replacement and has additional features which make it superior.
Discussed on: -arch
Reviewed by: thompsa
X-MFC-after: never (RELENG_6 as transition period)
flag on IP packets. Currently this option is only repected on udp
and raw ip sockets. On tcp sockets the DF flag is controlled by the
path MTU discovery option.
Sending a packet larger than the MTU size of the egress interface
returns an EMSGSIZE error.
Discussed with: rwatson
Sponsored by: TCP/IP Optimization Fundraise 2005
panics, which occur when stale ifnet pointers are left in struct
moptions hung off of inpcbs:
- Add in_ifdetach(), which matches in6_ifdetach(), and allows the
protocol to perform early tear-down on the interface early in
if_detach().
- Annotate that if_detach() needs careful consideration.
- Remove calls to in_pcbpurgeif0() in the handling of SIOCDIFADDR --
this is not the place to detect interface removal! This also
removes what is basically a nasty (and now unnecessary) hack.
- Invoke in_pcbpurgeif0() from in_ifdetach(), in both raw and UDP
IPv4 sockets.
It is now possible to run the msocket_ifnet_remove regression test
using HEAD without panicking.
MFC after: 3 days
has been done in icmp_input() already.
This fixes the ICMP_UNREACH_NEEDFRAG case where no MTU was
proposed in the ICMP reply.
PR: kern/81813
Submitted by: Vitezslav Novy <vita at fio.cz>
MFC after: 3 days
first interface is detached from parent and then bpfdetach() is called.
If the interface was the last carp(4) interface attached to parent, then
the mutex on parent is destroyed. When bpfdetach() calls if_setflags()
we panic on destroyed mutex.
To prevent the above scenario, clear pointer to parent, when we detach
ourselves from parent.
ARP requests only on the network where this IP address belong, to.
Before this change we did replied on all interfaces. This could
lead to an IP address conflict with host we are doing ARP proxy
for.
PR: kern/75634
Reviewed by: andre
between sack and a bug in the "bad retransmit recovery" logic. This is
a workaround, the underlying bug will be fixed later.
Submitted by: Mohan Srinivasan, Noritoshi Demizu
TTL a packet must have when received on a socket. All packets with a
lower TTL are silently dropped. Works on already connected/connecting
and listening sockets for RAW/UDP/TCP.
This option is only really useful when set to 255 preventing packets
from outside the directly connected networks reaching local listeners
on sockets.
Allows userland implementation of 'The Generalized TTL Security Mechanism
(GTSM)' according to RFC3682. Examples of such use include the Cisco IOS
BGP implementation command "neighbor ttl-security".
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: TCP/IP Optimization Fundraise 2005
cluster if needed.
Fixes the TCP issues raised in I-D draft-gont-icmp-payload-00.txt.
This aids in-the-wild debugging a lot and allows the receiver to do
more elaborate checks on the validity of the response.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: TCP/IP Optimization Fundraise 2005
packet in an ICMP reply. The minimum of 8 bytes is internally
enforced. The maximum quotation is the remaining space in the
reply mbuf.
This option is added in response to the issues raised in I-D
draft-gont-icmp-payload-00.txt.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Spnsored by: TCP/IP Optimizations Fundraise 2005
the IP address the packet came through in. This is useful for routers
to show in traceroutes the actual path a packet has taken instead of
the possibly different return path.
The new sysctl is named net.inet.icmp.reply_from_interface and defaults
to off.
MFC after: 2 weeks
than one interface in one subnet. However, some userland apps rely on
the believe that this configuration is impossible.
Add a sysctl switch net.inet.ip.same_prefix_carp_only. If the switch
is on, then kernel will refuse to add an additional interface to
already connected subnet unless the interface is CARP. Default
value is off.
PR: bin/82306
In collaboration with: mlaier
* Correct handling of IPv6 Extension Headers.
* Add unreach6 code.
* Add logging for IPv6.
Submitted by: sysctl handling derived from patch from ume needed for ip6fw
Obtained from: is_icmp6_query and send_reject6 derived from similar
functions of netinet6,ip6fw
Reviewed by: ume, gnn; silence on ipfw@
Test setup provided by: CK Software GmbH
MFC after: 6 days
incoming ARP packet and route request adding/removing
ARP entries. The root of the problem is that
struct llinfo_arp was accessed without any locks.
To close race we will use locking provided by
rtentry, that references this llinfo_arp:
- Make arplookup() return a locked rtentry.
- In arpresolve() hold the lock provided by
rt_check()/arplookup() until the end of function,
covering all accesses to the rtentry itself and
llinfo_arp it refers to.
- In in_arpinput() do not drop lock provided by
arplookup() during first part of the function.
- Simplify logic in the first part of in_arpinput(),
removing one level of indentation.
- In the second part of in_arpinput() hold rtentry
lock while copying address.
o Fix a condition when route entry is destroyed, while
another thread is contested on its lock:
- When storing a pointer to rtentry in llinfo_arp list,
always add a reference to this rtentry, to prevent
rtentry being destroyed via RTM_DELETE request.
- Remove this reference when removing entry from
llinfo_arp list.
o Further cleanup of arptimer():
- Inline arptfree() into arptimer().
- Use official queue(3) way to pass LIST.
- Hold rtentry lock while reading its structure.
- Do not check that sdl_family is AF_LINK, but
assert this.
Reviewed by: sam
Stress test: http://www.holm.cc/stress/log/cons141.html
Stress test: http://people.freebsd.org/~pho/stress/log/cons144.html
to atomically return either an existing set of IP multicast options for the
PCB, or a newlly allocated set with default values. The inpcb is returned
locked. This function may sleep.
Call ip_moptions() to acquire a reference to a PCB's socket options, and
perform the update of the options while holding the PCB lock. Release the
lock before returning.
Remove garbage collection of multicast options when values return to the
default, as this complicates locking substantially. Most applications
allocate a socket either to be multicast, or not, and don't tend to keep
around sockets that have previously been used for multicast, then used for
unicast.
This closes a number of race conditions involving multiple threads or
processes modifying the IP multicast state of a socket simultaenously.
MFC after: 7 days
IFF_DRV_RUNNING, as well as the move from ifnet.if_flags to
ifnet.if_drv_flags. Device drivers are now responsible for
synchronizing access to these flags, as they are in if_drv_flags. This
helps prevent races between the network stack and device driver in
maintaining the interface flags field.
Many __FreeBSD__ and __FreeBSD_version checks maintained and continued;
some less so.
Reviewed by: pjd, bz
MFC after: 7 days
lists, as well as accessor macros. For now, this is a recursive mutex
due code sequences where IPv4 multicast calls into IGMP calls into
ip_output(), which then tests for a multicast forwarding case.
For support macros in in_var.h to check multicast address lists, assert
that in_multi_mtx is held.
Acquire in_multi_mtx around iteration over the IPv4 multicast address
lists, such as in ip_input() and ip_output().
Acquire in_multi_mtx when manipulating the IPv4 layer multicast addresses,
as well as over the manipulation of ifnet multicast address lists in order
to keep the two layers in sync.
Lock down accesses to IPv4 multicast addresses in IGMP, or assert the
lock when performing IGMP join/leave events.
Eliminate spl's associated with IPv4 multicast addresses, portions of
IGMP that weren't previously expunged by IGMP locking.
Add in_multi_mtx, igmp_mtx, and if_addr_mtx lock order to hard-coded
lock order in WITNESS, in that order.
Problem reported by: Ed Maste <emaste at phaedrus dot sandvine dot ca>
MFC after: 10 days
FreeBSD specific ip_newid() changes NetBSD does not have.
Correct handling of non AF_INET packets passed to bpf [2].
PR: kern/80340[1], NetBSD PRs 29150[1], 30844[2]
Obtained from: NetBSD ip_gre.c rev. 1.34,1.35, if_gre.c rev. 1.56
Submitted by: Gert Doering <gert at greenie.muc.de>[2]
MFC after: 4 days
- most of the kernel code will not care about the actual encoding of
scope zone IDs and won't touch "s6_addr16[1]" directly.
- similarly, most of the kernel code will not care about link-local
scoped addresses as a special case.
- scope boundary check will be stricter. For example, the current
*BSD code allows a packet with src=::1 and dst=(some global IPv6
address) to be sent outside of the node, if the application do:
s = socket(AF_INET6);
bind(s, "::1");
sendto(s, some_global_IPv6_addr);
This is clearly wrong, since ::1 is only meaningful within a single
node, but the current implementation of the *BSD kernel cannot
reject this attempt.
Submitted by: JINMEI Tatuya <jinmei__at__isl.rdc.toshiba.co.jp>
Obtained from: KAME