Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
From: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2009 17:04:29 +0800 The bridging device used a constant hard_header_len. This will cause headroom shortage for ports with additional hardware header. The patch makes bridging device to use the maximum value of all ports. Signed-off-by: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Your driver must be able to cope with any amount of available headroom, no matter what hacks we put into the bridging layer. Please fix your driver, I'm not applying this patch. ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 2:40 PM, David Miller da...@davemloft.net wrote: From: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2009 17:04:29 +0800 The bridging device used a constant hard_header_len. This will cause headroom shortage for ports with additional hardware header. The patch makes bridging device to use the maximum value of all ports. Signed-off-by: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Your driver must be able to cope with any amount of available headroom, no matter what hacks we put into the bridging layer. Please fix your driver, I'm not applying this patch. Ok. But it's not good to reallocate every packet generated locally. Why not take this patch too? - Leo ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
From: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 15:05:20 +0800 On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 2:40 PM, David Miller da...@davemloft.net wrote: From: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2009 17:04:29 +0800 The bridging device used a constant hard_header_len. This will cause headroom shortage for ports with additional hardware header. The patch makes bridging device to use the maximum value of all ports. Signed-off-by: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Your driver must be able to cope with any amount of available headroom, no matter what hacks we put into the bridging layer. Please fix your driver, I'm not applying this patch. Ok. But it's not good to reallocate every packet generated locally. Why not take this patch too? Because as Stephen showed it didn't handle all cases. Look at the patch I posted, that's the way to go. ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 3:06 PM, David Miller da...@davemloft.net wrote: From: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 15:05:20 +0800 On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 2:40 PM, David Miller da...@davemloft.net wrote: From: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2009 17:04:29 +0800 The bridging device used a constant hard_header_len. This will cause headroom shortage for ports with additional hardware header. The patch makes bridging device to use the maximum value of all ports. Signed-off-by: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Your driver must be able to cope with any amount of available headroom, no matter what hacks we put into the bridging layer. Please fix your driver, I'm not applying this patch. Ok. But it's not good to reallocate every packet generated locally. Why not take this patch too? Because as Stephen showed it didn't handle all cases. Look at the patch I posted, that's the way to go. Patch coming right away. However I have some comment about your way. The choice is yours. - Leo ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 6:20 AM, David Miller da...@davemloft.net wrote: From: Stephen Hemminger shemmin...@linux-foundation.org Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2009 08:51:22 -0700 That ensures big enough header for locally generated packets, but any drivers that need bigger headroom still must handle bridged packets that come in with smaller space. When bridging packets, the skb comes from the allocation by the receiving driver. Almost all drivers will use dev_alloc_skb() which will allocate NET_SKB_PAD (16) bytes of additional headroom. This is used to hold copy of ethernet header for the bridge/netfilter code. So your patch is fine as an optimization but a driver can not safely depend on any additional headroom. The driver must check if there is space, and if no space is available, reallocate and copy. We had some plans to deal with this kind of issue for wireless too. Let me see if I can find the RFC patch from that discussion... Here it is, similar code would be added to the ipv4/ipv6 forwarding paths: diff --git a/include/linux/netdevice.h b/include/linux/netdevice.h index 7c1d446..6c06fba 100644 --- a/include/linux/netdevice.h +++ b/include/linux/netdevice.h @@ -600,6 +600,7 @@ struct net_device * Cache line mostly used on receive path (including eth_type_trans()) */ unsigned long last_rx; /* Time of last Rx */ + unsigned int rx_alloc_extra; /* Interface address info used in eth_type_trans() */ unsigned char dev_addr[MAX_ADDR_LEN]; /* hw address, (before bcast because most packets are unicast) */ diff --git a/net/bridge/br_forward.c b/net/bridge/br_forward.c index bdd7c35..531e483 100644 --- a/net/bridge/br_forward.c +++ b/net/bridge/br_forward.c @@ -42,6 +42,22 @@ int br_dev_queue_push_xmit(struct sk_buff *skb) if (nf_bridge_maybe_copy_header(skb)) kfree_skb(skb); else { + unsigned int headroom = skb_headroom(skb); + unsigned int hh_len = LL_RESERVED_SPACE(skb-dev); + + if (headroom hh_len) { + struct net_device *in_dev; + unsigned int extra; + + in_dev = __dev_get_by_index(dev_net(skb-dev), + skb-iif); + BUG_ON(!in_dev); + + extra = hh_len - headroom; + if (extra = in_dev-rx_alloc_extra) + in_dev-rx_alloc_extra = extra; + } + skb_push(skb, ETH_HLEN); dev_queue_xmit(skb); Dynamically adjusting is a good idea, but the rx_alloc_extra can only go up not the other way down in your code. Another thought is that if you re-allocate skb here the driver would be saved from checking the headroom in the fastpath, am I right? - Leo ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
From: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 16:43:53 +0800 Dynamically adjusting is a good idea, but the rx_alloc_extra can only go up not the other way down in your code. That's not a problem. Another thought is that if you re-allocate skb here the driver would be saved from checking the headroom in the fastpath, am I right? You're going to need it for other paths. There are other kinds of tunnels et al. that eat that headroom space on you. ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 5:04 PM, Li Yang le...@freescale.com wrote: The bridging device used a constant hard_header_len. This will cause headroom shortage for ports with additional hardware header. The patch makes bridging device to use the maximum value of all ports. Signed-off-by: Li Yang le...@freescale.com --- Fixes the following BUG when using bridging with gianfar driver: skb_under_panic: text:c0224b84 len:122 put:8 head:dfb81800 data:dfb817fa tail:0xdfb81874 end:0xdfb818a0 dev:eth1 [ cut here ] Kernel BUG at c02d9444 [verbose debug info unavailable] Oops: Exception in kernel mode, sig: 5 [#1] Call Trace: [df2dbb20] [c02d9444] skb_under_panic+0x48/0x5c (unreliable) [df2dbb30] [c0224b94] gfar_start_xmit+0x384/0x400 [df2dbb60] [c02e1c8c] dev_hard_start_xmit+0x258/0x2cc [df2dbba0] [c02f264c] __qdisc_run+0x5c/0x1f8 [df2dbbd0] [c02e4bf4] dev_queue_xmit+0x264/0x2d0 [df2dbbf0] [c036fdc8] br_dev_queue_push_xmit+0x90/0xf8 [df2dbc00] [c036fcc8] br_flood+0xc8/0x120 [df2dbc30] [c036ebe0] br_dev_xmit+0xbc/0xc0 [df2dbc40] [c02e1c8c] dev_hard_start_xmit+0x258/0x2cc [df2dbc80] [c02e4c04] dev_queue_xmit+0x274/0x2d0 [df2dbca0] [c02ebaa8] neigh_resolve_output+0xfc/0x25c Any comment about this? Is it possible to be included in 2.6.29? - Leo ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
From: Li Yang le...@freescale.com Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2009 16:15:34 +0800 I was wondering if this one failed to get your attention. yeah, happens all the time ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
On Fri, 20 Mar 2009 17:04:29 +0800 Li Yang le...@freescale.com wrote: The bridging device used a constant hard_header_len. This will cause headroom shortage for ports with additional hardware header. The patch makes bridging device to use the maximum value of all ports. Signed-off-by: Li Yang le...@freescale.com --- That ensures big enough header for locally generated packets, but any drivers that need bigger headroom still must handle bridged packets that come in with smaller space. When bridging packets, the skb comes from the allocation by the receiving driver. Almost all drivers will use dev_alloc_skb() which will allocate NET_SKB_PAD (16) bytes of additional headroom. This is used to hold copy of ethernet header for the bridge/netfilter code. So your patch is fine as an optimization but a driver can not safely depend on any additional headroom. The driver must check if there is space, and if no space is available, reallocate and copy. ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
From: Stephen Hemminger shemmin...@linux-foundation.org Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2009 08:51:22 -0700 That ensures big enough header for locally generated packets, but any drivers that need bigger headroom still must handle bridged packets that come in with smaller space. When bridging packets, the skb comes from the allocation by the receiving driver. Almost all drivers will use dev_alloc_skb() which will allocate NET_SKB_PAD (16) bytes of additional headroom. This is used to hold copy of ethernet header for the bridge/netfilter code. So your patch is fine as an optimization but a driver can not safely depend on any additional headroom. The driver must check if there is space, and if no space is available, reallocate and copy. We had some plans to deal with this kind of issue for wireless too. Let me see if I can find the RFC patch from that discussion... Here it is, similar code would be added to the ipv4/ipv6 forwarding paths: diff --git a/include/linux/netdevice.h b/include/linux/netdevice.h index 7c1d446..6c06fba 100644 --- a/include/linux/netdevice.h +++ b/include/linux/netdevice.h @@ -600,6 +600,7 @@ struct net_device * Cache line mostly used on receive path (including eth_type_trans()) */ unsigned long last_rx;/* Time of last Rx */ + unsigned intrx_alloc_extra; /* Interface address info used in eth_type_trans() */ unsigned char dev_addr[MAX_ADDR_LEN]; /* hw address, (before bcast because most packets are unicast) */ diff --git a/net/bridge/br_forward.c b/net/bridge/br_forward.c index bdd7c35..531e483 100644 --- a/net/bridge/br_forward.c +++ b/net/bridge/br_forward.c @@ -42,6 +42,22 @@ int br_dev_queue_push_xmit(struct sk_buff *skb) if (nf_bridge_maybe_copy_header(skb)) kfree_skb(skb); else { + unsigned int headroom = skb_headroom(skb); + unsigned int hh_len = LL_RESERVED_SPACE(skb-dev); + + if (headroom hh_len) { + struct net_device *in_dev; + unsigned int extra; + + in_dev = __dev_get_by_index(dev_net(skb-dev), + skb-iif); + BUG_ON(!in_dev); + + extra = hh_len - headroom; + if (extra = in_dev-rx_alloc_extra) + in_dev-rx_alloc_extra = extra; + } + skb_push(skb, ETH_HLEN); dev_queue_xmit(skb); diff --git a/net/core/skbuff.c b/net/core/skbuff.c index 5c459f2..74a2515 100644 --- a/net/core/skbuff.c +++ b/net/core/skbuff.c @@ -255,11 +255,12 @@ struct sk_buff *__netdev_alloc_skb(struct net_device *dev, unsigned int length, gfp_t gfp_mask) { int node = dev-dev.parent ? dev_to_node(dev-dev.parent) : -1; + unsigned int extra = dev-rx_alloc_extra + NET_SKB_PAD; struct sk_buff *skb; - skb = __alloc_skb(length + NET_SKB_PAD, gfp_mask, 0, node); + skb = __alloc_skb(length + extra, gfp_mask, 0, node); if (likely(skb)) { - skb_reserve(skb, NET_SKB_PAD); + skb_reserve(skb, extra); skb-dev = dev; } return skb; diff --git a/net/mac80211/tx.c b/net/mac80211/tx.c index f35eaea..86f0e36 100644 --- a/net/mac80211/tx.c +++ b/net/mac80211/tx.c @@ -1562,13 +1562,13 @@ int ieee80211_subif_start_xmit(struct sk_buff *skb, * be cloned. This could happen, e.g., with Linux bridge code passing * us broadcast frames. */ - if (head_need 0 || skb_cloned(skb)) { + if (head_need 0 || skb_header_cloned(skb)) { #if 0 printk(KERN_DEBUG %s: need to reallocate buffer for %d bytes of headroom\n, dev-name, head_need); #endif - if (skb_cloned(skb)) + if (skb_header_cloned(skb)) I802_DEBUG_INC(local-tx_expand_skb_head_cloned); else I802_DEBUG_INC(local-tx_expand_skb_head); ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
On Mon, 23 Mar 2009 15:20:28 -0700 (PDT) David Miller da...@davemloft.net wrote: From: Stephen Hemminger shemmin...@linux-foundation.org Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2009 08:51:22 -0700 That ensures big enough header for locally generated packets, but any drivers that need bigger headroom still must handle bridged packets that come in with smaller space. When bridging packets, the skb comes from the allocation by the receiving driver. Almost all drivers will use dev_alloc_skb() which will allocate NET_SKB_PAD (16) bytes of additional headroom. This is used to hold copy of ethernet header for the bridge/netfilter code. So your patch is fine as an optimization but a driver can not safely depend on any additional headroom. The driver must check if there is space, and if no space is available, reallocate and copy. We had some plans to deal with this kind of issue for wireless too. Let me see if I can find the RFC patch from that discussion... Here it is, similar code would be added to the ipv4/ipv6 forwarding paths: diff --git a/include/linux/netdevice.h b/include/linux/netdevice.h index 7c1d446..6c06fba 100644 --- a/include/linux/netdevice.h +++ b/include/linux/netdevice.h @@ -600,6 +600,7 @@ struct net_device * Cache line mostly used on receive path (including eth_type_trans()) */ unsigned long last_rx;/* Time of last Rx */ + unsigned intrx_alloc_extra; /* Interface address info used in eth_type_trans() */ unsigned char dev_addr[MAX_ADDR_LEN]; /* hw address, (before bcast because most packets are unicast) */ diff --git a/net/bridge/br_forward.c b/net/bridge/br_forward.c index bdd7c35..531e483 100644 --- a/net/bridge/br_forward.c +++ b/net/bridge/br_forward.c @@ -42,6 +42,22 @@ int br_dev_queue_push_xmit(struct sk_buff *skb) if (nf_bridge_maybe_copy_header(skb)) kfree_skb(skb); else { + unsigned int headroom = skb_headroom(skb); + unsigned int hh_len = LL_RESERVED_SPACE(skb-dev); + + if (headroom hh_len) { + struct net_device *in_dev; + unsigned int extra; + + in_dev = __dev_get_by_index(dev_net(skb-dev), + skb-iif); + BUG_ON(!in_dev); + + extra = hh_len - headroom; + if (extra = in_dev-rx_alloc_extra) + in_dev-rx_alloc_extra = extra; + } So you dynamically compute the additional space but if the space was an awkward size, could it cause driver to breaks alignment assumptions? And you didn't fixup the skb that is about to gag in the skb to make more space, so transmitting device driver (gfar) is going to overwrite or die. In summary, good idea, but may not solve the problem ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Re: [Bridge] [PATCH] net/bridge: use the maximum hard_header_len of ports for bridging device
From: Stephen Hemminger shemmin...@linux-foundation.org Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2009 15:45:17 -0700 So you dynamically compute the additional space but if the space was an awkward size, could it cause driver to breaks alignment assumptions? Yes, you'd need to 16-byte align or something like that. And you didn't fixup the skb that is about to gag in the skb to make more space, so transmitting device driver (gfar) is going to overwrite or die. This particular instance will do the headroom reallocation, that's unavoidable during the size transition event. The headroom checks can't ever be removed, but we won't hit them in the fast path after the adjustment is made by my patch. ___ Bridge mailing list Bridge@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge