On 10/27/2016 10:26 AM, Eric Dumazet wrote:
> On Wed, 2016-10-26 at 11:09 +1100, Jon Maxwell wrote:
>> We recently encountered a bug where a few customers using ibmveth on the 
>> same LPAR hit an issue where a TCP session hung when large receive was
>> enabled. Closer analysis revealed that the session was stuck because the 
>> one side was advertising a zero window repeatedly.
>>
>> We narrowed this down to the fact the ibmveth driver did not set gso_size 
>> which is translated by TCP into the MSS later up the stack. The MSS is 
>> used to calculate the TCP window size and as that was abnormally large, 
>> it was calculating a zero window, even although the sockets receive buffer 
>> was completely empty. 
>>
>> We were able to reproduce this and worked with IBM to fix this. Thanks Tom 
>> and Marcelo for all your help and review on this.
>>
>> The patch fixes both our internal reproduction tests and our customers tests.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Jon Maxwell <jmaxwel...@gmail.com>
>> ---
>>  drivers/net/ethernet/ibm/ibmveth.c | 20 ++++++++++++++++++++
>>  1 file changed, 20 insertions(+)
>>
>> diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/ibm/ibmveth.c 
>> b/drivers/net/ethernet/ibm/ibmveth.c
>> index 29c05d0..c51717e 100644
>> --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/ibm/ibmveth.c
>> +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/ibm/ibmveth.c
>> @@ -1182,6 +1182,8 @@ static int ibmveth_poll(struct napi_struct *napi, int 
>> budget)
>>      int frames_processed = 0;
>>      unsigned long lpar_rc;
>>      struct iphdr *iph;
>> +    bool large_packet = 0;
>> +    u16 hdr_len = ETH_HLEN + sizeof(struct tcphdr);
>>  
>>  restart_poll:
>>      while (frames_processed < budget) {
>> @@ -1236,10 +1238,28 @@ static int ibmveth_poll(struct napi_struct *napi, 
>> int budget)
>>                                              iph->check = 0;
>>                                              iph->check = 
>> ip_fast_csum((unsigned char *)iph, iph->ihl);
>>                                              adapter->rx_large_packets++;
>> +                                            large_packet = 1;
>>                                      }
>>                              }
>>                      }
>>  
>> +                    if (skb->len > netdev->mtu) {
>> +                            iph = (struct iphdr *)skb->data;
>> +                            if (be16_to_cpu(skb->protocol) == ETH_P_IP &&
>> +                                iph->protocol == IPPROTO_TCP) {
>> +                                    hdr_len += sizeof(struct iphdr);
>> +                                    skb_shinfo(skb)->gso_type = 
>> SKB_GSO_TCPV4;
>> +                                    skb_shinfo(skb)->gso_size = netdev->mtu 
>> - hdr_len;
>> +                            } else if (be16_to_cpu(skb->protocol) == 
>> ETH_P_IPV6 &&
>> +                                       iph->protocol == IPPROTO_TCP) {
>> +                                    hdr_len += sizeof(struct ipv6hdr);
>> +                                    skb_shinfo(skb)->gso_type = 
>> SKB_GSO_TCPV6;
>> +                                    skb_shinfo(skb)->gso_size = netdev->mtu 
>> - hdr_len;
>> +                            }
>> +                            if (!large_packet)
>> +                                    adapter->rx_large_packets++;
>> +                    }
>> +
>>  
> 
> This might break forwarding and PMTU discovery.
> 
> You force gso_size to device mtu, regardless of real MSS used by the TCP
> sender.
> 
> Don't you have the MSS provided in RX descriptor, instead of guessing
> the value ?

We've had some further discussions on this with the Virtual I/O Server (VIOS)
development team. The large receive aggregation in the VIOS (AIX based) is 
actually
being done by software in the VIOS. What they may be able to do is when 
performing
this aggregation, they could look at the packet lengths of all the packets being
aggregated and take the largest packet size within the aggregation unit, minus 
the
header length and return that to the virtual ethernet client which we could 
then stuff
into gso_size. They are currently assessing how feasible this would be to do 
and whether
it would impact other bits of the code. However, assuming this does end up 
being an option,
would this address the concerns here or is that going to break something else 
I'm
not thinking of?

Unfortunately, I don't think we'd have a good way to get gso_segs set correctly 
as I don't
see how that would get passed back up the interface.

Thanks,

Brian


-- 
Brian King
Power Linux I/O
IBM Linux Technology Center

Reply via email to