Now that ip_rt_fix_tos() doesn't reset ->flowi4_scope unconditionally,
we don't have to rely on the RTO_ONLINK bit to properly set the scope
of a flowi4 structure. We can just set ->flowi4_scope explicitly and
avoid using RTO_ONLINK in ->flowi4_tos.
This patch converts callers of ip_route_connect(). Instead of setting
the tos parameter with RT_CONN_FLAGS(sk), as all callers do, we can:
1- Drop the tos parameter from ip_route_connect(): its value was
entirely based on sk, which is also passed as parameter.
2- Set ->flowi4_scope depending on the SOCK_LOCALROUTE socket option
instead of always initialising it with RT_SCOPE_UNIVERSE (let's
define ip_sock_rt_scope() for this purpose).
3- Avoid overloading ->flowi4_tos with RTO_ONLINK: since the scope is
now properly initialised, we don't need to tell ip_rt_fix_tos() to
adjust ->flowi4_scope for us. So let's define ip_sock_rt_tos(),
which is the same as RT_CONN_FLAGS() but without the RTO_ONLINK
bit overload.
Note:
In the original ip_route_connect() code, __ip_route_output_key()
might clear the RTO_ONLINK bit of fl4->flowi4_tos (because of
ip_rt_fix_tos()). Therefore flowi4_update_output() had to reuse the
original tos variable. Now that we don't set RTO_ONLINK any more,
this is not a problem and we can use fl4->flowi4_tos in
flowi4_update_output().
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Nault <gnault@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Our customers in the fiber telecom world have network configurations
where they would like to control their traffic according to the number
of tags appearing in the packet.
For example, TR247 GPON conformance test suite specification mostly
talks about untagged, single, double tagged packets and gives lax
guidelines on the vlan protocol vs. number of vlan tags.
This is different from the common IT networks where 802.1Q and 802.1ad
protocols are usually describe single and double tagged packet. GPON
configurations that we work with have arbitrary mix the above protocols
and number of vlan tags in the packet.
The goal is to make the following TC commands possible:
tc filter add dev eth1 ingress flower \
num_of_vlans 1 vlan_prio 5 action drop
From our logs, we have redirect rules such that:
tc filter add dev $GPON ingress flower num_of_vlans $N \
action mirred egress redirect dev $DEV
where N can range from 0 to 3 and $DEV is the function of $N.
Also there are rules setting skb mark based on the number of vlans:
tc filter add dev $GPON ingress flower num_of_vlans $N vlan_prio \
$P action skbedit mark $M
This new dissector allows extracting the number of vlan tags existing in
the packet.
Signed-off-by: Boris Sukholitko <boris.sukholitko@broadcom.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
In order to properly inform user about relationship between port and
line card, introduce a driver API to set line card for a port. Use this
information to extend port devlink netlink message by line card index
and also include the line card index into phys_port_name and by that
into a netdevice name.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Allow driver to mark a line card as active. Expose this state to the
userspace over devlink netlink interface with proper notifications.
'active' state means that line card was plugged in after
being provisioned.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
In order to be able to configure all needed stuff on a port/netdevice
of a line card without the line card being present, introduce line card
provisioning. Basically by setting a type, provisioning process will
start and driver is supposed to create a placeholder for instances
(ports/netdevices) for a line card type.
Allow the user to query the supported line card types over line card
get command. Then implement two netlink command SET to allow user to
set/unset the card type.
On the driver API side, add provision/unprovision ops and supported
types array to be advertised. Upon provision op call, the driver should
take care of creating the instances for the particular line card type.
Introduce provision_set/clear() functions to be called by the driver
once the provisioning/unprovisioning is done on its side. These helpers
are not to be called directly due to the async nature of provisioning.
Example:
$ devlink port # No ports are listed
$ devlink lc
pci/0000:01:00.0:
lc 1 state unprovisioned
supported_types:
16x100G
lc 2 state unprovisioned
supported_types:
16x100G
lc 3 state unprovisioned
supported_types:
16x100G
lc 4 state unprovisioned
supported_types:
16x100G
lc 5 state unprovisioned
supported_types:
16x100G
lc 6 state unprovisioned
supported_types:
16x100G
lc 7 state unprovisioned
supported_types:
16x100G
lc 8 state unprovisioned
supported_types:
16x100G
$ devlink lc set pci/0000:01:00.0 lc 8 type 16x100G
$ devlink lc show pci/0000:01:00.0 lc 8
pci/0000:01:00.0:
lc 8 state active type 16x100G
supported_types:
16x100G
$ devlink port
pci/0000:01:00.0/0: type notset flavour cpu port 0 splittable false
pci/0000:01:00.0/53: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p1 flavour physical lc 8 port 1 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/54: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p2 flavour physical lc 8 port 2 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/55: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p3 flavour physical lc 8 port 3 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/56: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p4 flavour physical lc 8 port 4 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/57: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p5 flavour physical lc 8 port 5 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/58: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p6 flavour physical lc 8 port 6 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/59: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p7 flavour physical lc 8 port 7 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/60: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p8 flavour physical lc 8 port 8 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/61: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p9 flavour physical lc 8 port 9 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/62: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p10 flavour physical lc 8 port 10 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/63: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p11 flavour physical lc 8 port 11 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/64: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p12 flavour physical lc 8 port 12 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/125: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p13 flavour physical lc 8 port 13 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/126: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p14 flavour physical lc 8 port 14 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/127: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p15 flavour physical lc 8 port 15 splittable true lanes 4
pci/0000:01:00.0/128: type eth netdev enp1s0nl8p16 flavour physical lc 8 port 16 splittable true lanes 4
$ devlink lc set pci/0000:01:00.0 lc 8 notype
Signed-off-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Extend the devlink API so the driver is going to be able to create and
destroy linecard instances. There can be multiple line cards per devlink
device. Expose this new type of object over devlink netlink API to the
userspace, with notifications.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Reads and Writes to ip6_rt_gc_expire always have been racy,
as syzbot reported lately [1]
There is a possible risk of under-flow, leading
to unexpected high value passed to fib6_run_gc(),
although I have not observed this in the field.
Hosts hitting ip6_dst_gc() very hard are under pretty bad
state anyway.
[1]
BUG: KCSAN: data-race in ip6_dst_gc / ip6_dst_gc
read-write to 0xffff888102110744 of 4 bytes by task 13165 on cpu 1:
ip6_dst_gc+0x1f3/0x220 net/ipv6/route.c:3311
dst_alloc+0x9b/0x160 net/core/dst.c:86
ip6_dst_alloc net/ipv6/route.c:344 [inline]
icmp6_dst_alloc+0xb2/0x360 net/ipv6/route.c:3261
mld_sendpack+0x2b9/0x580 net/ipv6/mcast.c:1807
mld_send_cr net/ipv6/mcast.c:2119 [inline]
mld_ifc_work+0x576/0x800 net/ipv6/mcast.c:2651
process_one_work+0x3d3/0x720 kernel/workqueue.c:2289
worker_thread+0x618/0xa70 kernel/workqueue.c:2436
kthread+0x1a9/0x1e0 kernel/kthread.c:376
ret_from_fork+0x1f/0x30
read-write to 0xffff888102110744 of 4 bytes by task 11607 on cpu 0:
ip6_dst_gc+0x1f3/0x220 net/ipv6/route.c:3311
dst_alloc+0x9b/0x160 net/core/dst.c:86
ip6_dst_alloc net/ipv6/route.c:344 [inline]
icmp6_dst_alloc+0xb2/0x360 net/ipv6/route.c:3261
mld_sendpack+0x2b9/0x580 net/ipv6/mcast.c:1807
mld_send_cr net/ipv6/mcast.c:2119 [inline]
mld_ifc_work+0x576/0x800 net/ipv6/mcast.c:2651
process_one_work+0x3d3/0x720 kernel/workqueue.c:2289
worker_thread+0x618/0xa70 kernel/workqueue.c:2436
kthread+0x1a9/0x1e0 kernel/kthread.c:376
ret_from_fork+0x1f/0x30
value changed: 0x00000bb3 -> 0x00000ba9
Reported by Kernel Concurrency Sanitizer on:
CPU: 0 PID: 11607 Comm: kworker/0:21 Not tainted 5.18.0-rc1-syzkaller-00037-g42e7a03d3bad-dirty #0
Hardware name: Google Google Compute Engine/Google Compute Engine, BIOS Google 01/01/2011
Workqueue: mld mld_ifc_work
Fixes: 1da177e4c3 ("Linux-2.6.12-rc2")
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Reported-by: syzbot <syzkaller@googlegroups.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220413181333.649424-1-eric.dumazet@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Ido reported that the commit referenced in the Fixes tag broke
a gre use case with dummy devices. Add a check to ip_tunnel_init_flow
to see if the oif is an l3mdev port and if so set the oif to 0 to
avoid the oif comparison in fib_lookup_good_nhc.
Fixes: 40867d74c3 ("net: Add l3mdev index to flow struct and avoid oif reset for port devices")
Reported-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@idosch.org>
Signed-off-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Steffen Klassert says:
====================
pull request (net): ipsec 2022-04-14
1) Fix the output interface for VRF cases in xfrm_dst_lookup.
From David Ahern.
2) Fix write out of bounds by doing COW on esp output when the
packet size is larger than a page.
From Sabrina Dubroca.
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Introduce page_pool APIs to report stats through ethtool and reduce
duplicated code in each driver.
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Ilias Apalodimas <ilias.apalodimas@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add a new rtnl flag (RTNL_FLAG_BULK_DEL_SUPPORTED) which is used to
verify that the delete operation allows bulk object deletion. Also emit
a warning if anyone tries to set it for non-delete kind.
Suggested-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Aleksandrov <razor@blackwall.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add a helper which extracts the msg type's kind using the kind mask (0x3).
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Aleksandrov <razor@blackwall.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add rtnl kind names instead of using raw values. We'll need to
check for DEL kind later to validate bulk flag support.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Aleksandrov <razor@blackwall.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Commit ebe48d368e ("esp: Fix possible buffer overflow in ESP
transformation") tried to fix skb_page_frag_refill usage in ESP by
capping allocsize to 32k, but that doesn't completely solve the issue,
as skb_page_frag_refill may return a single page. If that happens, we
will write out of bounds, despite the check introduced in the previous
patch.
This patch forces COW in cases where we would end up calling
skb_page_frag_refill with a size larger than a page (first in
esp_output_head with tailen, then in esp_output_tail with
skb->data_len).
Fixes: cac2661c53 ("esp4: Avoid skb_cow_data whenever possible")
Fixes: 03e2a30f6a ("esp6: Avoid skb_cow_data whenever possible")
Signed-off-by: Sabrina Dubroca <sd@queasysnail.net>
Signed-off-by: Steffen Klassert <steffen.klassert@secunet.com>
The internal recvmsg() functions have two parameters 'flags' and 'noblock'
that were merged inside skb_recv_datagram(). As a follow up patch to commit
f4b41f062c ("net: remove noblock parameter from skb_recv_datagram()")
this patch removes the separate 'noblock' parameter for recvmsg().
Analogue to the referenced patch for skb_recv_datagram() the 'flags' and
'noblock' parameters are unnecessarily split up with e.g.
err = sk->sk_prot->recvmsg(sk, msg, size, flags & MSG_DONTWAIT,
flags & ~MSG_DONTWAIT, &addr_len);
or in
err = INDIRECT_CALL_2(sk->sk_prot->recvmsg, tcp_recvmsg, udp_recvmsg,
sk, msg, size, flags & MSG_DONTWAIT,
flags & ~MSG_DONTWAIT, &addr_len);
instead of simply using only flags all the time and check for MSG_DONTWAIT
where needed (to preserve for the formerly separated no(n)block condition).
Signed-off-by: Oliver Hartkopp <socketcan@hartkopp.net>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220411124955.154876-1-socketcan@hartkopp.net
Signed-off-by: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Use the new dscp_t type to replace the tos field of struct
fib_entry_notifier_info. This ensures ECN bits are ignored and makes it
compatible with the dscp field of struct fib_rt_info.
This also allows sparse to flag potential incorrect uses of DSCP and
ECN bits.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Nault <gnault@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Use the new dscp_t type to replace the tos field of struct fib_rt_info.
This ensures ECN bits are ignored and makes it compatible with the
fa_dscp field of struct fib_alias.
This also allows sparse to flag potential incorrect uses of DSCP and
ECN bits.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Nault <gnault@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Currently in mac80211 each STA object is represented
using sta_info datastructure with the associated
STA specific information and drivers access ieee80211_sta
part of it.
With MLO (Multi Link Operation) support being added
in 802.11be standard, though the association is logically
with a single Multi Link capable STA, at the physical level
communication can happen via different advertised
links (uniquely identified by Channel, operating class,
BSSID) and hence the need to handle multiple link
STA parameters within a composite sta_info object
called the MLD STA. The different link STA part of
MLD STA are identified using the link address which can
be same or different as the MLD STA address and unique
link id based on the link vif.
To support extension of such a model, the sta_info
datastructure is modified to hold multiple link STA
objects with link specific params currently within
sta_info moved to this new structure. Similarly this is
done for ieee80211_sta as well which will be accessed
within mac80211 as well as by drivers, hence trivial
driver changes are expected to support this.
For current non MLO supported drivers, only one link STA
is present and link information is accessed via 'deflink'
member.
For MLO drivers, we still need to define the APIs etc. to
get the correct link ID and access the correct part of
the station info.
Currently in mac80211, all link STA info are accessed directly
via deflink. These will be updated to access via link pointers
indexed by link id with MLO support patches, with link id
being 0 for non MLO supported cases.
Except for couple of macro related changes, below spatch takes
care of updating mac80211 and driver code to access to the
link STA info via deflink.
@ieee80211_sta@
struct ieee80211_sta *s;
struct sta_info *si;
identifier var = {supp_rates, ht_cap, vht_cap, he_cap, he_6ghz_capa, eht_cap, rx_nss, bandwidth, txpwr};
@@
(
s->
- var
+ deflink.var
|
si->sta.
- var
+ deflink.var
)
@sta_info@
struct sta_info *si;
identifier var = {gtk, pcpu_rx_stats, rx_stats, rx_stats_avg, status_stats, tx_stats, cur_max_bandwidth};
@@
(
si->
- var
+ deflink.var
)
Signed-off-by: Sriram R <quic_srirrama@quicinc.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/1649086883-13246-1-git-send-email-quic_srirrama@quicinc.com
[remove MLO-drivers notes from commit message, not clear yet; run spatch]
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
Add ieee80211_rx_check_bss_color_collision routine in order to introduce
BSS color collision detection in mac80211 if it is not supported in HW/FW
(e.g. for mt7915 chipset).
Add IEEE80211_HW_DETECTS_COLOR_COLLISION flag to let the driver notify
BSS color collision detection is supported in HW/FW. Set this for ath11k
which apparently didn't need this code.
Tested-by: Peter Chiu <Chui-Hao.Chiu@mediatek.com>
Co-developed-by: Ryder Lee <ryder.lee@mediatek.com>
Signed-off-by: Ryder Lee <ryder.lee@mediatek.com>
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/a05eeeb1841a84560dc5aaec77894fcb69a54f27.1648204871.git.lorenzo@kernel.org
[clarify commit message a bit, move flag to mac80211]
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
The comment above the ieee80211_tx_info_clear_status() helper was somewhat
confusing as to which fields it was or wasn't clearing. So replace it by
something that is hopefully more, well, clear.
Signed-off-by: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@toke.dk>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220404210108.2684907-1-toke@toke.dk
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
Pablo Neira Ayuso says:
====================
Netfilter updates for net-next
The following patchset contains Netfilter updates for net-next:
1) Replace unnecessary list_for_each_entry_continue() in nf_tables,
from Jakob Koschel.
2) Add struct nf_conntrack_net_ecache to conntrack event cache and
use it, from Florian Westphal.
3) Refactor ctnetlink_dump_list(), also from Florian.
4) Bump module reference counter on cttimeout object addition/removal,
from Florian.
5) Consolidate nf_log MAC printer, from Phil Sutter.
6) Add basic logging support for unknown ethertype, from Phil Sutter.
7) Consolidate check for sysctl nf_log_all_netns toggle, also from Phil.
8) Replace hardcode value in nft_bitwise, from Jeremy Sowden.
9) Rename BASIC-like goto tags in nft_bitwise to more meaningful names,
also from Jeremy.
10) nft_fib support for reverse path filtering with policy-based routing
on iif. Extend selftests to cover for this new usecase, from Florian.
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Replace kfree_skb() used in icmp_rcv() and icmpv6_rcv() with
kfree_skb_reason().
In order to get the reasons of the skb drops after icmp message handle,
we change the return type of 'handler()' in 'struct icmp_control' from
'bool' to 'enum skb_drop_reason'. This may change its original
intention, as 'false' means failure, but 'SKB_NOT_DROPPED_YET' means
success now. Therefore, all 'handler' and the call of them need to be
handled. Following 'handler' functions are involved:
icmp_unreach()
icmp_redirect()
icmp_echo()
icmp_timestamp()
icmp_discard()
And following new drop reasons are added:
SKB_DROP_REASON_ICMP_CSUM
SKB_DROP_REASON_INVALID_PROTO
The reason 'INVALID_PROTO' is introduced for the case that the packet
doesn't follow rfc 1122 and is dropped. This is not a common case, and
I believe we can locate the problem from the data in the packet. For now,
this 'INVALID_PROTO' is used for the icmp broadcasts with wrong types.
Maybe there should be a document file for these reasons. For example,
list all the case that causes the 'UNHANDLED_PROTO' and 'INVALID_PROTO'
drop reason. Therefore, users can locate their problems according to the
document.
Reviewed-by: Hao Peng <flyingpeng@tencent.com>
Reviewed-by: Jiang Biao <benbjiang@tencent.com>
Signed-off-by: Menglong Dong <imagedong@tencent.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
In order to report the reasons of skb drops in 'sock_queue_rcv_skb()',
introduce the function 'sock_queue_rcv_skb_reason()'.
As the return value of 'sock_queue_rcv_skb()' is used as the error code,
we can't make it as drop reason and have to pass extra output argument.
'sock_queue_rcv_skb()' is used in many places, so we can't change it
directly.
Introduce the new function 'sock_queue_rcv_skb_reason()' and make
'sock_queue_rcv_skb()' an inline call to it.
Reviewed-by: Hao Peng <flyingpeng@tencent.com>
Reviewed-by: Jiang Biao <benbjiang@tencent.com>
Signed-off-by: Menglong Dong <imagedong@tencent.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Since we are protected from async completions by decrypt_compl_lock
we can drop the async_notify and reinit the completion before we
start waiting.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
For better error reporting to user space, add extack messages when
skbedit action offload fails.
Example:
# echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/netlink/netlink_extack/enable
# tc filter add dev dummy0 ingress pref 1 proto all matchall skip_sw action skbedit queue_mapping 1234
Error: cls_matchall: Failed to setup flow action.
We have an error talking to the kernel
# cat /sys/kernel/tracing/trace_pipe
tc-185 [002] b..1. 31.802414: netlink_extack: msg=act_skbedit: Offload not supported when "queue_mapping" option is used
tc-185 [002] ..... 31.802418: netlink_extack: msg=cls_matchall: Failed to setup flow action
# tc filter add dev dummy0 ingress pref 1 proto all matchall skip_sw action skbedit inheritdsfield
Error: cls_matchall: Failed to setup flow action.
We have an error talking to the kernel
# cat /sys/kernel/tracing/trace_pipe
tc-187 [002] b..1. 45.985145: netlink_extack: msg=act_skbedit: Offload not supported when "inheritdsfield" option is used
tc-187 [002] ..... 45.985160: netlink_extack: msg=cls_matchall: Failed to setup flow action
Signed-off-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Petr Machata <petrm@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
For better error reporting to user space, add extack messages when gact
action offload fails.
Example:
# echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/netlink/netlink_extack/enable
# tc filter add dev dummy0 ingress pref 1 proto all matchall skip_sw action continue
Error: cls_matchall: Failed to setup flow action.
We have an error talking to the kernel
# cat /sys/kernel/tracing/trace_pipe
tc-181 [002] b..1. 105.493450: netlink_extack: msg=act_gact: Offload of "continue" action is not supported
tc-181 [002] ..... 105.493466: netlink_extack: msg=cls_matchall: Failed to setup flow action
# tc filter add dev dummy0 ingress pref 1 proto all matchall skip_sw action reclassify
Error: cls_matchall: Failed to setup flow action.
We have an error talking to the kernel
# cat /sys/kernel/tracing/trace_pipe
tc-183 [002] b..1. 124.126477: netlink_extack: msg=act_gact: Offload of "reclassify" action is not supported
tc-183 [002] ..... 124.126489: netlink_extack: msg=cls_matchall: Failed to setup flow action
# tc filter add dev dummy0 ingress pref 1 proto all matchall skip_sw action pipe action drop
Error: cls_matchall: Failed to setup flow action.
We have an error talking to the kernel
# cat /sys/kernel/tracing/trace_pipe
tc-185 [002] b..1. 137.097791: netlink_extack: msg=act_gact: Offload of "pipe" action is not supported
tc-185 [002] ..... 137.097804: netlink_extack: msg=cls_matchall: Failed to setup flow action
Signed-off-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Petr Machata <petrm@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
The callback is used by various actions to populate the flow action
structure prior to offload. Pass extack to this callback so that the
various actions will be able to report accurate error messages to user
space.
Signed-off-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Petr Machata <petrm@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
A tc flower filter matching TCA_FLOWER_KEY_VLAN_ETH_TYPE is expected to
match the L2 ethertype following the first VLAN header, as confirmed by
linked discussion with the maintainer. However, such rule also matches
packets that have additional second VLAN header, even though filter has
both eth_type and vlan_ethtype set to "ipv4". Looking at the code this
seems to be mostly an artifact of the way flower uses flow dissector.
First, even though looking at the uAPI eth_type and vlan_ethtype appear
like a distinct fields, in flower they are all mapped to the same
key->basic.n_proto. Second, flow dissector skips following VLAN header as
no keys for FLOW_DISSECTOR_KEY_CVLAN are set and eventually assigns the
value of n_proto to last parsed header. With these, such filters ignore any
headers present between first VLAN header and first "non magic"
header (ipv4 in this case) that doesn't result
FLOW_DISSECT_RET_PROTO_AGAIN.
Fix the issue by extending flow dissector VLAN key structure with new
'vlan_eth_type' field that matches first ethertype following previously
parsed VLAN header. Modify flower classifier to set the new
flow_dissector_key_vlan->vlan_eth_type with value obtained from
TCA_FLOWER_KEY_VLAN_ETH_TYPE/TCA_FLOWER_KEY_CVLAN_ETH_TYPE uAPIs.
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/Yjhgi48BpTGh6dig@nanopsycho/
Fixes: 9399ae9a6c ("net_sched: flower: Add vlan support")
Fixes: d64efd0926 ("net/sched: flower: Add supprt for matching on QinQ vlan headers")
Signed-off-by: Vlad Buslov <vladbu@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
TLS 1.3 has to strip padding, and it starts out 16 bytes
from the end of the record. Make it clear this is because
of the auth tag.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Similar justification to previous change, the information
about decryption status belongs in the skb.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Original TLS implementation was handling one record at a time.
It stashed the type of the record inside tls context (per socket
structure) for convenience. When async crypto support was added
[1] the author had to use skb->cb to store the type per-message.
The use of skb->cb overlaps with strparser, however, so a hybrid
approach was taken where type is stored in context while parsing
(since we parse a message at a time) but once parsed its copied
to skb->cb.
Recently a workaround for sockmaps [2] exposed the previously
private struct _strp_msg and started a trend of adding user
fields directly in strparser's header. This is cleaner than
storing information about an skb in the context.
This change is not strictly necessary, but IMHO the ownership
of the context field is confusing. Information naturally
belongs to the skb.
[1] commit 94524d8fc9 ("net/tls: Add support for async decryption of tls records")
[2] commit b2c4618162 ("bpf, sockmap: sk_skb data_end access incorrect when src_reg = dst_reg")
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This makes it easier for a followup patch to only expose ecache
related parts of nf_conntrack_net structure.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
The congestion status of a tcp flow may be updated since there
is congestion between tcp sender and receiver. It makes sense to
add tracepoint for congestion status set function to summate cc
status duration and evaluate the performance of network
and congestion algorithm. the backgound of this patch is below.
Link: https://github.com/iovisor/bcc/pull/3899
Signed-off-by: Ping Gan <jacky_gam_2001@163.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220406010956.19656-1-jacky_gam_2001@163.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
idev->addr_list needs to be protected by idev->lock. However, it is not
always possible to do so while iterating and performing actions on
inet6_ifaddr instances. For example, multiple functions (like
addrconf_{join,leave}_anycast) eventually call down to other functions
that acquire the idev->lock. The current code temporarily unlocked the
idev->lock during the loops, which can cause race conditions. Moving the
locks up is also not an appropriate solution as the ordering of lock
acquisition will be inconsistent with for example mc_lock.
This solution adds an additional field to inet6_ifaddr that is used
to temporarily add the instances to a temporary list while holding
idev->lock. The temporary list can then be traversed without holding
idev->lock. This change was done in two places. In addrconf_ifdown, the
list_for_each_entry_safe variant of the list loop is also no longer
necessary as there is no deletion within that specific loop.
Suggested-by: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Niels Dossche <dossche.niels@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220403231523.45843-1-dossche.niels@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
We had various bugs over the years with code
breaking the assumption that tp->snd_cwnd is greater
than zero.
Lately, syzbot reported the WARN_ON_ONCE(!tp->prior_cwnd) added
in commit 8b8a321ff7 ("tcp: fix zero cwnd in tcp_cwnd_reduction")
can trigger, and without a repro we would have to spend
considerable time finding the bug.
Instead of complaining too late, we want to catch where
and when tp->snd_cwnd is set to an illegal value.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Suggested-by: Yuchung Cheng <ycheng@google.com>
Cc: Neal Cardwell <ncardwell@google.com>
Acked-by: Yuchung Cheng <ycheng@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220405233538.947344-1-eric.dumazet@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Previously the skb was allocated with headroom MCTP_HEADER_MAXLEN,
but that isn't sufficient if we are using devs that are not MCTP
specific.
This also adds a check that the smctp_halen provided to sendmsg for
extended addressing is the correct size for the netdev.
Fixes: 833ef3b91d ("mctp: Populate socket implementation")
Reported-by: Matthew Rinaldi <mjrinal@g.clemson.edu>
Signed-off-by: Matt Johnston <matt@codeconstruct.com.au>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Core
----
- Introduce XDP multi-buffer support, allowing the use of XDP with
jumbo frame MTUs and combination with Rx coalescing offloads (LRO).
- Speed up netns dismantling (5x) and lower the memory cost a little.
Remove unnecessary per-netns sockets. Scope some lists to a netns.
Cut down RCU syncing. Use batch methods. Allow netdev registration
to complete out of order.
- Support distinguishing timestamp types (ingress vs egress) and
maintaining them across packet scrubbing points (e.g. redirect).
- Continue the work of annotating packet drop reasons throughout
the stack.
- Switch netdev error counters from an atomic to dynamically
allocated per-CPU counters.
- Rework a few preempt_disable(), local_irq_save() and busy waiting
sections problematic on PREEMPT_RT.
- Extend the ref_tracker to allow catching use-after-free bugs.
BPF
---
- Introduce "packing allocator" for BPF JIT images. JITed code is
marked read only, and used to be allocated at page granularity.
Custom allocator allows for more efficient memory use, lower
iTLB pressure and prevents identity mapping huge pages from
getting split.
- Make use of BTF type annotations (e.g. __user, __percpu) to enforce
the correct probe read access method, add appropriate helpers.
- Convert the BPF preload to use light skeleton and drop
the user-mode-driver dependency.
- Allow XDP BPF_PROG_RUN test infra to send real packets, enabling
its use as a packet generator.
- Allow local storage memory to be allocated with GFP_KERNEL if called
from a hook allowed to sleep.
- Introduce fprobe (multi kprobe) to speed up mass attachment (arch
bits to come later).
- Add unstable conntrack lookup helpers for BPF by using the BPF
kfunc infra.
- Allow cgroup BPF progs to return custom errors to user space.
- Add support for AF_UNIX iterator batching.
- Allow iterator programs to use sleepable helpers.
- Support JIT of add, and, or, xor and xchg atomic ops on arm64.
- Add BTFGen support to bpftool which allows to use CO-RE in kernels
without BTF info.
- Large number of libbpf API improvements, cleanups and deprecations.
Protocols
---------
- Micro-optimize UDPv6 Tx, gaining up to 5% in test on dummy netdev.
- Adjust TSO packet sizes based on min_rtt, allowing very low latency
links (data centers) to always send full-sized TSO super-frames.
- Make IPv6 flow label changes (AKA hash rethink) more configurable,
via sysctl and setsockopt. Distinguish between server and client
behavior.
- VxLAN support to "collect metadata" devices to terminate only
configured VNIs. This is similar to VLAN filtering in the bridge.
- Support inserting IPv6 IOAM information to a fraction of frames.
- Add protocol attribute to IP addresses to allow identifying where
given address comes from (kernel-generated, DHCP etc.)
- Support setting socket and IPv6 options via cmsg on ping6 sockets.
- Reject mis-use of ECN bits in IP headers as part of DSCP/TOS.
Define dscp_t and stop taking ECN bits into account in fib-rules.
- Add support for locked bridge ports (for 802.1X).
- tun: support NAPI for packets received from batched XDP buffs,
doubling the performance in some scenarios.
- IPv6 extension header handling in Open vSwitch.
- Support IPv6 control message load balancing in bonding, prevent
neighbor solicitation and advertisement from using the wrong port.
Support NS/NA monitor selection similar to existing ARP monitor.
- SMC
- improve performance with TCP_CORK and sendfile()
- support auto-corking
- support TCP_NODELAY
- MCTP (Management Component Transport Protocol)
- add user space tag control interface
- I2C binding driver (as specified by DMTF DSP0237)
- Multi-BSSID beacon handling in AP mode for WiFi.
- Bluetooth:
- handle MSFT Monitor Device Event
- add MGMT Adv Monitor Device Found/Lost events
- Multi-Path TCP:
- add support for the SO_SNDTIMEO socket option
- lots of selftest cleanups and improvements
- Increase the max PDU size in CAN ISOTP to 64 kB.
Driver API
----------
- Add HW counters for SW netdevs, a mechanism for devices which
offload packet forwarding to report packet statistics back to
software interfaces such as tunnels.
- Select the default NIC queue count as a fraction of number of
physical CPU cores, instead of hard-coding to 8.
- Expose devlink instance locks to drivers. Allow device layer of
drivers to use that lock directly instead of creating their own
which always runs into ordering issues in devlink callbacks.
- Add header/data split indication to guide user space enabling
of TCP zero-copy Rx.
- Allow configuring completion queue event size.
- Refactor page_pool to enable fragmenting after allocation.
- Add allocation and page reuse statistics to page_pool.
- Improve Multiple Spanning Trees support in the bridge to allow
reuse of topologies across VLANs, saving HW resources in switches.
- DSA (Distributed Switch Architecture):
- replay and offload of host VLAN entries
- offload of static and local FDB entries on LAG interfaces
- FDB isolation and unicast filtering
New hardware / drivers
----------------------
- Ethernet:
- LAN937x T1 PHYs
- Davicom DM9051 SPI NIC driver
- Realtek RTL8367S, RTL8367RB-VB switch and MDIO
- Microchip ksz8563 switches
- Netronome NFP3800 SmartNICs
- Fungible SmartNICs
- MediaTek MT8195 switches
- WiFi:
- mt76: MediaTek mt7916
- mt76: MediaTek mt7921u USB adapters
- brcmfmac: Broadcom BCM43454/6
- Mobile:
- iosm: Intel M.2 7360 WWAN card
Drivers
-------
- Convert many drivers to the new phylink API built for split PCS
designs but also simplifying other cases.
- Intel Ethernet NICs:
- add TTY for GNSS module for E810T device
- improve AF_XDP performance
- GTP-C and GTP-U filter offload
- QinQ VLAN support
- Mellanox Ethernet NICs (mlx5):
- support xdp->data_meta
- multi-buffer XDP
- offload tc push_eth and pop_eth actions
- Netronome Ethernet NICs (nfp):
- flow-independent tc action hardware offload (police / meter)
- AF_XDP
- Other Ethernet NICs:
- at803x: fiber and SFP support
- xgmac: mdio: preamble suppression and custom MDC frequencies
- r8169: enable ASPM L1.2 if system vendor flags it as safe
- macb/gem: ZynqMP SGMII
- hns3: add TX push mode
- dpaa2-eth: software TSO
- lan743x: multi-queue, mdio, SGMII, PTP
- axienet: NAPI and GRO support
- Mellanox Ethernet switches (mlxsw):
- source and dest IP address rewrites
- RJ45 ports
- Marvell Ethernet switches (prestera):
- basic routing offload
- multi-chain TC ACL offload
- NXP embedded Ethernet switches (ocelot & felix):
- PTP over UDP with the ocelot-8021q DSA tagging protocol
- basic QoS classification on Felix DSA switch using dcbnl
- port mirroring for ocelot switches
- Microchip high-speed industrial Ethernet (sparx5):
- offloading of bridge port flooding flags
- PTP Hardware Clock
- Other embedded switches:
- lan966x: PTP Hardward Clock
- qca8k: mdio read/write operations via crafted Ethernet packets
- Qualcomm 802.11ax WiFi (ath11k):
- add LDPC FEC type and 802.11ax High Efficiency data in radiotap
- enable RX PPDU stats in monitor co-exist mode
- Intel WiFi (iwlwifi):
- UHB TAS enablement via BIOS
- band disablement via BIOS
- channel switch offload
- 32 Rx AMPDU sessions in newer devices
- MediaTek WiFi (mt76):
- background radar detection
- thermal management improvements on mt7915
- SAR support for more mt76 platforms
- MBSSID and 6 GHz band on mt7915
- RealTek WiFi:
- rtw89: AP mode
- rtw89: 160 MHz channels and 6 GHz band
- rtw89: hardware scan
- Bluetooth:
- mt7921s: wake on Bluetooth, SCO over I2S, wide-band-speed (WBS)
- Microchip CAN (mcp251xfd):
- multiple RX-FIFOs and runtime configurable RX/TX rings
- internal PLL, runtime PM handling simplification
- improve chip detection and error handling after wakeup
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
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Merge tag 'net-next-5.18' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next
Pull networking updates from Jakub Kicinski:
"The sprinkling of SPI drivers is because we added a new one and Mark
sent us a SPI driver interface conversion pull request.
Core
----
- Introduce XDP multi-buffer support, allowing the use of XDP with
jumbo frame MTUs and combination with Rx coalescing offloads (LRO).
- Speed up netns dismantling (5x) and lower the memory cost a little.
Remove unnecessary per-netns sockets. Scope some lists to a netns.
Cut down RCU syncing. Use batch methods. Allow netdev registration
to complete out of order.
- Support distinguishing timestamp types (ingress vs egress) and
maintaining them across packet scrubbing points (e.g. redirect).
- Continue the work of annotating packet drop reasons throughout the
stack.
- Switch netdev error counters from an atomic to dynamically
allocated per-CPU counters.
- Rework a few preempt_disable(), local_irq_save() and busy waiting
sections problematic on PREEMPT_RT.
- Extend the ref_tracker to allow catching use-after-free bugs.
BPF
---
- Introduce "packing allocator" for BPF JIT images. JITed code is
marked read only, and used to be allocated at page granularity.
Custom allocator allows for more efficient memory use, lower iTLB
pressure and prevents identity mapping huge pages from getting
split.
- Make use of BTF type annotations (e.g. __user, __percpu) to enforce
the correct probe read access method, add appropriate helpers.
- Convert the BPF preload to use light skeleton and drop the
user-mode-driver dependency.
- Allow XDP BPF_PROG_RUN test infra to send real packets, enabling
its use as a packet generator.
- Allow local storage memory to be allocated with GFP_KERNEL if
called from a hook allowed to sleep.
- Introduce fprobe (multi kprobe) to speed up mass attachment (arch
bits to come later).
- Add unstable conntrack lookup helpers for BPF by using the BPF
kfunc infra.
- Allow cgroup BPF progs to return custom errors to user space.
- Add support for AF_UNIX iterator batching.
- Allow iterator programs to use sleepable helpers.
- Support JIT of add, and, or, xor and xchg atomic ops on arm64.
- Add BTFGen support to bpftool which allows to use CO-RE in kernels
without BTF info.
- Large number of libbpf API improvements, cleanups and deprecations.
Protocols
---------
- Micro-optimize UDPv6 Tx, gaining up to 5% in test on dummy netdev.
- Adjust TSO packet sizes based on min_rtt, allowing very low latency
links (data centers) to always send full-sized TSO super-frames.
- Make IPv6 flow label changes (AKA hash rethink) more configurable,
via sysctl and setsockopt. Distinguish between server and client
behavior.
- VxLAN support to "collect metadata" devices to terminate only
configured VNIs. This is similar to VLAN filtering in the bridge.
- Support inserting IPv6 IOAM information to a fraction of frames.
- Add protocol attribute to IP addresses to allow identifying where
given address comes from (kernel-generated, DHCP etc.)
- Support setting socket and IPv6 options via cmsg on ping6 sockets.
- Reject mis-use of ECN bits in IP headers as part of DSCP/TOS.
Define dscp_t and stop taking ECN bits into account in fib-rules.
- Add support for locked bridge ports (for 802.1X).
- tun: support NAPI for packets received from batched XDP buffs,
doubling the performance in some scenarios.
- IPv6 extension header handling in Open vSwitch.
- Support IPv6 control message load balancing in bonding, prevent
neighbor solicitation and advertisement from using the wrong port.
Support NS/NA monitor selection similar to existing ARP monitor.
- SMC
- improve performance with TCP_CORK and sendfile()
- support auto-corking
- support TCP_NODELAY
- MCTP (Management Component Transport Protocol)
- add user space tag control interface
- I2C binding driver (as specified by DMTF DSP0237)
- Multi-BSSID beacon handling in AP mode for WiFi.
- Bluetooth:
- handle MSFT Monitor Device Event
- add MGMT Adv Monitor Device Found/Lost events
- Multi-Path TCP:
- add support for the SO_SNDTIMEO socket option
- lots of selftest cleanups and improvements
- Increase the max PDU size in CAN ISOTP to 64 kB.
Driver API
----------
- Add HW counters for SW netdevs, a mechanism for devices which
offload packet forwarding to report packet statistics back to
software interfaces such as tunnels.
- Select the default NIC queue count as a fraction of number of
physical CPU cores, instead of hard-coding to 8.
- Expose devlink instance locks to drivers. Allow device layer of
drivers to use that lock directly instead of creating their own
which always runs into ordering issues in devlink callbacks.
- Add header/data split indication to guide user space enabling of
TCP zero-copy Rx.
- Allow configuring completion queue event size.
- Refactor page_pool to enable fragmenting after allocation.
- Add allocation and page reuse statistics to page_pool.
- Improve Multiple Spanning Trees support in the bridge to allow
reuse of topologies across VLANs, saving HW resources in switches.
- DSA (Distributed Switch Architecture):
- replay and offload of host VLAN entries
- offload of static and local FDB entries on LAG interfaces
- FDB isolation and unicast filtering
New hardware / drivers
----------------------
- Ethernet:
- LAN937x T1 PHYs
- Davicom DM9051 SPI NIC driver
- Realtek RTL8367S, RTL8367RB-VB switch and MDIO
- Microchip ksz8563 switches
- Netronome NFP3800 SmartNICs
- Fungible SmartNICs
- MediaTek MT8195 switches
- WiFi:
- mt76: MediaTek mt7916
- mt76: MediaTek mt7921u USB adapters
- brcmfmac: Broadcom BCM43454/6
- Mobile:
- iosm: Intel M.2 7360 WWAN card
Drivers
-------
- Convert many drivers to the new phylink API built for split PCS
designs but also simplifying other cases.
- Intel Ethernet NICs:
- add TTY for GNSS module for E810T device
- improve AF_XDP performance
- GTP-C and GTP-U filter offload
- QinQ VLAN support
- Mellanox Ethernet NICs (mlx5):
- support xdp->data_meta
- multi-buffer XDP
- offload tc push_eth and pop_eth actions
- Netronome Ethernet NICs (nfp):
- flow-independent tc action hardware offload (police / meter)
- AF_XDP
- Other Ethernet NICs:
- at803x: fiber and SFP support
- xgmac: mdio: preamble suppression and custom MDC frequencies
- r8169: enable ASPM L1.2 if system vendor flags it as safe
- macb/gem: ZynqMP SGMII
- hns3: add TX push mode
- dpaa2-eth: software TSO
- lan743x: multi-queue, mdio, SGMII, PTP
- axienet: NAPI and GRO support
- Mellanox Ethernet switches (mlxsw):
- source and dest IP address rewrites
- RJ45 ports
- Marvell Ethernet switches (prestera):
- basic routing offload
- multi-chain TC ACL offload
- NXP embedded Ethernet switches (ocelot & felix):
- PTP over UDP with the ocelot-8021q DSA tagging protocol
- basic QoS classification on Felix DSA switch using dcbnl
- port mirroring for ocelot switches
- Microchip high-speed industrial Ethernet (sparx5):
- offloading of bridge port flooding flags
- PTP Hardware Clock
- Other embedded switches:
- lan966x: PTP Hardward Clock
- qca8k: mdio read/write operations via crafted Ethernet packets
- Qualcomm 802.11ax WiFi (ath11k):
- add LDPC FEC type and 802.11ax High Efficiency data in radiotap
- enable RX PPDU stats in monitor co-exist mode
- Intel WiFi (iwlwifi):
- UHB TAS enablement via BIOS
- band disablement via BIOS
- channel switch offload
- 32 Rx AMPDU sessions in newer devices
- MediaTek WiFi (mt76):
- background radar detection
- thermal management improvements on mt7915
- SAR support for more mt76 platforms
- MBSSID and 6 GHz band on mt7915
- RealTek WiFi:
- rtw89: AP mode
- rtw89: 160 MHz channels and 6 GHz band
- rtw89: hardware scan
- Bluetooth:
- mt7921s: wake on Bluetooth, SCO over I2S, wide-band-speed (WBS)
- Microchip CAN (mcp251xfd):
- multiple RX-FIFOs and runtime configurable RX/TX rings
- internal PLL, runtime PM handling simplification
- improve chip detection and error handling after wakeup"
* tag 'net-next-5.18' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next: (2521 commits)
llc: fix netdevice reference leaks in llc_ui_bind()
drivers: ethernet: cpsw: fix panic when interrupt coaleceing is set via ethtool
ice: don't allow to run ice_send_event_to_aux() in atomic ctx
ice: fix 'scheduling while atomic' on aux critical err interrupt
net/sched: fix incorrect vlan_push_eth dest field
net: bridge: mst: Restrict info size queries to bridge ports
net: marvell: prestera: add missing destroy_workqueue() in prestera_module_init()
drivers: net: xgene: Fix regression in CRC stripping
net: geneve: add missing netlink policy and size for IFLA_GENEVE_INNER_PROTO_INHERIT
net: dsa: fix missing host-filtered multicast addresses
net/mlx5e: Fix build warning, detected write beyond size of field
iwlwifi: mvm: Don't fail if PPAG isn't supported
selftests/bpf: Fix kprobe_multi test.
Revert "rethook: x86: Add rethook x86 implementation"
Revert "arm64: rethook: Add arm64 rethook implementation"
Revert "powerpc: Add rethook support"
Revert "ARM: rethook: Add rethook arm implementation"
netdevice: add missing dm_private kdoc
net: bridge: mst: prevent NULL deref in br_mst_info_size()
selftests: forwarding: Use same VRF for port and VLAN upper
...
Hi Linus,
Please, pull the following treewide patch that replaces zero-length arrays with
flexible-array members. This patch has been baking in linux-next for a
whole development cycle.
Thanks
--
Gustavo
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Merge tag 'flexible-array-transformations-5.18-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gustavoars/linux
Pull flexible-array transformations from Gustavo Silva:
"Treewide patch that replaces zero-length arrays with flexible-array
members.
This has been baking in linux-next for a whole development cycle"
* tag 'flexible-array-transformations-5.18-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gustavoars/linux:
treewide: Replace zero-length arrays with flexible-array members
Seems like a potential copy-paste bug slipped in here,
the second memcpy should of course be populating src
and not dest.
Fixes: ab95465cde ("net/sched: add vlan push_eth and pop_eth action to the hardware IR")
Signed-off-by: Louis Peens <louis.peens@corigine.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220323092506.21639-1-louis.peens@corigine.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Alexei Starovoitov says:
====================
pull-request: bpf-next 2022-03-21 v2
We've added 137 non-merge commits during the last 17 day(s) which contain
a total of 143 files changed, 7123 insertions(+), 1092 deletions(-).
The main changes are:
1) Custom SEC() handling in libbpf, from Andrii.
2) subskeleton support, from Delyan.
3) Use btf_tag to recognize __percpu pointers in the verifier, from Hao.
4) Fix net.core.bpf_jit_harden race, from Hou.
5) Fix bpf_sk_lookup remote_port on big-endian, from Jakub.
6) Introduce fprobe (multi kprobe) _without_ arch bits, from Masami.
The arch specific bits will come later.
7) Introduce multi_kprobe bpf programs on top of fprobe, from Jiri.
8) Enable non-atomic allocations in local storage, from Joanne.
9) Various var_off ptr_to_btf_id fixed, from Kumar.
10) bpf_ima_file_hash helper, from Roberto.
11) Add "live packet" mode for XDP in BPF_PROG_RUN, from Toke.
* https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bpf/bpf-next: (137 commits)
selftests/bpf: Fix kprobe_multi test.
Revert "rethook: x86: Add rethook x86 implementation"
Revert "arm64: rethook: Add arm64 rethook implementation"
Revert "powerpc: Add rethook support"
Revert "ARM: rethook: Add rethook arm implementation"
bpftool: Fix a bug in subskeleton code generation
bpf: Fix bpf_prog_pack when PMU_SIZE is not defined
bpf: Fix bpf_prog_pack for multi-node setup
bpf: Fix warning for cast from restricted gfp_t in verifier
bpf, arm: Fix various typos in comments
libbpf: Close fd in bpf_object__reuse_map
bpftool: Fix print error when show bpf map
bpf: Fix kprobe_multi return probe backtrace
Revert "bpf: Add support to inline bpf_get_func_ip helper on x86"
bpf: Simplify check in btf_parse_hdr()
selftests/bpf/test_lirc_mode2.sh: Exit with proper code
bpf: Check for NULL return from bpf_get_btf_vmlinux
selftests/bpf: Test skipping stacktrace
bpf: Adjust BPF stack helper functions to accommodate skip > 0
bpf: Select proper size for bpf_prog_pack
...
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220322050159.5507-1-alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
We'll need an explicitly locked rate node API for netdevsim
to switch eswitch mode setting to locked.
Reviewed-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
The fib expression stores to a register, so we can't add empty stub.
Check that the register that is being written is in fact redundant.
In most cases, this is expected to cancel tracking as re-use is
unlikely.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
its enough to export the meta get reduce helper and then call it
from nft_meta_bridge too.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
Output of expressions might be larger than one single register, this might
clobber existing data. Reset tracking for all destination registers that
required to store the expression output.
This patch adds three new helper functions:
- nft_reg_track_update: cancel previous register tracking and update it.
- nft_reg_track_cancel: cancel any previous register tracking info.
- __nft_reg_track_cancel: cancel only one single register tracking info.
Partial register clobbering detection is also supported by checking the
.num_reg field which describes the number of register that are used.
This patch updates the following expressions:
- meta_bridge
- bitwise
- byteorder
- meta
- payload
to use these helper functions.
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
Skip register tracking for expressions that perform read-only operations
on the registers. Define and use a cookie pointer NFT_REDUCE_READONLY to
avoid defining stubs for these expressions.
This patch re-enables register tracking which was disabled in ed5f85d422
("netfilter: nf_tables: disable register tracking"). Follow up patches
add remaining register tracking for existing expressions.
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
The function sets the pernet boolean to avoid the spurious warning from
nf_ct_lookup_helper() when assigning conntrack helpers via nftables.
Fixes: 1a64edf54f ("netfilter: nft_ct: add helper set support")
Signed-off-by: Phil Sutter <phil@nwl.cc>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
ipsec-next
Steffen Klassert says:
====================
pull request (net-next): ipsec-next 2022-03-19
1) Delete duplicated functions that calls same xfrm_api_check.
From Leon Romanovsky.
2) Align userland API of the default policy structure to the
internal structures. From Nicolas Dichtel.
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Callers pass msg->msg_flags as flags, which contains MSG_DONTWAIT
instead of O_NONBLOCK.
Signed-off-by: Gavin Li <gavin@matician.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
Some controllers have problems with being sent a command to clear
all filtering. While the HCI code does not unconditionally
send a clear-all anymore at BR/EDR setup (after the state machine
refactor), there might be more ways of hitting these codepaths
in the future as the kernel develops.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Cc: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Ismael Ferreras Morezuelas <swyterzone@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
Third set of patches for v5.18. Smaller set this time, support for
mt7921u and some work on MBSSID support. Also a workaround for rfkill
userspace event.
Major changes:
mac80211
* MBSSID beacon handling in AP mode
rfkill
* make new event layout opt-in to workaround buggy user space
rtlwifi
* support On Networks N150 device id
mt76
* mt7915: MBSSID and 6 GHz band support
* new driver mt7921u
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Merge tag 'wireless-next-2022-03-18' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/wireless/wireless-next
Kalle Valo says:
====================
wireless-next patches for v5.18
Third set of patches for v5.18. Smaller set this time, support for
mt7921u and some work on MBSSID support. Also a workaround for rfkill
userspace event.
Major changes:
mac80211
* MBSSID beacon handling in AP mode
rfkill
* make new event layout opt-in to workaround buggy user space
rtlwifi
* support On Networks N150 device id
mt76
* mt7915: MBSSID and 6 GHz band support
* new driver mt7921u
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This is a follow up of commit f8d858e607 ("xfrm: make user policy API
complete"). The goal is to align userland API to the internal structures.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Dichtel <nicolas.dichtel@6wind.com>
Reviewed-by: Antony Antony <antony.antony@secunet.com>
Signed-off-by: Steffen Klassert <steffen.klassert@secunet.com>
Drivers might have error messages to propagate to user space, most
common being that they support a single mirror port.
Propagate the netlink extack so that they can inform user space in a
verbal way of their limitations.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Add the usual trampoline functionality from the generic DSA layer down
to the drivers for MST state changes.
When a state changes to disabled/blocking/listening, make sure to fast
age any dynamic entries in the affected VLANs (those controlled by the
MSTI in question).
Signed-off-by: Tobias Waldekranz <tobias@waldekranz.com>
Reviewed-by: Vladimir Oltean <olteanv@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Add the usual trampoline functionality from the generic DSA layer down
to the drivers for VLAN MSTI migrations.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Waldekranz <tobias@waldekranz.com>
Reviewed-by: Vladimir Oltean <olteanv@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Generate a switchdev notification whenever an MST state changes. This
notification is keyed by the VLANs MSTI rather than the VID, since
multiple VLANs may share the same MST instance.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Waldekranz <tobias@waldekranz.com>
Acked-by: Nikolay Aleksandrov <razor@blackwall.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Whenever a VLAN moves to a new MSTI, send a switchdev notification so
that switchdevs can track a bridge's VID to MSTI mappings.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Waldekranz <tobias@waldekranz.com>
Acked-by: Nikolay Aleksandrov <razor@blackwall.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Trigger a switchdev event whenever the bridge's MST mode is
enabled/disabled. This allows constituent ports to either perform any
required hardware config, or refuse the change if it not supported.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Waldekranz <tobias@waldekranz.com>
Acked-by: Nikolay Aleksandrov <razor@blackwall.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Even if this is a theoretical issue since it is not possible to perform
XDP_REDIRECT on a non-linear xdp_frame, veth driver does not account
paged area in ndo_xdp_xmit function pointer.
Introduce xdp_get_frame_len utility routine to get the xdp_frame full
length and account total frame size running XDP_REDIRECT of a
non-linear xdp frame into a veth device.
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
Acked-by: Toke Hoiland-Jorgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/54f9fd3bb65d190daf2c0bbae2f852ff16cfbaa0.1646989407.git.lorenzo@kernel.org
Add vlan push_eth and pop_eth action to the hardware intermediate
representation model which would subsequently allow it to be used
by drivers for offload.
Signed-off-by: Maor Dickman <maord@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Roi Dayan <roid@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Now that devlink ports are protected by the instance lock
it seems natural to pass devlink_port as an argument to
the port_split / port_unsplit callbacks.
This should save the drivers from doing a lookup.
In theory drivers may have supported unsplitting ports
which were not registered prior to this change.
Reviewed-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
It should be familiar and beneficial to expose devlink instance
lock to the drivers. This way drivers can block devlink from
calling them during critical sections without breakneck locking.
Add port helpers, port splitting callbacks will be the first
target.
Use 'devl_' prefix for "explicitly locked" API. Initial RFC used
'__devlink' but that's too much typing.
devl_lock_is_held() is not defined without lockdep, which is
the same behavior as lockdep_is_held() itself.
Reviewed-by: Leon Romanovsky <leonro@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
nf_flow_offload_inet_hook() does not check for 802.1q and PPPoE.
Fetch inner ethertype from these encapsulation protocols.
Fixes: 72efd585f7 ("netfilter: flowtable: add pppoe support")
Fixes: 4cd91f7c29 ("netfilter: flowtable: add vlan support")
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
The fundamental premise of VRF and l3mdev core code is binding a socket
to a device (l3mdev or netdev with an L3 domain) to indicate L3 scope.
Legacy code resets flowi_oif to the l3mdev losing any original port
device binding. Ben (among others) has demonstrated use cases where the
original port device binding is important and needs to be retained.
This patch handles that by adding a new entry to the common flow struct
that can indicate the l3mdev index for later rule and table matching
avoiding the need to reset flowi_oif.
In addition to allowing more use cases that require port device binds,
this patch brings a few datapath simplications:
1. l3mdev_fib_rule_match is only called when walking fib rules and
always after l3mdev_update_flow. That allows an optimization to bail
early for non-VRF type uses cases when flowi_l3mdev is not set. Also,
only that index needs to be checked for the FIB table id.
2. l3mdev_update_flow can be called with flowi_oif set to a l3mdev
(e.g., VRF) device. By resetting flowi_oif only for this case the
FLOWI_FLAG_SKIP_NH_OIF flag is not longer needed and can be removed,
removing several checks in the datapath. The flowi_iif path can be
simplified to only be called if the it is not loopback (loopback can
not be assigned to an L3 domain) and the l3mdev index is not already
set.
3. Avoid another device lookup in the output path when the fib lookup
returns a reject failure.
Note: 2 functional tests for local traffic with reject fib rules are
updated to reflect the new direct failure at FIB lookup time for ping
rather than the failure on packet path. The current code fails like this:
HINT: Fails since address on vrf device is out of device scope
COMMAND: ip netns exec ns-A ping -c1 -w1 -I eth1 172.16.3.1
ping: Warning: source address might be selected on device other than: eth1
PING 172.16.3.1 (172.16.3.1) from 172.16.3.1 eth1: 56(84) bytes of data.
--- 172.16.3.1 ping statistics ---
1 packets transmitted, 0 received, 100% packet loss, time 0ms
where the test now directly fails:
HINT: Fails since address on vrf device is out of device scope
COMMAND: ip netns exec ns-A ping -c1 -w1 -I eth1 172.16.3.1
ping: connect: No route to host
Signed-off-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Tested-by: Ben Greear <greearb@candelatech.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220314204551.16369-1-dsahern@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Add new fields in struct beacon_data to store all MBSSID elements.
Generate a beacon template which includes all MBSSID elements.
Move CSA offset to reflect the MBSSID element length.
Co-developed-by: Aloka Dixit <alokad@codeaurora.org>
Signed-off-by: Aloka Dixit <alokad@codeaurora.org>
Co-developed-by: John Crispin <john@phrozen.org>
Signed-off-by: John Crispin <john@phrozen.org>
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Tested-by: Money Wang <money.wang@mediatek.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/5322db3c303f431adaf191ab31c45e151dde5465.1645702516.git.lorenzo@kernel.org
[small cleanups]
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
Pablo Neira Ayuso says:
====================
Netfilter fixes for net
The following patchset contains Netfilter fixes for net coming late
in the 5.17-rc process:
1) Revert port remap to mitigate shadowing service ports, this is causing
problems in existing setups and this mitigation can be achieved with
explicit ruleset, eg.
... tcp sport < 16386 tcp dport >= 32768 masquerade random
This patches provided a built-in policy similar to the one described above.
2) Disable register tracking infrastructure in nf_tables. Florian reported
two issues:
- Existing expressions with no implemented .reduce interface
that causes data-store on register should cancel the tracking.
- Register clobbering might be possible storing data on registers that
are larger than 32-bits.
This might lead to generating incorrect ruleset bytecode. These two
issues are scheduled to be addressed in the next release cycle.
* git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netfilter/nf:
netfilter: nf_tables: disable register tracking
Revert "netfilter: conntrack: tag conntracks picked up in local out hook"
Revert "netfilter: nat: force port remap to prevent shadowing well-known ports"
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220312220315.64531-1-pablo@netfilter.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Similar to the port-based default priority, IEEE 802.1Q-2018 allows the
Application Priority Table to define QoS classes (0 to 7) per IP DSCP
value (0 to 63).
In the absence of an app table entry for a packet with DSCP value X,
QoS classification for that packet falls back to other methods (VLAN PCP
or port-based default). The presence of an app table for DSCP value X
with priority Y makes the hardware classify the packet to QoS class Y.
As opposed to the default-prio where DSA exposes only a "set" in
dsa_switch_ops (because the port-based default is the fallback, it
always exists, either implicitly or explicitly), for DSCP priorities we
expose an "add" and a "del". The addition of a DSCP entry means trusting
that DSCP priority, the deletion means ignoring it.
Drivers that already trust (at least some) DSCP values can describe
their configuration in dsa_switch_ops :: port_get_dscp_prio(), which is
called for each DSCP value from 0 to 63.
Again, there can be more than one dcbnl app table entry for the same
DSCP value, DSA chooses the one with the largest configured priority.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
The port-based default QoS class is assigned to packets that lack a
VLAN PCP (or the port is configured to not trust the VLAN PCP),
an IP DSCP (or the port is configured to not trust IP DSCP), and packets
on which no tc-skbedit action has matched.
Similar to other drivers, this can be exposed to user space using the
DCB Application Priority Table. IEEE 802.1Q-2018 specifies in Table
D-8 - Sel field values that when the Selector is 1, the Protocol ID
value of 0 denotes the "Default application priority. For use when
application priority is not otherwise specified."
The way in which the dcbnl integration in DSA has been designed has to
do with its requirements. Andrew Lunn explains that SOHO switches are
expected to come with some sort of pre-configured QoS profile, and that
it is desirable for this to come pre-loaded into the DSA slave interfaces'
DCB application priority table.
In the dcbnl design, this is possible because calls to dcb_ieee_setapp()
can be initiated by anyone including being self-initiated by this device
driver.
However, what makes this challenging to implement in DSA is that the DSA
core manages the net_devices (effectively hiding them from drivers),
while drivers manage the hardware. The DSA core has no knowledge of what
individual drivers' QoS policies are. DSA could export to drivers a
wrapper over dcb_ieee_setapp() and these could call that function to
pre-populate the app priority table, however drivers don't have a good
moment in time to do this. The dsa_switch_ops :: setup() method gets
called before the net_devices are created (dsa_slave_create), and so is
dsa_switch_ops :: port_setup(). What remains is dsa_switch_ops ::
port_enable(), but this gets called upon each ndo_open. If we add app
table entries on every open, we'd need to remove them on close, to avoid
duplicate entry errors. But if we delete app priority entries on close,
what we delete may not be the initial, driver pre-populated entries, but
rather user-added entries.
So it is clear that letting drivers choose the timing of the
dcb_ieee_setapp() call is inappropriate. The alternative which was
chosen is to introduce hardware-specific ops in dsa_switch_ops, and
effectively hide dcbnl details from drivers as well. For pre-populating
the application table, dsa_slave_dcbnl_init() will call
ds->ops->port_get_default_prio() which is supposed to read from
hardware. If the operation succeeds, DSA creates a default-prio app
table entry. The method is called as soon as the slave_dev is
registered, but before we release the rtnl_mutex. This is done such that
user space sees the app table entries as soon as it sees the interface
being registered.
The fact that we populate slave_dev->dcbnl_ops with a non-NULL pointer
changes behavior in dcb_doit() from net/dcb/dcbnl.c, which used to
return -EOPNOTSUPP for any dcbnl operation where netdev->dcbnl_ops is
NULL. Because there are still dcbnl-unaware DSA drivers even if they
have dcbnl_ops populated, the way to restore the behavior is to make all
dcbnl_ops return -EOPNOTSUPP on absence of the hardware-specific
dsa_switch_ops method.
The dcbnl framework absurdly allows there to be more than one app table
entry for the same selector and protocol (in other words, more than one
port-based default priority). In the iproute2 dcb program, there is a
"replace" syntactical sugar command which performs an "add" and a "del"
to hide this away. But we choose the largest configured priority when we
call ds->ops->port_set_default_prio(), using __fls(). When there is no
default-prio app table entry left, the port-default priority is restored
to 0.
Link: https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/netdevbpf/patch/20210113154139.1803705-2-olteanv@gmail.com/
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Tony Nguyen says:
====================
ice: GTP support in switchdev
Marcin Szycik says:
Add support for adding GTP-C and GTP-U filters in switchdev mode.
To create a filter for GTP, create a GTP-type netdev with ip tool, enable
hardware offload, add qdisc and add a filter in tc:
ip link add $GTP0 type gtp role <sgsn/ggsn> hsize <hsize>
ethtool -K $PF0 hw-tc-offload on
tc qdisc add dev $GTP0 ingress
tc filter add dev $GTP0 ingress prio 1 flower enc_key_id 1337 \
action mirred egress redirect dev $VF1_PR
By default, a filter for GTP-U will be added. To add a filter for GTP-C,
specify enc_dst_port = 2123, e.g.:
tc filter add dev $GTP0 ingress prio 1 flower enc_key_id 1337 \
enc_dst_port 2123 action mirred egress redirect dev $VF1_PR
Note: outer IPv6 offload is not supported yet.
Note: GTP-U with no payload offload is not supported yet.
ICE COMMS package is required to create a filter as it contains GTP
profiles.
Changes in iproute2 [1] are required to be able to add GTP netdev and use
GTP-specific options (QFI and PDU type).
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20220211182902.11542-1-wojciech.drewek@intel.com/T
---
v2: Add more CC
v3: Fix mail thread, sorry for spam
v4: Add GTP echo response in gtp module
v5: Change patch order
v6: Add GTP echo request in gtp module
v7: Fix kernel-docs in ice
v8: Remove handling of GTP Echo Response
v9: Add sending of multicast message on GTP Echo Response, fix GTP-C dummy
packet selection
v10: Rebase, fixed most 80 char line limits
v11: Rebase, collect Harald's Reviewed-by on patch 3
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Before adding yet another possibly contended atomic_long_t,
it is time to add per-cpu storage for existing ones:
dev->tx_dropped, dev->rx_dropped, and dev->rx_nohandler
Because many devices do not have to increment such counters,
allocate the per-cpu storage on demand, so that dev_get_stats()
does not have to spend considerable time folding zero counters.
Note that some drivers have abused these counters which
were supposed to be only used by core networking stack.
v4: should use per_cpu_ptr() in dev_get_stats() (Jakub)
v3: added a READ_ONCE() in netdev_core_stats_alloc() (Paolo)
v2: add a missing include (reported by kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>)
Change in netdev_core_stats_alloc() (Jakub)
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Cc: jeffreyji <jeffreyji@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Vazquez <brianvv@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220311051420.2608812-1-eric.dumazet@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
When iterating over sockets using vsock_for_each_connected_socket, make
sure that a transport filters out sockets that don't belong to the
transport.
There actually was an issue caused by this; in a nested VM
configuration, destroying the nested VM (which often involves the
closing of /dev/vhost-vsock if there was h2g connections to the nested
VM) kills not only the h2g connections, but also all existing g2h
connections to the (outmost) host which are totally unrelated.
Tested: Executed the following steps on Cuttlefish (Android running on a
VM) [1]: (1) Enter into an `adb shell` session - to have a g2h
connection inside the VM, (2) open and then close /dev/vhost-vsock by
`exec 3< /dev/vhost-vsock && exec 3<&-`, (3) observe that the adb
session is not reset.
[1] https://android.googlesource.com/device/google/cuttlefish/
Fixes: c0cfa2d8a7 ("vsock: add multi-transports support")
Reviewed-by: Stefano Garzarella <sgarzare@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiyong Park <jiyong@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220311020017.1509316-1-jiyong@google.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
* add BCM43454/6 support
rtw89
* add support for 160 MHz channels and 6 GHz band
* hardware scan support
iwlwifi
* support UHB TAS enablement via BIOS
* remove a bunch of W=1 warnings
* add support for channel switch offload
* support 32 Rx AMPDU sessions in newer devices
* add support for a couple of new devices
* add support for band disablement via BIOS
mt76
* mt7915 thermal management improvements
* SAR support for more mt76 drivers
* mt7986 wmac support on mt7915
ath11k
* debugfs interface to configure firmware debug log level
* debugfs interface to test Target Wake Time (TWT)
* provide 802.11ax High Efficiency (HE) data via radiotap
ath9k
* use hw_random API instead of directly dumping into random.c
wcn36xx
* fix wcn3660 to work on 5 GHz band
ath6kl
* add device ID for WLU5150-D81
cfg80211/mac80211
* initial EHT (from 802.11be) support
(EHT rates, 320 MHz, larger block-ack)
* support disconnect on HW restart
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Merge tag 'wireless-next-2022-03-11' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/wireless/wireless-next
Johannes Berg says:
====================
brcmfmac
* add BCM43454/6 support
rtw89
* add support for 160 MHz channels and 6 GHz band
* hardware scan support
iwlwifi
* support UHB TAS enablement via BIOS
* remove a bunch of W=1 warnings
* add support for channel switch offload
* support 32 Rx AMPDU sessions in newer devices
* add support for a couple of new devices
* add support for band disablement via BIOS
mt76
* mt7915 thermal management improvements
* SAR support for more mt76 drivers
* mt7986 wmac support on mt7915
ath11k
* debugfs interface to configure firmware debug log level
* debugfs interface to test Target Wake Time (TWT)
* provide 802.11ax High Efficiency (HE) data via radiotap
ath9k
* use hw_random API instead of directly dumping into random.c
wcn36xx
* fix wcn3660 to work on 5 GHz band
ath6kl
* add device ID for WLU5150-D81
cfg80211/mac80211
* initial EHT (from 802.11be) support
(EHT rates, 320 MHz, larger block-ack)
* support disconnect on HW restart
* tag 'wireless-next-2022-03-11' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/wireless/wireless-next: (247 commits)
mac80211: Add support to trigger sta disconnect on hardware restart
mac80211: fix potential double free on mesh join
mac80211: correct legacy rates check in ieee80211_calc_rx_airtime
nl80211: fix typo of NL80211_IF_TYPE_OCB in documentation
mac80211: Use GFP_KERNEL instead of GFP_ATOMIC when possible
mac80211: replace DEFINE_SIMPLE_ATTRIBUTE with DEFINE_DEBUGFS_ATTRIBUTE
rtw89: 8852c: process logic efuse map
rtw89: 8852c: process efuse of phycap
rtw89: support DAV efuse reading operation
rtw89: 8852c: add chip::dle_mem
rtw89: add page_regs to handle v1 chips
rtw89: add chip_info::{h2c,c2h}_reg to support more chips
rtw89: add hci_func_en_addr to support variant generation
rtw89: add power_{on/off}_func
rtw89: read chip version depends on chip ID
rtw89: pci: use a struct to describe all registers address related to DMA channel
rtw89: pci: add V1 of PCI channel address
rtw89: pci: add struct rtw89_pci_info
rtw89: 8852c: add 8852c empty files
MAINTAINERS: add devicetree bindings entry for mt76
...
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220311124029.213470-1-johannes@sipsolutions.net
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Add a function that checks if a net device type is GTP.
Signed-off-by: Wojciech Drewek <wojciech.drewek@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Harald Welte <laforge@gnumonks.org>
Signed-off-by: Tony Nguyen <anthony.l.nguyen@intel.com>
Options are as follows: PDU_TYPE:QFI and they refernce to
the fields from the PDU Session Protocol. PDU Session data
is conveyed in GTP-U Extension Header.
GTP-U Extension Header is described in 3GPP TS 29.281.
PDU Session Protocol is described in 3GPP TS 38.415.
PDU_TYPE - indicates the type of the PDU Session Information (4 bits)
QFI - QoS Flow Identifier (6 bits)
# ip link add gtp_dev type gtp role sgsn
# tc qdisc add dev gtp_dev ingress
# tc filter add dev gtp_dev protocol ip parent ffff: \
flower \
enc_key_id 11 \
gtp_opts 1:8/ff:ff \
action mirred egress redirect dev eth0
Signed-off-by: Wojciech Drewek <wojciech.drewek@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Tony Nguyen <anthony.l.nguyen@intel.com>
Adding GTP device through ip link creates the situation where
there is no userspace daemon which would handle GTP messages
(Echo Request for example). GTP-U instance which would not respond
to echo requests would violate GTP specification.
When GTP packet arrives with GTP_ECHO_REQ message type,
GTP_ECHO_RSP is send to the sender. GTP_ECHO_RSP message
should contain information element with GTPIE_RECOVERY tag and
restart counter value. For GTPv1 restart counter is not used
and should be equal to 0, for GTPv0 restart counter contains
information provided from userspace(IFLA_GTP_RESTART_COUNT).
Signed-off-by: Wojciech Drewek <wojciech.drewek@intel.com>
Suggested-by: Harald Welte <laforge@gnumonks.org>
Reviewed-by: Harald Welte <laforge@gnumonks.org>
Tested-by: Harald Welte <laforge@gnumonks.org>
Signed-off-by: Tony Nguyen <anthony.l.nguyen@intel.com>
Currently in case of target hardware restart, we just reconfig and
re-enable the security keys and enable the network queues to start
data traffic back from where it was interrupted.
Many ath10k wifi chipsets have sequence numbers for the data
packets assigned by firmware and the mac sequence number will
restart from zero after target hardware restart leading to mismatch
in the sequence number expected by the remote peer vs the sequence
number of the frame sent by the target firmware.
This mismatch in sequence number will cause out-of-order packets
on the remote peer and all the frames sent by the device are dropped
until we reach the sequence number which was sent before we restarted
the target hardware
In order to fix this, we trigger a sta disconnect, in case of target
hw restart. After this there will be a fresh connection and thereby
avoiding the dropping of frames by remote peer.
The right fix would be to pull the entire data path into the host
which is not feasible or would need lots of complex changes and
will still be inefficient.
Tested on ath10k using WCN3990, QCA6174
Signed-off-by: Youghandhar Chintala <youghand@codeaurora.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220308115325.5246-2-youghand@codeaurora.org
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
Today's implementation of csum_shift() leads to branching based on
parity of 'offset'
000002f8 <csum_block_add>:
2f8: 70 a5 00 01 andi. r5,r5,1
2fc: 41 a2 00 08 beq 304 <csum_block_add+0xc>
300: 54 84 c0 3e rotlwi r4,r4,24
304: 7c 63 20 14 addc r3,r3,r4
308: 7c 63 01 94 addze r3,r3
30c: 4e 80 00 20 blr
Use first bit of 'offset' directly as input of the rotation instead of
branching.
000002f8 <csum_block_add>:
2f8: 54 a5 1f 38 rlwinm r5,r5,3,28,28
2fc: 20 a5 00 20 subfic r5,r5,32
300: 5c 84 28 3e rotlw r4,r4,r5
304: 7c 63 20 14 addc r3,r3,r4
308: 7c 63 01 94 addze r3,r3
30c: 4e 80 00 20 blr
And change to left shift instead of right shift to skip one more
instruction. This has no impact on the final sum.
000002f8 <csum_block_add>:
2f8: 54 a5 1f 38 rlwinm r5,r5,3,28,28
2fc: 5c 84 28 3e rotlw r4,r4,r5
300: 7c 63 20 14 addc r3,r3,r4
304: 7c 63 01 94 addze r3,r3
308: 4e 80 00 20 blr
Seems like only powerpc benefits from a branchless implementation.
Other main architectures like ARM or X86 get better code with
the generic implementation and its branch.
Signed-off-by: Christophe Leroy <christophe.leroy@csgroup.eu>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Back when tcp_tso_autosize() and TCP pacing were introduced,
our focus was really to reduce burst sizes for long distance
flows.
The simple heuristic of using sk_pacing_rate/1024 has worked
well, but can lead to too small packets for hosts in the same
rack/cluster, when thousands of flows compete for the bottleneck.
Neal Cardwell had the idea of making the TSO burst size
a function of both sk_pacing_rate and tcp_min_rtt()
Indeed, for local flows, sending bigger bursts is better
to reduce cpu costs, as occasional losses can be repaired
quite fast.
This patch is based on Neal Cardwell implementation
done more than two years ago.
bbr is adjusting max_pacing_rate based on measured bandwidth,
while cubic would over estimate max_pacing_rate.
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tso_rtt_log can be used to tune or disable
this new feature, in logarithmic steps.
Tested:
100Gbit NIC, two hosts in the same rack, 4K MTU.
600 flows rate-limited to 20000000 bytes per second.
Before patch: (TSO sizes would be limited to 20000000/1024/4096 -> 4 segments per TSO)
~# echo 0 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tso_rtt_log
~# nstat -n;perf stat ./super_netperf 600 -H otrv6 -l 20 -- -K dctcp -q 20000000;nstat|egrep "TcpInSegs|TcpOutSegs|TcpRetransSegs|Delivered"
96005
Performance counter stats for './super_netperf 600 -H otrv6 -l 20 -- -K dctcp -q 20000000':
65,945.29 msec task-clock # 2.845 CPUs utilized
1,314,632 context-switches # 19935.279 M/sec
5,292 cpu-migrations # 80.249 M/sec
940,641 page-faults # 14264.023 M/sec
201,117,030,926 cycles # 3049769.216 GHz (83.45%)
17,699,435,405 stalled-cycles-frontend # 8.80% frontend cycles idle (83.48%)
136,584,015,071 stalled-cycles-backend # 67.91% backend cycles idle (83.44%)
53,809,530,436 instructions # 0.27 insn per cycle
# 2.54 stalled cycles per insn (83.36%)
9,062,315,523 branches # 137422329.563 M/sec (83.22%)
153,008,621 branch-misses # 1.69% of all branches (83.32%)
23.182970846 seconds time elapsed
TcpInSegs 15648792 0.0
TcpOutSegs 58659110 0.0 # Average of 3.7 4K segments per TSO packet
TcpExtTCPDelivered 58654791 0.0
TcpExtTCPDeliveredCE 19 0.0
After patch:
~# echo 9 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tso_rtt_log
~# nstat -n;perf stat ./super_netperf 600 -H otrv6 -l 20 -- -K dctcp -q 20000000;nstat|egrep "TcpInSegs|TcpOutSegs|TcpRetransSegs|Delivered"
96046
Performance counter stats for './super_netperf 600 -H otrv6 -l 20 -- -K dctcp -q 20000000':
48,982.58 msec task-clock # 2.104 CPUs utilized
186,014 context-switches # 3797.599 M/sec
3,109 cpu-migrations # 63.472 M/sec
941,180 page-faults # 19214.814 M/sec
153,459,763,868 cycles # 3132982.807 GHz (83.56%)
12,069,861,356 stalled-cycles-frontend # 7.87% frontend cycles idle (83.32%)
120,485,917,953 stalled-cycles-backend # 78.51% backend cycles idle (83.24%)
36,803,672,106 instructions # 0.24 insn per cycle
# 3.27 stalled cycles per insn (83.18%)
5,947,266,275 branches # 121417383.427 M/sec (83.64%)
87,984,616 branch-misses # 1.48% of all branches (83.43%)
23.281200256 seconds time elapsed
TcpInSegs 1434706 0.0
TcpOutSegs 58883378 0.0 # Average of 41 4K segments per TSO packet
TcpExtTCPDelivered 58878971 0.0
TcpExtTCPDeliveredCE 9664 0.0
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Neal Cardwell <ncardwell@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220309015757.2532973-1-eric.dumazet@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Having the definitions of {__,}tls_driver_ctx() under an #if
guard means code referencing them also needs to rely on the
preprocessor. The protection doesn't appear needed so make the
definitions unconditional.
Fixes: db37bc177d ("net/funeth: add the data path")
Reported-by: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@infradead.org>
Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Suggested-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Dimitris Michailidis <dmichail@fungible.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
When CONFIG_TCP_MD5SIG isn't enabled, there is a compilation bug due to
the fact that the static inline definition of tcp_inbound_md5_hash() has
an unexpected semicolon. Remove it.
Fixes: 1330b6ef33 ("skb: make drop reason booleanable")
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220309122012.668986-1-vladimir.oltean@nxp.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Steffen Klassert says:
====================
pull request (net): ipsec 2022-03-09
1) Fix IPv6 PMTU discovery for xfrm interfaces.
From Lina Wang.
2) Revert failing for policies and states that are
configured with XFRMA_IF_ID 0. It broke a
user configuration. From Kai Lueke.
3) Fix a possible buffer overflow in the ESP output path.
4) Fix ESP GSO for tunnel and BEET mode on inter address
family tunnels.
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
We have a number of cases where function returns drop/no drop
decision as a boolean. Now that we want to report the reason
code as well we have to pass extra output arguments.
We can make the reason code evaluate correctly as bool.
I believe we're good to reorder the reasons as they are
reported to user space as strings.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
The Felix driver declares FDB isolation but puts all standalone ports in
VID 0. This is mostly problem-free as discussed with Alvin here:
https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/netdevbpf/cover/20220302191417.1288145-1-vladimir.oltean@nxp.com/#24763870
however there is one catch. DSA still thinks that FDB entries are
installed on the CPU port as many times as there are user ports, and
this is problematic when multiple user ports share the same MAC address.
Consider the default case where all user ports inherit their MAC address
from the DSA master, and then the user runs:
ip link set swp0 address 00:01:02:03:04:05
The above will make dsa_slave_set_mac_address() call
dsa_port_standalone_host_fdb_add() for 00:01:02:03:04:05 in port 0's
standalone database, and dsa_port_standalone_host_fdb_del() for the old
address of swp0, again in swp0's standalone database.
Both the ->port_fdb_add() and ->port_fdb_del() will be propagated down
to the felix driver, which will end up deleting the old MAC address from
the CPU port. But this is still in use by other user ports, so we end up
breaking unicast termination for them.
There isn't a problem in the fact that DSA keeps track of host
standalone addresses in the individual database of each user port: some
drivers like sja1105 need this. There also isn't a problem in the fact
that some drivers choose the same VID/FID for all standalone ports.
It is just that the deletion of these host addresses must be delayed
until they are known to not be in use any longer, and only the driver
has this knowledge. Since DSA keeps these addresses in &cpu_dp->fdbs and
&cpu_db->mdbs, it is just a matter of walking over those lists and see
whether the same MAC address is present on the CPU port in the port db
of another user port.
I have considered reusing the generic dsa_port_walk_fdbs() and
dsa_port_walk_mdbs() schemes for this, but locking makes it difficult.
In the ->port_fdb_add() method and co, &dp->addr_lists_lock is held, but
dsa_port_walk_fdbs() also acquires that lock. Also, even assuming that
we introduce an unlocked variant of the address iterator, we'd still
need some relatively complex data structures, and a void *ctx in the
dsa_fdb_walk_cb_t which we don't currently pass, such that drivers are
able to figure out, after iterating, whether the same MAC address is or
isn't present in the port db of another port.
All the above, plus the fact that I expect other drivers to follow the
same model as felix where all standalone ports use the same FID, made me
conclude that a generic method provided by DSA is necessary:
dsa_fdb_present_in_other_db() and the mdb equivalent. Felix calls this
from the ->port_fdb_del() handler for the CPU port, when the database
was classified to either a port db, or a LAG db.
For symmetry, we also call this from ->port_fdb_add(), because if the
address was installed once, then installing it a second time serves no
purpose: it's already in hardware in VID 0 and it affects all standalone
ports.
This change moves dsa_db_equal() from switch.c to dsa.c, since it now
has one more caller.
Fixes: 54c3198460 ("net: mscc: ocelot: enforce FDB isolation when VLAN-unaware")
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This was a prerequisite for the ill-fated
"netfilter: nat: force port remap to prevent shadowing well-known ports".
As this has been reverted, this change can be backed out too.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
The maximum message size that can be send is bigger than
the maximum site that skb_page_frag_refill can allocate.
So it is possible to write beyond the allocated buffer.
Fix this by doing a fallback to COW in that case.
v2:
Avoid get get_order() costs as suggested by Linus Torvalds.
Fixes: cac2661c53 ("esp4: Avoid skb_cow_data whenever possible")
Fixes: 03e2a30f6a ("esp6: Avoid skb_cow_data whenever possible")
Reported-by: valis <sec@valis.email>
Signed-off-by: Steffen Klassert <steffen.klassert@secunet.com>
Realtek switches supports the same tag both before ethertype or between
payload and the CRC.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Angelo Daros de Luca <luizluca@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alvin Šipraga <alsi@bang-olufsen.dk>
Reviewed-by: Vladimir Oltean <olteanv@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This fixes attemting to print hdev->name directly which causes them to
print an error:
kernel: read_version:367: (efault): sock 000000006a3008f2
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
There is a regular need in the kernel to provide a way to declare having
a dynamically sized set of trailing elements in a structure. Kernel code
should always use "flexible array members" for these cases. The older
style of one-element or zero-length arrays should no longer be used.
Reference:
https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/deprecated.html#zero-length-and-one-element-arrays
Reported-by: Zeal Robot <zealci@zte.com.cn>
Signed-off-by: Changcheng Deng <deng.changcheng@zte.com.cn>
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
While investigating on why a synchronize_net() has been added recently
in ipv6_mc_down(), I found that igmp6_event_query() and igmp6_event_report()
might drop skbs in some cases.
Discussion about removing synchronize_net() from ipv6_mc_down()
will happen in a different thread.
Fixes: f185de28d9 ("mld: add new workqueues for process mld events")
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Cc: Taehee Yoo <ap420073@gmail.com>
Cc: Cong Wang <xiyou.wangcong@gmail.com>
Cc: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220303173728.937869-1-eric.dumazet@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
A latter patch will postpone the delivery_time clearing until the stack
knows the skb is being delivered locally. That will allow other kernel
forwarding path (e.g. ip[6]_forward) to keep the delivery_time also.
An earlier attempt was to do skb_clear_delivery_time() in
ip_local_deliver() and ip6_input(). The discussion [0] requested
to move it one step later into ip_local_deliver_finish()
and ip6_input_finish() so that the delivery_time can be kept
for the ip_vs forwarding path also.
To do that, this patch also needs to take care of the (rcv) timestamp
usecase in ip_is_fragment(). It needs to expect delivery_time in
the skb->tstamp, so it needs to save the mono_delivery_time bit in
inet_frag_queue such that the delivery_time (if any) can be restored
in the final defragmented skb.
[Note that it will only happen when the locally generated skb is looping
from egress to ingress over a virtual interface (e.g. veth, loopback...),
skb->tstamp may have the delivery time before it is known that it will
be delivered locally and received by another sk.]
[0]: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/ca728d81-80e8-3767-d5e-d44f6ad96e43@ssi.bg/
Signed-off-by: Martin KaFai Lau <kafai@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
The "ocelot" and "ocelot-8021q" tagging protocols make use of different
hardware resources, and host FDB entries have different destination
ports in the switch analyzer module, practically speaking.
So when the user requests a tagging protocol change, the driver must
migrate all host FDB and MDB entries from the NPI port (in fact CPU port
module) towards the same physical port, but this time used as a regular
port.
It is pointless for the felix driver to keep a copy of the host
addresses, when we can create and export DSA helpers for walking through
the addresses that it already needs to keep on the CPU port, for
refcounting purposes.
felix_classify_db() is moved up to avoid a forward declaration.
We pass "bool change" because dp->fdbs and dp->mdbs are uninitialized
lists when felix_setup() first calls felix_set_tag_protocol(), so we
need to avoid calling dsa_port_walk_fdbs() during probe time.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Adds a function page_pool_get_stats which can be used by drivers to obtain
stats for a specified page_pool.
Signed-off-by: Joe Damato <jdamato@fastly.com>
Acked-by: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Ilias Apalodimas <ilias.apalodimas@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add per-cpu stats tracking page pool recycling events:
- cached: recycling placed page in the page pool cache
- cache_full: page pool cache was full
- ring: page placed into the ptr ring
- ring_full: page released from page pool because the ptr ring was full
- released_refcnt: page released (and not recycled) because refcnt > 1
Signed-off-by: Joe Damato <jdamato@fastly.com>
Acked-by: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Ilias Apalodimas <ilias.apalodimas@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add per-pool statistics counters for the allocation path of a page pool.
These stats are incremented in softirq context, so no locking or per-cpu
variables are needed.
This code is disabled by default and a kernel config option is provided for
users who wish to enable them.
The statistics added are:
- fast: successful fast path allocations
- slow: slow path order-0 allocations
- slow_high_order: slow path high order allocations
- empty: ptr ring is empty, so a slow path allocation was forced.
- refill: an allocation which triggered a refill of the cache
- waive: pages obtained from the ptr ring that cannot be added to
the cache due to a NUMA mismatch.
Signed-off-by: Joe Damato <jdamato@fastly.com>
Acked-by: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Ilias Apalodimas <ilias.apalodimas@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Pablo Neira Ayuso says:
====================
Netfilter fixes for net
1) Use kfree_rcu(ptr, rcu) variant, using kfree_rcu(ptr) was not
intentional. From Eric Dumazet.
2) Use-after-free in netfilter hook core, from Eric Dumazet.
3) Missing rcu read lock side for netfilter egress hook,
from Florian Westphal.
4) nf_queue assume state->sk is full socket while it might not be.
Invoke sock_gen_put(), from Florian Westphal.
5) Add selftest to exercise the reported KASAN splat in 4)
6) Fix possible use-after-free in nf_queue in case sk_refcnt is 0.
Also from Florian.
7) Use input interface index only for hardware offload, not for
the software plane. This breaks tc ct action. Patch from Paul Blakey.
* git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netfilter/nf:
net/sched: act_ct: Fix flow table lookup failure with no originating ifindex
netfilter: nf_queue: handle socket prefetch
netfilter: nf_queue: fix possible use-after-free
selftests: netfilter: add nfqueue TCP_NEW_SYN_RECV socket race test
netfilter: nf_queue: don't assume sk is full socket
netfilter: egress: silence egress hook lockdep splats
netfilter: fix use-after-free in __nf_register_net_hook()
netfilter: nf_tables: prefer kfree_rcu(ptr, rcu) variant
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220301215337.378405-1-pablo@netfilter.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
After cited commit optimizted hw insertion, flow table entries are
populated with ifindex information which was intended to only be used
for HW offload. This tuple ifindex is hashed in the flow table key, so
it must be filled for lookup to be successful. But tuple ifindex is only
relevant for the netfilter flowtables (nft), so it's not filled in
act_ct flow table lookup, resulting in lookup failure, and no SW
offload and no offload teardown for TCP connection FIN/RST packets.
To fix this, add new tc ifindex field to tuple, which will
only be used for offloading, not for lookup, as it will not be
part of the tuple hash.
Fixes: 9795ded7f9 ("net/sched: act_ct: Fill offloading tuple iifidx")
Signed-off-by: Paul Blakey <paulb@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
This add a new sysctl: net.smc.autocorking_size
We can dynamically change the behaviour of autocorking
by change the value of autocorking_size.
Setting to 0 disables autocorking in SMC
Signed-off-by: Dust Li <dust.li@linux.alibaba.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This patch add sysctl interface to support container environment
for SMC as we talk in the mail list.
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20220224020253.GF5443@linux.alibaba.com
Co-developed-by: Tony Lu <tonylu@linux.alibaba.com>
Signed-off-by: Tony Lu <tonylu@linux.alibaba.com>
Signed-off-by: Dust Li <dust.li@linux.alibaba.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Eric Dumazet says:
The sock_hold() side seems suspect, because there is no guarantee
that sk_refcnt is not already 0.
On failure, we cannot queue the packet and need to indicate an
error. The packet will be dropped by the caller.
v2: split skb prefetch hunk into separate change
Fixes: 271b72c7fa ("udp: RCU handling for Unicast packets.")
Reported-by: Eric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Add per-vni statistics for vni filter mode. Counting Rx/Tx
bytes/packets/drops/errors at the appropriate places.
This patch changes vxlan_vs_find_vni to also return the
vxlan_vni_node in cases where the vni belongs to a vni
filtering vxlan device
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Aleksandrov <nikolay@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Roopa Prabhu <roopa@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This patch adds vnifiltering support to collect metadata device.
Motivation:
You can only use a single vxlan collect metadata device for a given
vxlan udp port in the system today. The vxlan collect metadata device
terminates all received vxlan packets. As shown in the below diagram,
there are use-cases where you need to support multiple such vxlan devices in
independent bridge domains. Each vxlan device must terminate the vni's
it is configured for.
Example usecase: In a service provider network a service provider
typically supports multiple bridge domains with overlapping vlans.
One bridge domain per customer. Vlans in each bridge domain are
mapped to globally unique vxlan ranges assigned to each customer.
vnifiltering support in collect metadata devices terminates only configured
vnis. This is similar to vlan filtering in bridge driver. The vni filtering
capability is provided by a new flag on collect metadata device.
In the below pic:
- customer1 is mapped to br1 bridge domain
- customer2 is mapped to br2 bridge domain
- customer1 vlan 10-11 is mapped to vni 1001-1002
- customer2 vlan 10-11 is mapped to vni 2001-2002
- br1 and br2 are vlan filtering bridges
- vxlan1 and vxlan2 are collect metadata devices with
vnifiltering enabled
┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ switch │
│ │
│ ┌───────────┐ ┌───────────┐ │
│ │ │ │ │ │
│ │ br1 │ │ br2 │ │
│ └┬─────────┬┘ └──┬───────┬┘ │
│ vlans│ │ vlans │ │ │
│ 10,11│ │ 10,11│ │ │
│ │ vlanvnimap: │ vlanvnimap: │
│ │ 10-1001,11-1002 │ 10-2001,11-2002 │
│ │ │ │ │ │
│ ┌──────┴┐ ┌──┴─────────┐ ┌───┴────┐ │ │
│ │ swp1 │ │vxlan1 │ │ swp2 │ ┌┴─────────────┐ │
│ │ │ │ vnifilter:│ │ │ │vxlan2 │ │
│ └───┬───┘ │ 1001,1002│ └───┬────┘ │ vnifilter: │ │
│ │ └────────────┘ │ │ 2001,2002 │ │
│ │ │ └──────────────┘ │
│ │ │ │
└───────┼──────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────┘
│ │
│ │
┌─────┴───────┐ │
│ customer1 │ ┌─────┴──────┐
│ host/VM │ │customer2 │
└─────────────┘ │ host/VM │
└────────────┘
With this implementation, vxlan dst metadata device can
be associated with range of vnis.
struct vxlan_vni_node is introduced to represent
a configured vni. We start with vni and its
associated remote_ip in this structure. This
structure can be extended to bring in other
per vni attributes if there are usecases for it.
A vni inherits an attribute from the base vxlan device
if there is no per vni attributes defined.
struct vxlan_dev gets a new rhashtable for
vnis called vxlan_vni_group. vxlan_vnifilter.c
implements the necessary netlink api, notifications
and helper functions to process and manage lifecycle
of vxlan_vni_node.
This patch also adds new helper functions in vxlan_multicast.c
to handle per vni remote_ip multicast groups which are part
of vxlan_vni_group.
Fix build problems:
Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Roopa Prabhu <roopa@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
As more police parameters are passed to flow_offload, driver can check
them to make sure hardware handles packets in the way indicated by tc.
The conform-exceed control should be drop/pipe or drop/ok. Besides,
for drop/ok, the police should be the last action. As hardware can't
configure peakrate/avrate/overhead, offload should not be supported if
any of them is configured.
Signed-off-by: Jianbo Liu <jianbol@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
The current police offload action entry is missing exceed/notexceed
actions and parameters that can be configured by tc police action.
Add the missing parameters as a pre-step for offloading police actions
to hardware.
Signed-off-by: Jianbo Liu <jianbol@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Roi Dayan <roid@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
As FDB isolation cannot be enforced between VLAN-aware bridges in lack
of hardware assistance like extra FID bits, it seems plausible that many
DSA switches cannot do it. Therefore, they need to reject configurations
with multiple VLAN-aware bridges from the two code paths that can
transition towards that state:
- joining a VLAN-aware bridge
- toggling VLAN awareness on an existing bridge
The .port_vlan_filtering method already propagates the netlink extack to
the driver, let's propagate it from .port_bridge_join too, to make sure
that the driver can use the same function for both.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
For DSA, to encourage drivers to perform FDB isolation simply means to
track which bridge does each FDB and MDB entry belong to. It then
becomes the driver responsibility to use something that makes the FDB
entry from one bridge not match the FDB lookup of ports from other
bridges.
The top-level functions where the bridge is determined are:
- dsa_port_fdb_{add,del}
- dsa_port_host_fdb_{add,del}
- dsa_port_mdb_{add,del}
- dsa_port_host_mdb_{add,del}
aka the pre-crosschip-notifier functions.
Changing the API to pass a reference to a bridge is not superfluous, and
looking at the passed bridge argument is not the same as having the
driver look at dsa_to_port(ds, port)->bridge from the ->port_fdb_add()
method.
DSA installs FDB and MDB entries on shared (CPU and DSA) ports as well,
and those do not have any dp->bridge information to retrieve, because
they are not in any bridge - they are merely the pipes that serve the
user ports that are in one or multiple bridges.
The struct dsa_bridge associated with each FDB/MDB entry is encapsulated
in a larger "struct dsa_db" database. Although only databases associated
to bridges are notified for now, this API will be the starting point for
implementing IFF_UNICAST_FLT in DSA. There, the idea is to install FDB
entries on the CPU port which belong to the corresponding user port's
port database. These are supposed to match only when the port is
standalone.
It is better to introduce the API in its expected final form than to
introduce it for bridges first, then to have to change drivers which may
have made one or more assumptions.
Drivers can use the provided bridge.num, but they can also use a
different numbering scheme that is more convenient.
DSA must perform refcounting on the CPU and DSA ports by also taking
into account the bridge number. So if two bridges request the same local
address, DSA must notify the driver twice, once for each bridge.
In fact, if the driver supports FDB isolation, DSA must perform
refcounting per bridge, but if the driver doesn't, DSA must refcount
host addresses across all bridges, otherwise it would be telling the
driver to delete an FDB entry for a bridge and the driver would delete
it for all bridges. So introduce a bool fdb_isolation in drivers which
would make all bridge databases passed to the cross-chip notifier have
the same number (0). This makes dsa_mac_addr_find() -> dsa_db_equal()
say that all bridge databases are the same database - which is
essentially the legacy behavior.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Steffen Klassert says:
====================
1) Fix PMTU for IPv6 if the reported MTU minus the ESP overhead is
smaller than 1280. From Jiri Bohac.
2) Fix xfrm interface ID and inter address family tunneling when
migrating xfrm states. From Yan Yan.
3) Add missing xfrm intrerface ID initialization on xfrmi_changelink.
From Antony Antony.
4) Enforce validity of xfrm offload input flags so that userspace can't
send undefined flags to the offload driver.
From Leon Romanovsky.
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
The functions do essentially the same work to verify TCP-MD5 sign.
Code can be merged into one family-independent function in order to
reduce copy'n'paste and generated code.
Later with TCP-AO option added, this will allow to create one function
that's responsible for segment verification, that will have all the
different checks for MD5/AO/non-signed packets, which in turn will help
to see checks for all corner-cases in one function, rather than spread
around different families and functions.
Cc: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Cc: Hideaki YOSHIFUJI <yoshfuji@linux-ipv6.org>
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Safonov <dima@arista.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220223175740.452397-1-dima@arista.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
This change introduces support for installing static FDB entries towards
a bridge port that is a LAG of multiple DSA switch ports, as well as
support for filtering towards the CPU local FDB entries emitted for LAG
interfaces that are bridge ports.
Conceptually, host addresses on LAG ports are identical to what we do
for plain bridge ports. Whereas FDB entries _towards_ a LAG can't simply
be replicated towards all member ports like we do for multicast, or VLAN.
Instead we need new driver API. Hardware usually considers a LAG to be a
"logical port", and sets the entire LAG as the forwarding destination.
The physical egress port selection within the LAG is made by hashing
policy, as usual.
To represent the logical port corresponding to the LAG, we pass by value
a copy of the dsa_lag structure to all switches in the tree that have at
least one port in that LAG.
To illustrate why a refcounted list of FDB entries is needed in struct
dsa_lag, it is enough to say that:
- a LAG may be a bridge port and may therefore receive FDB events even
while it isn't yet offloaded by any DSA interface
- DSA interfaces may be removed from a LAG while that is a bridge port;
we don't want FDB entries lingering around, but we don't want to
remove entries that are still in use, either
For all the cases below to work, the idea is to always keep an FDB entry
on a LAG with a reference count equal to the DSA member ports. So:
- if a port joins a LAG, it requests the bridge to replay the FDB, and
the FDB entries get created, or their refcount gets bumped by one
- if a port leaves a LAG, the FDB replay deletes or decrements refcount
by one
- if an FDB is installed towards a LAG with ports already present, that
entry is created (if it doesn't exist) and its refcount is bumped by
the amount of ports already present in the LAG
echo "Adding FDB entry to bond with existing ports"
ip link del bond0
ip link add bond0 type bond mode 802.3ad
ip link set swp1 down && ip link set swp1 master bond0 && ip link set swp1 up
ip link set swp2 down && ip link set swp2 master bond0 && ip link set swp2 up
ip link del br0
ip link add br0 type bridge
ip link set bond0 master br0
bridge fdb add dev bond0 00:01:02:03:04:05 master static
ip link del br0
ip link del bond0
echo "Adding FDB entry to empty bond"
ip link del bond0
ip link add bond0 type bond mode 802.3ad
ip link del br0
ip link add br0 type bridge
ip link set bond0 master br0
bridge fdb add dev bond0 00:01:02:03:04:05 master static
ip link set swp1 down && ip link set swp1 master bond0 && ip link set swp1 up
ip link set swp2 down && ip link set swp2 master bond0 && ip link set swp2 up
ip link del br0
ip link del bond0
echo "Adding FDB entry to empty bond, then removing ports one by one"
ip link del bond0
ip link add bond0 type bond mode 802.3ad
ip link del br0
ip link add br0 type bridge
ip link set bond0 master br0
bridge fdb add dev bond0 00:01:02:03:04:05 master static
ip link set swp1 down && ip link set swp1 master bond0 && ip link set swp1 up
ip link set swp2 down && ip link set swp2 master bond0 && ip link set swp2 up
ip link set swp1 nomaster
ip link set swp2 nomaster
ip link del br0
ip link del bond0
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
When the switchdev_handle_fdb_event_to_device() event replication helper
was created, my original thought was that FDB events on LAG interfaces
should most likely be special-cased, not just replicated towards all
switchdev ports beneath that LAG. So this replication helper currently
does not recurse through switchdev lower interfaces of LAG bridge ports,
but rather calls the lag_mod_cb() if that was provided.
No switchdev driver uses this helper for FDB events on LAG interfaces
yet, so that was an assumption which was yet to be tested. It is
certainly usable for that purpose, as my RFC series shows:
https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/netdevbpf/cover/20220210125201.2859463-1-vladimir.oltean@nxp.com/
however this approach is slightly convoluted because:
- the switchdev driver gets a "dev" that isn't its own net device, but
rather the LAG net device. It must call switchdev_lower_dev_find(dev)
in order to get a handle of any of its own net devices (the ones that
pass check_cb).
- in order for FDB entries on LAG ports to be correctly refcounted per
the number of switchdev ports beneath that LAG, we haven't escaped the
need to iterate through the LAG's lower interfaces. Except that is now
the responsibility of the switchdev driver, because the replication
helper just stopped half-way.
So, even though yes, FDB events on LAG bridge ports must be
special-cased, in the end it's simpler to let switchdev_handle_fdb_*
just iterate through the LAG port's switchdev lowers, and let the
switchdev driver figure out that those physical ports are under a LAG.
The switchdev_handle_fdb_event_to_device() helper takes a
"foreign_dev_check" callback so it can figure out whether @dev can
autonomously forward to @foreign_dev. DSA fills this method properly:
if the LAG is offloaded by another port in the same tree as @dev, then
it isn't foreign. If it is a software LAG, it is foreign - forwarding
happens in software.
Whether an interface is foreign or not decides whether the replication
helper will go through the LAG's switchdev lowers or not. Since the
lan966x doesn't properly fill this out, FDB events on software LAG
uppers will get called. By changing lan966x_foreign_dev_check(), we can
suppress them.
Whereas DSA will now start receiving FDB events for its offloaded LAG
uppers, so we need to return -EOPNOTSUPP, since we currently don't do
the right thing for them.
Cc: Horatiu Vultur <horatiu.vultur@microchip.com>
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
The main purpose of this change is to create a data structure for a LAG
as seen by DSA. This is similar to what we have for bridging - we pass a
copy of this structure by value to ->port_lag_join and ->port_lag_leave.
For now we keep the lag_dev, id and a reference count in it. Future
patches will add a list of FDB entries for the LAG (these also need to
be refcounted to work properly).
The LAG structure is created using dsa_port_lag_create() and destroyed
using dsa_port_lag_destroy(), just like we have for bridging.
Because now, the dsa_lag itself is refcounted, we can simplify
dsa_lag_map() and dsa_lag_unmap(). These functions need to keep a LAG in
the dst->lags array only as long as at least one port uses it. The
refcounting logic inside those functions can be removed now - they are
called only when we should perform the operation.
dsa_lag_dev() is renamed to dsa_lag_by_id() and now returns the dsa_lag
structure instead of the lag_dev net_device.
dsa_lag_foreach_port() now takes the dsa_lag structure as argument.
dst->lags holds an array of dsa_lag structures.
dsa_lag_map() now also saves the dsa_lag->id value, so that linear
walking of dst->lags in drivers using dsa_lag_id() is no longer
necessary. They can just look at lag.id.
dsa_port_lag_id_get() is a helper, similar to dsa_port_bridge_num_get(),
which can be used by drivers to get the LAG ID assigned by DSA to a
given port.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
The DSA LAG API will be changed to become more similar with the bridge
data structures, where struct dsa_bridge holds an unsigned int num,
which is generated by DSA and is one-based. We have a similar thing
going with the DSA LAG, except that isn't stored anywhere, it is
calculated dynamically by dsa_lag_id() by iterating through dst->lags.
The idea of encoding an invalid (or not requested) LAG ID as zero for
the purpose of simplifying checks in drivers means that the LAG IDs
passed by DSA to drivers need to be one-based too. So back-and-forth
conversion is needed when indexing the dst->lags array, as well as in
drivers which assume a zero-based index.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
In preparation of converting struct net_device *dp->lag_dev into a
struct dsa_lag *dp->lag, we need to rename, for consistency purposes,
all occurrences of the "lag" variable in the DSA core to "lag_dev".
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
When using hci_le_create_conn_sync it shall wait for the conn_timeout
since the connection complete may take longer than just 2 seconds.
Also fix the masking of HCI_EV_LE_ENHANCED_CONN_COMPLETE and
HCI_EV_LE_CONN_COMPLETE so they are never both set so we can predict
which one the controller will use in case of HCI_OP_LE_CREATE_CONN.
Fixes: 6cd29ec6ae ("Bluetooth: hci_sync: Wait for proper events when connecting LE")
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
Since bt_skb_sendmmsg can be used with the likes of SOCK_STREAM it
shall return the partial chunks it could allocate instead of freeing
everything as otherwise it can cause problems like bellow.
Fixes: 81be03e026 ("Bluetooth: RFCOMM: Replace use of memcpy_from_msg with bt_skb_sendmmsg")
Reported-by: Paul Menzel <pmenzel@molgen.mpg.de>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/d7206e12-1b99-c3be-84f4-df22af427ef5@molgen.mpg.de
BugLink: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=215594
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Tested-by: Paul Menzel <pmenzel@molgen.mpg.de> (Nokia N9 (MeeGo/Harmattan)
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
Pablo Neira Ayuso says:
====================
Netfilter fixes for net
This is fixing up the use without proper initialization in patch 5/5
-o-
Hi,
The following patchset contains Netfilter fixes for net:
1) Missing #ifdef CONFIG_IP6_NF_IPTABLES in recent xt_socket fix.
2) Fix incorrect flow action array size in nf_tables.
3) Unregister flowtable hooks from netns exit path.
4) Fix missing limit object release, from Florian Westphal.
5) Memleak in nf_tables object update path, also from Florian.
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This patch add a new bonding option ns_ip6_target, which correspond
to the arp_ip_target. With this we set IPv6 targets and send IPv6 NS
request to determine the health of the link.
For other related options like the validation, we still use
arp_validate, and will change to ns_validate later.
Note: the sysfs configuration support was removed based on
https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/8863.1645071997@famine
Signed-off-by: Hangbin Liu <liuhangbin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add a new bonding parameter ns_targets to store IPv6 address.
Add required bond_ns_send/rcv functions first before adding
IPv6 address option setting.
Add two functions bond_send/rcv_validate so we can send/recv
ARP and NS at the same time.
Signed-off-by: Hangbin Liu <liuhangbin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Adding an extra storage field for bond_opt_value so we can set large
bytes of data for bonding options in future, e.g. IPv6 address.
Define a new call bond_opt_initextra(). Also change the checking order of
__bond_opt_init() and check values first.
Signed-off-by: Hangbin Liu <liuhangbin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This patch separate NS message allocation steps from ndisc_send_ns(),
so it could be used in other places, like bonding, to allocate and
send IPv6 NS message.
Also export ndisc_send_skb() and ndisc_ns_create() for later bonding usage.
Signed-off-by: Hangbin Liu <liuhangbin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
In case user space sends a packet destined to a broadcast address when a
matching broadcast route is not configured, the kernel will create a
unicast neighbour entry that will never be resolved [1].
When the broadcast route is configured, the unicast neighbour entry will
not be invalidated and continue to linger, resulting in packets being
dropped.
Solve this by invalidating unresolved neighbour entries for broadcast
addresses after routes for these addresses are internally configured by
the kernel. This allows the kernel to create a broadcast neighbour entry
following the next route lookup.
Another possible solution that is more generic but also more complex is
to have the ARP code register a listener to the FIB notification chain
and invalidate matching neighbour entries upon the addition of broadcast
routes.
It is also possible to wave off the issue as a user space problem, but
it seems a bit excessive to expect user space to be that intimately
familiar with the inner workings of the FIB/neighbour kernel code.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/55a04a8f-56f3-f73c-2aea-2195923f09d1@huawei.com/
Reported-by: Wang Hai <wanghai38@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Ido Schimmel <idosch@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: Wang Hai <wanghai38@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Pass the address of drop_reason to tcp_add_backlog() to store the
reasons for skb drops when fails. Following drop reasons are
introduced:
SKB_DROP_REASON_SOCKET_BACKLOG
Reviewed-by: Mengen Sun <mengensun@tencent.com>
Reviewed-by: Hao Peng <flyingpeng@tencent.com>
Signed-off-by: Menglong Dong <imagedong@tencent.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
immediate verdict expression needs to allocate one slot in the flow offload
action array, however, immediate data expression does not need to do so.
fwd and dup expression need to allocate one slot, this is missing.
Add a new offload_action interface to report if this expression needs to
allocate one slot in the flow offload action array.
Fixes: be2861dc36 ("netfilter: nft_{fwd,dup}_netdev: add offload support")
Reported-and-tested-by: Nick Gregory <Nick.Gregory@Sophos.com>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
With drivers converted over to using phylink PCS, there is no need for
the struct dsa_switch member "pcs_poll" to exist anymore - there is a
flag in the struct phylink_pcs which indicates whether this PCS needs
to be polled which supersedes this.
Signed-off-by: Russell King (Oracle) <rmk+kernel@armlinux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Currently, we have mctp_address_ok(), which checks if an EID is in the
"valid" range of 8-254 inclusive. However, 0 and 255 may also be valid
addresses, depending on context. 0 is the NULL EID, which may be set
when physical addressing is used. 255 is valid as a destination address
for broadcasts.
This change renames mctp_address_ok to mctp_address_unicast, and adds
similar helpers for broadcast and null EIDs, which will be used in an
upcoming commit.
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Kerr <jk@codeconstruct.com.au>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
This patch adds a new protocol attribute to IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
Inspiration was taken from the protocol attribute of routes. User space
applications like iproute2 can set/get the protocol with the Netlink API.
The attribute is stored as an 8-bit unsigned integer.
The protocol attribute is set by kernel for these categories:
- IPv4 and IPv6 loopback addresses
- IPv6 addresses generated from router announcements
- IPv6 link local addresses
User space may pass custom protocols, not defined by the kernel.
Grouping addresses on their origin is useful in scenarios where you want
to distinguish between addresses based on who added them, e.g. kernel
vs. user space.
Tagging addresses with a string label is an existing feature that could be
used as a solution. Unfortunately the max length of a label is
15 characters, and for compatibility reasons the label must be prefixed
with the name of the device followed by a colon. Since device names also
have a max length of 15 characters, only -1 characters is guaranteed to be
available for any origin tag, which is not that much.
A reference implementation of user space setting and getting protocols
is available for iproute2:
9a6ea18bd7
Signed-off-by: Jacques de Laval <Jacques.De.Laval@westermo.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220217150202.80802-1-Jacques.De.Laval@westermo.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Add DSA support for the phylink mac_select_pcs() method so DSA drivers
can return provide phylink with the appropriate PCS for the PHY
interface mode.
Signed-off-by: Russell King (Oracle) <rmk+kernel@armlinux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
UDP sendmsg() can be lockless, this is causing all kinds
of data races.
This patch converts sk->sk_tskey to remove one of these races.
BUG: KCSAN: data-race in __ip_append_data / __ip_append_data
read to 0xffff8881035d4b6c of 4 bytes by task 8877 on cpu 1:
__ip_append_data+0x1c1/0x1de0 net/ipv4/ip_output.c:994
ip_make_skb+0x13f/0x2d0 net/ipv4/ip_output.c:1636
udp_sendmsg+0x12bd/0x14c0 net/ipv4/udp.c:1249
inet_sendmsg+0x5f/0x80 net/ipv4/af_inet.c:819
sock_sendmsg_nosec net/socket.c:705 [inline]
sock_sendmsg net/socket.c:725 [inline]
____sys_sendmsg+0x39a/0x510 net/socket.c:2413
___sys_sendmsg net/socket.c:2467 [inline]
__sys_sendmmsg+0x267/0x4c0 net/socket.c:2553
__do_sys_sendmmsg net/socket.c:2582 [inline]
__se_sys_sendmmsg net/socket.c:2579 [inline]
__x64_sys_sendmmsg+0x53/0x60 net/socket.c:2579
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x44/0xd0 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0xae
write to 0xffff8881035d4b6c of 4 bytes by task 8880 on cpu 0:
__ip_append_data+0x1d8/0x1de0 net/ipv4/ip_output.c:994
ip_make_skb+0x13f/0x2d0 net/ipv4/ip_output.c:1636
udp_sendmsg+0x12bd/0x14c0 net/ipv4/udp.c:1249
inet_sendmsg+0x5f/0x80 net/ipv4/af_inet.c:819
sock_sendmsg_nosec net/socket.c:705 [inline]
sock_sendmsg net/socket.c:725 [inline]
____sys_sendmsg+0x39a/0x510 net/socket.c:2413
___sys_sendmsg net/socket.c:2467 [inline]
__sys_sendmmsg+0x267/0x4c0 net/socket.c:2553
__do_sys_sendmmsg net/socket.c:2582 [inline]
__se_sys_sendmmsg net/socket.c:2579 [inline]
__x64_sys_sendmmsg+0x53/0x60 net/socket.c:2579
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x44/0xd0 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0xae
value changed: 0x0000054d -> 0x0000054e
Reported by Kernel Concurrency Sanitizer on:
CPU: 0 PID: 8880 Comm: syz-executor.5 Not tainted 5.17.0-rc2-syzkaller-00167-gdcb85f85fa6f-dirty #0
Hardware name: Google Google Compute Engine/Google Compute Engine, BIOS Google 01/01/2011
Fixes: 09c2d251b7 ("net-timestamp: add key to disambiguate concurrent datagrams")
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Cc: Willem de Bruijn <willemb@google.com>
Reported-by: syzbot <syzkaller@googlegroups.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Following the cited commit, sparse started complaining about:
../include/net/gro.h:58:1: warning: directive in macro's argument list
../include/net/gro.h:59:1: warning: directive in macro's argument list
Fix that by moving the defines out of the struct_group() macro.
Fixes: de5a1f3ce4 ("net: gro: minor optimization for dev_gro_receive()")
Reviewed-by: Maxim Mikityanskiy <maximmi@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Gal Pressman <gal@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Alexander Lobakin <alexandr.lobakin@intel.com>
Acked-by: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Introduced in commit cf96357303 ("net: dsa: Allow providing PHY
statistics from CPU port"), it appears these were never used.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220216193726.2926320-1-vladimir.oltean@nxp.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
There is a regular need in the kernel to provide a way to declare
having a dynamically sized set of trailing elements in a structure.
Kernel code should always use “flexible array members”[1] for these
cases. The older style of one-element or zero-length arrays should
no longer be used[2].
This code was transformed with the help of Coccinelle:
(next-20220214$ spatch --jobs $(getconf _NPROCESSORS_ONLN) --sp-file script.cocci --include-headers --dir . > output.patch)
@@
identifier S, member, array;
type T1, T2;
@@
struct S {
...
T1 member;
T2 array[
- 0
];
};
UAPI and wireless changes were intentionally excluded from this patch
and will be sent out separately.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flexible_array_member
[2] https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v5.16/process/deprecated.html#zero-length-and-one-element-arrays
Link: https://github.com/KSPP/linux/issues/78
Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Gustavo A. R. Silva <gustavoars@kernel.org>
Options parsing in now done from mptcp_incoming_options().
mptcp_parse_option() has been removed from mptcp.h when CONFIG_MPTCP is
defined but not when it is not.
Fixes: cfde141ea3 ("mptcp: move option parsing into mptcp_incoming_options()")
Acked-by: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Baerts <matthieu.baerts@tessares.net>
Signed-off-by: Mat Martineau <mathew.j.martineau@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Ipv6 flowlabels historically require a reservation before use.
Optionally in exclusive mode (e.g., user-private).
Commit 59c820b231 ("ipv6: elide flowlabel check if no exclusive
leases exist") introduced a fastpath that avoids this check when no
exclusive leases exist in the system, and thus any flowlabel use
will be granted.
That allows skipping the control operation to reserve a flowlabel
entirely. Though with a warning if the fast path fails:
This is an optimization. Robust applications still have to revert to
requesting leases if the fast path fails due to an exclusive lease.
Still, this is subtle. Better isolate network namespaces from each
other. Flowlabels are per-netns. Also record per-netns whether
exclusive leases are in use. Then behavior does not change based on
activity in other netns.
Changes
v2
- wrap in IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_IPV6) to avoid breakage if disabled
Fixes: 59c820b231 ("ipv6: elide flowlabel check if no exclusive leases exist")
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/MWHPR2201MB1072BCCCFCE779E4094837ACD0329@MWHPR2201MB1072.namprd22.prod.outlook.com/
Reported-by: Congyu Liu <liu3101@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Willem de Bruijn <willemb@google.com>
Tested-by: Congyu Liu <liu3101@purdue.edu>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220215160037.1976072-1-willemdebruijn.kernel@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Currently, DSA programs VLANs on shared (DSA and CPU) ports each time it
does so on user ports. This is good for basic functionality but has
several limitations:
- the VLAN group which must reach the CPU may be radically different
from the VLAN group that must be autonomously forwarded by the switch.
In other words, the admin may want to isolate noisy stations and avoid
traffic from them going to the control processor of the switch, where
it would just waste useless cycles. The bridge already supports
independent control of VLAN groups on bridge ports and on the bridge
itself, and when VLAN-aware, it will drop packets in software anyway
if their VID isn't added as a 'self' entry towards the bridge device.
- Replaying host FDB entries may depend, for some drivers like mv88e6xxx,
on replaying the host VLANs as well. The 2 VLAN groups are
approximately the same in most regular cases, but there are corner
cases when timing matters, and DSA's approximation of replicating
VLANs on shared ports simply does not work.
- If a user makes the bridge (implicitly the CPU port) join a VLAN by
accident, there is no way for the CPU port to isolate itself from that
noisy VLAN except by rebooting the system. This is because for each
VLAN added on a user port, DSA will add it on shared ports too, but
for each VLAN deletion on a user port, it will remain installed on
shared ports, since DSA has no good indication of whether the VLAN is
still in use or not.
Now that the bridge driver emits well-balanced SWITCHDEV_OBJ_ID_PORT_VLAN
addition and removal events, DSA has a simple and straightforward task
of separating the bridge port VLANs (these have an orig_dev which is a
DSA slave interface, or a LAG interface) from the host VLANs (these have
an orig_dev which is a bridge interface), and to keep a simple reference
count of each VID on each shared port.
Forwarding VLANs must be installed on the bridge ports and on all DSA
ports interconnecting them. We don't have a good view of the exact
topology, so we simply install forwarding VLANs on all DSA ports, which
is what has been done until now.
Host VLANs must be installed primarily on the dedicated CPU port of each
bridge port. More subtly, they must also be installed on upstream-facing
and downstream-facing DSA ports that are connecting the bridge ports and
the CPU. This ensures that the mv88e6xxx's problem (VID of host FDB
entry may be absent from VTU) is still addressed even if that switch is
in a cross-chip setup, and it has no local CPU port.
Therefore:
- user ports contain only bridge port (forwarding) VLANs, and no
refcounting is necessary
- DSA ports contain both forwarding and host VLANs. Refcounting is
necessary among these 2 types.
- CPU ports contain only host VLANs. Refcounting is also necessary.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
The switchdev_handle_port_obj_add() helper is good for replicating a
port object on the lower interfaces of @dev, if that object was emitted
on a bridge, or on a bridge port that is a LAG.
However, drivers that use this helper limit themselves to a box from
which they can no longer intercept port objects notified on neighbor
ports ("foreign interfaces").
One such driver is DSA, where software bridging with foreign interfaces
such as standalone NICs or Wi-Fi APs is an important use case. There, a
VLAN installed on a neighbor bridge port roughly corresponds to a
forwarding VLAN installed on the DSA switch's CPU port.
To support this use case while also making use of the benefits of the
switchdev_handle_* replication helper for port objects, introduce a new
variant of these functions that crawls through the neighbor ports of
@dev, in search of potentially compatible switchdev ports that are
interested in the event.
The strategy is identical to switchdev_handle_fdb_event_to_device():
if @dev wasn't a switchdev interface, then go one step upper, and
recursively call this function on the bridge that this port belongs to.
At the next recursion step, __switchdev_handle_port_obj_add() will
iterate through the bridge's lower interfaces. Among those, some will be
switchdev interfaces, and one will be the original @dev that we came
from. To prevent infinite recursion, we must suppress reentry into the
original @dev, and just call the @add_cb for the switchdev_interfaces.
It looks like this:
br0
/ | \
/ | \
/ | \
swp0 swp1 eth0
1. __switchdev_handle_port_obj_add(eth0)
-> check_cb(eth0) returns false
-> eth0 has no lower interfaces
-> eth0's bridge is br0
-> switchdev_lower_dev_find(br0, check_cb, foreign_dev_check_cb))
finds br0
2. __switchdev_handle_port_obj_add(br0)
-> check_cb(br0) returns false
-> netdev_for_each_lower_dev
-> check_cb(swp0) returns true, so we don't skip this interface
3. __switchdev_handle_port_obj_add(swp0)
-> check_cb(swp0) returns true, so we call add_cb(swp0)
(back to netdev_for_each_lower_dev from 2)
-> check_cb(swp1) returns true, so we don't skip this interface
4. __switchdev_handle_port_obj_add(swp1)
-> check_cb(swp1) returns true, so we call add_cb(swp1)
(back to netdev_for_each_lower_dev from 2)
-> check_cb(eth0) returns false, so we skip this interface to
avoid infinite recursion
Note: eth0 could have been a LAG, and we don't want to suppress the
recursion through its lowers if those exist, so when check_cb() returns
false, we still call switchdev_lower_dev_find() to estimate whether
there's anything worth a recursion beneath that LAG. Using check_cb()
and foreign_dev_check_cb(), switchdev_lower_dev_find() not only figures
out whether the lowers of the LAG are switchdev, but also whether they
actively offload the LAG or not (whether the LAG is "foreign" to the
switchdev interface or not).
The port_obj_info->orig_dev is preserved across recursive calls, so
switchdev drivers still know on which device was this notification
originally emitted.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
br_switchdev_port_vlan_add() currently emits a SWITCHDEV_PORT_OBJ_ADD
event with a SWITCHDEV_OBJ_ID_PORT_VLAN for 2 distinct cases:
- a struct net_bridge_vlan got created
- an existing struct net_bridge_vlan was modified
This makes it impossible for switchdev drivers to properly balance
PORT_OBJ_ADD with PORT_OBJ_DEL events, so if we want to allow that to
happen, we must provide a way for drivers to distinguish between a
VLAN with changed flags and a new one.
Annotate struct switchdev_obj_port_vlan with a "bool changed" that
distinguishes the 2 cases above.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
mv88e6xxx is special among DSA drivers in that it requires the VTU to
contain the VID of the FDB entry it modifies in
mv88e6xxx_port_db_load_purge(), otherwise it will return -EOPNOTSUPP.
Sometimes due to races this is not always satisfied even if external
code does everything right (first deletes the FDB entries, then the
VLAN), because DSA commits to hardware FDB entries asynchronously since
commit c9eb3e0f87 ("net: dsa: Add support for learning FDB through
notification").
Therefore, the mv88e6xxx driver must close this race condition by
itself, by asking DSA to flush the switchdev workqueue of any FDB
deletions in progress, prior to exiting a VLAN.
Fixes: c9eb3e0f87 ("net: dsa: Add support for learning FDB through notification")
Reported-by: Rafael Richter <rafael.richter@gin.de>
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
First set of patches for v5.18, with both wireless and stack patches.
rtw89 now has AP mode support and wcn36xx has survey support. But
otherwise pretty normal.
Major changes:
ath11k
* add LDPC FEC type in 802.11 radiotap header
* enable RX PPDU stats in monitor co-exist mode
wcn36xx
* implement survey reporting
brcmfmac
* add CYW43570 PCIE device
rtw88
* rtw8821c: enable RFE 6 devices
rtw89
* AP mode support
mt76
* mt7916 support
* background radar detection support
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Merge tag 'wireless-next-2022-02-11' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/wireless/wireless-next
wireless-next patches for v5.18
First set of patches for v5.18, with both wireless and stack patches.
rtw89 now has AP mode support and wcn36xx has survey support. But
otherwise pretty normal.
Major changes:
ath11k
* add LDPC FEC type in 802.11 radiotap header
* enable RX PPDU stats in monitor co-exist mode
wcn36xx
* implement survey reporting
brcmfmac
* add CYW43570 PCIE device
rtw88
* rtw8821c: enable RFE 6 devices
rtw89
* AP mode support
mt76
* mt7916 support
* background radar detection support
This counter has never been visible, there is little point
trying to maintain it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Although we can control SMC handshake limitation through socket options,
which means that applications who need it must modify their code. It's
quite troublesome for many existing applications. This patch modifies
the global default value of SMC handshake limitation through netlink,
providing a way to put constraint on handshake without modifies any code
for applications.
Suggested-by: Tony Lu <tonylu@linux.alibaba.com>
Signed-off-by: D. Wythe <alibuda@linux.alibaba.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Lu <tonylu@linux.alibaba.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Having to acquire rtnl from netdev_run_todo() for every dismantled
device is not desirable when/if rtnl is under stress.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
As depicted in the IEEE 802.15.4 specification, modulation/bands are
tight to a number of page/channels so we can for most of them derive the
durations automatically.
The two locations that must call this new helper to set the variou
symbol durations are:
- when manually requesting a channel change though the netlink interface
- at PHY creation, once the device driver has set the default
page/channel
If an information is missing, the symbol duration is not touched, a
debug message is eventually printed. This keeps the compatibility with
the unconverted drivers for which it was too complicated for me to find
their precise information. If they initially provided a symbol duration,
it would be kept. If they don't, the symbol duration value is left
untouched.
Once the symbol duration derived, the lifs and sifs durations are
updated as well.
Signed-off-by: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Alexander Aring <aahringo@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220201180629.93410-4-miquel.raynal@bootlin.com
Signed-off-by: Stefan Schmidt <stefan@datenfreihafen.org>
Tdsym is often given in the spec as pretty small numbers in microseconds
and hence was reflected in the code as symbol_duration and was stored as
a u8. Actually, for UWB PHYs, the symbol duration is given in
nanoseconds and are as precise as picoseconds. In order to handle better
these PHYs, change the type of symbol_duration to u32 and store this
value in nanoseconds.
All the users of this variable are updated in a mechanical way.
Signed-off-by: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Alexander Aring <aahringo@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220201180629.93410-3-miquel.raynal@bootlin.com
Signed-off-by: Stefan Schmidt <stefan@datenfreihafen.org>
Stefan Schmidt says:
====================
pull-request: ieee802154-next 2022-02-10
An update from ieee802154 for your *net-next* tree.
There is more ongoing in ieee802154 than usual. This will be the first pull
request for this cycle, but I expect one more. Depending on review and rework
times.
Pavel Skripkin ported the atusb driver over to the new USB api to avoid unint
problems as well as making use of the modern api without kmalloc() needs in he
driver.
Miquel Raynal landed some changes to ensure proper frame checksum checking with
hwsim, documenting our use of wake and stop_queue and eliding a magic value by
using the proper define.
David Girault documented the address struct used in ieee802154.
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Pablo Neira Ayuso says:
====================
Netfilter updates for net-next
1) Conntrack sets on CHECKSUM_UNNECESSARY for UDP packet with no checksum,
from Kevin Mitchell.
2) skb->priority support for nfqueue, from Nicolas Dichtel.
3) Remove conntrack extension register API, from Florian Westphal.
4) Move nat destroy hook to nf_nat_hook instead, to remove
nf_ct_ext_destroy(), also from Florian.
5) Wrap pptp conntrack NAT hooks into single structure, from Florian Westphal.
6) Support for tcp option set to noop for nf_tables, also from Florian.
7) Do not run x_tables comment match from packet path in nf_tables,
from Florian Westphal.
8) Replace spinlock by cmpxchg() loop to update missed ct event,
from Florian Westphal.
9) Wrap cttimeout hooks into single structure, from Florian.
10) Add fast nft_cmp expression for up to 16-bytes.
11) Use cb->ctx to store context in ctnetlink dump, instead of using
cb->args[], from Florian Westphal.
* git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netfilter/nf-next:
netfilter: ctnetlink: use dump structure instead of raw args
nfqueue: enable to set skb->priority
netfilter: nft_cmp: optimize comparison for 16-bytes
netfilter: cttimeout: use option structure
netfilter: ecache: don't use nf_conn spinlock
netfilter: nft_compat: suppress comment match
netfilter: exthdr: add support for tcp option removal
netfilter: conntrack: pptp: use single option structure
netfilter: conntrack: remove extension register api
netfilter: conntrack: handle ->destroy hook via nat_ops instead
netfilter: conntrack: move extension sizes into core
netfilter: conntrack: make all extensions 8-byte alignned
netfilter: nfqueue: enable to get skb->priority
netfilter: conntrack: mark UDP zero checksum as CHECKSUM_UNNECESSARY
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220209133616.165104-1-pablo@netfilter.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Daniel Borkmann says:
====================
pull-request: bpf-next 2022-02-09
We've added 126 non-merge commits during the last 16 day(s) which contain
a total of 201 files changed, 4049 insertions(+), 2215 deletions(-).
The main changes are:
1) Add custom BPF allocator for JITs that pack multiple programs into a huge
page to reduce iTLB pressure, from Song Liu.
2) Add __user tagging support in vmlinux BTF and utilize it from BPF
verifier when generating loads, from Yonghong Song.
3) Add per-socket fast path check guarding from cgroup/BPF overhead when
used by only some sockets, from Pavel Begunkov.
4) Continued libbpf deprecation work of APIs/features and removal of their
usage from samples, selftests, libbpf & bpftool, from Andrii Nakryiko
and various others.
5) Improve BPF instruction set documentation by adding byte swap
instructions and cleaning up load/store section, from Christoph Hellwig.
6) Switch BPF preload infra to light skeleton and remove libbpf dependency
from it, from Alexei Starovoitov.
7) Fix architecture-agnostic macros in libbpf for accessing syscall
arguments from BPF progs for non-x86 architectures,
from Ilya Leoshkevich.
8) Rework port members in struct bpf_sk_lookup and struct bpf_sock to be
of 16-bit field with anonymous zero padding, from Jakub Sitnicki.
9) Add new bpf_copy_from_user_task() helper to read memory from a different
task than current. Add ability to create sleepable BPF iterator progs,
from Kenny Yu.
10) Implement XSK batching for ice's zero-copy driver used by AF_XDP and
utilize TX batching API from XSK buffer pool, from Maciej Fijalkowski.
11) Generate temporary netns names for BPF selftests to avoid naming
collisions, from Hangbin Liu.
12) Implement bpf_core_types_are_compat() with limited recursion for
in-kernel usage, from Matteo Croce.
13) Simplify pahole version detection and finally enable CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_DWARF5
to be selected with CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_BTF, from Nathan Chancellor.
14) Misc minor fixes to libbpf and selftests from various folks.
* https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bpf/bpf-next: (126 commits)
selftests/bpf: Cover 4-byte load from remote_port in bpf_sk_lookup
bpf: Make remote_port field in struct bpf_sk_lookup 16-bit wide
libbpf: Fix compilation warning due to mismatched printf format
selftests/bpf: Test BPF_KPROBE_SYSCALL macro
libbpf: Add BPF_KPROBE_SYSCALL macro
libbpf: Fix accessing the first syscall argument on s390
libbpf: Fix accessing the first syscall argument on arm64
libbpf: Allow overriding PT_REGS_PARM1{_CORE}_SYSCALL
selftests/bpf: Skip test_bpf_syscall_macro's syscall_arg1 on arm64 and s390
libbpf: Fix accessing syscall arguments on riscv
libbpf: Fix riscv register names
libbpf: Fix accessing syscall arguments on powerpc
selftests/bpf: Use PT_REGS_SYSCALL_REGS in bpf_syscall_macro
libbpf: Add PT_REGS_SYSCALL_REGS macro
selftests/bpf: Fix an endianness issue in bpf_syscall_macro test
bpf: Fix bpf_prog_pack build HPAGE_PMD_SIZE
bpf: Fix leftover header->pages in sparc and powerpc code.
libbpf: Fix signedness bug in btf_dump_array_data()
selftests/bpf: Do not export subtest as standalone test
bpf, x86_64: Fail gracefully on bpf_jit_binary_pack_finalize failures
...
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220209210050.8425-1-daniel@iogearbox.net
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
This change adds a couple of new ioctls for mctp sockets:
SIOCMCTPALLOCTAG and SIOCMCTPDROPTAG. These ioctls provide facilities
for explicit allocation / release of tags, overriding the automatic
allocate-on-send/release-on-reply and timeout behaviours. This allows
userspace more control over messages that may not fit a simple
request/response model.
In order to indicate a pre-allocated tag to the sendmsg() syscall, we
introduce a new flag to the struct sockaddr_mctp.smctp_tag value:
MCTP_TAG_PREALLOC.
Additional changes from Jeremy Kerr <jk@codeconstruct.com.au>.
Contains a fix that was:
Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Matt Johnston <matt@codeconstruct.com.au>
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Kerr <jk@codeconstruct.com.au>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Currently, we have a couple of paths that check that an EID matches, or
the match value is MCTP_ADDR_ANY.
Rather than open coding this, add a little helper.
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Kerr <jk@codeconstruct.com.au>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
When uncloning an skb dst and its associated metadata, a new
dst+metadata is allocated and later replaces the old one in the skb.
This is helpful to have a non-shared dst+metadata attached to a specific
skb.
The issue is the uncloned dst+metadata is initialized with a refcount of
1, which is increased to 2 before attaching it to the skb. When
tun_dst_unclone returns, the dst+metadata is only referenced from a
single place (the skb) while its refcount is 2. Its refcount will never
drop to 0 (when the skb is consumed), leading to a memory leak.
Fix this by removing the call to dst_hold in tun_dst_unclone, as the
dst+metadata refcount is already 1.
Fixes: fc4099f172 ("openvswitch: Fix egress tunnel info.")
Cc: Pravin B Shelar <pshelar@ovn.org>
Reported-by: Vlad Buslov <vladbu@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: Vlad Buslov <vladbu@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Antoine Tenart <atenart@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
When uncloning an skb dst and its associated metadata a new dst+metadata
is allocated and the tunnel information from the old metadata is copied
over there.
The issue is the tunnel metadata has references to cached dst, which are
copied along the way. When a dst+metadata refcount drops to 0 the
metadata is freed including the cached dst entries. As they are also
referenced in the initial dst+metadata, this ends up in UaFs.
In practice the above did not happen because of another issue, the
dst+metadata was never freed because its refcount never dropped to 0
(this will be fixed in a subsequent patch).
Fix this by initializing the dst cache after copying the tunnel
information from the old metadata to also unshare the dst cache.
Fixes: d71785ffc7 ("net: add dst_cache to ovs vxlan lwtunnel")
Cc: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Reported-by: Vlad Buslov <vladbu@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: Vlad Buslov <vladbu@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Antoine Tenart <atenart@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Allow up to 16-byte comparisons with a new cmp fast version. Use two
64-bit words and calculate the mask representing the bits to be
compared. Make sure the comparison is 64-bit aligned and avoid
out-of-bound memory access on registers.
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
Instead of two exported functions, export a single option structure.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
For updating eache missed value we can use cmpxchg.
This also avoids need to disable BH.
kernel robot reported build failure on v1 because not all arches support
cmpxchg for u16, so extend this to u32.
This doesn't increase struct size, existing padding is used.
Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
Next step for using per netns inet6_addr_lst
is to have per netns work item to ultimately
call addrconf_verify_rtnl() and addrconf_verify()
with a new 'struct net*' argument.
Everything is still using the global inet6_addr_lst[] table.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Add a per netns hash table and a dedicated spinlock,
first step to get rid of the global inet6_addr_lst[] one.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Use the new dscp_t type to replace the fc_tos field of fib_config, to
ensure IPv4 routes aren't influenced by ECN bits when configured with
non-zero rtm_tos.
Before this patch, IPv4 routes specifying an rtm_tos with some of the
ECN bits set were accepted. However they wouldn't work (never match) as
IPv4 normally clears the ECN bits with IPTOS_RT_MASK before doing a FIB
lookup (although a few buggy code paths don't).
After this patch, IPv4 routes specifying an rtm_tos with any ECN bit
set is rejected.
Note: IPv6 routes ignore rtm_tos altogether, any rtm_tos is accepted,
but treated as if it were 0.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Nault <gnault@redhat.com>
Acked-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Define a dscp_t type and its appropriate helpers that ensure ECN bits
are not taken into account when handling DSCP.
Use this new type to replace the tclass field of struct fib6_rule, so
that fib6-rules don't get influenced by ECN bits anymore.
Before this patch, fib6-rules didn't make any distinction between the
DSCP and ECN bits. Therefore, rules specifying a DSCP (tos or dsfield
options in iproute2) stopped working as soon a packets had at least one
of its ECN bits set (as a work around one could create four rules for
each DSCP value to match, one for each possible ECN value).
After this patch fib6-rules only compare the DSCP bits. ECN doesn't
influence the result anymore. Also, fib6-rules now must have the ECN
bits cleared or they will be rejected.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Nault <gnault@redhat.com>
Acked-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
While testing a patch that will follow later
("net: add netns refcount tracker to struct nsproxy")
I found that devtmpfs_init() was called before init_net
was initialized.
This is a bug, because devtmpfs_setup() calls
ksys_unshare(CLONE_NEWNS);
This has the effect of increasing init_net refcount,
which will be later overwritten to 1, as part of setup_net(&init_net)
We had too many prior patches [1] trying to work around the root cause.
Really, make sure init_net is in BSS section, and that net_ns_init()
is called earlier at boot time.
Note that another patch ("vfs: add netns refcount tracker
to struct fs_context") also will need net_ns_init() being called
before vfs_caches_init()
As a bonus, this patch saves around 4KB in .data section.
[1]
f8c46cb390 ("netns: do not call pernet ops for not yet set up init_net namespace")
b5082df801 ("net: Initialise init_net.count to 1")
734b65417b ("net: Statically initialize init_net.dev_base_head")
v2: fixed a build error reported by kernel build bots (CONFIG_NET=n)
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
While inspecting some perf report, I noticed that the compiler
emits suboptimal code for the napi CB initialization, fetching
and storing multiple times the memory for flags bitfield.
This is with gcc 10.3.1, but I observed the same with older compiler
versions.
We can help the compiler to do a nicer work clearing several
fields at once using an u32 alias. The generated code is quite
smaller, with the same number of conditional.
Before:
objdump -t net/core/gro.o | grep " F .text"
0000000000000bb0 l F .text 0000000000000357 dev_gro_receive
After:
0000000000000bb0 l F .text 000000000000033c dev_gro_receive
v1 -> v2:
- use struct_group (Alexander and Alex)
RFC -> v1:
- use __struct_group to delimit the zeroed area (Alexander)
Signed-off-by: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Currently tc skb extension is used to send miss info from
tc to ovs datapath module, and driver to tc. For the tc to ovs
miss it is currently always allocated even if it will not
be used by ovs datapath (as it depends on a requested feature).
Export the static key which is used by openvswitch module to
guard this code path as well, so it will be skipped if ovs
datapath doesn't need it. Enable this code path once
ovs datapath needs it.
Signed-off-by: Paul Blakey <paulb@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jamal Hadi Salim <jhs@mojatatu.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
The size of the status_driver_data field was not adjusted when
the is_valid_ack_signal field was added.
Since the size of struct ieee80211_tx_info is limited, replace
the is_valid_ack_signal field with a flags field, and adjust the
struct size accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Avraham Stern <avraham.stern@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Luca Coelho <luciano.coelho@intel.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/iwlwifi.20220202104617.0ff363d4fa56.I45792c0187034a6d0e1c99a7db741996ef7caba3@changeid
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
These no longer register/unregister a meaningful structure so remove it.
Cc: Paul Blakey <paulb@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
The nat module already exposes a few functions to the conntrack core.
Move the nat extension destroy hook to it.
After this, no conntrack extension needs a destroy hook.
'struct nf_ct_ext_type' and the register/unregister api can be removed
in a followup patch.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
No need to specify this in the registration modules, we already
collect all sizes for build-time checks on the maximum combined size.
After this change, all extensions except nat have no meaningful content
in their nf_ct_ext_type struct definition.
Next patch handles nat, this will then allow to remove the dynamic
register api completely.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
All extensions except one need 8 byte alignment, so just make that the
default.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
The previous commit d01ffb9eee ("ax25: add refcount in ax25_dev
to avoid UAF bugs") introduces refcount into ax25_dev, but there
are reference leak paths in ax25_ctl_ioctl(), ax25_fwd_ioctl(),
ax25_rt_add(), ax25_rt_del() and ax25_rt_opt().
This patch uses ax25_dev_put() and adjusts the position of
ax25_addr_ax25dev() to fix reference cout leaks of ax25_dev.
Fixes: d01ffb9eee ("ax25: add refcount in ax25_dev to avoid UAF bugs")
Signed-off-by: Duoming Zhou <duoming@zju.edu.cn>
Reviewed-by: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@oracle.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220203150811.42256-1-duoming@zju.edu.cn
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Given that standalone ports are now configured to bypass the ATU and
forward all frames towards the upstream port, extend the ATU bypass to
multichip systems.
Load VID 0 (standalone) into the VTU with the policy bit set. Since
VID 4095 (bridged) is already loaded, we now know that all VIDs in use
are always available in all VTUs. Therefore, we can safely enable
802.1Q on DSA ports.
Setting the DSA ports' VTU policy to TRAP means that all incoming
frames on VID 0 will be classified as MGMT - as a result, the ATU is
bypassed on all subsequent switches.
With this isolation in place, we are able to support configurations
that are simultaneously very quirky and very useful. Quirky because it
involves looping cables between local switchports like in this
example:
CPU
| .------.
.---0---. | .----0----.
| sw0 | | | sw1 |
'-1-2-3-' | '-1-2-3-4-'
$ @ '---' $ @ % %
We have three physically looped pairs ($, @, and %).
This is very useful because it allows us to run the kernel's
kselftests for the bridge on mv88e6xxx hardware.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Waldekranz <tobias@waldekranz.com>
Reviewed-by: Vladimir Oltean <olteanv@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Clear MapDA on standalone ports to bypass any ATU lookup that might
point the packet in the wrong direction. This means that all packets
are flooded using the PVT config. So make sure that standalone ports
are only allowed to communicate with the local upstream port.
Here is a scenario in which this is needed:
CPU
| .----.
.---0---. | .--0--.
| sw0 | | | sw1 |
'-1-2-3-' | '-1-2-'
'---'
- sw0p1 and sw1p1 are bridged
- sw0p2 and sw1p2 are in standalone mode
- Learning must be enabled on sw0p3 in order for hardware forwarding
to work properly between bridged ports
1. A packet with SA :aa comes in on sw1p2
1a. Egresses sw1p0
1b. Ingresses sw0p3, ATU adds an entry for :aa towards port 3
1c. Egresses sw0p0
2. A packet with DA :aa comes in on sw0p2
2a. If an ATU lookup is done at this point, the packet will be
incorrectly forwarded towards sw0p3. With this change in place,
the ATU is bypassed and the packet is forwarded in accordance
with the PVT, which only contains the CPU port.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Waldekranz <tobias@waldekranz.com>
Reviewed-by: Vladimir Oltean <olteanv@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This change is meant to permit a driver to perform "fragmenting" of the
page from within the driver instead of the current model which requires
pre-partitioning the page. The main motivation behind this is to support
use cases where the page will be split up by the driver after DMA instead
of before.
With this change it becomes possible to start using page pool to replace
some of the existing use cases where multiple references were being used
for a single page, but the number needed was unknown as the size could be
dynamic.
For example, with this code it would be possible to do something like
the following to handle allocation:
page = page_pool_alloc_pages();
if (!page)
return NULL;
page_pool_fragment_page(page, DRIVER_PAGECNT_BIAS_MAX);
rx_buf->page = page;
rx_buf->pagecnt_bias = DRIVER_PAGECNT_BIAS_MAX;
Then we would process a received buffer by handling it with:
rx_buf->pagecnt_bias--;
Once the page has been fully consumed we could then flush the remaining
instances with:
if (page_pool_defrag_page(page, rx_buf->pagecnt_bias))
continue;
page_pool_put_defragged_page(pool, page -1, !!budget);
The general idea is that we want to have the ability to allocate a page
with excess fragment count and then trim off the unneeded fragments.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Duyck <alexanderduyck@fb.com>
Reviewed-by: Ilias Apalodimas <ilias.apalodimas@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
syzkaller was able to trigger a deadlock for NTF_MANAGED entries [0]:
kworker/0:16/14617 is trying to acquire lock:
ffffffff8d4dd370 (&tbl->lock){++-.}-{2:2}, at: ___neigh_create+0x9e1/0x2990 net/core/neighbour.c:652
[...]
but task is already holding lock:
ffffffff8d4dd370 (&tbl->lock){++-.}-{2:2}, at: neigh_managed_work+0x35/0x250 net/core/neighbour.c:1572
The neighbor entry turned to NUD_FAILED state, where __neigh_event_send()
triggered an immediate probe as per commit cd28ca0a3d ("neigh: reduce
arp latency") via neigh_probe() given table lock was held.
One option to fix this situation is to defer the neigh_probe() back to
the neigh_timer_handler() similarly as pre cd28ca0a3d. For the case
of NTF_MANAGED, this deferral is acceptable given this only happens on
actual failure state and regular / expected state is NUD_VALID with the
entry already present.
The fix adds a parameter to __neigh_event_send() in order to communicate
whether immediate probe is allowed or disallowed. Existing call-sites
of neigh_event_send() default as-is to immediate probe. However, the
neigh_managed_work() disables it via use of neigh_event_send_probe().
[0] <TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0xcd/0x134 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_deadlock_bug kernel/locking/lockdep.c:2956 [inline]
check_deadlock kernel/locking/lockdep.c:2999 [inline]
validate_chain kernel/locking/lockdep.c:3788 [inline]
__lock_acquire.cold+0x149/0x3ab kernel/locking/lockdep.c:5027
lock_acquire kernel/locking/lockdep.c:5639 [inline]
lock_acquire+0x1ab/0x510 kernel/locking/lockdep.c:5604
__raw_write_lock_bh include/linux/rwlock_api_smp.h:202 [inline]
_raw_write_lock_bh+0x2f/0x40 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:334
___neigh_create+0x9e1/0x2990 net/core/neighbour.c:652
ip6_finish_output2+0x1070/0x14f0 net/ipv6/ip6_output.c:123
__ip6_finish_output net/ipv6/ip6_output.c:191 [inline]
__ip6_finish_output+0x61e/0xe90 net/ipv6/ip6_output.c:170
ip6_finish_output+0x32/0x200 net/ipv6/ip6_output.c:201
NF_HOOK_COND include/linux/netfilter.h:296 [inline]
ip6_output+0x1e4/0x530 net/ipv6/ip6_output.c:224
dst_output include/net/dst.h:451 [inline]
NF_HOOK include/linux/netfilter.h:307 [inline]
ndisc_send_skb+0xa99/0x17f0 net/ipv6/ndisc.c:508
ndisc_send_ns+0x3a9/0x840 net/ipv6/ndisc.c:650
ndisc_solicit+0x2cd/0x4f0 net/ipv6/ndisc.c:742
neigh_probe+0xc2/0x110 net/core/neighbour.c:1040
__neigh_event_send+0x37d/0x1570 net/core/neighbour.c:1201
neigh_event_send include/net/neighbour.h:470 [inline]
neigh_managed_work+0x162/0x250 net/core/neighbour.c:1574
process_one_work+0x9ac/0x1650 kernel/workqueue.c:2307
worker_thread+0x657/0x1110 kernel/workqueue.c:2454
kthread+0x2e9/0x3a0 kernel/kthread.c:377
ret_from_fork+0x1f/0x30 arch/x86/entry/entry_64.S:295
</TASK>
Fixes: 7482e3841d ("net, neigh: Add NTF_MANAGED flag for managed neighbor entries")
Reported-by: syzbot+5239d0e1778a500d477a@syzkaller.appspotmail.com
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
Cc: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Cc: Roopa Prabhu <roopa@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: syzbot+5239d0e1778a500d477a@syzkaller.appspotmail.com
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220201193942.5055-1-daniel@iogearbox.net
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
When setting RTO through BPF program, some SYN ACK packets were unaffected
and continued to use TCP_TIMEOUT_INIT constant. This patch adds timeout
option to struct request_sock. Option is initialized with TCP_TIMEOUT_INIT
and is reassigned through BPF using tcp_timeout_init call. SYN ACK
retransmits now use newly added timeout option.
Signed-off-by: Akhmat Karakotov <hmukos@yandex-team.ru>
Acked-by: Martin KaFai Lau <kafai@fb.com>
v2:
- Add timeout option to struct request_sock. Do not call
tcp_timeout_init on every syn ack retransmit.
v3:
- Use unsigned long for min. Bound tcp_timeout_init to TCP_RTO_MAX.
v4:
- Refactor duplicate code by adding reqsk_timeout function.
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Certain drivers may need to send management traffic to the switch for
things like register access, FDB dump, etc, to accelerate what their
slow bus (SPI, I2C, MDIO) can already do.
Ethernet is faster (especially in bulk transactions) but is also more
unreliable, since the user may decide to bring the DSA master down (or
not bring it up), therefore severing the link between the host and the
attached switch.
Drivers needing Ethernet-based register access already should have
fallback logic to the slow bus if the Ethernet method fails, but that
fallback may be based on a timeout, and the I/O to the switch may slow
down to a halt if the master is down, because every Ethernet packet will
have to time out. The driver also doesn't have the option to turn off
Ethernet-based I/O momentarily, because it wouldn't know when to turn it
back on.
Which is where this change comes in. By tracking NETDEV_CHANGE,
NETDEV_UP and NETDEV_GOING_DOWN events on the DSA master, we should know
the exact interval of time during which this interface is reliably
available for traffic. Provide this information to switches so they can
use it as they wish.
An helper is added dsa_port_master_is_operational() to check if a master
port is operational.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Ansuel Smith <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Give this structure a header to better explain its content.
Signed-off-by: David Girault <david.girault@qorvo.com>
[miquel.raynal@bootlin.com: Isolate this change from a bigger commit and
reword the comment]
Signed-off-by: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220201180956.93581-1-miquel.raynal@bootlin.com
Signed-off-by: Stefan Schmidt <stefan@datenfreihafen.org>
Add the SO_TXREHASH socket option to control hash rethink behavior per socket.
When default mode is set, sockets disable rehash at initialization and use
sysctl option when entering listen state. setsockopt() overrides default
behavior.
Signed-off-by: Akhmat Karakotov <hmukos@yandex-team.ru>
Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add a per ns sysctl that controls the txhash rethink behavior:
net.core.txrehash. When enabled, the same behavior is retained,
when disabled, rethink is not performed. Sysctl is enabled by default.
Signed-off-by: Akhmat Karakotov <hmukos@yandex-team.ru>
Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
ip_idents_reserve is only used in net/ipv4/route.c. Make it static
and remove the export.
Signed-off-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Cc: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Since v2.5.44 and addition of ip_options_fragment()
ip_options_build() does not render headers for fragments
directly. @is_frag is always 0.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
- Add support for RTL8822C hci_ver 0x08
- Add support for RTL8852AE part 0bda:2852
- Fix WBS setting for Intel legacy ROM products
- Enable SCO over I2S ib mt7921s
- Increment management interface revision
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Merge tag 'for-net-next-2022-01-28' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bluetooth/bluetooth-next
Luiz Augusto von Dentz says:
====================
bluetooth-next pull request for net-next:
- Add support for RTL8822C hci_ver 0x08
- Add support for RTL8852AE part 0bda:2852
- Fix WBS setting for Intel legacy ROM products
- Enable SCO over I2S ib mt7921s
- Increment management interface revision
* tag 'for-net-next-2022-01-28' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bluetooth/bluetooth-next: (30 commits)
Bluetooth: Increment management interface revision
Bluetooth: hci_sync: Fix queuing commands when HCI_UNREGISTER is set
Bluetooth: hci_h5: Add power reset via gpio in h5_btrtl_open
Bluetooth: btrtl: Add support for RTL8822C hci_ver 0x08
Bluetooth: hci_event: Fix HCI_EV_VENDOR max_len
Bluetooth: hci_core: Rate limit the logging of invalid SCO handle
Bluetooth: hci_event: Ignore multiple conn complete events
Bluetooth: msft: fix null pointer deref on msft_monitor_device_evt
Bluetooth: btmtksdio: mask out interrupt status
Bluetooth: btmtksdio: run sleep mode by default
Bluetooth: btmtksdio: lower log level in btmtksdio_runtime_[resume|suspend]()
Bluetooth: mt7921s: fix btmtksdio_[drv|fw]_pmctrl()
Bluetooth: mt7921s: fix bus hang with wrong privilege
Bluetooth: btmtksdio: refactor btmtksdio_runtime_[suspend|resume]()
Bluetooth: mt7921s: fix firmware coredump retrieve
Bluetooth: hci_serdev: call init_rwsem() before p->open()
Bluetooth: Remove kernel-doc style comment block
Bluetooth: btusb: Whitespace fixes for btusb_setup_csr()
Bluetooth: btusb: Add one more Bluetooth part for the Realtek RTL8852AE
Bluetooth: btintel: Fix WBS setting for Intel legacy ROM products
...
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220128205915.3995760-1-luiz.dentz@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
If we dereference ax25_dev after we call kfree(ax25_dev) in
ax25_dev_device_down(), it will lead to concurrency UAF bugs.
There are eight syscall functions suffer from UAF bugs, include
ax25_bind(), ax25_release(), ax25_connect(), ax25_ioctl(),
ax25_getname(), ax25_sendmsg(), ax25_getsockopt() and
ax25_info_show().
One of the concurrency UAF can be shown as below:
(USE) | (FREE)
| ax25_device_event
| ax25_dev_device_down
ax25_bind | ...
... | kfree(ax25_dev)
ax25_fillin_cb() | ...
ax25_fillin_cb_from_dev() |
... |
The root cause of UAF bugs is that kfree(ax25_dev) in
ax25_dev_device_down() is not protected by any locks.
When ax25_dev, which there are still pointers point to,
is released, the concurrency UAF bug will happen.
This patch introduces refcount into ax25_dev in order to
guarantee that there are no pointers point to it when ax25_dev
is released.
Signed-off-by: Duoming Zhou <duoming@zju.edu.cn>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
It is not straightforward to the newcomer that a single skb can
currently be sent at a time and that the internal process is to stop the
queue when processing a frame before re-enabling it.
Make this clear by documenting the ieee802154_wake/stop_queue()
helpers.
Signed-off-by: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Alexander Aring <aahringo@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220125122540.855604-4-miquel.raynal@bootlin.com
Signed-off-by: Stefan Schmidt <stefan@datenfreihafen.org>
Inline a part of ipv6_fixup_options() to avoid extra overhead on
function call if opt is NULL.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Begunkov <asml.silence@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Willem de Bruijn <willemb@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Another preparation patch. inet_cork_full already contains a field for
iflow, so we can avoid passing a separate struct iflow6 into
__ip6_append_data() and ip6_make_skb(), and use the flow stored in
inet_cork_full. Make sure callers set cork->fl, i.e. we init it in
ip6_append_data() and before calling ip6_make_skb().
Signed-off-by: Pavel Begunkov <asml.silence@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Willem de Bruijn <willemb@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
ip_select_ident_segs() has been very conservative about using
the connected socket private generator only for packets with IP_DF
set, claiming it was needed for some VJ compression implementations.
As mentioned in this referenced document, this can be abused.
(Ref: Off-Path TCP Exploits of the Mixed IPID Assignment)
Before switching to pure random IPID generation and possibly hurt
some workloads, lets use the private inet socket generator.
Not only this will remove one vulnerability, this will also
improve performance of TCP flows using pmtudisc==IP_PMTUDISC_DONT
Fixes: 73f156a6e8 ("inetpeer: get rid of ip_id_count")
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Reported-by: Ray Che <xijiache@gmail.com>
Cc: Willy Tarreau <w@1wt.eu>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Move desc_array from the driver to the pool. The reason behind this is
that we can then reuse this array as a temporary storage for descriptors
in all zero-copy drivers that use the batched interface. This will make
it easier to add batching to more drivers.
i40e is the only driver that has a batched Tx zero-copy
implementation, so no need to touch any other driver.
Signed-off-by: Magnus Karlsson <magnus.karlsson@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Lobakin <alexandr.lobakin@intel.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20220125160446.78976-6-maciej.fijalkowski@intel.com
This reverts commit b75326c201.
This commit breaks Linux compatibility with USGv6 tests. The RFC this
commit was based on is actually an expired draft: no published RFC
currently allows the new behaviour it introduced.
Without full IETF endorsement, the flash renumbering scenario this
patch was supposed to enable is never going to work, as other IPv6
equipements on the same LAN will keep the 2 hours limit.
Fixes: b75326c201 ("ipv6: Honor all IPv6 PIO Valid Lifetime values")
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Nault <gnault@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Different netns has different requirement on the setting of min_adv_mss
sysctl which the advertised MSS will be never lower than.
Enable min_adv_mss to be configured per network namespace.
Signed-off-by: xu xin <xu.xin16@zte.com.cn>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This reverts commit b515d26372.
Commit b515d26372 ("xfrm: xfrm_state_mtu
should return at least 1280 for ipv6") in v5.14 breaks the TCP MSS
calculation in ipsec transport mode, resulting complete stalls of TCP
connections. This happens when the (P)MTU is 1280 or slighly larger.
The desired formula for the MSS is:
MSS = (MTU - ESP_overhead) - IP header - TCP header
However, the above commit clamps the (MTU - ESP_overhead) to a
minimum of 1280, turning the formula into
MSS = max(MTU - ESP overhead, 1280) - IP header - TCP header
With the (P)MTU near 1280, the calculated MSS is too large and the
resulting TCP packets never make it to the destination because they
are over the actual PMTU.
The above commit also causes suboptimal double fragmentation in
xfrm tunnel mode, as described in
https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20210429202529.codhwpc7w6kbudug@dwarf.suse.cz/
The original problem the above commit was trying to fix is now fixed
by commit 6596a02295 ("xfrm: fix MTU
regression").
Signed-off-by: Jiri Bohac <jbohac@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Steffen Klassert <steffen.klassert@secunet.com>
This patch enables distinguishing SAs and SPs based on if_id during
the xfrm_migrate flow. This ensures support for xfrm interfaces
throughout the SA/SP lifecycle.
When there are multiple existing SPs with the same direction,
the same xfrm_selector and different endpoint addresses,
xfrm_migrate might fail with ENODATA.
Specifically, the code path for performing xfrm_migrate is:
Stage 1: find policy to migrate with
xfrm_migrate_policy_find(sel, dir, type, net)
Stage 2: find and update state(s) with
xfrm_migrate_state_find(mp, net)
Stage 3: update endpoint address(es) of template(s) with
xfrm_policy_migrate(pol, m, num_migrate)
Currently "Stage 1" always returns the first xfrm_policy that
matches, and "Stage 3" looks for the xfrm_tmpl that matches the
old endpoint address. Thus if there are multiple xfrm_policy
with same selector, direction, type and net, "Stage 1" might
rertun a wrong xfrm_policy and "Stage 3" will fail with ENODATA
because it cannot find a xfrm_tmpl with the matching endpoint
address.
The fix is to allow userspace to pass an if_id and add if_id
to the matching rule in Stage 1 and Stage 2 since if_id is a
unique ID for xfrm_policy and xfrm_state. For compatibility,
if_id will only be checked if the attribute is set.
Tested with additions to Android's kernel unit test suite:
https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/kernel/tests/+/1668886
Signed-off-by: Yan Yan <evitayan@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Steffen Klassert <steffen.klassert@secunet.com>
TCP ipv4 uses per-cpu/per-netns ctl sockets in order to send
RST and some ACK packets (on behalf of TIMEWAIT sockets).
This adds memory and cpu costs, which do not seem needed.
Now typical servers have 256 or more cores, this adds considerable
tax to netns users.
tcp sockets are used from BH context, are not receiving packets,
and do not store any persistent state but the 'struct net' pointer
in order to be able to use IPv4 output functions.
Note that I attempted a related change in the past, that had
to be hot-fixed in commit bdbbb8527b ("ipv4: tcp: get rid of ugly unicast_sock")
This patch could very well surface old bugs, on layers not
taking care of sk->sk_kern_sock properly.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Back in linux-2.6.25 (commit 98c6d1b261 "[NETNS]: Make icmpv6_sk per namespace.",
we added private per-cpu/per-netns ipv6 icmp sockets.
This adds memory and cpu costs, which do not seem needed.
Now typical servers have 256 or more cores, this adds considerable
tax to netns users.
icmp sockets are used from BH context, are not receiving packets,
and do not store any persistent state but the 'struct net' pointer.
icmpv6_xmit_lock() already makes sure to lock the chosen per-cpu
socket.
This patch has a considerable impact on the number of netns
that the worker thread in cleanup_net() can dismantle per second,
because ip6mr_sk_done() is no longer called, meaning we no longer
acquire the rtnl mutex, competing with other threads adding new netns.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Back in linux-2.6.25 (commit 4a6ad7a141 "[NETNS]: Make icmp_sk per namespace."),
we added private per-cpu/per-netns ipv4 icmp sockets.
This adds memory and cpu costs, which do not seem needed.
Now typical servers have 256 or more cores, this adds considerable
tax to netns users.
icmp sockets are used from BH context, are not receiving packets,
and do not store any persistent state but the 'struct net' pointer.
icmp_xmit_lock() already makes sure to lock the chosen per-cpu
socket.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Prior patches in the series made sure tw_timer_handler()
can be fired after netns has been dismantled/freed.
We no longer have to scan a potentially big TCP ehash
table at netns dismantle.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
We will soon get rid of inet_twsk_purge().
This means that tw_timer_handler() might fire after
a netns has been dismantled/freed.
Instead of adding a function (and data structure) to find a netns
from tw->tw_net_cookie, just update the SNMP counters
a bit earlier, when the netns is known to be alive.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
We want to allow inet_twsk_kill() working even if netns
has been dismantled/freed, to get rid of inet_twsk_purge().
This patch adds tw->tw_bslot to cache the bind bucket slot
so that inet_twsk_kill() no longer needs to dereference twsk_net(tw)
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
When one of the three connection complete events is received multiple
times for the same handle, the device is registered multiple times which
leads to memory corruptions. Therefore, consequent events for a single
connection are ignored.
The conn->state can hold different values, therefore HCI_CONN_HANDLE_UNSET
is introduced to identify new connections. To make sure the events do not
contain this or another invalid handle HCI_CONN_HANDLE_MAX and checks
are introduced.
Buglink: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=215497
Signed-off-by: Soenke Huster <soenke.huster@eknoes.de>
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Daniel Borkmann says:
====================
pull-request: bpf-next 2022-01-24
We've added 80 non-merge commits during the last 14 day(s) which contain
a total of 128 files changed, 4990 insertions(+), 895 deletions(-).
The main changes are:
1) Add XDP multi-buffer support and implement it for the mvneta driver,
from Lorenzo Bianconi, Eelco Chaudron and Toke Høiland-Jørgensen.
2) Add unstable conntrack lookup helpers for BPF by using the BPF kfunc
infra, from Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi.
3) Extend BPF cgroup programs to export custom ret value to userspace via
two helpers bpf_get_retval() and bpf_set_retval(), from YiFei Zhu.
4) Add support for AF_UNIX iterator batching, from Kuniyuki Iwashima.
5) Complete missing UAPI BPF helper description and change bpf_doc.py script
to enforce consistent & complete helper documentation, from Usama Arif.
6) Deprecate libbpf's legacy BPF map definitions and streamline XDP APIs to
follow tc-based APIs, from Andrii Nakryiko.
7) Support BPF_PROG_QUERY for BPF programs attached to sockmap, from Di Zhu.
8) Deprecate libbpf's bpf_map__def() API and replace users with proper getters
and setters, from Christy Lee.
9) Extend libbpf's btf__add_btf() with an additional hashmap for strings to
reduce overhead, from Kui-Feng Lee.
10) Fix bpftool and libbpf error handling related to libbpf's hashmap__new()
utility function, from Mauricio Vásquez.
11) Add support to BTF program names in bpftool's program dump, from Raman Shukhau.
12) Fix resolve_btfids build to pick up host flags, from Connor O'Brien.
* https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bpf/bpf-next: (80 commits)
selftests, bpf: Do not yet switch to new libbpf XDP APIs
selftests, xsk: Fix rx_full stats test
bpf: Fix flexible_array.cocci warnings
xdp: disable XDP_REDIRECT for xdp frags
bpf: selftests: add CPUMAP/DEVMAP selftests for xdp frags
bpf: selftests: introduce bpf_xdp_{load,store}_bytes selftest
net: xdp: introduce bpf_xdp_pointer utility routine
bpf: generalise tail call map compatibility check
libbpf: Add SEC name for xdp frags programs
bpf: selftests: update xdp_adjust_tail selftest to include xdp frags
bpf: test_run: add xdp_shared_info pointer in bpf_test_finish signature
bpf: introduce frags support to bpf_prog_test_run_xdp()
bpf: move user_size out of bpf_test_init
bpf: add frags support to xdp copy helpers
bpf: add frags support to the bpf_xdp_adjust_tail() API
bpf: introduce bpf_xdp_get_buff_len helper
net: mvneta: enable jumbo frames if the loaded XDP program support frags
bpf: introduce BPF_F_XDP_HAS_FRAGS flag in prog_flags loading the ebpf program
net: mvneta: add frags support to XDP_TX
xdp: add frags support to xdp_return_{buff/frame}
...
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220124221235.18993-1-daniel@iogearbox.net
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
bond_option_active_slave_get_rcu() should not be used in rtnl_mutex as it
use rcu_dereference(). Replace to rcu_dereference_rtnl() so we also can use
this function in rtnl protected context.
With this update, we can rmeove the rcu_read_lock/unlock in
bonding .ndo_eth_ioctl and .get_ts_info.
Reported-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Fixes: 94dd016ae5 ("bond: pass get_ts_info and SIOC[SG]HWTSTAMP ioctl to active device")
Signed-off-by: Hangbin Liu <liuhangbin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This change adds support for tail growing and shrinking for XDP frags.
When called on a non-linear packet with a grow request, it will work
on the last fragment of the packet. So the maximum grow size is the
last fragments tailroom, i.e. no new buffer will be allocated.
A XDP frags capable driver is expected to set frag_size in xdp_rxq_info
data structure to notify the XDP core the fragment size.
frag_size set to 0 is interpreted by the XDP core as tail growing is
not allowed.
Introduce __xdp_rxq_info_reg utility routine to initialize frag_size field.
When shrinking, it will work from the last fragment, all the way down to
the base buffer depending on the shrinking size. It's important to mention
that once you shrink down the fragment(s) are freed, so you can not grow
again to the original size.
Acked-by: Toke Hoiland-Jorgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Co-developed-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Eelco Chaudron <echaudro@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/eabda3485dda4f2f158b477729337327e609461d.1642758637.git.lorenzo@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Introduce bpf_xdp_get_buff_len helper in order to return the xdp buffer
total size (linear and paged area)
Acked-by: Toke Hoiland-Jorgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/aac9ac3504c84026cf66a3c71b7c5ae89bc991be.1642758637.git.lorenzo@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Take into account if the received xdp_buff/xdp_frame is non-linear
recycling/returning the frame memory to the allocator or into
xdp_frame_bulk.
Acked-by: Toke Hoiland-Jorgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/a961069febc868508ce1bdf5e53a343eb4e57cb2.1642758637.git.lorenzo@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Introduce xdp_update_skb_shared_info routine to update frags array
metadata in skb_shared_info data structure converting to a skb from
a xdp_buff or xdp_frame.
According to the current skb_shared_info architecture in
xdp_frame/xdp_buff and to the xdp frags support, there is
no need to run skb_add_rx_frag() and reset frags array converting the buffer
to a skb since the frag array will be in the same position for xdp_buff/xdp_frame
and for the skb, we just need to update memory metadata.
Introduce XDP_FLAGS_PF_MEMALLOC flag in xdp_buff_flags in order to mark
the xdp_buff or xdp_frame as under memory-pressure if pages of the frags array
are under memory pressure. Doing so we can avoid looping over all fragments in
xdp_update_skb_shared_info routine. The driver is expected to set the
flag constructing the xdp_buffer using xdp_buff_set_frag_pfmemalloc
utility routine.
Rely on xdp_update_skb_shared_info in __xdp_build_skb_from_frame routine
converting the non-linear xdp_frame to a skb after performing a XDP_REDIRECT.
Acked-by: Toke Hoiland-Jorgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/bfd23fb8a8d7438724f7819c567cdf99ffd6226f.1642758637.git.lorenzo@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Introduce flags field in xdp_frame and xdp_buffer data structures
to define additional buffer features. At the moment the only
supported buffer feature is frags bit (XDP_FLAGS_HAS_FRAGS).
frags bit is used to specify if this is a linear buffer
(XDP_FLAGS_HAS_FRAGS not set) or a frags frame (XDP_FLAGS_HAS_FRAGS
set). In the latter case the driver is expected to initialize the
skb_shared_info structure at the end of the first buffer to link together
subsequent buffers belonging to the same frame.
Acked-by: Toke Hoiland-Jorgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/e389f14f3a162c0a5bc6a2e1aa8dd01a90be117d.1642758637.git.lorenzo@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
When compiling the kernel with CONFIG_INET disabled, the
sk_defer_free_flush() should be defined as a nop.
This resolves the following compilation error:
ld: net/core/sock.o: in function `sk_defer_free_flush':
./include/net/tcp.h:1378: undefined reference to `__sk_defer_free_flush'
Fixes: 79074a72d3 ("net: Flush deferred skb free on socket destroy")
Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Tariq Toukan <tariqt@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Gal Pressman <gal@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220120123440.9088-1-gal@nvidia.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
This patch introduces two new MGMT events for notifying the bluetoothd
whenever the controller starts/stops monitoring a device.
Test performed:
- Verified by logs that the MSFT Monitor Device is received from the
controller and the bluetoothd is notified whenever the controller
starts/stops monitoring a device.
Signed-off-by: Manish Mandlik <mmandlik@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Miao-chen Chou <mcchou@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Whenever the controller starts/stops monitoring a bt device, it sends
MSFT Monitor Device event. Add handler to read this vendor event.
Test performed:
- Verified by logs that the MSFT Monitor Device event is received from
the controller whenever it starts/stops monitoring a device.
Signed-off-by: Manish Mandlik <mmandlik@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Miao-chen Chou <mcchou@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Current release - regressions:
- fix memory leaks in the skb free deferral scheme if upper layer
protocols are used, i.e. in-kernel TCP readers like TLS
Current release - new code bugs:
- nf_tables: fix NULL check typo in _clone() functions
- change the default to y for Vertexcom vendor Kconfig
- a couple of fixes to incorrect uses of ref tracking
- two fixes for constifying netdev->dev_addr
Previous releases - regressions:
- bpf:
- various verifier fixes mainly around register offset handling
when passed to helper functions
- fix mount source displayed for bpffs (none -> bpffs)
- bonding:
- fix extraction of ports for connection hash calculation
- fix bond_xmit_broadcast return value when some devices are down
- phy: marvell: add Marvell specific PHY loopback
- sch_api: don't skip qdisc attach on ingress, prevent ref leak
- htb: restore minimal packet size handling in rate control
- sfp: fix high power modules without diagnostic monitoring
- mscc: ocelot:
- don't let phylink re-enable TX PAUSE on the NPI port
- don't dereference NULL pointers with shared tc filters
- smsc95xx: correct reset handling for LAN9514
- cpsw: avoid alignment faults by taking NET_IP_ALIGN into account
- phy: micrel: use kszphy_suspend/_resume for irq aware devices,
avoid races with the interrupt
Previous releases - always broken:
- xdp: check prog type before updating BPF link
- smc: resolve various races around abnormal connection termination
- sit: allow encapsulated IPv6 traffic to be delivered locally
- axienet: fix init/reset handling, add missing barriers,
read the right status words, stop queues correctly
- add missing dev_put() in sock_timestamping_bind_phc()
Misc:
- ipv4: prevent accidentally passing RTO_ONLINK to
ip_route_output_key_hash() by sanitizing flags
- ipv4: avoid quadratic behavior in netns dismantle
- stmmac: dwmac-oxnas: add support for OX810SE
- fsl: xgmac_mdio: add workaround for erratum A-009885
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
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Merge tag 'net-5.17-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net
Pull networking fixes from Jakub Kicinski:
"Including fixes from netfilter, bpf.
Quite a handful of old regression fixes but most of those are
pre-5.16.
Current release - regressions:
- fix memory leaks in the skb free deferral scheme if upper layer
protocols are used, i.e. in-kernel TCP readers like TLS
Current release - new code bugs:
- nf_tables: fix NULL check typo in _clone() functions
- change the default to y for Vertexcom vendor Kconfig
- a couple of fixes to incorrect uses of ref tracking
- two fixes for constifying netdev->dev_addr
Previous releases - regressions:
- bpf:
- various verifier fixes mainly around register offset handling
when passed to helper functions
- fix mount source displayed for bpffs (none -> bpffs)
- bonding:
- fix extraction of ports for connection hash calculation
- fix bond_xmit_broadcast return value when some devices are down
- phy: marvell: add Marvell specific PHY loopback
- sch_api: don't skip qdisc attach on ingress, prevent ref leak
- htb: restore minimal packet size handling in rate control
- sfp: fix high power modules without diagnostic monitoring
- mscc: ocelot:
- don't let phylink re-enable TX PAUSE on the NPI port
- don't dereference NULL pointers with shared tc filters
- smsc95xx: correct reset handling for LAN9514
- cpsw: avoid alignment faults by taking NET_IP_ALIGN into account
- phy: micrel: use kszphy_suspend/_resume for irq aware devices,
avoid races with the interrupt
Previous releases - always broken:
- xdp: check prog type before updating BPF link
- smc: resolve various races around abnormal connection termination
- sit: allow encapsulated IPv6 traffic to be delivered locally
- axienet: fix init/reset handling, add missing barriers, read the
right status words, stop queues correctly
- add missing dev_put() in sock_timestamping_bind_phc()
Misc:
- ipv4: prevent accidentally passing RTO_ONLINK to
ip_route_output_key_hash() by sanitizing flags
- ipv4: avoid quadratic behavior in netns dismantle
- stmmac: dwmac-oxnas: add support for OX810SE
- fsl: xgmac_mdio: add workaround for erratum A-009885"
* tag 'net-5.17-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net: (92 commits)
ipv4: add net_hash_mix() dispersion to fib_info_laddrhash keys
ipv4: avoid quadratic behavior in netns dismantle
net/fsl: xgmac_mdio: Fix incorrect iounmap when removing module
powerpc/fsl/dts: Enable WA for erratum A-009885 on fman3l MDIO buses
dt-bindings: net: Document fsl,erratum-a009885
net/fsl: xgmac_mdio: Add workaround for erratum A-009885
net: mscc: ocelot: fix using match before it is set
net: phy: micrel: use kszphy_suspend()/kszphy_resume for irq aware devices
net: cpsw: avoid alignment faults by taking NET_IP_ALIGN into account
nfc: llcp: fix NULL error pointer dereference on sendmsg() after failed bind()
net: axienet: increase default TX ring size to 128
net: axienet: fix for TX busy handling
net: axienet: fix number of TX ring slots for available check
net: axienet: Fix TX ring slot available check
net: axienet: limit minimum TX ring size
net: axienet: add missing memory barriers
net: axienet: reset core on initialization prior to MDIO access
net: axienet: Wait for PhyRstCmplt after core reset
net: axienet: increase reset timeout
bpf, selftests: Add ringbuf memory type confusion test
...
This change adds conntrack lookup helpers using the unstable kfunc call
interface for the XDP and TC-BPF hooks. The primary usecase is
implementing a synproxy in XDP, see Maxim's patchset [0].
Export get_net_ns_by_id as nf_conntrack_bpf.c needs to call it.
This object is only built when CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_BTF_MODULES is enabled.
[0]: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20211019144655.3483197-1-maximmi@nvidia.com
Signed-off-by: Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi <memxor@gmail.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220114163953.1455836-7-memxor@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
- fix possible uninitialized memory usage for setattr
- fix fscache reading hole in a file just after it's been grown
- split net/9p/trans_fd.c in its own module like other transports
that module defaults to 9P_NET and is autoloaded if required so
users should not be impacted
- add Christian Schoenebeck to 9p reviewers
- some more trivial cleanup
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Merge tag '9p-for-5.17-rc1' of git://github.com/martinetd/linux
Pull 9p updates from Dominique Martinet:
"Fixes, split 9p_net_fd, and new reviewer:
- fix possible uninitialized memory usage for setattr
- fix fscache reading hole in a file just after it's been grown
- split net/9p/trans_fd.c in its own module like other transports.
The new transport module defaults to 9P_NET and is autoloaded if
required so users should not be impacted
- add Christian Schoenebeck to 9p reviewers
- some more trivial cleanup"
* tag '9p-for-5.17-rc1' of git://github.com/martinetd/linux:
9p: fix enodata when reading growing file
net/9p: show error message if user 'msize' cannot be satisfied
MAINTAINERS: 9p: add Christian Schoenebeck as reviewer
9p: only copy valid iattrs in 9P2000.L setattr implementation
9p: Use BUG_ON instead of if condition followed by BUG.
net/p9: load default transports
9p/xen: autoload when xenbus service is available
9p/trans_fd: split into dedicated module
fs: 9p: remove unneeded variable
9p/trans_virtio: Fix typo in the comment for p9_virtio_create()
commit 56b765b79e ("htb: improved accuracy at high rates") broke
"overhead X", "linklayer atm" and "mpu X" attributes.
"overhead X" and "linklayer atm" have already been fixed. This restores
the "mpu X" handling, as might be used by DOCSIS or Ethernet shaping:
tc class add ... htb rate X overhead 4 mpu 64
The code being fixed is used by htb, tbf and act_police. Cake has its
own mpu handling. qdisc_calculate_pkt_len still uses the size table
containing values adjusted for mpu by user space.
iproute2 tc has always passed mpu into the kernel via a tc_ratespec
structure, but the kernel never directly acted on it, merely stored it
so that it could be read back by `tc class show`.
Rather, tc would generate length-to-time tables that included the mpu
(and linklayer) in their construction, and the kernel used those tables.
Since v3.7, the tables were no longer used. Along with "mpu", this also
broke "overhead" and "linklayer" which were fixed in 01cb71d2d4
("net_sched: restore "overhead xxx" handling", v3.10) and 8a8e3d84b1
("net_sched: restore "linklayer atm" handling", v3.11).
"overhead" was fixed by simply restoring use of tc_ratespec::overhead -
this had originally been used by the kernel but was initially omitted
from the new non-table-based calculations.
"linklayer" had been handled in the table like "mpu", but the mode was
not originally passed in tc_ratespec. The new implementation was made to
handle it by getting new versions of tc to pass the mode in an extended
tc_ratespec, and for older versions of tc the table contents were analysed
at load time to deduce linklayer.
As "mpu" has always been given to the kernel in tc_ratespec,
accompanying the mpu-based table, we can restore system functionality
with no userspace change by making the kernel act on the tc_ratespec
value.
Fixes: 56b765b79e ("htb: improved accuracy at high rates")
Signed-off-by: Kevin Bracey <kevin@bracey.fi>
Cc: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Cc: Jiri Pirko <jiri@resnulli.us>
Cc: Vimalkumar <j.vimal@gmail.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220112170210.1014351-1-kevin@bracey.fi
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Both fields can be read/written without synchronization,
add proper accessors and documentation.
Fixes: d5dd88794a ("inet: fix various use-after-free in defrags units")
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
While struct tcf_exts has a net pointer, it is not refcounted
until tcf_exts_get_net() is called.
Fixes: dbdcda634c ("net: sched: add netns refcount tracker to struct tcf_exts")
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Reported-by: syzbot <syzkaller@googlegroups.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220110094750.236478-1-eric.dumazet@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Now that all transports are split into modules it may happen that no
transports are registered when v9fs_get_default_trans() is called.
When that is the case try to load more transports from modules.
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20211103193823.111007-5-linux@weissschuh.net
Signed-off-by: Thomas Weißschuh <linux@weissschuh.net>
[Dominique: constify v9fs_get_trans_by_name argument as per patch1v2]
Signed-off-by: Dominique Martinet <asmadeus@codewreck.org>
This allows these transports only to be used when needed.
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20211103193823.111007-3-linux@weissschuh.net
Signed-off-by: Thomas Weißschuh <linux@weissschuh.net>
[Dominique: Kconfig NET_9P_FD: -depends VIRTIO, +default NET_9P]
Signed-off-by: Dominique Martinet <asmadeus@codewreck.org>
Netfilter conntrack maintains NAT flags per connection indicating
whether NAT was configured for the connection. Openvswitch maintains
NAT flags on the per packet flow key ct_state field, indicating
whether NAT was actually executed on the packet.
When a packet misses from tc to ovs the conntrack NAT flags are set.
However, NAT was not necessarily executed on the packet because the
connection's state might still be in NEW state. As such, openvswitch
wrongly assumes that NAT was executed and sets an incorrect flow key
NAT flags.
Fix this, by flagging to openvswitch which NAT was actually done in
act_ct via tc_skb_ext and tc_skb_cb to the openvswitch module, so
the packet flow key NAT flags will be correctly set.
Fixes: b57dc7c13e ("net/sched: Introduce action ct")
Signed-off-by: Paul Blakey <paulb@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jamal Hadi Salim <jhs@mojatatu.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220106153804.26451-1-paulb@nvidia.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Pablo Neira Ayuso says:
====================
Netfilter updates for net-next
The following patchset contains Netfilter updates for net-next. This
includes one patch to update ovs and act_ct to use nf_ct_put() instead
of nf_conntrack_put().
1) Add netns_tracker to nfnetlink_log and masquerade, from Eric Dumazet.
2) Remove redundant rcu read-size lock in nf_tables packet path.
3) Replace BUG() by WARN_ON_ONCE() in nft_payload.
4) Consolidate rule verdict tracing.
5) Replace WARN_ON() by WARN_ON_ONCE() in nf_tables core.
6) Make counter support built-in in nf_tables.
7) Add new field to conntrack object to identify locally generated
traffic, from Florian Westphal.
8) Prevent NAT from shadowing well-known ports, from Florian Westphal.
9) Merge nf_flow_table_{ipv4,ipv6} into nf_flow_table_inet, also from
Florian.
10) Remove redundant pointer in nft_pipapo AVX2 support, from Colin Ian King.
11) Replace opencoded max() in conntrack, from Jiapeng Chong.
12) Update conntrack to use refcount_t API, from Florian Westphal.
13) Move ip_ct_attach indirection into the nf_ct_hook structure.
14) Constify several pointer object in the netfilter codebase,
from Florian Westphal.
15) Tree-wide replacement of nf_conntrack_put() by nf_ct_put(), also
from Florian.
16) Fix egress splat due to incorrect rcu notation, from Florian.
17) Move stateful fields of connlimit, last, quota, numgen and limit
out of the expression data area.
18) Build a blob to represent the ruleset in nf_tables, this is a
requirement of the new register tracking infrastructure.
19) Add NFT_REG32_NUM to define the maximum number of 32-bit registers.
20) Add register tracking infrastructure to skip redundant
store-to-register operations, this includes support for payload,
meta and bitwise expresssions.
* git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/pablo/nf-next: (32 commits)
netfilter: nft_meta: cancel register tracking after meta update
netfilter: nft_payload: cancel register tracking after payload update
netfilter: nft_bitwise: track register operations
netfilter: nft_meta: track register operations
netfilter: nft_payload: track register operations
netfilter: nf_tables: add register tracking infrastructure
netfilter: nf_tables: add NFT_REG32_NUM
netfilter: nf_tables: add rule blob layout
netfilter: nft_limit: move stateful fields out of expression data
netfilter: nft_limit: rename stateful structure
netfilter: nft_numgen: move stateful fields out of expression data
netfilter: nft_quota: move stateful fields out of expression data
netfilter: nft_last: move stateful fields out of expression data
netfilter: nft_connlimit: move stateful fields out of expression data
netfilter: egress: avoid a lockdep splat
net: prefer nf_ct_put instead of nf_conntrack_put
netfilter: conntrack: avoid useless indirection during conntrack destruction
netfilter: make function op structures const
netfilter: core: move ip_ct_attach indirection to struct nf_ct_hook
netfilter: conntrack: convert to refcount_t api
...
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220109231640.104123-1-pablo@netfilter.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Check if the destination register already contains the data that this
bitwise expression performs. This allows to skip this redundant
operation.
If the destination contains a different bitwise operation, cancel the
register tracking information. If the destination contains no bitwise
operation, update the register tracking information.
Update the payload and meta expression to check if this bitwise
operation has been already performed on the register. Hence, both the
payload/meta and the bitwise expressions are reduced.
There is also a special case: If source register != destination register
and source register is not updated by a previous bitwise operation, then
transfer selector from the source register to the destination register.
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
This patch adds new infrastructure to skip redundant selector store
operations on the same register to achieve a performance boost from
the packet path.
This is particularly noticeable in pure linear rulesets but it also
helps in rulesets which are already heaving relying in maps to avoid
ruleset linear inspection.
The idea is to keep data of the most recurrent store operations on
register to reuse them with cmp and lookup expressions.
This infrastructure allows for dynamic ruleset updates since the ruleset
blob reduction happens from the kernel.
Userspace still needs to be updated to maximize register utilization to
cooperate to improve register data reuse / reduce number of store on
register operations.
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
Add a definition including the maximum number of 32-bits registers that
are used a scratchpad memory area to store data.
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
This patch adds a blob layout per chain to represent the ruleset in the
packet datapath.
size (unsigned long)
struct nft_rule_dp
struct nft_expr
...
struct nft_rule_dp
struct nft_expr
...
struct nft_rule_dp (is_last=1)
The new structure nft_rule_dp represents the rule in a more compact way
(smaller memory footprint) compared to the control-plane nft_rule
structure.
The ruleset blob is a read-only data structure. The first field contains
the blob size, then the rules containing expressions. There is a trailing
rule which is used by the tracing infrastructure which is equivalent to
the NULL rule marker in the previous representation. The blob size field
does not include the size of this trailing rule marker.
The ruleset blob is generated from the commit path.
This patch reuses the infrastructure available since 0cbc06b3fa
("netfilter: nf_tables: remove synchronize_rcu in commit phase") to
build the array of rules per chain.
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
nf_ct_put() results in a usesless indirection:
nf_ct_put -> nf_conntrack_put -> nf_conntrack_destroy -> rcu readlock +
indirect call of ct_hooks->destroy().
There are two _put helpers:
nf_ct_put and nf_conntrack_put. The latter is what should be used in
code that MUST NOT cause a linker dependency on the conntrack module
(e.g. calls from core network stack).
Everyone else should call nf_ct_put() instead.
A followup patch will convert a few nf_conntrack_put() calls to
nf_ct_put(), in particular from modules that already have a conntrack
dependency such as act_ct or even nf_conntrack itself.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
- Add support for Foxconn QCA 0xe0d0
- Fix HCI init sequence on MacBook Air 8,1 and 8,2
- Fix Intel firmware loading on legacy ROM devices
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Merge tag 'for-net-next-2022-01-07' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bluetooth/bluetooth-next
Luiz Augusto von Dentz says:
====================
bluetooth-next pull request for net-next:
- Add support for Foxconn QCA 0xe0d0
- Fix HCI init sequence on MacBook Air 8,1 and 8,2
- Fix Intel firmware loading on legacy ROM devices
* tag 'for-net-next-2022-01-07' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bluetooth/bluetooth-next:
Bluetooth: hci_sock: fix endian bug in hci_sock_setsockopt()
Bluetooth: L2CAP: uninitialized variables in l2cap_sock_setsockopt()
Bluetooth: btqca: sequential validation
Bluetooth: btusb: Add support for Foxconn QCA 0xe0d0
Bluetooth: btintel: Fix broken LED quirk for legacy ROM devices
Bluetooth: hci_event: Rework hci_inquiry_result_with_rssi_evt
Bluetooth: btbcm: disable read tx power for MacBook Air 8,1 and 8,2
Bluetooth: hci_qca: Fix NULL vs IS_ERR_OR_NULL check in qca_serdev_probe
Bluetooth: hci_bcm: Check for error irq
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220107210942.3750887-1-luiz.dentz@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Alexei Starovoitov says:
====================
pull-request: bpf-next 2022-01-06
We've added 41 non-merge commits during the last 2 day(s) which contain
a total of 36 files changed, 1214 insertions(+), 368 deletions(-).
The main changes are:
1) Various fixes in the verifier, from Kris and Daniel.
2) Fixes in sockmap, from John.
3) bpf_getsockopt fix, from Kuniyuki.
4) INET_POST_BIND fix, from Menglong.
5) arm64 JIT fix for bpf pseudo funcs, from Hou.
6) BPF ISA doc improvements, from Christoph.
* https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bpf/bpf-next: (41 commits)
bpf: selftests: Add bind retry for post_bind{4, 6}
bpf: selftests: Use C99 initializers in test_sock.c
net: bpf: Handle return value of BPF_CGROUP_RUN_PROG_INET{4,6}_POST_BIND()
bpf/selftests: Test bpf_d_path on rdonly_mem.
libbpf: Add documentation for bpf_map batch operations
selftests/bpf: Don't rely on preserving volatile in PT_REGS macros in loop3
xdp: Add xdp_do_redirect_frame() for pre-computed xdp_frames
xdp: Move conversion to xdp_frame out of map functions
page_pool: Store the XDP mem id
page_pool: Add callback to init pages when they are allocated
xdp: Allow registering memory model without rxq reference
samples/bpf: xdpsock: Add timestamp for Tx-only operation
samples/bpf: xdpsock: Add time-out for cleaning Tx
samples/bpf: xdpsock: Add sched policy and priority support
samples/bpf: xdpsock: Add cyclic TX operation capability
samples/bpf: xdpsock: Add clockid selection support
samples/bpf: xdpsock: Add Dest and Src MAC setting for Tx-only operation
samples/bpf: xdpsock: Add VLAN support for Tx-only operation
libbpf 1.0: Deprecate bpf_object__find_map_by_offset() API
libbpf 1.0: Deprecate bpf_map__is_offload_neutral()
...
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220107013626.53943-1-alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
The return value of BPF_CGROUP_RUN_PROG_INET{4,6}_POST_BIND() in
__inet_bind() is not handled properly. While the return value
is non-zero, it will set inet_saddr and inet_rcv_saddr to 0 and
exit:
err = BPF_CGROUP_RUN_PROG_INET4_POST_BIND(sk);
if (err) {
inet->inet_saddr = inet->inet_rcv_saddr = 0;
goto out_release_sock;
}
Let's take UDP for example and see what will happen. For UDP
socket, it will be added to 'udp_prot.h.udp_table->hash' and
'udp_prot.h.udp_table->hash2' after the sk->sk_prot->get_port()
called success. If 'inet->inet_rcv_saddr' is specified here,
then 'sk' will be in the 'hslot2' of 'hash2' that it don't belong
to (because inet_saddr is changed to 0), and UDP packet received
will not be passed to this sock. If 'inet->inet_rcv_saddr' is not
specified here, the sock will work fine, as it can receive packet
properly, which is wired, as the 'bind()' is already failed.
To undo the get_port() operation, introduce the 'put_port' field
for 'struct proto'. For TCP proto, it is inet_put_port(); For UDP
proto, it is udp_lib_unhash(); For icmp proto, it is
ping_unhash().
Therefore, after sys_bind() fail caused by
BPF_CGROUP_RUN_PROG_INET4_POST_BIND(), it will be unbinded, which
means that it can try to be binded to another port.
Signed-off-by: Menglong Dong <imagedong@tencent.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20220106132022.3470772-2-imagedong@tencent.com
This rework the handling of hci_inquiry_result_with_rssi_evt to not use
a union to represent the different inquiry responses.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Tested-by: Soenke Huster <soenke.huster@eknoes.de>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
As discussed during review here:
https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/netdevbpf/patch/20220105132141.2648876-3-vladimir.oltean@nxp.com/
we should inform developers about pitfalls of concurrent access to the
boolean properties of dsa_switch and dsa_port, now that they've been
converted to bit fields. No other measure than a comment needs to be
taken, since the code paths that update these bit fields are not
concurrent with each other.
Suggested-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This is a cosmetic incremental fixup to commits
7787ff7763 ("net: dsa: merge all bools of struct dsa_switch into a single u32")
bde82f389a ("net: dsa: merge all bools of struct dsa_port into a single u8")
The desire to make this change was enunciated after posting these
patches here:
https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/netdevbpf/cover/20220105132141.2648876-1-vladimir.oltean@nxp.com/
but due to a slight timing overlap (message posted at 2:28 p.m. UTC,
merge commit is at 2:46 p.m. UTC), that comment was missed and the
changes were applied as-is.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Steffen Klassert says:
====================
pull request (net): ipsec 2022-01-06
1) Fix xfrm policy lookups for ipv6 gre packets by initializing
fl6_gre_key properly. From Ghalem Boudour.
2) Fix the dflt policy check on forwarding when there is no
policy configured. The check was done for the wrong direction.
From Nicolas Dichtel.
3) Use the correct 'struct xfrm_user_offload' when calculating
netlink message lenghts in xfrm_sa_len(). From Eric Dumazet.
4) Tread inserting xfrm interface id 0 as an error.
From Antony Antony.
5) Fail if xfrm state or policy is inserted with XFRMA_IF_ID 0,
xfrm interfaces with id 0 are not allowed.
From Antony Antony.
6) Fix inner_ipproto setting in the sec_path for tunnel mode.
From Raed Salem.
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Steffen Klassert says:
====================
pull request (net-next): ipsec-next 2022-01-06
1) Fix some clang_analyzer warnings about never read variables.
From luo penghao.
2) Check for pols[0] only once in xfrm_expand_policies().
From Jean Sacren.
3) The SA curlft.use_time was updated only on SA cration time.
Update whenever the SA is used. From Antony Antony
4) Add support for SM3 secure hash.
From Xu Jia.
5) Add support for SM4 symmetric cipher algorithm.
From Xu Jia.
6) Add a rate limit for SA mapping change messages.
From Antony Antony.
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Store the XDP mem ID inside the page_pool struct so it can be retrieved
later for use in bpf_prog_run().
Signed-off-by: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20220103150812.87914-4-toke@redhat.com
Add a new callback function to page_pool that, if set, will be called every
time a new page is allocated. This will be used from bpf_test_run() to
initialise the page data with the data provided by userspace when running
XDP programs with redirect turned on.
Signed-off-by: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20220103150812.87914-3-toke@redhat.com
The functions that register an XDP memory model take a struct xdp_rxq as
parameter, but the RXQ is not actually used for anything other than pulling
out the struct xdp_mem_info that it embeds. So refactor the register
functions and export variants that just take a pointer to the xdp_mem_info.
This is in preparation for enabling XDP_REDIRECT in bpf_prog_run(), using a
page_pool instance that is not connected to any network device.
Signed-off-by: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20220103150812.87914-2-toke@redhat.com
ieee80211_iterate_active_interfaces() and
ieee80211_iterate_active_interfaces_atomic() already exist, where the
former allows the iterator function to sleep. Add
ieee80211_iterate_stations() which is similar to
ieee80211_iterate_stations_atomic() but allows the iterator to sleep.
This is needed for adding SDIO support to the rtw88 driver. Some
interators there are reading or writing registers. With the SDIO ops
(sdio_readb, sdio_writeb and friends) this means that the iterator
function may sleep.
Signed-off-by: Martin Blumenstingl <martin.blumenstingl@googlemail.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211228211501.468981-2-martin.blumenstingl@googlemail.com
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
This patch enables the sysctl mtu_expires to be configured per net
namespace.
Signed-off-by: xu xin <xu.xin16@zte.com.cn>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This patch enables the sysctl min_pmtu to be configured per net
namespace.
Signed-off-by: xu xin <xu.xin16@zte.com.cn>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
When finding the socket to report an error on, if the invoking packet
is using Segment Routing, the IPv6 destination address is that of an
intermediate router, not the end destination. Extract the ultimate
destination address from the segment address.
This change allows traceroute to function in the presence of Segment
Routing.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Willem de Bruijn <willemb@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
RFC8754 says:
ICMP error packets generated within the SR domain are sent to source
nodes within the SR domain. The invoking packet in the ICMP error
message may contain an SRH. Since the destination address of a packet
with an SRH changes as each segment is processed, it may not be the
destination used by the socket or application that generated the
invoking packet.
For the source of an invoking packet to process the ICMP error
message, the ultimate destination address of the IPv6 header may be
required. The following logic is used to determine the destination
address for use by protocol-error handlers.
* Walk all extension headers of the invoking IPv6 packet to the
routing extension header preceding the upper-layer header.
- If routing header is type 4 Segment Routing Header (SRH)
o The SID at Segment List[0] may be used as the destination
address of the invoking packet.
Mangle the skb so the network header points to the invoking packet
inside the ICMP packet. The seg6 helpers can then be used on the skb
to find any segment routing headers. If found, mark this fact in the
IPv6 control block of the skb, and store the offset into the packet of
the SRH. Then restore the skb back to its old state.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Willem de Bruijn <willemb@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
An ICMP error message can contain in its message body part of an IPv6
packet which invoked the error. Such a packet might contain a segment
router header. Export get_srh() so the ICMP code can make use of it.
Since his changes the scope of the function from local to global, add
the seg6_ prefix to keep the namespace clean. And move it into seg6.c
so it is always available, not just when IPV6_SEG6_LWTUNNEL is
enabled.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Willem de Bruijn <willemb@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Driver offloading ct tuples can use the information of which devices
received the packets that created the offloaded connections, to
more efficiently offload them only to the relevant device.
Add new act_ct nf conntrack extension, which is used to store the skb
devices before offloading the connection, and then fill in the tuple
iifindex so drivers can get the device via metadata dissector match.
Signed-off-by: Oz Shlomo <ozsh@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Blakey <paulb@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
The same fix in commit 5ec7d18d18 ("sctp: use call_rcu to free endpoint")
is also needed for dumping one asoc and sock after the lookup.
Fixes: 86fdb3448c ("sctp: ensure ep is not destroyed before doing the dump")
Signed-off-by: Xin Long <lucien.xin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Alexei Starovoitov says:
====================
pull-request: bpf-next 2021-12-30
The following pull-request contains BPF updates for your *net-next* tree.
We've added 72 non-merge commits during the last 20 day(s) which contain
a total of 223 files changed, 3510 insertions(+), 1591 deletions(-).
The main changes are:
1) Automatic setrlimit in libbpf when bpf is memcg's in the kernel, from Andrii.
2) Beautify and de-verbose verifier logs, from Christy.
3) Composable verifier types, from Hao.
4) bpf_strncmp helper, from Hou.
5) bpf.h header dependency cleanup, from Jakub.
6) get_func_[arg|ret|arg_cnt] helpers, from Jiri.
7) Sleepable local storage, from KP.
8) Extend kfunc with PTR_TO_CTX, PTR_TO_MEM argument support, from Kumar.
====================
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
drivers/net/ethernet/mellanox/mlx5/core/en_tc.c
commit 077cdda764 ("net/mlx5e: TC, Fix memory leak with rules with internal port")
commit 31108d142f ("net/mlx5: Fix some error handling paths in 'mlx5e_tc_add_fdb_flow()'")
commit 4390c6edc0 ("net/mlx5: Fix some error handling paths in 'mlx5e_tc_add_fdb_flow()'")
https://lore.kernel.org/all/20211229065352.30178-1-saeed@kernel.org/
net/smc/smc_wr.c
commit 49dc9013e3 ("net/smc: Use the bitmap API when applicable")
commit 349d43127d ("net/smc: fix kernel panic caused by race of smc_sock")
bitmap_zero()/memset() is removed by the fix
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
netns/bpf.h gets included by netdevice.h (thru net_namespace.h)
which in turn gets included in a lot of places. We should keep
netns/bpf.h as light-weight as possible.
bpf-netns.h seems to contain more implementation details than
deserves to be included in a netns header. It needs to pull in
uapi/bpf.h to get various enum types.
Move enum netns_bpf_attach_type to netns/bpf.h and invert the
dependency. This makes netns/bpf.h fit the mold of a struct
definition header more clearly, and drops the number of objects
rebuilt when uapi/bpf.h is touched from 7.7k to 1.1k.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20211230012742.770642-3-kuba@kernel.org
Add missing includes unmasked by the subsequent change.
Mostly network drivers missing an include for XDP_PACKET_HEADROOM.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20211230012742.770642-2-kuba@kernel.org
- Add support for Foxconn MT7922A
- Add support for Realtek RTL8852AE
- Rework HCI event handling to use skb_pull_data
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Merge tag 'for-net-next-2021-12-29' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bluetooth/bluetooth-next
Luiz Augusto von Dentz says:
====================
bluetooth-next pull request for net-next:
- Add support for Foxconn MT7922A
- Add support for Realtek RTL8852AE
- Rework HCI event handling to use skb_pull_data
* tag 'for-net-next-2021-12-29' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bluetooth/bluetooth-next: (62 commits)
Bluetooth: MGMT: Fix spelling mistake "simultanous" -> "simultaneous"
Bluetooth: vhci: Set HCI_QUIRK_VALID_LE_STATES
Bluetooth: MGMT: Fix LE simultaneous roles UUID if not supported
Bluetooth: hci_sync: Add check simultaneous roles support
Bluetooth: hci_sync: Wait for proper events when connecting LE
Bluetooth: hci_sync: Add support for waiting specific LE subevents
Bluetooth: hci_sync: Add hci_le_create_conn_sync
Bluetooth: hci_event: Use skb_pull_data when processing inquiry results
Bluetooth: hci_sync: Push sync command cancellation to workqueue
Bluetooth: hci_qca: Stop IBS timer during BT OFF
Bluetooth: btusb: Add support for Foxconn MT7922A
Bluetooth: btintel: Add missing quirks and msft ext for legacy bootloader
Bluetooth: btusb: Add two more Bluetooth parts for WCN6855
Bluetooth: L2CAP: Fix using wrong mode
Bluetooth: hci_sync: Fix not always pausing advertising when necessary
Bluetooth: mgmt: Make use of mgmt_send_event_skb in MGMT_EV_DEVICE_CONNECTED
Bluetooth: mgmt: Make use of mgmt_send_event_skb in MGMT_EV_DEVICE_FOUND
Bluetooth: mgmt: Introduce mgmt_alloc_skb and mgmt_send_event_skb
Bluetooth: btusb: Return error code when getting patch status failed
Bluetooth: btusb: Handle download_firmware failure cases
...
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211229211258.2290966-1-luiz.dentz@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
sock.h is pretty heavily used (5k objects rebuilt on x86 after
it's touched). We can drop the include of filter.h from it and
add a forward declaration of struct sk_filter instead.
This decreases the number of rebuilt objects when bpf.h
is touched from ~5k to ~1k.
There's a lot of missing includes this was masking. Primarily
in networking tho, this time.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Marc Kleine-Budde <mkl@pengutronix.de>
Acked-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Nikolay Aleksandrov <nikolay@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Stefano Garzarella <sgarzare@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20211229004913.513372-1-kuba@kernel.org
This patch is to delay the endpoint free by calling call_rcu() to fix
another use-after-free issue in sctp_sock_dump():
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in __lock_acquire+0x36d9/0x4c20
Call Trace:
__lock_acquire+0x36d9/0x4c20 kernel/locking/lockdep.c:3218
lock_acquire+0x1ed/0x520 kernel/locking/lockdep.c:3844
__raw_spin_lock_bh include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:135 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock_bh+0x31/0x40 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:168
spin_lock_bh include/linux/spinlock.h:334 [inline]
__lock_sock+0x203/0x350 net/core/sock.c:2253
lock_sock_nested+0xfe/0x120 net/core/sock.c:2774
lock_sock include/net/sock.h:1492 [inline]
sctp_sock_dump+0x122/0xb20 net/sctp/diag.c:324
sctp_for_each_transport+0x2b5/0x370 net/sctp/socket.c:5091
sctp_diag_dump+0x3ac/0x660 net/sctp/diag.c:527
__inet_diag_dump+0xa8/0x140 net/ipv4/inet_diag.c:1049
inet_diag_dump+0x9b/0x110 net/ipv4/inet_diag.c:1065
netlink_dump+0x606/0x1080 net/netlink/af_netlink.c:2244
__netlink_dump_start+0x59a/0x7c0 net/netlink/af_netlink.c:2352
netlink_dump_start include/linux/netlink.h:216 [inline]
inet_diag_handler_cmd+0x2ce/0x3f0 net/ipv4/inet_diag.c:1170
__sock_diag_cmd net/core/sock_diag.c:232 [inline]
sock_diag_rcv_msg+0x31d/0x410 net/core/sock_diag.c:263
netlink_rcv_skb+0x172/0x440 net/netlink/af_netlink.c:2477
sock_diag_rcv+0x2a/0x40 net/core/sock_diag.c:274
This issue occurs when asoc is peeled off and the old sk is freed after
getting it by asoc->base.sk and before calling lock_sock(sk).
To prevent the sk free, as a holder of the sk, ep should be alive when
calling lock_sock(). This patch uses call_rcu() and moves sock_put and
ep free into sctp_endpoint_destroy_rcu(), so that it's safe to try to
hold the ep under rcu_read_lock in sctp_transport_traverse_process().
If sctp_endpoint_hold() returns true, it means this ep is still alive
and we have held it and can continue to dump it; If it returns false,
it means this ep is dead and can be freed after rcu_read_unlock, and
we should skip it.
In sctp_sock_dump(), after locking the sk, if this ep is different from
tsp->asoc->ep, it means during this dumping, this asoc was peeled off
before calling lock_sock(), and the sk should be skipped; If this ep is
the same with tsp->asoc->ep, it means no peeloff happens on this asoc,
and due to lock_sock, no peeloff will happen either until release_sock.
Note that delaying endpoint free won't delay the port release, as the
port release happens in sctp_endpoint_destroy() before calling call_rcu().
Also, freeing endpoint by call_rcu() makes it safe to access the sk by
asoc->base.sk in sctp_assocs_seq_show() and sctp_rcv().
Thanks Jones to bring this issue up.
v1->v2:
- improve the changelog.
- add kfree(ep) into sctp_endpoint_destroy_rcu(), as Jakub noticed.
Reported-by: syzbot+9276d76e83e3bcde6c99@syzkaller.appspotmail.com
Reported-by: Lee Jones <lee.jones@linaro.org>
Fixes: d25adbeb0c ("sctp: fix an use-after-free issue in sctp_sock_dump")
Signed-off-by: Xin Long <lucien.xin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Struct sctp_ep_common is included in both asoc and ep, but hlist_node
and hashent are only needed by ep after asoc_hashtable was dropped by
Commit b5eff71283 ("sctp: drop the old assoc hashtable of sctp").
So it is better to move hlist_node and hashent from sctp_ep_common to
sctp_endpoint, and it saves some space for each asoc.
Signed-off-by: Xin Long <lucien.xin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Kernel generates mapping change message, XFRM_MSG_MAPPING,
when a source port chage is detected on a input state with UDP
encapsulation set. Kernel generates a message for each IPsec packet
with new source port. For a high speed flow per packet mapping change
message can be excessive, and can overload the user space listener.
Introduce rate limiting for XFRM_MSG_MAPPING message to the user space.
The rate limiting is configurable via netlink, when adding a new SA or
updating it. Use the new attribute XFRMA_MTIMER_THRESH in seconds.
v1->v2 change:
update xfrm_sa_len()
v2->v3 changes:
use u32 insted unsigned long to reduce size of struct xfrm_state
fix xfrm_ompat size Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
accept XFRM_MSG_MAPPING only when XFRMA_ENCAP is present
Co-developed-by: Thomas Egerer <thomas.egerer@secunet.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Egerer <thomas.egerer@secunet.com>
Signed-off-by: Antony Antony <antony.antony@secunet.com>
Signed-off-by: Steffen Klassert <steffen.klassert@secunet.com>
1) From Shay Drory: Devlink user knobs to control device's EQ size
This series provides knobs which will enable users to
minimize memory consumption of mlx5 Functions (PF/VF/SF).
mlx5 exposes two new generic devlink params for EQ size
configuration and uses devlink generic param max_macs.
LINK: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20211208141722.13646-1-shayd@nvidia.com/
2) From Tariq and Lama, allocate software channel objects and statistics
of a mlx5 netdevice private data dynamically upon first demand to save on
memory.
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Merge tag 'mlx5-updates-2021-12-21' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/saeed/linux
Saeed Mahameed says:
====================
mlx5-updates-2021-12-21
1) From Shay Drory: Devlink user knobs to control device's EQ size
This series provides knobs which will enable users to
minimize memory consumption of mlx5 Functions (PF/VF/SF).
mlx5 exposes two new generic devlink params for EQ size
configuration and uses devlink generic param max_macs.
LINK: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20211208141722.13646-1-shayd@nvidia.com/
2) From Tariq and Lama, allocate software channel objects and statistics
of a mlx5 netdevice private data dynamically upon first demand to save on
memory.
* tag 'mlx5-updates-2021-12-21' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/saeed/linux:
net/mlx5e: Take packet_merge params directly from the RX res struct
net/mlx5e: Allocate per-channel stats dynamically at first usage
net/mlx5e: Use dynamic per-channel allocations in stats
net/mlx5e: Allow profile-specific limitation on max num of channels
net/mlx5e: Save memory by using dynamic allocation in netdev priv
net/mlx5e: Add profile indications for PTP and QOS HTB features
net/mlx5e: Use bitmap field for profile features
net/mlx5: Remove the repeated declaration
net/mlx5: Let user configure max_macs generic param
devlink: Clarifies max_macs generic devlink param
net/mlx5: Let user configure event_eq_size param
devlink: Add new "event_eq_size" generic device param
net/mlx5: Let user configure io_eq_size param
devlink: Add new "io_eq_size" generic device param
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211222031604.14540-1-saeed@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
This allows to identify flows that originate from local machine
in a followup patch.
It would be possible to make this a ->status bit instead.
For now I did not do that yet because I don't have a use-case for
exposing this info to userspace.
If one comes up the toggle can be replaced with a status bit.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
Commit d068ca2ae2 ("codel: split into multiple files") moved all
Qdisc-related code to codel_qdisc.h, move the include of pkt_sched.h
as well.
This is similar to the previous commit, although we don't care as
much about incremental builds after pkt_sched.h was touched itself
it is included by net/sch_generic.h which is modified ~20 times
a year.
This decreases the incremental build size after touching pkt_sched.h
from 1592 to 617 objects.
Fix unmasked missing includes in WiFi drivers.
Acked-by: Kalle Valo <kvalo@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211221193941.3805147-2-kuba@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Since sock.h is modified relatively often (60 times in the last
12 months) it seems worthwhile to decrease the incremental build
work.
CoDel's header includes net/inet_ecn.h which in turn includes net/sock.h.
codel.h is itself included by mac80211 which is included by much of
the WiFi stack and drivers. Removing the net/inet_ecn.h include from
CoDel breaks the dependecy between WiFi and sock.h.
Commit d068ca2ae2 ("codel: split into multiple files") moved all
the code which actually needs ECN helpers out to net/codel_impl.h,
the include can be moved there as well.
This decreases the incremental build size after touching sock.h
from 4999 objects to 4051 objects.
Fix unmasked missing includes in WiFi drivers.
Acked-by: Kalle Valo <kvalo@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211221193941.3805147-1-kuba@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
If controller/driver don't support LE simultaneous roles its UUID shall
be omitted when responding to MGMT_OP_READ_EXP_FEATURES_INFO.
This also rework the support introducing HCI_LE_SIMULTANEOUS_ROLES flag
so it can be detected when userspace wants to use or not.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This attempts to check if the controller can act as both central and
peripheral simultaneously and in case it does skip suspending
advertising or in case of directed advertising don't fail if scanning.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This adds support for waiting for specific LE subevents instead of
command status which may only indicate that the commands is in progress
and a different event is used to complete the operation.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This adds hci_le_create_conn_sync and make hci_le_connect use it instead
of queueing multiple commands which may conflict with the likes of
hci_update_passive_scan which uses hci_cmd_sync_queue.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
syzbot reported that hci_cmd_sync_cancel may sleep from the wrong
context. To avoid this, create a new work item that pushes the relevant
parts into a different context.
Note that we keep the old implementation with the name
__hci_cmd_sync_cancel as the sleeping behaviour is desired in some
cases.
Reported-and-tested-by: syzbot+485cc00ea7cf41dfdbf1@syzkaller.appspotmail.com
Fixes: c97a747efc ("Bluetooth: btusb: Cancel sync commands for certain URB errors")
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Berg <bberg@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
Add new device generic parameter to determine the size of the
asynchronous control events EQ.
For example, to reduce event EQ size to 64, execute:
$ devlink dev param set pci/0000:06:00.0 \
name event_eq_size value 64 cmode driverinit
$ devlink dev reload pci/0000:06:00.0
Signed-off-by: Shay Drory <shayd@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Moshe Shemesh <moshe@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Saeed Mahameed <saeedm@nvidia.com>
Add new device generic parameter to determine the size of the
I/O completion EQs.
For example, to reduce I/O EQ size to 64, execute:
$ devlink dev param set pci/0000:06:00.0 \
name io_eq_size value 64 cmode driverinit
$ devlink dev reload pci/0000:06:00.0
Signed-off-by: Shay Drory <shayd@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Moshe Shemesh <moshe@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Saeed Mahameed <saeedm@nvidia.com>
* ndo_fill_forward_path support in mac80211, to let
drivers use it
* association comeback notification for userspace,
to be able to react more sensibly to long delays
* support for background radar detection hardware
in some chipsets
* SA Query Procedures offload on the AP side
* more logging if we find problems with HT/VHT/HE
* various cleanups and minor fixes
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Merge tag 'mac80211-next-for-net-next-2021-12-21' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jberg/mac80211-next
Johannes Berg says:
====================
This time we have:
* ndo_fill_forward_path support in mac80211, to let drivers use it
* association comeback notification for userspace, to be able
to react more sensibly to long delays
* support for background radar detection hardware in some chipsets
* SA Query Procedures offload on the AP side
* more logging if we find problems with HT/VHT/HE
* various cleanups and minor fixes
Conflicts:
net/wireless/reg.c:
e08ebd6d7b ("cfg80211: Acquire wiphy mutex on regulatory work")
701fdfe348 ("cfg80211: Enable regulatory enforcement checks for drivers supporting mesh iface")
https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211221111950.57ecc6a7@canb.auug.org.au
drivers/net/wireless/ath/ath10k/wmi.c:
7f599aeccb ("cfg80211: Use the HE operation IE to determine a 6GHz BSS channel")
3bf2537ec2 ("ath10k: drop beacon and probe response which leak from other channel")
https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211221115004.1cd6b262@canb.auug.org.au
* tag 'mac80211-next-for-net-next-2021-12-21' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jberg/mac80211-next: (32 commits)
cfg80211: Enable regulatory enforcement checks for drivers supporting mesh iface
rfkill: allow to get the software rfkill state
cfg80211: refactor cfg80211_get_ies_channel_number()
nl82011: clarify interface combinations wrt. channels
nl80211: Add support to offload SA Query procedures for AP SME device
nl80211: Add support to set AP settings flags with single attribute
mac80211: add more HT/VHT/HE state logging
cfg80211: Use the HE operation IE to determine a 6GHz BSS channel
cfg80211: rename offchannel_chain structs to background_chain to avoid confusion with ETSI standard
mac80211: Notify cfg80211 about association comeback
cfg80211: Add support for notifying association comeback
mac80211: introduce channel switch disconnect function
cfg80211: Fix order of enum nl80211_band_iftype_attr documentation
cfg80211: simplify cfg80211_chandef_valid()
mac80211: Remove a couple of obsolete TODO
mac80211: fix FEC flag in radio tap header
mac80211: use coarse boottime for airtime fairness code
ieee80211: change HE nominal packet padding value defines
cfg80211: use ieee80211_bss_get_elem() instead of _get_ie()
mac80211: Use memset_after() to clear tx status
...
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211221112532.28708-1-johannes@sipsolutions.net
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
In previous method each AP settings flag is represented by a top-level
flag attribute and conversion to enum cfg80211_ap_settings_flags had to
be done before sending them to driver. This commit is to make it easier
to define new AP settings flags and sending them to driver.
This commit also deprecate sending of
%NL80211_ATTR_EXTERNAL_AUTH_SUPPORT in %NL80211_CMD_START_AP. But to
maintain backwards compatibility checks for
%NL80211_ATTR_EXTERNAL_AUTH_SUPPORT in %NL80211_CMD_START_AP when
%NL80211_ATTR_AP_SETTINGS_FLAGS not present in %NL80211_CMD_START_AP.
Signed-off-by: Veerendranath Jakkam <vjakkam@codeaurora.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/1637911519-21306-1-git-send-email-vjakkam@codeaurora.org
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
A non-collocated AP whose primary channel is not a PSC channel
may transmit a duplicated beacon on the corresponding PSC channel
in which it would indicate its true primary channel.
Use this inforamtion contained in the HE operation IE to determine
the primary channel of the AP.
In case of invalid infomration ignore it and use the channel
the frame was received on.
Signed-off-by: Ayala Beker <ayala.beker@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Luca Coelho <luciano.coelho@intel.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/iwlwifi.20211202143322.71eb2176e54e.I130f678e4aa390973ab39d838bbfe7b2d54bff8e@changeid
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
ETSI standard defines "Offchannel CAC" as:
"Off-Channel CAC is performed by a number of non-continuous checks
spread over a period in time. This period, which is required to
determine the presence of radar signals, is defined as the Off-Channel
CAC Time..
Minimum Off-Channel CAC Time 6 minutes and Maximum Off-Channel CAC Time
4 hours..".
mac80211 implementation refers to a dedicated hw chain used for continuous
radar monitoring. Rename offchannel_* references to background_* in
order to avoid confusion with ETSI standard.
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/4204cc1d648d76b44557981713231e030a3bd991.1638190762.git.lorenzo@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
Thought the underline driver MLME can handle association temporal
rejection with comeback, it is still useful to notify this to
user space, as user space might want to handle the temporal
rejection differently. For example, in case the comeback time
is too long, user space can deauthenticate immediately and try
to associate with a different AP.
Signed-off-by: Ilan Peer <ilan.peer@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Luca Coelho <luciano.coelho@intel.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/iwlwifi.20211129152938.2467809e8cb3.I45574185b582666bc78eef0c29a4c36b478e5382@changeid
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
Introduce a disconnect function that can be used when a
channel switch error occurs. The channel switch can request to
block the tx, and so, we need to make sure we do not send a deauth
frame in this case.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Errera <nathan.errera@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Luca Coelho <luciano.coelho@intel.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/iwlwifi.20211129152938.cd2a615a0702.I9edb14785586344af17644b610ab5be109dcef00@changeid
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
Add process to validate flags of filter and actions when adding
a tc filter.
We need to prevent adding filter with flags conflicts with its actions.
Signed-off-by: Baowen Zheng <baowen.zheng@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Louis Peens <louis.peens@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@corigine.com>
Acked-by: Jamal Hadi Salim <jhs@mojatatu.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add reoffload process to update hw_count when driver
is inserted or removed.
We will delete the action if it is with skip_sw flag and
not offloaded to any hardware in reoffload process.
When reoffloading actions, we still offload the actions
that are added independent of filters.
Signed-off-by: Baowen Zheng <baowen.zheng@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Louis Peens <louis.peens@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
When collecting stats for actions update them using both
hardware and software counters.
Stats update process should not run in context of preempt_disable.
Signed-off-by: Baowen Zheng <baowen.zheng@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Louis Peens <louis.peens@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Rename exts stats update functions with hw for readability.
We make this change also to update stats from hw for an action
when it is offloaded to hw as a single action.
Signed-off-by: Baowen Zheng <baowen.zheng@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
We add skip_hw and skip_sw for user to control if offload the action
to hardware.
We also add in_hw_count for user to indicate if the action is offloaded
to any hardware.
Signed-off-by: Baowen Zheng <baowen.zheng@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@corigine.com>
Acked-by: Jamal Hadi Salim <jhs@mojatatu.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Use flow_indr_dev_register/flow_indr_dev_setup_offload to
offload tc action.
We need to call tc_cleanup_flow_action to clean up tc action entry since
in tc_setup_action, some actions may hold dev refcnt, especially the mirror
action.
Signed-off-by: Baowen Zheng <baowen.zheng@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Louis Peens <louis.peens@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add a new ops to tc_action_ops for flow action setup.
Refactor function tc_setup_flow_action to use this new ops.
We make this change to facilitate to add standalone action module.
We will also use this ops to offload action independent of filter
in following patch.
Signed-off-by: Baowen Zheng <baowen.zheng@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
To improves readability, we rename offload functions with offload instead
of flow.
The term flow is related to exact matches, so we rename these functions
with offload.
We make this change to facilitate single action offload functions naming.
Signed-off-by: Baowen Zheng <baowen.zheng@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add index to flow_action_entry structure and delete index from police and
gate child structure.
We make this change to offload tc action for driver to identify a tc
action.
Signed-off-by: Baowen Zheng <baowen.zheng@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@corigine.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
If ct rejects a flow, it removes the conntrack info from the skb.
act_ct sets the post_ct variable so the dissector will see this case
as an +tracked +invalid state, but the zone id is lost with the
conntrack info.
To restore the zone id on such cases, set the last executed zone,
via the tc control block, when passing ct, and read it back in the
dissector if there is no ct info on the skb (invalid connection).
Fixes: 7baf2429a1 ("net/sched: cls_flower add CT_FLAGS_INVALID flag support")
Signed-off-by: Paul Blakey <paulb@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
BPF layer extends the qdisc control block via struct bpf_skb_data_end
and because of that there is no more room to add variables to the
qdisc layer control block without going over the skb->cb size.
Extend the qdisc control block with a tc control block,
and move all tc related variables to there as a pre-step for
extending the tc control block with additional members.
Signed-off-by: Paul Blakey <paulb@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Now that there is only one fib nla_policy there is no need to
keep the macro around. Place it where its used.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
The attributes are identical in all implementations so move the ipv4 one
into the core and remove the per-family nla policies.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
On the NXP Bluebox 3 board which uses a multi-switch setup with sja1105,
the mechanism through which the tagger connects to the switch tree is
broken, due to improper DSA code design. At the time when tag_ops->connect()
is called in dsa_port_parse_cpu(), DSA hasn't finished "touching" all
the ports, so it doesn't know how large the tree is and how many ports
it has. It has just seen the first CPU port by this time. As a result,
this function will call the tagger's ->connect method too early, and the
tagger will connect only to the first switch from the tree.
This could be perhaps addressed a bit more simply by just moving the
tag_ops->connect(dst) call a bit later (for example in dsa_tree_setup),
but there is already a design inconsistency at present: on the switch
side, the notification is on a per-switch basis, but on the tagger side,
it is on a per-tree basis. Furthermore, the persistent storage itself is
per switch (ds->tagger_data). And the tagger connect and disconnect
procedures (at least the ones that exist currently) could see a fair bit
of simplification if they didn't have to iterate through the switches of
a tree.
To fix the issue, this change transforms tag_ops->connect(dst) into
tag_ops->connect(ds) and moves it somewhere where we already iterate
over all switches of a tree. That is in dsa_switch_setup_tag_protocol(),
which is a good placement because we already have there the connection
call to the switch side of things.
As for the dsa_tree_bind_tag_proto() method (called from the code path
that changes the tag protocol), things are a bit more complicated
because we receive the tree as argument, yet when we unwind on errors,
it would be nice to not call tag_ops->disconnect(ds) where we didn't
previously call tag_ops->connect(ds). We didn't have this problem before
because the tag_ops connection operations passed the entire dst before,
and this is more fine grained now. To solve the error rewind case using
the new API, we have to create yet one more cross-chip notifier for
disconnection, and stay connected with the old tag protocol to all the
switches in the tree until we've succeeded to connect with the new one
as well. So if something fails half way, the whole tree is still
connected to the old tagger. But there may still be leaks if the tagger
fails to connect to the 2nd out of 3 switches in a tree: somebody needs
to tell the tagger to disconnect from the first switch. Nothing comes
for free, and this was previously handled privately by the tagging
protocol driver before, but now we need to emit a disconnect cross-chip
notifier for that, because DSA has to take care of the unwind path. We
assume that the tagging protocol has connected to a switch if it has set
ds->tagger_data to something, otherwise we avoid calling its
disconnection method in the error rewind path.
The rest of the changes are in the tagging protocol drivers, and have to
do with the replacement of dst with ds. The iteration is removed and the
error unwind path is simplified, as mentioned above.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
zero_copy_allocator has been removed back when Bjorn Topel introduced
xsk_buff_pool. Remove references to it that were dangling in the tree.
Signed-off-by: Maciej Fijalkowski <maciej.fijalkowski@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
Acked-by: Magnus Karlsson <magnus.karlsson@intel.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20211210171511.11574-1-maciej.fijalkowski@intel.com
This structure is used only in bareudp.c.
While there, adjust include files: we need netdevice.h, not skbuff.h.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Nault <gnault@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
All current in-tree uses of dp->priv have been replaced with
ds->tagger_data, which provides for a safer API especially when the
connection isn't the regular 1:1 link between one switch driver and one
tagging protocol driver, but could be either one switch to many taggers,
or many switches to one tagger.
Therefore, we can remove this unused pointer.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Ansuel is working on register access over Ethernet for the qca8k switch
family. This requires the qca8k tagging protocol driver to receive
frames which aren't intended for the network stack, but instead for the
qca8k switch driver itself.
The dp->priv is currently the prevailing method for passing data back
and forth between the tagging protocol driver and the switch driver.
However, this method is riddled with caveats.
The DSA design allows in principle for any switch driver to return any
protocol it desires in ->get_tag_protocol(). The dsa_loop driver can be
modified to do just that. But in the current design, the memory behind
dp->priv has to be allocated by the switch driver, so if the tagging
protocol is paired to an unexpected switch driver, we may end up in NULL
pointer dereferences inside the kernel, or worse (a switch driver may
allocate dp->priv according to the expectations of a different tagger).
The latter possibility is even more plausible considering that DSA
switches can dynamically change tagging protocols in certain cases
(dsa <-> edsa, ocelot <-> ocelot-8021q), and the current design lends
itself to mistakes that are all too easy to make.
This patch proposes that the tagging protocol driver should manage its
own memory, instead of relying on the switch driver to do so.
After analyzing the different in-tree needs, it can be observed that the
required tagger storage is per switch, therefore a ds->tagger_data
pointer is introduced. In principle, per-port storage could also be
introduced, although there is no need for it at the moment. Future
changes will replace the current usage of dp->priv with ds->tagger_data.
We define a "binding" event between the DSA switch tree and the tagging
protocol. During this binding event, the tagging protocol's ->connect()
method is called first, and this may allocate some memory for each
switch of the tree. Then a cross-chip notifier is emitted for the
switches within that tree, and they are given the opportunity to fix up
the tagger's memory (for example, they might set up some function
pointers that represent virtual methods for consuming packets).
Because the memory is owned by the tagger, there exists a ->disconnect()
method for the tagger (which is the place to free the resources), but
there doesn't exist a ->disconnect() method for the switch driver.
This is part of the design. The switch driver should make minimal use of
the public part of the tagger data, and only after type-checking it
using the supplied "proto" argument.
In the code there are in fact two binding events, one is the initial
event in dsa_switch_setup_tag_protocol(). At this stage, the cross chip
notifier chains aren't initialized, so we call each switch's connect()
method by hand. Then there is dsa_tree_bind_tag_proto() during
dsa_tree_change_tag_proto(), and here we have an old protocol and a new
one. We first connect to the new one before disconnecting from the old
one, to simplify error handling a bit and to ensure we remain in a valid
state at all times.
Co-developed-by: Ansuel Smith <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ansuel Smith <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This patch moves sock_release_ownership() down in include/net/sock.h and
replaces some sk_lock.owned tests with sock_owned_by_user_nocheck().
Signed-off-by: Kuniyuki Iwashima <kuniyu@amazon.co.jp>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211208062158.54132-1-kuniyu@amazon.co.jp
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
We have 100+ syzbot reports about netns being dismantled too soon,
still unresolved as of today.
We think a missing get_net() or an extra put_net() is the root cause.
In order to find the bug(s), and be able to spot future ones,
this patch adds CONFIG_NET_NS_REFCNT_TRACKER and new helpers
to precisely pair all put_net() with corresponding get_net().
To use these helpers, each data structure owning a refcount
should also use a "netns_tracker" to pair the get and put.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Pablo Neira Ayuso says:
====================
Netfilter fixes for net
1) Fix bogus compilter warning in nfnetlink_queue, from Florian Westphal.
2) Don't run conntrack on vrf with !dflt qdisc, from Nicolas Dichtel.
3) Fix nft_pipapo bucket load in AVX2 lookup routine for six 8-bit
groups, from Stefano Brivio.
4) Break rule evaluation on malformed TCP options.
5) Use socat instead of nc in selftests/netfilter/nft_zones_many.sh,
also from Florian
6) Fix KCSAN data-race in conntrack timeout updates, from Eric Dumazet.
* git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/pablo/nf:
netfilter: conntrack: annotate data-races around ct->timeout
selftests: netfilter: switch zone stress to socat
netfilter: nft_exthdr: break evaluation if setting TCP option fails
selftests: netfilter: Add correctness test for mac,net set type
nft_set_pipapo: Fix bucket load in AVX2 lookup routine for six 8-bit groups
vrf: don't run conntrack on vrf with !dflt qdisc
netfilter: nfnetlink_queue: silence bogus compiler warning
====================
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211209000847.102598-1-pablo@netfilter.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
We don't really need new switch API for these, and with new switches
which intend to add support for this feature, it will become cumbersome
to maintain.
The change consists in restructuring the two drivers that implement this
offload (sja1105 and mv88e6xxx) such that the offload is enabled and
disabled from the ->port_bridge_{join,leave} methods instead of the old
->port_bridge_tx_fwd_{,un}offload.
The only non-trivial change is that mv88e6xxx_map_virtual_bridge_to_pvt()
has been moved to avoid a forward declaration, and the
mv88e6xxx_reg_lock() calls from inside it have been removed, since
locking is now done from mv88e6xxx_port_bridge_{join,leave}.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Alvin Šipraga <alsi@bang-olufsen.dk>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
This is a preparation patch for the removal of the DSA switch methods
->port_bridge_tx_fwd_offload() and ->port_bridge_tx_fwd_unoffload().
The plan is for the switch to report whether it offloads TX forwarding
directly as a response to the ->port_bridge_join() method.
This change deals with the noisy portion of converting all existing
function prototypes to take this new boolean pointer argument.
The bool is placed in the cross-chip notifier structure for bridge join,
and a reference to it is provided to drivers. In the next change, DSA
will then actually look at this value instead of calling
->port_bridge_tx_fwd_offload().
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Alvin Šipraga <alsi@bang-olufsen.dk>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
The main desire behind this is to provide coherent bridge information to
the fast path without locking.
For example, right now we set dp->bridge_dev and dp->bridge_num from
separate code paths, it is theoretically possible for a packet
transmission to read these two port properties consecutively and find a
bridge number which does not correspond with the bridge device.
Another desire is to start passing more complex bridge information to
dsa_switch_ops functions. For example, with FDB isolation, it is
expected that drivers will need to be passed the bridge which requested
an FDB/MDB entry to be offloaded, and along with that bridge_dev, the
associated bridge_num should be passed too, in case the driver might
want to implement an isolation scheme based on that number.
We already pass the {bridge_dev, bridge_num} pair to the TX forwarding
offload switch API, however we'd like to remove that and squash it into
the basic bridge join/leave API. So that means we need to pass this
pair to the bridge join/leave API.
During dsa_port_bridge_leave, first we unset dp->bridge_dev, then we
call the driver's .port_bridge_leave with what used to be our
dp->bridge_dev, but provided as an argument.
When bridge_dev and bridge_num get folded into a single structure, we
need to preserve this behavior in dsa_port_bridge_leave: we need a copy
of what used to be in dp->bridge.
Switch drivers check bridge membership by comparing dp->bridge_dev with
the provided bridge_dev, but now, if we provide the struct dsa_bridge as
a pointer, they cannot keep comparing dp->bridge to the provided
pointer, since this only points to an on-stack copy. To make this
obvious and prevent driver writers from forgetting and doing stupid
things, in this new API, the struct dsa_bridge is provided as a full
structure (not very large, contains an int and a pointer) instead of a
pointer. An explicit comparison function needs to be used to determine
bridge membership: dsa_port_offloads_bridge().
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Alvin Šipraga <alsi@bang-olufsen.dk>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Move the static inline helpers from net/dsa/dsa_priv.h to
include/net/dsa.h, so that drivers can call functions such as
dsa_port_offloads_bridge_dev(), which will be necessary after the
transition to a more complex bridge structure.
More functions than are needed right now are being moved, but this is
done for uniformity.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Alvin Šipraga <alsi@bang-olufsen.dk>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
The location of the bridge device pointer and number is going to change.
It is not going to be kept individually per port, but in a common
structure allocated dynamically and which will have lockdep validation.
Create helpers to access these elements so that we have a migration path
to the new organization.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
The service where DSA assigns a unique bridge number for each forwarding
domain is useful even for drivers which do not implement the TX
forwarding offload feature.
For example, drivers might use the dp->bridge_num for FDB isolation.
So rename ds->num_fwd_offloading_bridges to ds->max_num_bridges, and
calculate a unique bridge_num for all drivers that set this value.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Alvin Šipraga <alsi@bang-olufsen.dk>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
I have seen too many bugs already due to the fact that we must encode an
invalid dp->bridge_num as a negative value, because the natural tendency
is to check that invalid value using (!dp->bridge_num). Latest example
can be seen in commit 1bec0f0506 ("net: dsa: fix bridge_num not
getting cleared after ports leaving the bridge").
Convert the existing users to assume that dp->bridge_num == 0 is the
encoding for invalid, and valid bridge numbers start from 1.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Alvin Šipraga <alsi@bang-olufsen.dk>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
This introduces mgmt_alloc_skb and mgmt_send_event_skb which are
convenient when building MGMT events that have variable length as the
likes of skb_put_data can be used to insert portion directly on the skb
instead of having to first build an intermediate buffer just to be
copied over the skb.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This adds support for Set Privacy Mode when updating the resolving list
when HCI_CONN_FLAG_DEVICE_PRIVACY so the controller shall use Device
Mode for devices programmed in the resolving list, Device Mode is
actually required when the remote device are not able to use RPA as
otherwise the default mode is Network Privacy Mode in which only
allows RPAs thus the controller would filter out advertisement using
identity addresses for which there is an IRK.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This introduces HCI_CONN_FLAG_DEVICE_PRIVACY which can be used by
userspace to indicate to the controller to use Device Privacy Mode to a
specific device.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This reworks hci_conn_params flags to use bitmap_* helpers and add
support for setting the supported flags in hdev->conn_flags so it can
easily be accessed.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
Some devices have a bug causing them to not work if they query
LE tx power on startup. Thus we add a quirk in order to not query it
and default min/max tx power values to HCI_TX_POWER_INVALID.
Signed-off-by: Aditya Garg <gargaditya08@live.com>
Reported-by: Orlando Chamberlain <redecorating@protonmail.com>
Tested-by: Orlando Chamberlain <redecorating@protonmail.com>
Link:
https://lore.kernel.org/r/4970a940-211b-25d6-edab-21a815313954@protonmail.com
Fixes: 7c395ea521 ("Bluetooth: Query LE tx power on startup")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This uses skb_pull_data to check the LE Direct Advertising Report
events received have the minimum required length.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This uses skb_pull_data to check the LE Extended Advertising Report
events received have the minimum required length.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This uses skb_pull_data to check the LE Advertising Report events
received have the minimum required length.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This uses skb_pull_data to check the Extended Inquiry Result events
received have the minimum required length.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This uses skb_pull_data to check the Inquiry Result with RSSI events
received have the minimum required length.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This uses skb_pull_data to check the Inquiry Result events received
have the minimum required length.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This uses skb_pull_data to check the Number of Complete Packets events
received have the minimum required length.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
This uses skb_pull_data to check the BR/EDR events received have the
minimum required length.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
Vladimir reported csum issues after my recent change in skb_postpull_rcsum()
Issue here is the following:
initial skb->csum is the csum of
[part to be pulled][rest of packet]
Old code:
skb->csum = csum_sub(skb->csum, csum_partial(pull, pull_length, 0));
New code:
skb->csum = ~csum_partial(pull, pull_length, ~skb->csum);
This is broken if the csum of [pulled part]
happens to be equal to skb->csum, because end
result of skb->csum is 0 in new code, instead
of being 0xffffffff
David Laight suggested to use
skb->csum = -csum_partial(pull, pull_length, -skb->csum);
I based my patches on existing code present in include/net/seg6.h,
update_csum_diff4() and update_csum_diff16() which might need
a similar fix.
I guess that my tests, mostly pulling 40 bytes of IPv6 header
were not providing enough entropy to hit this bug.
v2: added wsum_negate() to make sparse happy.
Fixes: 29c3002644 ("net: optimize skb_postpull_rcsum()")
Fixes: 0bd28476f6 ("gro: optimize skb_gro_postpull_rcsum()")
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Reported-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Suggested-by: David Laight <David.Laight@ACULAB.COM>
Cc: David Lebrun <dlebrun@google.com>
Tested-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211204045356.3659278-1-eric.dumazet@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Note that other ip_tunnel users do not seem to hold a reference
on tunnel->dev. Probably needs some investigations.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
We want to track all dev_hold()/dev_put() to ease leak hunting.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
We want to track all dev_hold()/dev_put() to ease leak hunting.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
After transfer errors it makes sense to cancel an ongoing synchronous
command that cannot complete anymore. To permit this, export the old
hci_req_sync_cancel function as hci_cmd_sync_cancel in the API.
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Berg <bberg@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>
KCSAN reported a data-race [1] around tx_rebalance_counter
which can be accessed from different contexts, without
the protection of a lock/mutex.
[1]
BUG: KCSAN: data-race in bond_alb_init_slave / bond_alb_monitor
write to 0xffff888157e8ca24 of 4 bytes by task 7075 on cpu 0:
bond_alb_init_slave+0x713/0x860 drivers/net/bonding/bond_alb.c:1613
bond_enslave+0xd94/0x3010 drivers/net/bonding/bond_main.c:1949
do_set_master net/core/rtnetlink.c:2521 [inline]
__rtnl_newlink net/core/rtnetlink.c:3475 [inline]
rtnl_newlink+0x1298/0x13b0 net/core/rtnetlink.c:3506
rtnetlink_rcv_msg+0x745/0x7e0 net/core/rtnetlink.c:5571
netlink_rcv_skb+0x14e/0x250 net/netlink/af_netlink.c:2491
rtnetlink_rcv+0x18/0x20 net/core/rtnetlink.c:5589
netlink_unicast_kernel net/netlink/af_netlink.c:1319 [inline]
netlink_unicast+0x5fc/0x6c0 net/netlink/af_netlink.c:1345
netlink_sendmsg+0x6e1/0x7d0 net/netlink/af_netlink.c:1916
sock_sendmsg_nosec net/socket.c:704 [inline]
sock_sendmsg net/socket.c:724 [inline]
____sys_sendmsg+0x39a/0x510 net/socket.c:2409
___sys_sendmsg net/socket.c:2463 [inline]
__sys_sendmsg+0x195/0x230 net/socket.c:2492
__do_sys_sendmsg net/socket.c:2501 [inline]
__se_sys_sendmsg net/socket.c:2499 [inline]
__x64_sys_sendmsg+0x42/0x50 net/socket.c:2499
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x44/0xd0 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0xae
read to 0xffff888157e8ca24 of 4 bytes by task 1082 on cpu 1:
bond_alb_monitor+0x8f/0xc00 drivers/net/bonding/bond_alb.c:1511
process_one_work+0x3fc/0x980 kernel/workqueue.c:2298
worker_thread+0x616/0xa70 kernel/workqueue.c:2445
kthread+0x2c7/0x2e0 kernel/kthread.c:327
ret_from_fork+0x1f/0x30
value changed: 0x00000001 -> 0x00000064
Reported by Kernel Concurrency Sanitizer on:
CPU: 1 PID: 1082 Comm: kworker/u4:3 Not tainted 5.16.0-rc3-syzkaller #0
Hardware name: Google Google Compute Engine/Google Compute Engine, BIOS Google 01/01/2011
Workqueue: bond1 bond_alb_monitor
Fixes: 1da177e4c3 ("Linux-2.6.12-rc2")
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Reported-by: syzbot <syzkaller@googlegroups.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Before commit faa041a40b ("ipv4: Create cleanup helper for fib_nh")
changes to net->ipv4.fib_num_tclassid_users were protected by RTNL.
After the change, this is no longer the case, as free_fib_info_rcu()
runs after rcu grace period, without rtnl being held.
Fixes: faa041a40b ("ipv4: Create cleanup helper for fib_nh")
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Cc: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Phylink needs slightly more information than phylink_get_interfaces()
allows us to get from the DSA drivers - we need the MAC capabilities.
Replace the phylink_get_interfaces() method with phylink_get_caps() to
allow DSA drivers to fill in the phylink_config MAC capabilities field
as well.
Signed-off-by: Russell King (Oracle) <rmk+kernel@armlinux.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Marek Behún <kabel@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
The devlink_resources_unregister() used second parameter as an
entry point for the recursive removal of devlink resources. None
of the callers outside of devlink core needed to use this field,
so let's remove it.
As part of this removal, the "struct devlink_resource" was moved
from .h to .c file as it is not possible to use in any place in
the code except devlink.c.
Signed-off-by: Leon Romanovsky <leonro@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Currently, we use hard code number to verify if we are in the
arp_interval timeslice. But some user may want to reduce/extend
the verify timeslice. With the similar team option 'missed_max'
the uers could change that number based on their own environment.
Acked-by: Jay Vosburgh <jay.vosburgh@canonical.com>
Signed-off-by: Hangbin Liu <liuhangbin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Each peer's endpoint contains a dst_cache entry that takes a reference
to another netdev. When the containing namespace exits, we take down the
socket and prevent future sockets from being created (by setting
creating_net to NULL), which removes that potential reference on the
netns. However, it doesn't release references to the netns that a netdev
cached in dst_cache might be taking, so the netns still might fail to
exit. Since the socket is gimped anyway, we can simply clear all the
dst_caches (by way of clearing the endpoint src), which will release all
references.
However, the current dst_cache_reset function only releases those
references lazily. But it turns out that all of our usages of
wg_socket_clear_peer_endpoint_src are called from contexts that are not
exactly high-speed or bottle-necked. For example, when there's
connection difficulty, or when userspace is reconfiguring the interface.
And in particular for this patch, when the netns is exiting. So for
those cases, it makes more sense to call dst_release immediately. For
that, we add a small helper function to dst_cache.
This patch also adds a test to netns.sh from Hangbin Liu to ensure this
doesn't regress.
Tested-by: Hangbin Liu <liuhangbin@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Xiumei Mu <xmu@redhat.com>
Cc: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@redhat.com>
Cc: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Fixes: 900575aa33 ("wireguard: device: avoid circular netns references")
Signed-off-by: Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@zx2c4.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
The kernel leaks memory when a `fib` rule is present in IPv6 nftables
firewall rules and a suppress_prefix rule is present in the IPv6 routing
rules (used by certain tools such as wg-quick). In such scenarios, every
incoming packet will leak an allocation in `ip6_dst_cache` slab cache.
After some hours of `bpftrace`-ing and source code reading, I tracked
down the issue to ca7a03c417 ("ipv6: do not free rt if
FIB_LOOKUP_NOREF is set on suppress rule").
The problem with that change is that the generic `args->flags` always have
`FIB_LOOKUP_NOREF` set[1][2] but the IPv6-specific flag
`RT6_LOOKUP_F_DST_NOREF` might not be, leading to `fib6_rule_suppress` not
decreasing the refcount when needed.
How to reproduce:
- Add the following nftables rule to a prerouting chain:
meta nfproto ipv6 fib saddr . mark . iif oif missing drop
This can be done with:
sudo nft create table inet test
sudo nft create chain inet test test_chain '{ type filter hook prerouting priority filter + 10; policy accept; }'
sudo nft add rule inet test test_chain meta nfproto ipv6 fib saddr . mark . iif oif missing drop
- Run:
sudo ip -6 rule add table main suppress_prefixlength 0
- Watch `sudo slabtop -o | grep ip6_dst_cache` to see memory usage increase
with every incoming ipv6 packet.
This patch exposes the protocol-specific flags to the protocol
specific `suppress` function, and check the protocol-specific `flags`
argument for RT6_LOOKUP_F_DST_NOREF instead of the generic
FIB_LOOKUP_NOREF when decreasing the refcount, like this.
[1]: ca7a03c417/net/ipv6/fib6_rules.c (L71)
[2]: ca7a03c417/net/ipv6/fib6_rules.c (L99)
Link: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=215105
Fixes: ca7a03c417 ("ipv6: do not free rt if FIB_LOOKUP_NOREF is set on suppress rule")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@zx2c4.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Add macro definition for number of IANA VXLAN-GPE port for generic use.
Signed-off-by: Hao Chen <chenhao288@hisilicon.com>
Signed-off-by: Guangbin Huang <huangguangbin2@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Steffen reported a TCP stream corruption for HTTP requests
served by the apache web-server using a cifs mount-point
and memory mapping the relevant file.
The root cause is quite similar to the one addressed by
commit 20eb4f29b6 ("net: fix sk_page_frag() recursion from
memory reclaim"). Here the nested access to the task page frag
is caused by a page fault on the (mmapped) user-space memory
buffer coming from the cifs file.
The page fault handler performs an smb transaction on a different
socket, inside the same process context. Since sk->sk_allaction
for such socket does not prevent the usage for the task_frag,
the nested allocation modify "under the hood" the page frag
in use by the outer sendmsg call, corrupting the stream.
The overall relevant stack trace looks like the following:
httpd 78268 [001] 3461630.850950: probe:tcp_sendmsg_locked:
ffffffff91461d91 tcp_sendmsg_locked+0x1
ffffffff91462b57 tcp_sendmsg+0x27
ffffffff9139814e sock_sendmsg+0x3e
ffffffffc06dfe1d smb_send_kvec+0x28
[...]
ffffffffc06cfaf8 cifs_readpages+0x213
ffffffff90e83c4b read_pages+0x6b
ffffffff90e83f31 __do_page_cache_readahead+0x1c1
ffffffff90e79e98 filemap_fault+0x788
ffffffff90eb0458 __do_fault+0x38
ffffffff90eb5280 do_fault+0x1a0
ffffffff90eb7c84 __handle_mm_fault+0x4d4
ffffffff90eb8093 handle_mm_fault+0xc3
ffffffff90c74f6d __do_page_fault+0x1ed
ffffffff90c75277 do_page_fault+0x37
ffffffff9160111e page_fault+0x1e
ffffffff9109e7b5 copyin+0x25
ffffffff9109eb40 _copy_from_iter_full+0xe0
ffffffff91462370 tcp_sendmsg_locked+0x5e0
ffffffff91462370 tcp_sendmsg_locked+0x5e0
ffffffff91462b57 tcp_sendmsg+0x27
ffffffff9139815c sock_sendmsg+0x4c
ffffffff913981f7 sock_write_iter+0x97
ffffffff90f2cc56 do_iter_readv_writev+0x156
ffffffff90f2dff0 do_iter_write+0x80
ffffffff90f2e1c3 vfs_writev+0xa3
ffffffff90f2e27c do_writev+0x5c
ffffffff90c042bb do_syscall_64+0x5b
ffffffff916000ad entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x65
The cifs filesystem rightfully sets sk_allocations to GFP_NOFS,
we can avoid the nesting using the sk page frag for allocation
lacking the __GFP_FS flag. Do not define an additional mm-helper
for that, as this is strictly tied to the sk page frag usage.
v1 -> v2:
- use a stricted sk_page_frag() check instead of reordering the
code (Eric)
Reported-by: Steffen Froemer <sfroemer@redhat.com>
Fixes: 5640f76858 ("net: use a per task frag allocator")
Signed-off-by: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
To replace unix_table_lock with per-hash locks in the next patch, we need
to save a hash in each socket because /proc/net/unix or BPF prog iterate
sockets while holding a hash table lock and release it later in a different
function.
Currently, we store a real/pseudo hash in struct unix_address. However, we
do not allocate it to unbound sockets, nor should we do just for that. For
this purpose, we can use sk_hash. Then, we no longer use the hash field in
struct unix_address and can remove it.
Also, this patch does
- rename unix_insert_socket() to unix_insert_unbound_socket()
- remove the redundant list argument from __unix_insert_socket() and
unix_insert_unbound_socket()
- use 'unsigned int' instead of 'unsigned' in __unix_set_addr_hash()
- remove 'inline' from unix_remove_socket() and
unix_insert_unbound_socket().
Signed-off-by: Kuniyuki Iwashima <kuniyu@amazon.co.jp>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
In preparation for FORTIFY_SOURCE performing compile-time and run-time
field bounds checking for memset(), avoid intentionally writing across
neighboring fields.
Use memset_after() so memset() doesn't get confused about writing
beyond the destination member that is intended to be the starting point
of zeroing through the end of the struct.
Additionally fix the common helper, ieee80211_tx_info_clear_status(),
which was not clearing ack_signal, but the open-coded versions
did. Johannes Berg points out this bug was introduced by commit
e3e1a0bcb3 ("mac80211: reduce IEEE80211_TX_MAX_RATES") but was harmless.
Also drops the associated unneeded BUILD_BUG_ON()s, and adds a note to
carl9170 about usage.
Signed-off-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
Tested-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com> [both CARL9170+P54USB on real HW]
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211118203839.1289276-1-keescook@chromium.org
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
If necessary schedule offchan_cac_abort_wk work in cfg80211_radar_event
routine adding offchan parameter to cfg80211_radar_event signature.
Rename cfg80211_radar_event in __cfg80211_radar_event and introduce
the two following inline helpers:
- cfg80211_radar_event
- cfg80211_offchan_radar_event
Doing so the drv will not need to run cfg80211_offchan_cac_abort() after
radar detection on the offchannel chain.
Tested-by: Owen Peng <owen.peng@mediatek.com>
Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/3ff583e021e3343a3ced54a7b09b5e184d1880dc.1637062727.git.lorenzo@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
This allows drivers to provide a destination device + info for flow offload
Only supported in combination with 802.3 encap offload
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
Tested-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211112112223.1209-1-nbd@nbd.name
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
We can leverage third argument to csum_partial():
X = csum_sub(X, csum_partial(start, len, 0));
-->
X = csum_add(X, ~csum_partial(start, len, 0));
-->
X = ~csum_partial(start, len, ~X);
This removes one add/adc pair and its dependency against the carry flag.
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Currently, the probe timer is reused as the raise timer when PLPMTUD is in
the Search Complete state. raise_count was introduced to count how many
times the probe timer has timed out. When raise_count reaches to 30, the
raise timer handler will be triggered.
During the whole processing above, the timer keeps timing out every probe_
interval. It is a waste for the Search Complete state, as the raise timer
only needs to time out after 30 * probe_interval.
Since the raise timer and probe timer are never used at the same time, it
is no need to keep probe timer 'alive' in the Search Complete state. This
patch to introduce sctp_transport_reset_raise_timer() to start the timer
as the raise timer when entering the Search Complete state. When entering
the other states, sctp_transport_reset_probe_timer() will still be called
to reset the timer to the probe timer.
raise_count can be removed from sctp_transport as no need to count probe
timer timeout for raise timer timeout. last_rtx_chunks can be removed as
sctp_transport_reset_probe_timer() can be called in the place where asoc
rtx_data_chunks is changed.
Signed-off-by: Xin Long <lucien.xin@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Marcelo Ricardo Leitner <marcelo.leitner@gmail.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/edb0e48988ea85997488478b705b11ddc1ba724a.1637781974.git.lucien.xin@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
When doing remote name request, we cannot scan. In the normal case it's
OK since we can expect it to finish within a short amount of time.
However, there is a possibility to scan lots of devices that
(1) requires Remote Name Resolve
(2) is unresponsive to Remote Name Resolve
When this happens, we are stuck to do Remote Name Resolve until all is
done before continue scanning.
This patch adds a time limit to stop us spending too long on remote
name request.
Signed-off-by: Archie Pusaka <apusaka@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Miao-chen Chou <mcchou@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
Introducing NAME_REQUEST_FAILED flag that will be sent together with
device found event on name resolve failure. This will provide the
userspace with an information so it can decide not to resolve the
name for these devices in the future.
Signed-off-by: Archie Pusaka <apusaka@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Miao-chen Chou <mcchou@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>