We have this valgrind trace:
==1125== Invalid read of size 4
==1125== at 0x170A7D: pim_if_delete (pim_iface.c:203)
==1125== by 0x170C01: pim_if_terminate (pim_iface.c:80)
==1125== by 0x174F34: pim_instance_terminate (pim_instance.c:68)
==1125== by 0x17535B: pim_vrf_terminate (pim_instance.c:260)
==1125== by 0x1941CF: pim_terminate (pimd.c:161)
==1125== by 0x1B476D: pim_sigint (pim_signals.c:44)
==1125== by 0x4910C22: frr_sigevent_process (sigevent.c:133)
==1125== by 0x49220A4: thread_fetch (thread.c:1777)
==1125== by 0x48DC8E2: frr_run (libfrr.c:1222)
==1125== by 0x15E12A: main (pim_main.c:176)
==1125== Address 0x6274d28 is 1,192 bytes inside a block of size 1,752 free'd
==1125== at 0x48369AB: free (in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==1125== by 0x174FF1: pim_vrf_delete (pim_instance.c:181)
==1125== by 0x4925480: vrf_delete (vrf.c:264)
==1125== by 0x4925480: vrf_delete (vrf.c:238)
==1125== by 0x49332C7: zclient_vrf_delete (zclient.c:2187)
==1125== by 0x4934319: zclient_read (zclient.c:4003)
==1125== by 0x492249C: thread_call (thread.c:2008)
==1125== by 0x48DC8D7: frr_run (libfrr.c:1223)
==1125== by 0x15E12A: main (pim_main.c:176)
==1125== Block was alloc'd at
==1125== at 0x4837B65: calloc (in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==1125== by 0x48E80AF: qcalloc (memory.c:116)
==1125== by 0x1750DA: pim_instance_init (pim_instance.c:90)
==1125== by 0x1750DA: pim_vrf_new (pim_instance.c:161)
==1125== by 0x4924FDC: vrf_get (vrf.c:183)
==1125== by 0x493334C: zclient_vrf_add (zclient.c:2157)
==1125== by 0x4934319: zclient_read (zclient.c:4003)
==1125== by 0x492249C: thread_call (thread.c:2008)
==1125== by 0x48DC8D7: frr_run (libfrr.c:1223)
==1125== by 0x15E12A: main (pim_main.c:176)
and you do this series of events:
a) Create a vrf, put an interface in it
b) Turn on pim on that interface and turn on pim in that vrf
c) Delete the vrf
d) Do anything with the interface, in this case shutdown the system
The move of the interface to a new vrf is leaving the pim_ifp->pim pointer pointing
at the old pim instance, which was just deleted, so the instance pointer was freed.
Let's clean up the pim pointer in the interface pointer as well.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
The flag for telling BGP that a route is expected to be installed
first before notifying a peer was always being set upon receipt
of a path that could be accepted as bestpath. This is not correct:
imagine that you have a peer sending you a route and you have a
network statement that covers the same route. Irrelevant if the
network statement would win the flag on the dest was being set
in bgp_update. Thus you could get into a situation where
the network statement path wins but since the flag is set on
the node, it will never be announced to a peer.
Let's just move the setting of the flag into bgp_zebra_announce
and _withdraw. In _announce set the flag to TRUE when suppress-fib
is enabled. In _withdraw just always unset the flag as that a withdrawal
does not need to wait for rib removal before announcing. This will
cover the case when a network statement is added after the route has
been learned from a peer.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
If configuring `neighbor password` under VRF (not default), the session
will never be established.
Before setting TCP_MD5 for the connection fd, we need to enable this on the
accept direction as well (listener).
Signed-off-by: Donatas Abraitis <donatas@opensourcerouting.org>
This commit contains fixes for the following issues found
- 'mgmt commit check' issued through 'vtysh -f' was actually commtting the changeset.
- On config validation failure backend, mgmtd was not passing the correct error-reason
to frontend.
- 'mgmt rollback ...' was reverting the change on backend, but config on mgmtd daemon
remains intact
Signed-off-by: Pushpasis Sarkar <pushpasis@gmail.com>
This commit adds user documentation for the new MGMT daemon and
new FRR Management Framework.
Co-authored-by: Yash Ranjan <ranjany@vmware.com>
Co-authored-by: Abhinay Ramesh <rabhinay@vmware.com>
Co-authored-by: Ujwal P <ujwalp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Pushpasis Sarkar <pushpasis@gmail.com>
This commmit introduces Staticd as a backend client for the MGMTd
framework. All the static commands will be diverted to the MGMT
daemon and will use the transactional model to make changes to the
internal state. Similar mechanism can be used by other daemons to use
the MGMT framework in the future.
This commit includes the following functionalities in the changeset:
1. Diverts all the staticd (config only) commands to MGMTd.
2. Enrolls staticd as a backend client to use the MGMT framework.
3. Modify the staticd NB config handlers so that they can be compiled
into a library and loaded in the MGMTd process context.
Co-authored-by: Pushpasis Sarkar <pushpasis@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Abhinay Ramesh <rabhinay@vmware.com>
Co-authored-by: Ujwal P <ujwalp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Yash Ranjan <ranjany@vmware.com>
This commit introduces the MGMT Transaction framework that takes
management requests from one (or more) frontend client sessions,
translates them into transactions and drives them to completion
in co-oridination with one (or more) backend client daemons
involved in the request.
This commit includes the following functionalities in the changeset:
1. Introduces the actual Transaction module. Commands added related to
transaction are:
a. show mgmt transaction all
2. Adds support for commit rollback feature which stores upto the 10
commit buffers. Each commit has a commit-id which can be used to
rollback to the exact configuration state.
Commands supported for this feature are:
a. show mgmt commit-history
b. mgmt rollback commit-id COMMIT_ID
3. Add hidden commands to enable record various performance metrics:
a. mgmt performance-measurement
b. mgmt reset-statistic
Co-authored-by: Pushpasis Sarkar <pushpasis@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Abhinay Ramesh <rabhinay@vmware.com>
Co-authored-by: Ujwal P <ujwalp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Yash Ranjan <ranjany@vmware.com>
This commit introduces the MGMT Backend Interface which can be used
by back-end management client daemons like BGPd, Staticd, Zebra to
connect with new FRR Management daemon (MGMTd) and utilize the new
FRR Management Framework to let any Frontend clients to retrieve any
operational data or manipulate any configuration data owned by the
individual Backend daemon component.
This commit includes the following functionalities in the changeset:
1. Add new Backend server for Backend daemons connect to.
2. Add a C-based Backend client library which can be used by daemons
to communicate with MGMTd via the Backend interface.
3. Maintain a backend adapter for each connection from an appropriate
Backend client to facilitate client requests and track one or more
transactions initiated from Frontend client sessions that involves
the backend client component.
4. Add the following commands to inspect various Backend client
related information
a. show mgmt backend-adapter all
b. show mgmt backend-yang-xpath-registry
c. show mgmt yang-xpath-subscription
Co-authored-by: Pushpasis Sarkar <pushpasis@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Abhinay Ramesh <rabhinay@vmware.com>
Co-authored-by: Ujwal P <ujwalp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Yash Ranjan <ranjany@vmware.com>
This commit introduces the Frontend Interface which can be used
by front-end management clients like Netconf server, Restconf
Server and CLI to interact with new FRR Management daemon (MGMTd)
to access and sometimes modify FRR management data.
This commit includes the following functionalities in the changeset:
1. Add new Frontend server for clients connect to.
2. Add a C-based Frontend client library which can be used by Frontend
clients to communicate with MGMTd via the Frontend interface.
3. Maintain a frontend adapter for each connection from an appropriate
Frontend client to facilitate client requests and track one or more
client sessions across it.
4. Define the protobuf message format for messages to be exchanged
between MGMTd Frontend module and the Frontend client.
5. This changeset also introduces an instance of MGMT Frontend client
embedded within the lib/vty module that can be leveraged by any FRR
daemon to connect to MGMTd's Frontend interface. The same has been
integrated with and initialized within the MGMTd daemon's process
context to implement a bunch of 'set-config', 'commit-apply',
'get-config' and 'get-data' commands via VTYSH
Co-authored-by: Pushpasis Sarkar <pushpasis@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Abhinay Ramesh <rabhinay@vmware.com>
Co-authored-by: Ujwal P <ujwalp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Yash Ranjan <ranjany@vmware.com>
Features added in this commit:
1. Bringup/shutdown new management daemon 'mgmtd' along with FRR.
2. Support for Startup, Candidate and Running DBs.
3. Lock/Unlock DS feature using pthread lock.
4. Load config from a JSON file onto candidate DS.
5. Save config to a JSON file from running/candidate DS.
6. Dump candidate or running DS contents on the terminal or a file in
JSON/XML format.
7. Maintaining commit history (Full rollback support to be added in
future commits).
8. Addition of debug commands.
Co-authored-by: Yash Ranjan <ranjany@vmware.com>
Co-authored-by: Abhinay Ramesh <rabhinay@vmware.com>
Co-authored-by: Ujwal P <ujwalp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Pushpasis Sarkar <pushpasis@gmail.com>
It's not allowed to install routes with zero distance, let's disallow this
for route-maps as well.
Signed-off-by: Donatas Abraitis <donatas@opensourcerouting.org>
Some debugs were especially hard to figure out in bgp_route.c
a) If using a %p pointer to print the bgp_path_info this
is pretty useless. Print where it came from instead
b) Use A.B.C.D/M(VRFNAME) when outputing the prefix
Just basically give more useful information.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Prevent a use after free and tell the bfd subsystem
we are shutting down in staticd.
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460:==2264460==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free on address 0x61f000004698 at pc 0x7f65d1eb11b2 bp 0x7ffdbface490 sp 0x7ffdbface488
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460-READ of size 4 at 0x61f000004698 thread T0
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #0 0x7f65d1eb11b1 in zclient_bfd_command lib/bfd.c:307
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #1 0x7f65d1eb20f5 in _bfd_sess_send lib/bfd.c:507
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #2 0x7f65d20510aa in thread_call lib/thread.c:1989
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #3 0x7f65d2051f0a in _thread_execute lib/thread.c:2081
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #4 0x7f65d1eb271b in _bfd_sess_remove lib/bfd.c:544
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #5 0x7f65d1eb278d in bfd_sess_free lib/bfd.c:553
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #6 0x7f65d1eb5400 in bfd_protocol_integration_finish lib/bfd.c:1029
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #7 0x7f65d1f42f77 in hook_call_frr_fini lib/libfrr.c:41
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #8 0x7f65d1f494a1 in frr_fini lib/libfrr.c:1199
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #9 0x563b7abefd76 in sigint staticd/static_main.c:70
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #10 0x7f65d200ef91 in frr_sigevent_process lib/sigevent.c:115
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #11 0x7f65d204fac6 in thread_fetch lib/thread.c:1758
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #12 0x7f65d1f49377 in frr_run lib/libfrr.c:1184
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #13 0x563b7abefed1 in main staticd/static_main.c:160
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #14 0x7f65d1b92d09 in __libc_start_main ../csu/libc-start.c:308
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460- #15 0x563b7abefa99 in _start (/usr/lib/frr/staticd+0x15a99)
./bfd_topo3.test_bfd_topo3/r4.staticd.asan.2264460-
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Add a hash_clean_and_free() function as well as convert
the code to use it. This function also takes a double
pointer to the hash to set it NULL. Also it cleanly
does nothing if the pointer is NULL( as a bunch of
code tested for ).
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
There are some specific edge-cases when is a need to run FRR and another FRR
and/or another BGP implementation on the same box. Relaxing 127.0.0.0/8 for
this case might be reasonable.
An example below peering via 127.0.0.0/8 between FRR and GoBGP:
```
% ss -ntlp | grep 179
LISTEN 0 4096 127.0.0.1:179 0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN 0 128 127.0.0.2:179 0.0.0.0:*
% grep 127.0.0.2 /etc/frr/daemons
bgpd_options=" -A 127.0.0.1 -l 127.0.0.2"
% grep local /etc/gobgp/config.toml
local-address-list = ["127.0.0.1"]
donatas-pc# sh ip bgp summary
IPv4 Unicast Summary (VRF default):
BGP router identifier 192.168.10.17, local AS number 65001 vrf-id 0
BGP table version 0
RIB entries 0, using 0 bytes of memory
Peers 1, using 725 KiB of memory
Neighbor V AS MsgRcvd MsgSent TblVer InQ OutQ Up/Down State/PfxRcd PfxSnt Desc
127.0.0.1 4 65002 7 7 0 0 0 00:02:02 0 0 N/A
Total number of neighbors 1
donatas-pc#
```
Signed-off-by: Donatas Abraitis <donatas@opensourcerouting.org>
Description:
After area range config, summary lsas are aggerated to configured
route but later it was being flushed instead of the actual summary
lsa. This was seen when prefix-id of the aggregated route is same
as one of the actual summary route.
Here, aggregated summary lsa need to be returned to set the flag
SUMMARY_APPROVE after originating aggregated summary lsa but its not.
Which is being cleaned up as part of unapproved summary cleanup.
Corrected this now.
Issue: #13028
Signed-off-by: Rajesh Girada <rgirada@vmware.com>
Due to the wrong input argv id, "argv[idx_word]->arg"
fetched in-correctly and it clears all the route-maps instead of
specific one.
Now correct argv id is passed to clear the given route-map counters.
Also, use RMAP_NAME which allows to show list of configured
route-maps in the system.
After Fix:-
Ticket:#3407773
Issue:3407773
Testing: UT done
Before:
TORC11# clear route-map counters
<cr>
WORD route-map name
After:
TORC11# clear route-map counters
<cr>
RMAP_NAME route-map name
my-as
Signed-off-by: Chirag Shah <chirag@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Sindhu Parvathi Gopinathan's <sgopinathan@nvidia.com>
When deleting a bfd peer during shutdown, let's ensure
that any scheduled events are actually stopped.
==7759== Invalid read of size 4
==7759== at 0x48BF700: _bfd_sess_valid (bfd.c:419)
==7759== by 0x48BF700: _bfd_sess_send (bfd.c:470)
==7759== by 0x492F79C: thread_call (thread.c:2008)
==7759== by 0x48E9BD7: frr_run (libfrr.c:1223)
==7759== by 0x1C739B: main (bgp_main.c:550)
==7759== Address 0xfb687a4 is 4 bytes inside a block of size 272 free'd
==7759== at 0x48369AB: free (in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==7759== by 0x48BFA5A: bfd_sess_free (bfd.c:535)
==7759== by 0x2B7034: bgp_peer_remove_bfd (bgp_bfd.c:339)
==7759== by 0x29FF8A: peer_free (bgpd.c:1160)
==7759== by 0x29FF8A: peer_unlock_with_caller (bgpd.c:1192)
==7759== by 0x2A0506: peer_delete (bgpd.c:2633)
==7759== by 0x208190: bgp_stop (bgp_fsm.c:1639)
==7759== by 0x20C082: bgp_event_update (bgp_fsm.c:2751)
==7759== by 0x492F79C: thread_call (thread.c:2008)
==7759== by 0x48E9BD7: frr_run (libfrr.c:1223)
==7759== by 0x1C739B: main (bgp_main.c:550)
==7759== Block was alloc'd at
==7759== at 0x4837B65: calloc (in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==7759== by 0x48F53AF: qcalloc (memory.c:116)
==7759== by 0x48BF98D: bfd_sess_new (bfd.c:397)
==7759== by 0x2B76DC: bgp_peer_configure_bfd (bgp_bfd.c:298)
==7759== by 0x2B76DC: bgp_peer_configure_bfd (bgp_bfd.c:279)
==7759== by 0x29BA06: peer_group2peer_config_copy (bgpd.c:2803)
==7759== by 0x2A3D96: peer_create_bind_dynamic_neighbor (bgpd.c:4107)
==7759== by 0x2A4195: peer_lookup_dynamic_neighbor (bgpd.c:4239)
==7759== by 0x21AB72: bgp_accept (bgp_network.c:422)
==7759== by 0x492F79C: thread_call (thread.c:2008)
==7759== by 0x48E9BD7: frr_run (libfrr.c:1223)
==7759== by 0x1C739B: main (bgp_main.c:550)
tl;dr -> Effectively, in this test setup we have 300 dynamic bgp
sessions all of which are using bfd. When a peer collision is detected
or we remove the peers, if an event has been scheduled but not actually
executed yet the event event was not actually being stopped, leaving
the bsp pointer on the thread->arg and causing a crash when it is
executed.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Issue:
When a netns is deleted, since zebra doesn’t receive interface down/delete
notifications from kernel, it manually deletes the interface without removing
the association between zebra_l3vni and the interface that is being deleted
(i.e it deletes the interface without setting “zl3vni->vxlan_if” to NULL).
Later, during the deletion of netns, when zl3vni_rmac_uninstall() is called to
uninstall the remote RMAC from the kernel, zebra ends up accessing stale
“zl3vni->vxlan_if” pointer, which now points to freed memory.
This was causing heap use-after-free.
Fix:
Before zebra starts deleting the interfaces when it receives netns delete notification,
appropriate functions() are being called to remove the association between evpn structs
and interface and set “zl3vni->vxlan_if” to NULL. This ensures that when
zl3vni_rmac_uninstall() is called during netns deletion, it will bail because
“zl3vni->vxlan_if” is NULL.
Signed-off-by: Pooja Jagadeesh Doijode <pdoijode@nvidia.com>
After restarting pim6d, in some cases the ifindex is 0 for the interfaces,
so the vif index is also assigned as 0.
This causes the interface name to be pim6reg.
Fix:
If the ifindex is 0 and the interface name is not "pimreg" or "pim6reg",
the function will return without assigning vifindex with an error message.
Issue: #12744
Signed-off-by: Sai Gomathi N <nsaigomathi@vmware.com>