During 'make man', makedocbook falsely reports "texinfo command
'@modifier' remains in output" while processing the setlocal(3) manpage,
which contains that literal string.
Move the check for unrecognized texinfo commands to before processing
'@@' (an escaped '@') in the texinfo source, and teach it to ignore
them.
Improve that check slightly, so it catches non-alphabetic texinfo
commands, of which there are few.
Now we don't have false positives, we can make unrecognized texinfo
commands fatal to manpage generation, rather than leaving them verbatim
in the generated manpage.
..., not just '#if defined(__CYGWIN__)'. (Exception: 'clog10l' which currently
indeed is for Cygwin only.)
This completes 2017-07-05 commit be3ca39474
"Fixed warnings for some long double complex methods" after Aditya Upadhyay's
work on importing "Long double complex methods" from NetBSD.
For example, this changes GCC/nvptx libgfortran 'configure' output as follows:
[...]
checking for ccosf... yes
checking for ccos... yes
checking for ccosl... [-no-]{+yes+}
[...]
..., and correspondingly GCC/nvptx 'nvptx-none/libgfortran/config.h' as
follows:
[...]
/* Define to 1 if you have the `ccosl' function. */
-/* #undef HAVE_CCOSL */
+#define HAVE_CCOSL 1
[...]
Similarly for 'ccoshl', 'cexpl', 'cpowl', 'csinl', 'csinhl', 'ctanl', 'ctanhl',
'cacoshl', 'cacosl', 'casinhl', 'catanhl'. ('conjl', 'cprojl' are not
currently being used in libgfortran.)
This in turn simplifies GCC/nvptx 'libgfortran/intrinsics/c99_functions.c'
compilation such that this files doesn't have to provide its own
"Implementation of various C99 functions" for those, when in fact they're
available in newlib libm.
Commit 737e2004a3 accidentally introduced a call to strlen in
code used with wide character strings in case of wcsftime. Use
STRLEN instead.
Fixes: 737e2004a3 ("strftime.c(__strftime): add %q, %v, tests; tweak %Z doc")
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Drop 'makedocbook --cache' (any dependency on the man-cache rule which
invokes that was dropped by the non-recursive make changes)
Instead, add some explicit locking which prevents processes colliding
over the file containing generated python code for the parser table.
The first attempt to support the 64-bit mode had two bugs:
1. The saved general-purpose register 31 value was overwritten with the saved
link register value.
2. The link register was saved and restored using 32-bit instructions.
Use 64-bit store/load instructions to save/restore the link register. Make
sure that the general-purpose register 31 and the link register storage areas
do not overlap.
> ERROR: xref linking to Stubs has no generated link text.
> Error: no ID for constraint linkend: Stubs.
(Despite saying "ERROR", this is actually a warning, and manpages are
still generated)
Improve chapter-texi2docbook so it generates elements for texinfo
sections as well, so that a cross-reference to the "Stubs" section
contains a valid element ID.
newlib/libc/sys/arm/Makefile.inc was modified but automake was not rerun in
commit 5230eb7f8c
Implement sysconf for Arm
on arm-none-eabi target this caused
ld: B/arm-none-eabi/lib/libg.a(libc_a-mallocr.o): in function `malloc_extend_top':
S/newlib-cygwin/newlib/libc/stdlib/_mallocr.c:2161: undefined reference to `sysconf'
- add support for using sysconf to get page size in _mallocr.c via
HAVE_SYSCONF_PAGESIZE flag set in configure.host
- set flag in configure.host for arm and add a default sysconf implementation
in libc/sys/arm that returns the page size
- the default implementation can be overridden outside newlib to allow a
different page size to improve malloc on devices with a small footprint
without needing to rebuild newlib
- this patch is based on a contribution from Torbjorn Svensson and
Niklas Dahlquist (https://ecos.sourceware.org/ml/newlib/current/017616.html)
Previously, the chacha20 instance would be rekeyed every 1.6MB. This
makes it happen at a random point somewhere in the 1-2MB range.
Feedback deraadt@ visa@, ok tb@ visa@
newlib port: Make REKEY_BASE depend on SIZE_MAX
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
In the incredibly unbelievable circumstance where _rs_init() fails to
allocate pages, don't call abort() because of corefile data leakage
concerns, but simply _exit(). The reasoning is _rs_init() will only fail
if someone finds a way to apply specific pressure against this failure
point, for the purpose of leaking information into a core which they can
read. We don't need a corefile in this instance to debug that. So take
this "lever" away from whoever in the future wants to do that.
In the nano version of malloc, when the last chunk is to be extended,
there is no need to acount for the header again as it's already taken
into account in the overall "alloc_size" at the beginning of the
function.
Contributed by STMicroelectronics
Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@foss.st.com>
When using nano malloc and the remaning heap space is not big enough to
fullfill the allocation, malloc will attempt to merge the last chunk in
the free list with a new allocation in order to create a bigger chunk.
This is successful, but the chunk still remains in the free_list, so
any later call to malloc can give out the same region without it first
being freed.
Possible sequence to verify:
void *p1 = malloc(3000);
void *p2 = malloc(4000);
void *p3 = malloc(5000);
void *p4 = malloc(6000);
void *p5 = malloc(7000);
free(p2);
free(p4);
void *p6 = malloc(35000);
free(p6);
void *p7 = malloc(42000);
void *p8 = malloc(32000);
Without the change, p7 and p8 points to the same address.
Requirement, after malloc(35000), there is less than 42000 bytes
available on the heap.
Contributed by STMicroelectronics
Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@foss.st.com>
When __SINGLE_THREAD__ is not defined, stdin, stdout and stderr needs
to have their _lock instance initialized. The __sfp() method is not
invoked for the 3 mentioned fds thus, the std() method needs to handle
the initialization of the lock.
This is more or less a revert of 382550072b
Contributed by STMicroelectronics
Signed-off-by: Torbjörn SVENSSON <torbjorn.svensson@foss.st.com>
This patch makes syscalls for SH architecture respecting the global option
"--disable-newlib-supplied-syscalls". This is useful when a bare-metal
toolchain is needed.
Signed-off-by: Yilin Sun <imi415@imi.moe>
This simple testcase:
locale_t st = newlocale(LC_ALL_MASK, "C", (locale_t)0);
locale_t st2 = newlocale(LC_CTYPE_MASK, "en_US.UTF-8", st);
is sufficient to reproduce a crash in _newlocale_r. After the first call
to newlocale, `st' points to __C_locale, which is const. When using `st'
as locale base in the second call, _newlocale_r tries to set pointers
inside base to NULL. This is bad if base is __C_locale, obviously.
Add a test to avoid trying to overwrite pointer values inside base if
base is __C_locale.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
Given that 64 bit Cygwin defines all file access types (off_t,
fpos_t, and derived types) as 64 bit anyway, there's no reason
left to rely on the stdio64 part of newlib. Use base functions
and base types.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
By default, Newlib uses a huge object of type struct _reent to store
thread-specific data. This object is returned by __getreent() if the
__DYNAMIC_REENT__ Newlib configuration option is defined.
The reentrancy structure contains for example errno and the standard input,
output, and error file streams. This means that if an application only uses
errno it has a dependency on the file stream support even if it does not use
it. This is an issue for lower end targets and applications which need to
qualify the software according to safety standards (for example ECSS-E-ST-40C,
ECSS-Q-ST-80C, IEC 61508, ISO 26262, DO-178, DO-330, DO-333).
If the new _REENT_THREAD_LOCAL configuration option is enabled, then struct
_reent is replaced by dedicated thread-local objects for each struct _reent
member. The thread-local objects are defined in translation units which use
the corresponding object.
In a follow up patch, struct _reent is optionally replaced by dedicated
thread-local objects. In this case,_REENT is optionally defined to NULL. Add
the _REENT_IS_NULL() macro to disable this check on demand.
Add a _REENT_SIG_FUNC() macro to encapsulate access to the
_sig_func member of struct reent. This will help to replace the
struct member with a thread-local storage object in a follow up
patch.
Add a _REENT_CVTBUF() macro to encapsulate access to the _cvtbuf
member of struct reent. This will help to replace the struct
member with a thread-local storage object in a follow up patch.
Add a _REENT_CVTLEN() macro to encapsulate access to the _cvtlen
member of struct reent. This will help to replace the struct
member with a thread-local storage object in a follow-up patch.
Add a _REENT_CLEANUP() macro to encapsulate access to the
__cleanup member of struct reent. This will help to replace the
struct member with a thread-local storage object in a follow up
patch.
Add a _REENT_LOCALE() macro to encapsulate access to the _locale
member of struct reent. This will help to replace the struct
member with a thread-local storage object in a follow up patch.
Add a _REENT_INC() macro to encapsulate access to the _inc member
of struct reent. This will help to replace the struct member with
a thread-local storage object in a follow up patch.
Add a _REENT_STDERR() macro to encapsulate access to the _stderr
member of struct reent. This will help to replace the struct
member with a thread-local storage object in a follow up patch.
Add a _REENT_STDOUT() macro to encapsulate access to the _stdout
member of struct reent. This will help to replace the struct
member with a thread-local storage object in a follow up patch.
Add a _REENT_STDIN() macro to encapsulate access to the _stdin
member of struct reent. This will help to replace the struct
member with a thread-local storage object in a follow up patch.
Add a _REENT_ERRNO() macro to encapsulate the access to the
_errno member of struct reent. This will help to replace the
structure member with a thread-local storage object in a follow
up patch.
Replace uses of __errno_r() with _REENT_ERRNO(). Keep __errno_r() macro for
potential users outside of Newlib.
Use this macro to access the _emergency member of struct _reent. This macro
will help to replace the _emergency member of struct _reent with a thread-local
storage object in a follow up patch.
The "/dev/log" socket existed in pre-FreeBSD times. Later it was
substituted to a compatibility symlink. The symlink creation was
deprecated in FreeBSD 10.2 and 9-STABLE.
Reviewed by: markj
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35304
Provide sticky ARP flag for network interface which marks it as the
"sticky" one similarly to what we have for bridges. Once interface is
marked sticky, any address resolved using the ARP will be saved as a
static one in the ARP table. Such functionality may be used to prevent
ARP spoofing or to decrease latencies in Ethernet networks.
The drawbacks include potential limitations in usage of ARP-based
load-balancers and high-availability solutions such as carp(4).
The implemented option is disabled by default, therefore should not
impact the default behaviour of the networking stack.
Sponsored by: Conclusive Engineering sp. z o.o.
Reviewed By: melifaro, pauamma_gundo.com
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35314
MFC after: 2 weeks
The old fixed-point arithmetic used for calculating load averages had an
overflow at 1024. So on systems with extremely high load, the observed
load average would actually fall back to 0 and shoot up again, creating
a kind of sawtooth graph.
Fix this by using 64-bit math internally, while still reporting the load
average to userspace as a 32-bit number.
Sponsored by: Axcient
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35134
TCP per RFC793 has 4 reserved flag bits for future use. One
of those bits may be used for Accurate ECN.
This patch is to include these bits in the LRO code to ease
the extensibility if/when these bits are used.
Reviewed By: hselasky, rrs, #transport
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D34127
Hide historical Class A/B/C macros unless IN_HISTORICAL_NETS is defined;
define it for user level. Define IN_MULTICAST separately from IN_CLASSD,
and use it in pf instead of IN_CLASSD. Stop using class for setting
default masks when not specified; instead, define new default mask
(24 bits). Warn when an Internet address is set without a mask.
MFC after: 1 month
Reviewed by: cy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32708
TCP stack sysctl nodes are currently inserted using the stack
name alias. Allow the user to get the current stack's alias to
allow for programatic sysctl access.
Obtained from: Netflix
TCP Hystart draft version -03:
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-tcpm-hystartplusplus
Is a new version of hystart that allows one to carefully exit slow start if the RTT
spikes too much. The newer version has a slower-slow-start so to speak that then
kicks in for five round trips. To see if you exited too early, if not into congestion avoidance.
This commit will add that feature to our newreno CC and add the needed bits in rack to
be able to enable it.
Reviewed by: tuexen
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32373
The rack stack, with respect to the rack bits in it, was originally built based
on an early I-D of rack. In fact at that time the TLP bits were in a separate
I-D. The dynamic reordering window based on DSACK events was not present
in rack at that time. It is now part of the RFC and we need to update our stack
to include these features. However we want to have a way to control the feature
so that we can, if the admin decides, make it stay the same way system wide as
well as via socket option. The new sysctl and socket option has the following
meaning for setting:
00 (0) - Keep the old way, i.e. reordering window is 1 and do not use DSACK bytes to add to reorder window
01 (1) - Change the Reordering window to 1/4 of an RTT but do not use DSACK bytes to add to reorder window
10 (2) - Keep the reordering window as 1, but do use SACK bytes to add additional 1/4 RTT delay to the reorder window
11 (3) - reordering window is 1/4 of an RTT and add additional DSACK bytes to increase the reordering window (RFC behavior)
The default currently in the sysctl is 3 so we get standards based behavior.
Reviewed by: tuexen
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31506
Add a PNOLOCK flag so that, in the race circumstance where
wakeup races are externally mitigated, tsleep() can be
called with a sleep time of 0 without triggering an
an assertion.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: Netflix
SO_RERROR indicates that receive buffer overflows should be handled as
errors. Historically receive buffer overflows have been ignored and
programs could not tell if they missed messages or messages had been
truncated because of overflows. Since programs historically do not
expect to get receive overflow errors, this behavior is not the
default.
This is really really important for programs that use route(4) to keep
in sync with the system. If we loose a message then we need to reload
the full system state, otherwise the behaviour from that point is
undefined and can lead to chasing bogus bug reports.
Reviewed by: philip (network), kbowling (transport), gbe (manpages)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26652
Import OpenBSD's syncookie support for pf. This feature help pf resist
TCP SYN floods by only creating states once the remote host completes
the TCP handshake rather than when the initial SYN packet is received.
This is accomplished by using the initial sequence numbers to encode a
cookie (hence the name) in the SYN+ACK response and verifying this on
receipt of the client ACK.
Reviewed by: kbowling
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Modirum MDPay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31138
so we can test various changes to the slop value in timers.
Timer_slop, in TCP, has been 200ms for a long time. This value dates back
a long time when delayed ack timers were longer and links were slower. A
200ms timer slop allows 1 MSS to be sent over a 60kbps link. Its possible that
lowering this value to something more in line with todays delayed ack values (40ms)
might improve TCP. This bit of code makes it so rack can, via a socket option,
adjust the timer slop.
Reviewed by: mtuexen
Sponsered by: Netflix Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30249
Recover from excessive losses without reverting to a
retransmission timeout (RTO). Disabled by default, enable
with sysctl net.inet.tcp.do_lrd=1
Reviewed By: #transport, rrs, tuexen, #manpages
Sponsored by: Netapp, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28931
versions of rack and bbr. This fixes several breakages (panics) since the
tcp_lro code was committed that have been reported. Quite a few new features
are now in rack (prefecting of DGP -- Dynamic Goodput Pacing among the
largest). There is also support for ack-war prevention. Documents comming soon
on rack..
Sponsored by: Netflix
Reviewed by: rscheff, mtuexen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30036
Its use is for cases where some filler is needed for cmd, or we need an
indication that there were no cmd supplied, and so on.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29935
Teach poll(2) to support Linux-style POLLRDHUP events for sockets, if
requested. Triggered when the remote peer shuts down writing or closes
its end.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29757
Adding support for TCP over UDP allows communication with
TCP stacks which can be implemented in userspace without
requiring special priviledges or specific support by the OS.
This is joint work with rrs.
Reviewed by: rrs
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29469
A lot of small arm64 gadgets are using 1500000 as console speed.
While cu can perfectly deal with this some 3rd party software, e.g.,
comms/conserver-con add speeds based on B<n> being defined.
Having it defined here simplifies enhancing other software.
Obtained-from: NetBSD sys/sys/termios.h 1.36
MFC-after: 2 weeks
Reviewed-by: philip (,okayed by imp)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29209
should be handled as errors. Historically receive buffer overflows have been
ignored and programs could not tell if they missed messages or messages had
been truncated because of overflows. Since programs historically do not expect
to get receive overflow errors, this behavior is not the default.
This is really really important for programs that use route(4) to keep in sync
with the system. If we loose a message then we need to reload the full system
state, otherwise the behaviour from that point is undefined and can lead
to chasing bogus bug reports.
This makes roundup2/rounddown2 type- and const-preserving and allows
using it on pointer types without casting to uintptr_t first. Not
performing pointer-to-integer conversions also helps the compiler's
optimization passes and can therefore result in better code generation.
When using it with integer values there should be no change other than
the compiler checking that the alignment value is a valid power-of-two.
I originally implemented these builtins for CHERI a few years ago and
they have been very useful for CheriBSD. However, they are also useful
for non-CHERI code so I was able to upstream them for Clang 10.0.
Rationale from the clang documentation:
Clang provides builtins to support checking and adjusting alignment
of pointers and integers. These builtins can be used to avoid relying
on implementation-defined behavior of arithmetic on integers derived
from pointers. Additionally, these builtins retain type information
and, unlike bitwise arithmetic, they can perform semantic checking on
the alignment value.
There is also a feature request for GCC, so GCC may also support it in
the future: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=98641
Reviewed By: brooks, jhb, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28332
Originally IFCAP_NOMAP meant that the mbuf has external storage pointer
that points to unmapped address. Then, this was extended to array of
such pointers. Then, such mbufs were augmented with header/trailer.
Basically, extended mbufs are extended, and set of features is subject
to change. The new name should be generic enough to avoid further
renaming.
These functions get/set tty winsize respectively, and are trivial wrappers
around corresponding termio ioctls.
The functions are expected to be a part of POSIX.1 issue 8:
https://www.austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=1151#c3856.
They are currently available in NetBSD and in musl libc.
PR: 251868
Submitted by: Soumendra Ganguly <soumendraganguly@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27650
In order to efficiently serve web traffic on a NUMA
machine, one must avoid as many NUMA domain crossings as
possible. With SO_REUSEPORT_LB, a number of workers can share a
listen socket. However, even if a worker sets affinity to a core
or set of cores on a NUMA domain, it will receive connections
associated with all NUMA domains in the system. This will lead to
cross-domain traffic when the server writes to the socket or
calls sendfile(), and memory is allocated on the server's local
NUMA node, but transmitted on the NUMA node associated with the
TCP connection. Similarly, when the server reads from the socket,
he will likely be reading memory allocated on the NUMA domain
associated with the TCP connection.
This change provides a new socket ioctl, TCP_REUSPORT_LB_NUMA. A
server can now tell the kernel to filter traffic so that only
incoming connections associated with the desired NUMA domain are
given to the server. (Of course, in the case where there are no
servers sharing the listen socket on some domain, then as a
fallback, traffic will be hashed as normal to all servers sharing
the listen socket regardless of domain). This allows a server to
deal only with traffic that is local to its NUMA domain, and
avoids cross-domain traffic in most cases.
This patch, and a corresponding small patch to nginx to use
TCP_REUSPORT_LB_NUMA allows us to serve 190Gb/s of kTLS encrypted
https media content from dual-socket Xeons with only 13% (as
measured by pcm.x) cross domain traffic on the memory controller.
Reviewed by: jhb, bz (earlier version), bcr (man page)
Tested by: gonzo
Sponsored by: Netfix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21636
struct ifconf and struct ifreq use the odd style "struct<tab>foo".
struct ifdrv seems to have tried to follow this but was committed with
spaces in place of most tabs resulting in "struct<space><space>ifdrv".
MFC after: 3 days
As this ABI is still fresh (r367287), let's correct some mistakes now:
- Version the structure to allow for future changes
- Include sender's pid in control message structure
- Use a distinct control message type from the cmsgcred / sockcred mess
Discussed with: kib, markj, trasz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27084
This option is intended to be semantically identical to Linux's
SOL_SOCKET:SO_PASSCRED. For now, it is mutually exclusive with the
pre-existing sockopt SOL_LOCAL:LOCAL_CREDS.
Reviewed by: markj (penultimate version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27011
Bring in the long-overdue 4.4BSD-Lite2 rev 8.3 by cgd of
sys/ioccom.h. This uses UL suffix for the IOC_* constants so they
don't sign extend. Also bring in the handy diagram from NetBSD's
version of this file. This alters the 4.4BSD-Lite2 code slightly
in a way that's semantically the same but more compact.
This should stop the warnings from Chrome for bogus sign extension.
Reviewed by: kib@, jhb@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26423
- Add a new send tag type for a send tag that supports both rate
limiting (packet pacing) and TLS offload (mostly similar to D22669
but adds a separate structure when allocating the new tag type).
- When allocating a send tag for TLS offload, check to see if the
connection already has a pacing rate. If so, allocate a tag that
supports both rate limiting and TLS offload rather than a plain TLS
offload tag.
- When setting an initial rate on an existing ifnet KTLS connection,
set the rate in the TCP control block inp and then reset the TLS
send tag (via ktls_output_eagain) to reallocate a TLS + ratelimit
send tag. This allocates the TLS send tag asynchronously from a
task queue, so the TLS rate limit tag alloc is always sleepable.
- When modifying a rate on a connection using KTLS, look for a TLS
send tag. If the send tag is only a plain TLS send tag, assume we
failed to allocate a TLS ratelimit tag (either during the
TCP_TXTLS_ENABLE socket option, or during the send tag reset
triggered by ktls_output_eagain) and ignore the new rate. If the
send tag is a ratelimit TLS send tag, change the rate on the TLS tag
and leave the inp tag alone.
- Lock the inp lock when setting sb_tls_info for a socket send buffer
so that the routines in tcp_ratelimit can safely dereference the
pointer without needing to grab the socket buffer lock.
- Add an IFCAP_TXTLS_RTLMT capability flag and associated
administrative controls in ifconfig(8). TLS rate limit tags are
only allocated if this capability is enabled. Note that TLS offload
(whether unlimited or rate limited) always requires IFCAP_TXTLS[46].
Reviewed by: gallatin, hselasky
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26691
It is lightweight way to check if an IPv4 address exists.
Submitted by: Roy Marples
Reviewed by: gnn, melifaro
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26636
This adds a new IP_PROTO / IPV6_PROTO setsockopt (getsockopt)
option IP(V6)_VLAN_PCP, which can be set to -1 (interface
default), or explicitly to any priority between 0 and 7.
Note that for untagged traffic, explicitly adding a
priority will insert a special 801.1Q vlan header with
vlan ID = 0 to carry the priority setting
Reviewed by: gallatin, rrs
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26409
This change is based on the nexthop objects landed in D24232.
The change introduces the concept of nexthop groups.
Each group contains the collection of nexthops with their
relative weights and a dataplane-optimized structure to enable
efficient nexthop selection.
Simular to the nexthops, nexthop groups are immutable. Dataplane part
gets compiled during group creation and is basically an array of
nexthop pointers, compiled w.r.t their weights.
With this change, `rt_nhop` field of `struct rtentry` contains either
nexthop or nexthop group. They are distinguished by the presense of
NHF_MULTIPATH flag.
All dataplane lookup functions returns pointer to the nexthop object,
leaving nexhop groups details inside routing subsystem.
User-visible changes:
The change is intended to be backward-compatible: all non-mpath operations
should work as before with ROUTE_MPATH and net.route.multipath=1.
All routes now comes with weight, default weight is 1, maximum is 2^24-1.
Current maximum multipath group width is statically set to 64.
This will become sysctl-tunable in the followup changes.
Using functionality:
* Recompile kernel with ROUTE_MPATH
* set net.route.multipath to 1
route add -6 2001:db8::/32 2001:db8::2 -weight 10
route add -6 2001:db8::/32 2001:db8::3 -weight 20
netstat -6On
Nexthop groups data
Internet6:
GrpIdx NhIdx Weight Slots Gateway Netif Refcnt
1 ------- ------- ------- --------------------------------------- --------- 1
13 10 1 2001:db8::2 vlan2
14 20 2 2001:db8::3 vlan2
Next steps:
* Land outbound hashing for locally-originated routes ( D26523 ).
* Fix net/bird multipath (net/frr seems to work fine)
* Add ROUTE_MPATH to GENERIC
* Set net.route.multipath=1 by default
Tested by: olivier
Reviewed by: glebius
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26449
For interfaces that do not support SIOCGIFMEDIA (for which there are
quite a few) the only fallback is to query the interface for
if_data->ifi_link_state. While it's possible to get at if_data for an
interface via getifaddrs(3) or sysctl, both are heavy weight mechanisms.
SIOCGIFDATA is a simple ioctl to retrieve this fast with very little
resource use in comparison. This implementation mirrors that of other
similar ioctls in FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Roy Marples <roy@marples.name>
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26538
The fastpath in tcp_output tries to send out
full segments, and avoid sending partial segments by
comparing against the static t_maxseg variable.
That value does not consider tcp options like timestamps,
while the initial window calculation is using
the correct dynamic tcp_maxseg() function.
Due to this interaction, the last, full size segment
is considered too short and not sent out immediately.
Reviewed by: tuexen
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26478
for hw checksumming and TSO for VXLAN traffic.
These are similar to the existing VLAN capabilities.
Reviewed by: kib@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25873
Created with shm_open2(SHM_LARGEPAGE) and then configured with
FIOSSHMLPGCNF ioctl, largepages posix shared memory objects guarantee
that all userspace mappings of it are served by superpage non-managed
mappings.
Only amd64 for now, both 2M and 1G superpages can be requested, the
later requires CPU feature.
Reviewed by: markj
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24652
Currently we use a single bit to indicate whether the virtual page is
part of a superpage. To support a forthcoming implementation of
non-transparent 1GB superpages, it is useful to provide more detailed
information about large page sizes.
The change converts MINCORE_SUPER into a mask for MINCORE_PSIND(psind)
values, indicating a mapping of size psind, where psind is an index into
the pagesizes array returned by getpagesizes(3), which in turn comes
from the hw.pagesizes sysctl. MINCORE_PSIND(1) is equal to the old
value of MINCORE_SUPER.
For now, two bits are used to record the page size, permitting values
of MAXPAGESIZES up to 4.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26238
The constant seems to exists on MacOS X >= 10.8.
Requested by: swills
Reviewed by: allanjude, kevans
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25933
Lack of SHM_GROW_ON_WRITE is actively breaking Python's memfd_create tests,
so go ahead and implement it. A future change will make memfd_create always
set SHM_GROW_ON_WRITE, to match Linux behavior and unbreak Python's tests
on -CURRENT.
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25502
This change adds Hyper-V socket feature in FreeBSD. New socket address
family AF_HYPERV and its kernel support are added.
Submitted by: Wei Hu <weh@microsoft.com>
Reviewed by: Dexuan Cui <decui@microsoft.com>
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Microsoft
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24061
- Add a new TCP_RXTLS_ENABLE socket option to set the encryption and
authentication algorithms and keys as well as the initial sequence
number.
- When reading from a socket using KTLS receive, applications must use
recvmsg(). Each successful call to recvmsg() will return a single
TLS record. A new TCP control message, TLS_GET_RECORD, will contain
the TLS record header of the decrypted record. The regular message
buffer passed to recvmsg() will receive the decrypted payload. This
is similar to the interface used by Linux's KTLS RX except that
Linux does not return the full TLS header in the control message.
- Add plumbing to the TOE KTLS interface to request either transmit
or receive KTLS sessions.
- When a socket is using receive KTLS, redirect reads from
soreceive_stream() into soreceive_generic().
- Note that this interface is currently only defined for TLS 1.1 and
1.2, though I believe we will be able to reuse the same interface
and structures for 1.3.
in getting the latest rack and bbr in from the NF repo. When those come in the
OOB data handling will be fixed where Skyzaller crashes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24575
This change is build on top of nexthop objects introduced in r359823.
Nexthops are separate datastructures, containing all necessary information
to perform packet forwarding such as gateway interface and mtu. Nexthops
are shared among the routes, providing more pre-computed cache-efficient
data while requiring less memory. Splitting the LPM code and the attached
data solves multiple long-standing problems in the routing layer,
drastically reduces the coupling with outher parts of the stack and allows
to transparently introduce faster lookup algorithms.
Route caching was (re)introduced to minimise (slow) routing lookups, allowing
for notably better performance for large TCP senders. Caching works by
acquiring rtentry reference, which is protected by per-rtentry mutex.
If the routing table is changed (checked by comparing the rtable generation id)
or link goes down, cache record gets withdrawn.
Nexthops have the same reference counting interface, backed by refcount(9).
This change merely replaces rtentry with the actual forwarding nextop as a
cached object, which is mostly mechanical. Other moving parts like cache
cleanup on rtable change remains the same.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24340
specified by a #define. Also, add a comment describing the historical context
for this length.
Reviewed by: bz, jhb, kbowling (previous version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24272
This is the foundational change for the routing subsytem rearchitecture.
More details and goals are available in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24141 .
This patch introduces concept of nexthop objects and new nexthop-based
routing KPI.
Nexthops are objects, containing all necessary information for performing
the packet output decision. Output interface, mtu, flags, gw address goes
there. For most of the cases, these objects will serve the same role as
the struct rtentry is currently serving.
Typically there will be low tens of such objects for the router even with
multiple BGP full-views, as these objects will be shared between routing
entries. This allows to store more information in the nexthop.
New KPI:
struct nhop_object *fib4_lookup(uint32_t fibnum, struct in_addr dst,
uint32_t scopeid, uint32_t flags, uint32_t flowid);
struct nhop_object *fib6_lookup(uint32_t fibnum, const struct in6_addr *dst6,
uint32_t scopeid, uint32_t flags, uint32_t flowid);
These 2 function are intended to replace all all flavours of
<in_|in6_>rtalloc[1]<_ign><_fib>, mpath functions and the previous
fib[46]-generation functions.
Upon successful lookup, they return nexthop object which is guaranteed to
exist within current NET_EPOCH. If longer lifetime is desired, one can
specify NHR_REF as a flag and get a referenced version of the nexthop.
Reference semantic closely resembles rtentry one, allowing sed-style conversion.
Additionally, another 2 functions are introduced to support uRPF functionality
inside variety of our firewalls. Their primary goal is to hide the multipath
implementation details inside the routing subsystem, greatly simplifying
firewalls implementation:
int fib4_lookup_urpf(uint32_t fibnum, struct in_addr dst, uint32_t scopeid,
uint32_t flags, const struct ifnet *src_if);
int fib6_lookup_urpf(uint32_t fibnum, const struct in6_addr *dst6, uint32_t scopeid,
uint32_t flags, const struct ifnet *src_if);
All functions have a separate scopeid argument, paving way to eliminating IPv6 scope
embedding and allowing to support IPv4 link-locals in the future.
Structure changes:
* rtentry gets new 'rt_nhop' pointer, slightly growing the overall size.
* rib_head gets new 'rnh_preadd' callback pointer, slightly growing overall sz.
Old KPI:
During the transition state old and new KPI will coexists. As there are another 4-5
decent-sized conversion patches, it will probably take a couple of weeks.
To support both KPIs, fields not required by the new KPI (most of rtentry) has to be
kept, resulting in the temporary size increase.
Once conversion is finished, rtentry will notably shrink.
More details:
* architectural overview: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24141
* list of the next changes: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24232
Reviewed by: ae,glebius(initial version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24232
due to peer pressure switch over to opt-in instead of opt-out for epoch.
Instead of IFF_NEEDSEPOCH, provide IFF_KNOWSEPOCH. If driver marks
itself with IFF_KNOWSEPOCH, then ether_input() would not enter epoch
when processing its packets.
Now this will create recursive entrance in epoch in >90% network
drivers, but will guarantee safeness of the transition.
Mark several tested drivers as IFF_KNOWSEPOCH.
Reviewed by: hselasky, jeff, bz, gallatin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23674