On Wed, Mar 25, 2026 at 12:58 AM Simon Baatz <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Hi Wesley,
>
> On Tue, Mar 24, 2026 at 02:52:58PM -0600, Wesley Atwell wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > This v3 addresses the follow-up review on v2.
> >
> > Eric pointed out that 1/3 does not need the added packetdrill comment
> > and that 2/3 compared signed free_space against an unsigned
> > granularity.
> >
> > This revision drops the extra in-file comment from 1/3 and keeps
> > the scaled-window granularity in int space in 2/3 so the comparison
> > stays type-safe. The overall approach and reproducer remain unchanged
> > from v2.
> >
> > Simon was right that the original 3/3 only showed the explicit
> > rcv_ssthresh-limited ALIGN-up behavior. For v2, 3/3 was replaced with
> > an OOO-memory-based reproducer that first grows rcv_ssthresh with
> > in-order data and then drives raw backed free_space below
> > rcv_ssthresh without advancing rcv_nxt. In the instrumented
> > old-behavior run that shaped this test, the critical ACK reached
> > free_space=86190, rcv_ssthresh=86286, and still advertised 87040
> > (85 << 10). With 2/3 applied, the same ACK stays at 84.
> >
> > That follow-up also clarified why the broader 2/3 change is required.
> > A narrower variant that preserved the old rcv_ssthresh-limited ALIGN-up
> > behavior was not sufficient: earlier ACKs still stored 85 in tp->rcv_wnd,
> > and tcp_select_window() later preserved that extra unit because shrinking
> > was disallowed. Keeping tp->rcv_wnd representable across the scaled
> > no-shrink path is what lets later ACKs settle at the correct
> > wire-visible edge.
>
> So, you are saying that 84 defines the "correct
> wire-visible edge"?  That's a strong claim.
>
> The test in 3/3 adds OOO packets until the window calculated from
> free_space is 84.  But why stop there?  If I added further OOO
> packets until the calculated window drops to 83, I can claim, by the
> same reasoning, that 83 is the correct value and the initial 84 is
> wrong.
>
> In other words, this is a very synthetic scenario that can be steered
> to arbitrary values.  As stated in v1, I would really like to see a
> packetdrill (or real-world scenario) where the old behavior actually
> hurts (after all, this series claims that the current behavior needs
> to be fixed).
>

This series seems to be a social engineering experiment.

Could we have the prompts that were fed to an AI agent ?

I really do not see the point. RWIN is by essence advisory, and TCP
cannot accept
arbitrary bloated (small skb->len / skb->truesize ratio) anyway.

Reply via email to