  accordingly.

  ipfw has grown 2 new keywords:

  setfib N ip from anay to any
  count ip from any to any fib N

  In pf there seems to be a requirement to be able to give symbolic names to the
  fibs but I do not have that capacity. I am not sure if it is required.

  SCTP has interestingly enough built in support for this, called VRFs
  in Cisco parlance. it will be interesting to see how that handles it
  when it suddenly actually does something.

  Where to next:
  --------------------

  After committing the ABI compatible version and MFCing it, I'd
  like to proceed in a forward direction in -current. this will
  result in some roto-tilling in the routing code.

  Firstly: the current code's idea of having a separate tree per
  protocol family, all of the same format, and pointed to by the
  1 dimensional array is a bit silly. Especially when one considers that
  there is code that makes assumptions about every protocol having the
  same internal structures there. Some protocols don't WANT that
  sort of structure. (for example the whole idea of a netmask is foreign
  to appletalk). This needs to be made opaque to the external code.

  My suggested first change is to add routing method pointers to the
  'domain' structure, along with information pointing the data.
  instead of having an array of pointers to uniform structures,
  there would be an array pointing to the 'domain' structures
  for each protocol address domain (protocol family),
  and the methods this reached would be called. The methods would have
  an argument that gives FIB number, but the protocol would be free
  to ignore it.

  When the ABI can be changed it raises the possibilty of the
  addition of a fib entry into the "struct route". Currently,
  the structure contains the sockaddr of the desination, and the resulting
  fib entry. To make this work fully, one could add a fib number
  so that given an address and a fib, one can find the third element, the
  fib entry.

  Interaction with the ARP layer/ LL layer would need to be
  revisited as well. Qing Li has been working on this already.

  This work was sponsored by Ironport Systems/Cisco

Reviewed by:    several including rwatson, bz and mlair (parts each)
Obtained from:  Ironport systems/Cisco
2008-05-09 23:03:00 +00:00
Robert Watson
baa45840d7 In ip_output(), allow a read lock as well as a write lock when asserting
a lock on the passed inpcb.

MFC after:	3 months
2008-04-19 14:35:17 +00:00
Robert Watson
8501a69cc9 Convert pcbinfo and inpcb mutexes to rwlocks, and modify macros to
explicitly select write locking for all use of the inpcb mutex.
Update some pcbinfo lock assertions to assert locked rather than
write-locked, although in practice almost all uses of the pcbinfo
rwlock main exclusive, and all instances of inpcb lock acquisition
are exclusive.

This change should introduce (ideally) little functional change.
However, it lays the groundwork for significantly increased
parallelism in the TCP/IP code.

MFC after:	3 months
Tested by:	kris (superset of committered patch)
2008-04-17 21:38:18 +00:00
Qing Li
e440aed958 This patch provides the back end support for equal-cost multi-path
(ECMP) for both IPv4 and IPv6. Previously, multipath route insertion
is disallowed. For example,

	route add -net 192.103.54.0/24 10.9.44.1
	route add -net 192.103.54.0/24 10.9.44.2

The second route insertion will trigger an error message of
"add net 192.103.54.0/24: gateway 10.2.5.2: route already in table"

Multiple default routes can also be inserted. Here is the netstat
output:

default		10.2.5.1	UGS	0	3074	bge0 =>
default		10.2.5.2	UGS	0	0	bge0

When multipath routes exist, the "route delete" command requires
a specific gateway to be specified or else an error message would
be displayed. For example,

	route delete default

would fail and trigger the following error message:

"route: writing to routing socket: No such process"
"delete net default: not in table"

On the other hand,

	route delete default 10.2.5.2

would be successful: "delete net default: gateway 10.2.5.2"

One does not have to specify a gateway if there is only a single
route for a particular destination.

I need to perform more testings on address aliases and multiple
interfaces that have the same IP prefixes. This patch as it
stands today is not yet ready for prime time. Therefore, the ECMP
code fragments are fully guarded by the RADIX_MPATH macro.
Include the "options  RADIX_MPATH" in the kernel configuration
to enable this feature.

Reviewed by:	robert, sam, gnn, julian, kmacy
2008-04-13 05:45:14 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
ea26d58729 Replaced the misleading uses of a historical artefact M_TRYWAIT with M_WAIT.
Removed dead code that assumed that M_TRYWAIT can return NULL; it's not true
since the advent of MBUMA.

Reviewed by:	arch

There are ongoing disputes as to whether we want to switch to directly using
UMA flags M_WAITOK/M_NOWAIT for mbuf(9) allocation.
2008-03-25 09:39:02 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
c26fe973a3 Rather than passing around a cached 'priv', pass in an ucred to
ipsec*_set_policy and do the privilege check only if needed.

Try to assimilate both ip*_ctloutput code blocks calling ipsec*_set_policy.

Reviewed by:	rwatson
2008-02-02 14:11:31 +00:00
Robert Watson
30d239bc4c Merge first in a series of TrustedBSD MAC Framework KPI changes
from Mac OS X Leopard--rationalize naming for entry points to
the following general forms:

  mac_<object>_<method/action>
  mac_<object>_check_<method/action>

The previous naming scheme was inconsistent and mostly
reversed from the new scheme.  Also, make object types more
consistent and remove spaces from object types that contain
multiple parts ("posix_sem" -> "posixsem") to make mechanical
parsing easier.  Introduce a new "netinet" object type for
certain IPv4/IPv6-related methods.  Also simplify, slightly,
some entry point names.

All MAC policy modules will need to be recompiled, and modules
not updates as part of this commit will need to be modified to
conform to the new KPI.

Sponsored by:	SPARTA (original patches against Mac OS X)
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project, Apple Computer
2007-10-24 19:04:04 +00:00
Mike Silbersack
4b421e2daa Add FBSDID to all files in netinet so that people can more
easily include file version information in bug reports.

Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-10-07 20:44:24 +00:00