Commit Graph

268 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Donald Sharp
9d1fec4c7e zebra: When deleting nexthop group entries ensure the thread is off
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-07-16 19:00:43 -04:00
Donald Sharp
f00b37e710 zebra: make rib_process_dplane_results own ctx freeing
The rib_process_dplane_results function was having each
sub function handler process the results and then
free the ctx.  Lot's of functionality that needs to remember
to free the context.  Let's just free it in the main loop.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-06-29 15:24:20 -04:00
Donald Sharp
fc3de981be zebra: Allow kernel routes to stick around better on interface state changes
Currently kernel routes on system bring up would be `auto-accepted`,
then if an interface went down all kernel and system routes would
be re-evaluated.  There exists situations where a kernel route can
exist but the interface itself is not exactly in a state that is
ready to create a connected route yet.  As such when any interface
goes down in the system all kernel/system routes would be re-evaluated
and then since that interfaces connected route is not in the table yet
the route is matching against a default route( or not at all ) and
is being dropped.

Modify the code such that kernel or system routes just look for interface
being in a good state (up or operative) and accept it.

Broken code:
eva# show ip route
Codes: K - kernel route, C - connected, S - static, R - RIP,
       O - OSPF, I - IS-IS, B - BGP, E - EIGRP, N - NHRP,
       T - Table, v - VNC, V - VNC-Direct, A - Babel, D - SHARP,
       F - PBR, f - OpenFabric,
       > - selected route, * - FIB route, q - queued, r - rejected, b - backup
       t - trapped, o - offload failure

K>* 0.0.0.0/0 [0/100] via 192.168.119.1, enp39s0, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.5/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.6/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.7/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.8/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.9/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.10/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.11/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.12/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.13/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.14/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.16/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 1.2.3.17/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
C>* 4.5.6.99/32 is directly connected, dummy9, 00:05:08
K>* 4.9.10.11/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:05:08
K>* 10.11.12.13/32 [0/0] via 192.168.119.1, enp39s0, 00:05:08
C>* 192.168.10.0/24 is directly connected, dummy99, 00:05:08
C>* 192.168.119.0/24 is directly connected, enp39s0, 00:05:08
<shutdown a non-related interface>
eva# show ip route
Codes: K - kernel route, C - connected, S - static, R - RIP,
       O - OSPF, I - IS-IS, B - BGP, E - EIGRP, N - NHRP,
       T - Table, v - VNC, V - VNC-Direct, A - Babel, D - SHARP,
       F - PBR, f - OpenFabric,
       > - selected route, * - FIB route, q - queued, r - rejected, b - backup
       t - trapped, o - offload failure

K>* 0.0.0.0/0 [0/100] via 192.168.119.1, enp39s0, 00:05:28
C>* 4.5.6.99/32 is directly connected, dummy9, 00:05:28
K>* 10.11.12.13/32 [0/0] via 192.168.119.1, enp39s0, 00:05:28
C>* 192.168.10.0/24 is directly connected, dummy99, 00:05:28
C>* 192.168.119.0/24 is directly connected, enp39s0, 00:05:28

Working code:
eva# show ip route
Codes: K - kernel route, C - connected, S - static, R - RIP,
       O - OSPF, I - IS-IS, B - BGP, E - EIGRP, N - NHRP,
       T - Table, v - VNC, V - VNC-Direct, A - Babel, D - SHARP,
       F - PBR, f - OpenFabric,
       > - selected route, * - FIB route, q - queued, r - rejected, b - backup
       t - trapped, o - offload failure

K>* 0.0.0.0/0 [0/100] via 192.168.119.1, enp39s0, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.5/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.6/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.7/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.8/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.9/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.10/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.11/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.12/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.13/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.14/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.16/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 1.2.3.17/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
C>* 4.5.6.99/32 is directly connected, dummy9, 00:00:04
K>* 4.9.10.11/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:04
K>* 10.11.12.13/32 [0/0] via 192.168.119.1, enp39s0, 00:00:04
C>* 192.168.10.0/24 is directly connected, dummy99, 00:00:04
C>* 192.168.119.0/24 is directly connected, enp39s0, 00:00:04
<shutdown a non-related interface>
eva# show ip route
Codes: K - kernel route, C - connected, S - static, R - RIP,
       O - OSPF, I - IS-IS, B - BGP, E - EIGRP, N - NHRP,
       T - Table, v - VNC, V - VNC-Direct, A - Babel, D - SHARP,
       F - PBR, f - OpenFabric,
       > - selected route, * - FIB route, q - queued, r - rejected, b - backup
       t - trapped, o - offload failure

K>* 0.0.0.0/0 [0/100] via 192.168.119.1, enp39s0, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.5/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.6/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.7/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.8/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.9/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.10/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.11/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.12/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.13/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.14/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.16/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 1.2.3.17/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
C>* 4.5.6.99/32 is directly connected, dummy9, 00:00:15
K>* 4.9.10.11/32 [0/0] via 172.22.0.44, br-23e378ed7fd2 linkdown, 00:00:15
K>* 10.11.12.13/32 [0/0] via 192.168.119.1, enp39s0, 00:00:15
C>* 192.168.10.0/24 is directly connected, dummy99, 00:00:15
C>* 192.168.119.0/24 is directly connected, enp39s0, 00:00:15
eva#

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-06-23 12:22:30 -04:00
Donald Sharp
c9af62e314 zebra: Add a configurable knob zebra nexthop-group keep (1-3600)
Allow end operator to set how long a nexthop-group is kept around
in the system after it is no-longer being used.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-06-16 14:47:19 -04:00
Donald Sharp
35729f38fa zebra: Add a timer to nexthop group deletion
Before deleting nexthop groups, that are installed,
from the system, start a timer and hold the nexthop
group for that time.

Suppose you have this scenario

a) create a static route with 1 x ecmp
      creates a nhg with 1 x ecmp
b) create a static route with 2 x ecmp
      creates a nhg with 2 x ecmp
      deletes a's nhg
c) create a static route with 3 x ecmp
      creates a nhg with 3 x ecmp
      deletes b's nhg
d) create a different route with 1 x ecmp
      creates another 1 x ecmp ( since a's ecmp was deleted )
e) create a different route with 2 x ecmp
      creates another 2 x ecmp ( since b's ecmp was deleted )

If you don't delete the nhg, start a timer, the nhg's used
in steps a and b can be reused for steps d and e.  This reduces
overhead work with zebra <-> kernel interactions and improves
the speed of the system.

So modify the code to note that an installed nexthop group should
be kept around a bit and hopefully reused.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-06-16 14:47:19 -04:00
Donald Sharp
382858d015 zebra: Move where zebra marks a nhg as uninstalled in fib
Currently the code is marking the nhg as uninstalled but not
causing that to flood up to the dependent nhgs:

nhg 3 is a group of 1/2
   1 -> interface A
   2 -> interface B

Suppose A goes down, old code would mark nhg 1 as !VALID and !INSTALLED.
Suppose B then goes down, old code would mark nhg 2 as !VALID and !INSTALLED
But would not mark nhg 3 as !VALID and !INSTALLED (sort of assuming that
it would just be cleaned up by NHG refcounts ).  I would prefer that
the code is pedantic about nhg 3 actually being removed from the system.

This code moves the setting of !INSTALLED into zebra_nhg.c where it
really belongs.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-06-16 14:47:19 -04:00
Donald Sharp
68d188be7a zebra: Convert debugs to use %pNG
The nexthop group debugs were using %u to just display the id.
I found this very hard to figure out what was going on.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-06-14 20:25:56 -04:00
Donald Sharp
cc75cbea1b zebra: Add %pNG to zebra print routines
Add `%pNG` so that a nexthop group can be displayed in debugs/logs
such that it can provide useful information.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-06-14 20:25:56 -04:00
anlan_cs
8e3aae66ce *: remove the checking returned value for hash_get()
Firstly, *keep no change* for `hash_get()` with NULL
`alloc_func`.

Only focus on cases with non-NULL `alloc_func` of
`hash_get()`.

Since `hash_get()` with non-NULL `alloc_func` parameter
shall not fail, just ignore the returned value of it.
The returned value must not be NULL.
So in this case, remove the unnecessary checking NULL
or not for the returned value and add `void` in front
of it.

Importantly, also *keep no change* for the two cases with
non-NULL `alloc_func` -
1) Use `assert(<returned_data> == <searching_data>)` to
   ensure it is a created node, not a found node.
   Refer to `isis_vertex_queue_insert()` of isisd, there
   are many examples of this case in isid.
2) Use `<returned_data> != <searching_data>` to judge it
   is a found node, then free <searching_data>.
   Refer to `aspath_intern()` of bgpd, there are many
   examples of this case in bgpd.

Here, <returned_data> is the returned value from `hash_get()`,
and <searching_data> is the data, which is to be put into
hash table.

Signed-off-by: anlan_cs <vic.lan@pica8.com>
2022-05-03 00:41:48 +08:00
mobash-rasool
16b5065b47
Merge pull request #10908 from donaldsharp/proto_only_error
zebra: When `zebra nexthop proto only` limit errors
2022-04-19 21:27:29 +05:30
Donald Sharp
1cadfaf213 zebra: When zebra nexthop proto only limit errors
Operators are seeing:

Mar 28 07:19:37 kingpin zebra[418]: [TZANK-DEMSE] netlink_nexthop_msg_encode: nhg_id 68 (zebra): proto-based nexthops only, ignoring
Mar 28 07:19:37 kingpin zebra[418]: [TZANK-DEMSE] netlink_nexthop_msg_encode: nhg_id 68 (zebra): proto-based nexthops only, ignoring
Mar 28 07:19:37 kingpin zebra[418]: [YXPF5-B2CE0] netlink_route_multipath_msg_encode: RTM_DELROUTE 2804:4d48:4000::/42 vrf 0(254)
Mar 28 07:19:37 kingpin zebra[418]: [YXPF5-B2CE0] netlink_route_multipath_msg_encode: RTM_NEWROUTE 2804:4d48:4000::/42 vrf 0(254)
Mar 28 07:19:37 kingpin zebra[418]: [TVM3E-A8ZAG] _netlink_route_build_singlepath: (single-path): 2804:4d48:4000::/42 nexthop via fe80::b6fb:e4ff:fe26:c5d5  if 2 vrf default(0)
Mar 28 07:19:37 kingpin zebra[418]: [HYEHE-CQZ9G] nl_batch_send: netlink-dp (NS 0), batch size=140, msg cnt=2
Mar 28 07:19:37 kingpin zebra[418]: [P2XBZ-RAFQ5][EC 4043309074] Failed to install Nexthop ID (68) into the kernel

When `zebra nexthop proto only` is turned on.

Effectively zebra intentionally does not do the nexthop group installation
and the dplane notification in zebra_nhg.c just assumes it was a failure
and prints an error message.  Since this act was intentional, let's
just notice that it was intentional and not report the message
as a failure.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-04-18 09:41:38 -04:00
Donald Sharp
c9e4abf81f zebra: Allow system routes to recurse through themselves
Currently if a end user has something like this:

Routing entry for 192.168.212.1/32
  Known via "kernel", distance 0, metric 100, best
  Last update 00:07:50 ago
  * directly connected, ens5

Codes: K - kernel route, C - connected, S - static, R - RIP,
       O - OSPF, I - IS-IS, B - BGP, E - EIGRP, N - NHRP,
       T - Table, v - VNC, V - VNC-Direct, A - Babel, F - PBR,
       f - OpenFabric,
       > - selected route, * - FIB route, q - queued, r - rejected, b - backup
       t - trapped, o - offload failure

K>* 0.0.0.0/0 [0/100] via 192.168.212.1, ens5, src 192.168.212.19, 00:00:15
C>* 192.168.212.0/27 is directly connected, ens5, 00:07:50
K>* 192.168.212.1/32 [0/100] is directly connected, ens5, 00:07:50

And FRR does a link flap, it refigures the route and rejects the default
route:

2022/04/09 16:38:20 ZEBRA: [NZNZ4-7P54Y] default(0:254):0.0.0.0/0: Processing rn 0x56224dbb5b00
2022/04/09 16:38:20 ZEBRA: [ZJVZ4-XEGPF] default(0:254):0.0.0.0/0: Examine re 0x56224dbddc20 (kernel) status: Changed Installed flags: Selected dist 0 metric 100
2022/04/09 16:38:20 ZEBRA: [GG8QH-195KE] nexthop_active_update: re 0x56224dbddc20 nhe 0x56224dbdd950 (7), curr_nhe 0x56224dedb550
2022/04/09 16:38:20 ZEBRA: [T9JWA-N8HM5] nexthop_active_check: re 0x56224dbddc20, nexthop 192.168.212.1, via ens5
2022/04/09 16:38:20 ZEBRA: [M7EN1-55BTH]         nexthop_active: Route Type kernel has not turned on recursion
2022/04/09 16:38:20 ZEBRA: [HJ48M-MB610]         nexthop_active_check: Unable to find active nexthop
2022/04/09 16:38:20 ZEBRA: [JPJF4-TGCY5] default(0:254):0.0.0.0/0: After processing: old_selected 0x56224dbddc20 new_selected 0x0 old_fib 0x56224dbddc20 new_fib 0x0

So the 192.168.212.1 route is matched for the nexthop but it is not connected and
zebra treats it as a problem.  Modify the code such that if a system route
matches through another system route, then it should work imo.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-04-09 13:17:14 -04:00
Donald Sharp
48dc861028 zebra: Allow multiple connected routes to be choosen for kernel routes
This bug should only really affect kernel routes.  To reproduce:

a) Have multiple connected routes that point to the same prefix
swp8  up      default         169.254.0.250/30
swp9  up      default         169.254.0.250/30

b) Have a kernel route that uses one of those connected routes
7.6.2.8 via 169.254.0.249 dev swp8 proto static
(But have it choose a non-selected connected nexthop)

c) Introduce an event that causes the rib table to be reprocessed,
say a unrelated interface going up / down

  This causes the route to be lost with this message:
2022/03/28 21:21:53 ZEBRA: [YXCJP-0WZWV] netlink_nexthop_msg_encode: ID (3454): 169.254.0.249, via swp8(1383) vrf default(0)
2022/03/28 21:21:53 ZEBRA: [YF2E6-J60JH] nexthop_active: 169.254.0.249, via swp8 given ifindex does not match nexthops ifindex found found: directly connected, swp9

Effectively the nexthop that zebra is choosing would not be the one
that the kernel route has choosen and FRR removes the route:
022/03/28 21:21:53 ZEBRA: [NM15X-X83N9] rib_process: (0:254):7.6.2.8/32: rn 0x56042e632e90, removing re 0x56042e6316e0
2022/03/28 21:21:53 ZEBRA: [Y53JX-CBC5H] rib_unlink: (0:254):7.6.2.8/32: rn 0x56042e632e90, re 0x56042e6316e0
2022/03/28 21:21:53 ZEBRA: [KT8QQ-45WQ0] rib_gc_dest: (0:?):7.6.2.8/32: removing dest from table

What is happening?

Zebra is not looking at all connected routes and if any of them
would have the appropriate ifindex and just blindly rejecting
the route.

So when nexthop resolution happens and it matches a connected
route and the dest->selected nexthop ifindex does not match, let's sort
through the rest of them and see if any of them match and if so
let's keep the route.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-04-08 08:15:20 -04:00
Stephen Worley
5d41413833 zebra: add support for protodown reason code
Add support for setting the protodown reason code.

829eb208e8

These patches handle all our netlink code for setting the reason.

For protodown reason we only set `frr` as the reason externally
but internally we have more descriptive reasoning available via
`show interface IFNAME`. The kernel only provides a bitwidth of 32
that all userspace programs have to share so this makes the most sense.

Since this is new functionality, it needs to be added to the dplane
pthread instead. So these patches, also move the protodown setting we
were doing before into the dplane pthread. For this, we abstract it a
bit more to make it a general interface LINK update dplane API. This
API can be expanded to support gernal link creation/updating when/if
someone ever adds that code.

We also move a more common entrypoint for evpn-mh and from zapi clients
like vrrpd. They both call common code now to set our internal flags
for protodown and protodown reason.

Also add debugging code for dumping netlink packets with
protodown/protodown_reason.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Worley <sworley@nvidia.com>
2022-03-09 17:52:44 -05:00
anlan_cs
3f04f9cf24 zebra: let /32 host route with same IP cross VRF
Contraints of host routes are too strict in current code:
Host routes with same destination address and nexthop address are forbidden
even when cross VRFs.

Currently host routes with different destination and nexthop address can cross
VRFs, it is ok. But host routes with same addresses are forbidden to cross VRFs,
it is wrong.

Since different VRFs can have the same addresses, leak specific host route with
the same nexthop address ( it means destination address is same to nexthop
address ) to other VRFs is a normal case.

This commit relaxes that contraints. Host routes with same destination address
and nexthop address are forbidden only when not cross VRFs.

Signed-off-by: anlan_cs <vic.lan@pica8.com>
2022-03-09 07:22:11 +08:00
Donald Sharp
45dafca86c zebra: Use the routes vrf not the vrf of the nexthop for route-map application
When a end operator is doing cross vrf imports in bgp:

router bgp 3239 vrf FOO
  address-family ipv4 uni
    import vrf BAR
!

and zebra has this configuration:

vrf FOO
  ip protocol bgp route-map EVA
!

The current code in zebra_nhg.c was looking up the vrf of the
nexthop and attempting to apply the ip protocol route-map.

For most people the nexthop vrf and the re vrf are one and the
same so they never see a problem.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-02-28 13:08:01 -05:00
Mark Stapp
728f2017ae zebra: add dplane type for NETCONF data
Add a new dplane op for interface NETCONF data; add the new
enum value to several switch statements.

Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mstapp@nvidia.com>
2022-02-25 09:53:02 -05:00
Donald Sharp
81ef8a69ae zebra: Use AF_UNSPEC instead of setting to 0
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-02-07 13:22:41 -05:00
Donald Sharp
07b9ebca65 zebra: Ensure zebra_nhg_sweep_table accounts for double deletes
I'm seeing this crash in various forms:
Program terminated with signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
50 ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c: No such file or directory.
[Current thread is 1 (Thread 0x7f418efbc7c0 (LWP 3580253))]
(gdb) bt
(gdb) f 4
267 (*func)(hb, arg);
(gdb) p hb
$1 = (struct hash_bucket *) 0x558cdaafb250
(gdb) p *hb
$2 = {len = 0, next = 0x0, key = 0, data = 0x0}
(gdb)

I've also seen a crash where data is 0x03.

My suspicion is that hash_iterate is calling zebra_nhg_sweep_entry which
does delete the particular entry we are looking at as well as possibly other
entries when the ref count for those entries gets set to 0 as well.

Then we have this loop in hash_iterate.c:

   for (i = 0; i < hash->size; i++)
            for (hb = hash->index[i]; hb; hb = hbnext) {
                    /* get pointer to next hash bucket here, in case (*func)
                     * decides to delete hb by calling hash_release
                     */
                    hbnext = hb->next;
                    (*func)(hb, arg);
            }
Suppose in the previous loop hbnext is set to hb->next and we call
zebra_nhg_sweep_entry. This deletes the previous entry and also
happens to cause the hbnext entry to be deleted as well, because of nhg
refcounts. At this point in time the memory pointed to by hbnext is
not owned by the pthread anymore and we can end up on a state where
it's overwritten by another pthread in zebra with data for other incoming events.

What to do?  Let's change the sweep function to a hash_walk and have
it stop iterating and to start over if there is a possible double
delete operation.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2022-02-04 12:05:38 -05:00
Donald Sharp
5b311cf18d
Merge pull request #9052 from mjstapp/dplane_incoming_dev
zebra: Move incoming netlink interface address change events to the dplane pthread
2021-09-21 10:51:37 -04:00
Mark Stapp
9d59df634c zebra: add new dplane op codes for interface addr events
Add new dplane op values for incoming interface address add
and delete events.

Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs.ietf@gmail.com>
2021-09-14 11:07:30 -04:00
Ryoga Saito
24b3c59c2d zebra: copy nexthop_srv6 in nexthop_set_resolved
Current implementation doesn't copy nexthop_srv6. This causes unexpected
behavior when receiving SID information and nexthop isn't onlink.t

Signed-off-by: Ryoga Saito <contact@proelbtn.com>
2021-09-10 22:30:00 +00:00
Donald Sharp
f2595bd505 zebra: Convert to struct zebra_nhlfe as per our internal standard
We do not use typedef's to talk about structures as per our standard.
Fixing.

Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
2021-09-02 10:33:23 -04:00
Stephen Worley
bf157b9263 zebra: fix ifp pointer for groups/recursives
At some point we broke the ifp pointer for nhe->ifp such
that it was pointing to an interface even in groups/recurisve
instances.

Add checks here to make it again so that we only set the ifp
pointer if it is a fully resolved singleton NHE.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Worley <sworley@nvidia.com>
2021-07-15 11:24:24 -04:00
Donatas Abraitis
8643c2e5f7 *: Replace 4/16 integers to IPV4_MAX_BYTELEN/IPV6_MAX_BYTELEN
Signed-off-by: Donatas Abraitis <donatas.abraitis@gmail.com>
2021-07-01 23:54:39 +03:00
Donatas Abraitis
12256b84a5 *: Convert numeric 32 into IPV4_MAX_BITLEN for prefixlen
Signed-off-by: Donatas Abraitis <donatas.abraitis@gmail.com>
2021-07-01 23:50:39 +03:00
Donatas Abraitis
13ccce6e7e *: Convert numeric 128 into IPV6_MAX_BITLEN for prefixlen
Signed-off-by: Donatas Abraitis <donatas.abraitis@gmail.com>
2021-07-01 17:53:21 +03:00
Donatas Abraitis
936fbaef47 *: Replace IPV4_MAX_PREFIXLEN to IPV4_MAX_BITLEN
Just drop IPV4_MAX_PREFIXLEN at all, no need keeping both.

Signed-off-by: Donatas Abraitis <donatas.abraitis@gmail.com>
2021-07-01 17:44:09 +03:00
Donatas Abraitis
f4d81e5507 *: Replace IPV6_MAX_PREFIXLEN to IPV6_MAX_BITLEN
Just drop IPV6_MAX_PREFIXLEN at all, no need keeping both.

Signed-off-by: Donatas Abraitis <donatas.abraitis@gmail.com>
2021-07-01 17:41:09 +03:00
Hiroki Shirokura
eab0f8f0a2 lib,sharpd,zebra: update nexthop object with nh_srv6
Signed-off-by: Hiroki Shirokura <slank.dev@gmail.com>
2021-06-02 10:24:48 -04:00
Hiroki Shirokura
76fb7ae4de zebra: ZEBRA_ROUTE_ADD supports seg6 route (step3)
With this patch, zclient can intall seg6 rotues when
they set properties "nh_seg6_segs" on struct nexthop
and set ZEBRA_FLAG_SEG6_ROUTE on zapi_route's flag.

Signed-off-by: Hiroki Shirokura <slank.dev@gmail.com>
2021-06-02 10:24:48 -04:00
Hiroki Shirokura
8689b25a08 zebra: ZEBRA_ROUTE_ADD supports seg6local route (step1)
With this patch, zclient can intall seg6local rotues whem
they set properties nh_seg6local_{action,ctx} on struct nexthop
and set ZEBRA_FLAG_SEG6LOCAL_ROUTE on zapi_route's flag.

Signed-off-by: Hiroki Shirokura <slank.dev@gmail.com>
2021-06-02 10:24:47 -04:00
Philippe Guibert
62b4b7e44a zebra: new dplane action to set gre link interface
This action is initiated by nhrp and has been stubbed when
moving to zebra. Now, a netlink request is forged to set
the link interface of a gre interface if that gre interface
does not have already a link interface.

Signed-off-by: Philippe Guibert <philippe.guibert@6wind.com>
2021-04-30 10:33:18 +02:00
Russ White
d8c3daca19
Merge pull request #8531 from mjstapp/fix_backups_misc
zebra: Misc fixups for backup nexthops
2021-04-27 16:04:24 -04:00
Stephen Worley
829c939a88
Merge pull request #8488 from mjstapp/more_workqueue
lib, zebra: use zebra workqueue for NHG updates
2021-04-27 11:59:33 -04:00
Stephen Worley
dc65cd999d zebra: handle gracefulRS/retain with proto NHGs
Properly handle refcounting of Proto-owned NHGs when
zebra is operating under graceful restart and retain
conditions.

We have an extra refcnt of 1 we keep for proto-owned NHGs to
indicate the upper level proto has created and owns it.

When we are reading these in from the kernel, we need to set them
to 1 as appropriate. Without this, we fail in the assert() during
zebra_nhg_proto_add() after the owning daemons resends the NHG
and the refcnts are off by one.

Also add in the same logic we use for routes when sweeping with
respect to uptimes.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Worley <sworley@nvidia.com>
2021-04-22 17:25:15 -04:00
Stephen Worley
45691de9a0 zebra: add uptime to NHEs
Add uptime for use with NHEs to keep track of how
long we have had this NHE in our rib without an update.

This is treated exactly the same as the re->uptime for
routes. When we get an update for a route, we reset the
uptime.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Worley <sworley@nvidia.com>
2021-04-22 17:25:15 -04:00
Stephen Worley
65f137fe3c zebra: add PROTO_OWNED macro for NHE id bounds checking
Add a PROTO_OWNED macro for code readability when checking
ID bounds for whether a NHG is proto owned.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Worley <sworley@nvidia.com>
2021-04-22 17:25:15 -04:00
Mark Stapp
a082cd9a51 zebra: include inner labels with recursive backups
When capturing backup nexthops with recursive resolution,
ensure that inner labels from the recursive nexthop are
included in each backup (as they are with the resolving
primary nexthops).

Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
2021-04-21 14:30:15 -04:00
Mark Stapp
c56c16eb2c zebra: fix some issues in recursive backup nexthop code
Fix a couple of small things in the code that captures backup
nexthops during recursive resolution.

Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
2021-04-21 14:30:15 -04:00
Mark Stapp
04bec7b217 zebra: use workqueue for daemon-owned NHGs
Use the main zebra workqueue for daemon-owned NHGs, in addition
to processing kernel-owned NHGs. The zapi message processing
creates a temporary object that's enqueued to the workqueue,
then processed/installed as part of the workqueue processing.

Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
2021-04-15 14:20:39 -04:00
Philippe Guibert
e18747a967 zebra: move neighbor table configuration to dplane contexts
Instead of directly configuring the neighbor table after read from zapi
interface, a zebra dplane context is prepared to host the interface and
the family where the neighbor table is updated. Also, some other fields
are hosted: app_probes, ucast_probes, and mcast_probes. More information
on those fields can be found on ip-ntable configuration.

Signed-off-by: Philippe Guibert <philippe.guibert@6wind.com>
2021-04-09 18:29:58 +02:00
Philippe Guibert
0a27a2fef5 zebra, lib: handle NEIGH_ADD/DELETE to zebra dataplane framework
EVPN neighbor operations were already done in the zebra dataplane
framework. Now that NHRP is able to use zebra to perform neighbor IP
operations (by programming link IP operations), handle this operation
under dataplane framework:
- assign two new operations NEIGH_IP_INSTALL and NEIGH_IP_DELETE; this
is reserved for GRE like interfaces:
example: ip neigh add A.B.C.D lladdr E.F.G.H
- use 'struct ipaddr' to store and encode the link ip address
- reuse dplane_neigh_info, and create an union with mac address
- reuse the protocol type and use it for neighbor operations; this
permits to store the daemon originating this neighbor operation.
a new route type is created: ZEBRA_ROUTE_NEIGH.
- the netlink level functions will handle a pointer, and a type; the
type indicates the family of the pointer: AF_INET or AF_INET6 if the
link type is an ip address, mac address otherwise.
- to keep backward compatibility with old queries, as no extension was
done, an option NEIGH_NO_EXTENSION has been put in place
- also, 2 new state flags are used: NUD_PERMANENT and NUD_FAILED.

Signed-off-by: Philippe Guibert <philippe.guibert@6wind.com>
2021-04-09 18:29:58 +02:00
David Lamparter
224ccf29d9 zebra: kill zebra_memory.h, use MTYPE_STATIC
This one also needed a bit of shuffling around, but MTYPE_RE is the only
one left used across file boundaries now.

Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@diac24.net>
2021-03-22 20:02:17 +01:00
Mark Stapp
5530d55d3c zebra: capture backup nexthop info with recursive resolution
When resolving a recursive route, capture backup nexthop info
along with the resolving nexthops.

Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
2021-03-16 12:14:53 -04:00
Mark Stapp
aa45883818 zebra: add ui control for use of backup nexthops in resolution
Add a control and api for the use of backup nexthops in
recursive resolution. With 'no', we won't try to use installed
backup nexthops when resolving a recursive route.

Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
2021-03-16 12:14:53 -04:00
Stephen Worley
0a7edab036
Merge pull request #7993 from mjstapp/reorg_resolve
zebra: reorg nexthop resolution code
2021-03-16 11:34:33 -04:00
Philippe Guibert
ef524230a6 zebra: move ipset and ipset_entry to zebra dplane contexts
like it has been done for iptable contexts, a zebra dplane context is
created for each ipset/ipset entry event. The zebra_dplane_ctx job is
then enqueued and processed by separate thread. Like it has been done
for zebra_pbr_iptable context, the ipset and ipset entry contexts are
encapsulated into an union of structures in zebra_dplane_ctx.

There is a specificity in that when storing ipset_entry structure, there
was a backpointer pointer to the ipset structure that is necessary
to get some complementary information before calling the hook. The
proposal is to use an ipset_entry_info structure next to the ipset_entry,
in the zebra_dplane context. That information is used for ipset_entry
processing. The ipset name and the ipset type are the only fields
 necessary.

Signed-off-by: Philippe Guibert <philippe.guibert@6wind.com>
2021-03-10 14:57:32 +01:00
Philippe Guibert
5162e00045 zebra: move iptable handling in zebra_dplane
The iptable processing was not handled in remote dataplane, and was
directly processed by the thread in charge of zapi calls. Now that call
can be handled in the zebra_dplane separate thread. once a
zebra_dplane_ctx is allocated for iptable handling, the hook call is
performed later. Subsequently, a return code may be triggered to zclient
interface if any problem occurs when calling the hook call.

Signed-off-by: Philippe Guibert <philippe.guibert@6wind.com>
2021-03-04 11:50:25 +01:00
Mark Stapp
9b4ab90984 zebra: support nh resolution without a route
Start reorg of zebra nexthop-resolution so that we can use the
resolution logic for nexthop-groups as well as routes. Change
the signature of the core nexthop_active() api so that it does
not require a route-entry or route-node. Move some of the logic
around so that nexthop-specific logic is in nexthop_active(),
while route-oriented logic is in nexthop_active_check().

Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
2021-02-19 15:38:37 -05:00