Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
On Wed, Aug 17, 2016 at 09:01:38AM +, David Laight wrote: > From: Marcelo Ricardo Leitner > > Sent: 16 August 2016 18:25 > ... > > > That doesn't seem a good idea. > > > You don't want to abort the association if there is a transient > > > memory allocation failure. > > > You also can't drop data chunks. > > > > From a system-wise POV, this behavior - to free the new asoc in case of > > transient memory allocation failure - doesn't seem bad to me. > > That's what will have to happen if any allocation before it failed and > > also it helps the system to reduce the stress a little bit. I don't see > > any inconsistency/problems here because we are not dropping a single > > random chunk but instead we are actually refusing to initialize a new > > asoc in such conditions. > > Failing a new association should be ok, whether purists will like > connect() failing ENOMEM is another matter. > Good point. > > Nevertheless, I agree that letting the application see ENOMEM errors when > > the data actually got queued and is being fully handled, as in, it will > > be retransmitted later, is not be wise, as the application probably > > won't be able to distinguish from ENOMEMs that it should retry or not. > > I think an application would be justified in thinking that an ENOMEM return > meant that the system call had no effect. > Yep > For send() even ENOMEM is really wrong, it should be treated as 'flow control' > and either block or return EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK. Agreed. > Getting POLLOUT set is left as an exercise to the reader :-) > :-) > ... > > Well, it may be, but we are trying to improve it. Please continue > > discussing the fixes so we can keep improving it. :) > > Indeed, we have customers who use sctp (for M3UA). > We don't do anything 'complicated', but do end up sending a lot of short > data chunks. > > David > > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sctp" in > the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html >
Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
>> > If letting the application see ENOMEM errors, and sctp has to drop this >> > chunk, instead of retransmiting the ENOMEM chunk, but the ENOMEM >> > chunk may not be the chunk from current msg, as it flush all the queue. >> > even if users get an ENOMEM error, they may re-send a chunk that is same >> > with the one that is still in retransmit queue. >> >> Yep, one more reason to handle those internally when safe. I just checked tcp_sendmsg, it doesn't return any transmit error to user, *NOT ONLY* ENOMEM. you can check __tcp_push_pending_frames and tcp_push, their return type is even void. although it may get err from sk->sk_err: err = sk_stream_error(sk, flags, err); But I didn't see it put any err into sk->sk_err in the main transmit path. yes, tcp_write_xmit has return value, as well as tcp_transmit_skb and err = icsk->icsk_af_ops->queue_xmit(sk, skb, &inet->cork.fl). but all of them are just used for internal, never return to userspace In tcp_write_xmit, it even uses "unlikely': if (unlikely(tcp_transmit_skb(sk, skb, 1, gfp))) break; > > Xin, maybe you can squash this patch and this ENOMEM handling? I'm > thinking that handling ENOMEM may result in similar situations in other > places, so we have a common reasoning on them. > So this reason does really matter, and not only for ENOMEM in transmit path.
RE: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
From: Marcelo Ricardo Leitner > Sent: 16 August 2016 18:25 ... > > That doesn't seem a good idea. > > You don't want to abort the association if there is a transient > > memory allocation failure. > > You also can't drop data chunks. > > From a system-wise POV, this behavior - to free the new asoc in case of > transient memory allocation failure - doesn't seem bad to me. > That's what will have to happen if any allocation before it failed and > also it helps the system to reduce the stress a little bit. I don't see > any inconsistency/problems here because we are not dropping a single > random chunk but instead we are actually refusing to initialize a new > asoc in such conditions. Failing a new association should be ok, whether purists will like connect() failing ENOMEM is another matter. > Nevertheless, I agree that letting the application see ENOMEM errors when > the data actually got queued and is being fully handled, as in, it will > be retransmitted later, is not be wise, as the application probably > won't be able to distinguish from ENOMEMs that it should retry or not. I think an application would be justified in thinking that an ENOMEM return meant that the system call had no effect. For send() even ENOMEM is really wrong, it should be treated as 'flow control' and either block or return EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK. Getting POLLOUT set is left as an exercise to the reader :-) ... > Well, it may be, but we are trying to improve it. Please continue > discussing the fixes so we can keep improving it. :) Indeed, we have customers who use sctp (for M3UA). We don't do anything 'complicated', but do end up sending a lot of short data chunks. David
Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 03:33:30PM -0300, Marcelo Ricardo Leitner wrote: > On Wed, Aug 17, 2016 at 02:24:19AM +0800, Xin Long wrote: > > >> > This err returns back to sctp_sendmsg, there sctp will abort asoc. > > > > > > That's not right I think. sctp_sendmsg will only free the asoc if it was > > > created to send that specific chunk. And in this case, this change > > > should have no effect as it can't have sctp_outq_flush() touching > > > several transports in a row. > > > > > > I'm basing on: > > > out_free: > > > if (new_asoc) > > > sctp_association_free(asoc); > > > > > > and sctp_recvmsg will just fetch, return and clear the error via > > > sctp_skb_recv_datagram, but not free it. > > > > > > Do you see any other place freeing it? > > Sorry, you are right, it free assoc just for new_asoc. > > > > > > > >> > > >> That doesn't seem a good idea. > > >> You don't want to abort the association if there is a transient > > >> memory allocation failure. > > >> You also can't drop data chunks. > > > > > > From a system-wise POV, this behavior - to free the new asoc in case of > > > transient memory allocation failure - doesn't seem bad to me. > > > That's what will have to happen if any allocation before it failed and > > > also it helps the system to reduce the stress a little bit. I don't see > > > any inconsistency/problems here because we are not dropping a single > > > random chunk but instead we are actually refusing to initialize a new > > > asoc in such conditions. > > > > > > Nevertheless, I agree that letting the application see ENOMEM errors when > > > the data actually got queued and is being fully handled, as in, it will > > > be retransmitted later, is not be wise, as the application probably > > > won't be able to distinguish from ENOMEMs that it should retry or not. > > > Here I see a problem, yet it's not due to this specific change, perhaps > > > it just got attention because of it. In this situation, we should handle > > > ENOMEMs internally if possible so the application can know that if it > > > hits an ENOMEM, it's real and it has to retry. > > If letting the application see ENOMEM errors, and sctp has to drop this > > chunk, instead of retransmiting the ENOMEM chunk, but the ENOMEM > > chunk may not be the chunk from current msg, as it flush all the queue. > > even if users get an ENOMEM error, they may re-send a chunk that is same > > with the one that is still in retransmit queue. > > Yep, one more reason to handle those internally when safe. Xin, maybe you can squash this patch and this ENOMEM handling? I'm thinking that handling ENOMEM may result in similar situations in other places, so we have a common reasoning on them.
Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
On Wed, Aug 17, 2016 at 02:24:19AM +0800, Xin Long wrote: > >> > This err returns back to sctp_sendmsg, there sctp will abort asoc. > > > > That's not right I think. sctp_sendmsg will only free the asoc if it was > > created to send that specific chunk. And in this case, this change > > should have no effect as it can't have sctp_outq_flush() touching > > several transports in a row. > > > > I'm basing on: > > out_free: > > if (new_asoc) > > sctp_association_free(asoc); > > > > and sctp_recvmsg will just fetch, return and clear the error via > > sctp_skb_recv_datagram, but not free it. > > > > Do you see any other place freeing it? > Sorry, you are right, it free assoc just for new_asoc. > > > > >> > >> That doesn't seem a good idea. > >> You don't want to abort the association if there is a transient > >> memory allocation failure. > >> You also can't drop data chunks. > > > > From a system-wise POV, this behavior - to free the new asoc in case of > > transient memory allocation failure - doesn't seem bad to me. > > That's what will have to happen if any allocation before it failed and > > also it helps the system to reduce the stress a little bit. I don't see > > any inconsistency/problems here because we are not dropping a single > > random chunk but instead we are actually refusing to initialize a new > > asoc in such conditions. > > > > Nevertheless, I agree that letting the application see ENOMEM errors when > > the data actually got queued and is being fully handled, as in, it will > > be retransmitted later, is not be wise, as the application probably > > won't be able to distinguish from ENOMEMs that it should retry or not. > > Here I see a problem, yet it's not due to this specific change, perhaps > > it just got attention because of it. In this situation, we should handle > > ENOMEMs internally if possible so the application can know that if it > > hits an ENOMEM, it's real and it has to retry. > If letting the application see ENOMEM errors, and sctp has to drop this > chunk, instead of retransmiting the ENOMEM chunk, but the ENOMEM > chunk may not be the chunk from current msg, as it flush all the queue. > even if users get an ENOMEM error, they may re-send a chunk that is same > with the one that is still in retransmit queue. Yep, one more reason to handle those internally when safe.
Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
>> > This err returns back to sctp_sendmsg, there sctp will abort asoc. > > That's not right I think. sctp_sendmsg will only free the asoc if it was > created to send that specific chunk. And in this case, this change > should have no effect as it can't have sctp_outq_flush() touching > several transports in a row. > > I'm basing on: > out_free: > if (new_asoc) > sctp_association_free(asoc); > > and sctp_recvmsg will just fetch, return and clear the error via > sctp_skb_recv_datagram, but not free it. > > Do you see any other place freeing it? Sorry, you are right, it free assoc just for new_asoc. > >> >> That doesn't seem a good idea. >> You don't want to abort the association if there is a transient >> memory allocation failure. >> You also can't drop data chunks. > > From a system-wise POV, this behavior - to free the new asoc in case of > transient memory allocation failure - doesn't seem bad to me. > That's what will have to happen if any allocation before it failed and > also it helps the system to reduce the stress a little bit. I don't see > any inconsistency/problems here because we are not dropping a single > random chunk but instead we are actually refusing to initialize a new > asoc in such conditions. > > Nevertheless, I agree that letting the application see ENOMEM errors when > the data actually got queued and is being fully handled, as in, it will > be retransmitted later, is not be wise, as the application probably > won't be able to distinguish from ENOMEMs that it should retry or not. > Here I see a problem, yet it's not due to this specific change, perhaps > it just got attention because of it. In this situation, we should handle > ENOMEMs internally if possible so the application can know that if it > hits an ENOMEM, it's real and it has to retry. If letting the application see ENOMEM errors, and sctp has to drop this chunk, instead of retransmiting the ENOMEM chunk, but the ENOMEM chunk may not be the chunk from current msg, as it flush all the queue. even if users get an ENOMEM error, they may re-send a chunk that is same with the one that is still in retransmit queue. > > Fixing this inconsistency may very well cause us to let that new asoc to > live longer, works for me too. > >> >> > in this function, sctp tries to do 3 things: >> > 1. flush rtx queue >> > 2. transmit the packet of current transport >> > 3. flush all the transports. >> > Now sctp would do them one by one, even if one of them returns err. >> >> You probably need to explain what 'flush' means here. >> I think it means 'process and send', but it might mean 'discard the >> contents of'. > > Yes, the first. He probably use the work 'flush' because the function is > called .._flush_.. Yes, :D > >> Last time I looked at the sctp code my head exploded. >> ISTR it is a mess of timing errors waiting to happen >> (and I write comms protocol stack code for a living). > > Well, it may be, but we are trying to improve it. Please continue > discussing the fixes so we can keep improving it. :) > > Marcelo >
Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 04:01:50PM +, David Laight wrote: > From: Xin Long > > Sent: 16 August 2016 12:34 > > > > >> Both sctp_outq_flush_rtx and sctp_packet_transmit can ONLY > > >> return one error (-ENOMEM), as sctp_outq_flush_rtx also calls > > >> sctp_packet_transmit. > > > > > > What is the effect of the error? > > > If it is 'just' equivalent to a lost ethernet packet (and the skb (etc) > > > is freed) then the protocol will recover. > > > If it is anything else then the error path is probably wrong. > > > > This err returns back to sctp_sendmsg, there sctp will abort asoc. That's not right I think. sctp_sendmsg will only free the asoc if it was created to send that specific chunk. And in this case, this change should have no effect as it can't have sctp_outq_flush() touching several transports in a row. I'm basing on: out_free: if (new_asoc) sctp_association_free(asoc); and sctp_recvmsg will just fetch, return and clear the error via sctp_skb_recv_datagram, but not free it. Do you see any other place freeing it? > > That doesn't seem a good idea. > You don't want to abort the association if there is a transient > memory allocation failure. > You also can't drop data chunks. >From a system-wise POV, this behavior - to free the new asoc in case of transient memory allocation failure - doesn't seem bad to me. That's what will have to happen if any allocation before it failed and also it helps the system to reduce the stress a little bit. I don't see any inconsistency/problems here because we are not dropping a single random chunk but instead we are actually refusing to initialize a new asoc in such conditions. Nevertheless, I agree that letting the application see ENOMEM errors when the data actually got queued and is being fully handled, as in, it will be retransmitted later, is not be wise, as the application probably won't be able to distinguish from ENOMEMs that it should retry or not. Here I see a problem, yet it's not due to this specific change, perhaps it just got attention because of it. In this situation, we should handle ENOMEMs internally if possible so the application can know that if it hits an ENOMEM, it's real and it has to retry. Fixing this inconsistency may very well cause us to let that new asoc to live longer, works for me too. > > > in this function, sctp tries to do 3 things: > > 1. flush rtx queue > > 2. transmit the packet of current transport > > 3. flush all the transports. > > Now sctp would do them one by one, even if one of them returns err. > > You probably need to explain what 'flush' means here. > I think it means 'process and send', but it might mean 'discard the > contents of'. Yes, the first. He probably use the work 'flush' because the function is called .._flush_.. > Last time I looked at the sctp code my head exploded. > ISTR it is a mess of timing errors waiting to happen > (and I write comms protocol stack code for a living). Well, it may be, but we are trying to improve it. Please continue discussing the fixes so we can keep improving it. :) Marcelo
RE: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
From: Xin Long > Sent: 16 August 2016 12:34 > > >> Both sctp_outq_flush_rtx and sctp_packet_transmit can ONLY > >> return one error (-ENOMEM), as sctp_outq_flush_rtx also calls > >> sctp_packet_transmit. > > > > What is the effect of the error? > > If it is 'just' equivalent to a lost ethernet packet (and the skb (etc) > > is freed) then the protocol will recover. > > If it is anything else then the error path is probably wrong. > > This err returns back to sctp_sendmsg, there sctp will abort asoc. That doesn't seem a good idea. You don't want to abort the association if there is a transient memory allocation failure. You also can't drop data chunks. > in this function, sctp tries to do 3 things: > 1. flush rtx queue > 2. transmit the packet of current transport > 3. flush all the transports. > Now sctp would do them one by one, even if one of them returns err. You probably need to explain what 'flush' means here. I think it means 'process and send', but it might mean 'discard the contents of'. Last time I looked at the sctp code my head exploded. ISTR it is a mess of timing errors waiting to happen (and I write comms protocol stack code for a living). David
Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
>> >> [1] >> Both sctp_outq_flush_rtx and sctp_packet_transmit can ONLY >> return one error (-ENOMEM), as sctp_outq_flush_rtx also calls >> sctp_packet_transmit. > > What is the effect of the error? > If it is 'just' equivalent to a lost ethernet packet (and the skb (etc) > is freed) then the protocol will recover. > If it is anything else then the error path is probably wrong. This err returns back to sctp_sendmsg, there sctp will abort asoc. in this function, sctp tries to do 3 things: 1. flush rtx queue 2. transmit the packet of current transport 3. flush all the transports. Now sctp would do them one by one, even if one of them returns err. > > Also after one error is it actually worth trying to send anything else > at all? ISTM that the code should either: yeah, that's the problem. the "sctp_flush_out:" code tries to force clear all the transport before returning even if there're errors already. > 1) wait for resources and retry. > 2) discard the entire queue (freeing resource) and hope the protocol >timers will recover. It's a different process, will think about it. > >> [2] >> It's the original codes that it doesn't return immediately when >> sctp_outq_flush_rtx returns error. I guess it just doesn't want >> to stop flushing out transport_list only because it fail to flush >> rtx. >> even sctp_packet_transmit_chunk in sctp_outq_flush also just >> put the error into sk->sk_err, instread of returning immediately. >> >> So we cannot return the err at the first failure as [2], the error >> here is always -ENOMEM as [1]. >> I think to return the last error here is ok, at least not dangerous, >> can also fix the issue "a success return may hide an error" with >> clear codes. :) > > Which code looks at sk->sk_err? > It doesn't look right to be setting an error code on the socket due > a transmit packet discard. I guess sctp_packet_transmit_chunk's return value is used for 'status' (like PMTU_FULL,RWND_FUL... ), that's why err was put into sk->sk_err. This err is supposed to be checked in sctp_sendmsg, but there sctp_error check sk->sk_err only when err == -EPIPE. yes, we need to fix this, thanks.
RE: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
From: Xin Long > Sent: 13 August 2016 08:48 > > > > This style of error handling is dangerous. The first error can be > > lost. > > > > For example, if sctp_outq_flush_rtx() earlier in this function returns > > an error, it will be lost if any invocation of the function > > sctp_packet_transmit() at the end function signals an error. > > > > I think you should always preserve the first error that is recorded > > into 'error'. > > > > I also wonder about why sctp_outq_flush_rtx() errors are completely > > ignored and don't influence the control flow here in any way. > > Yes, the first error can be lost. > Here we just keep the last error. We don't really have to return the > first error or return it on the first failure. > > [1] > Both sctp_outq_flush_rtx and sctp_packet_transmit can ONLY > return one error (-ENOMEM), as sctp_outq_flush_rtx also calls > sctp_packet_transmit. What is the effect of the error? If it is 'just' equivalent to a lost ethernet packet (and the skb (etc) is freed) then the protocol will recover. If it is anything else then the error path is probably wrong. Also after one error is it actually worth trying to send anything else at all? ISTM that the code should either: 1) wait for resources and retry. 2) discard the entire queue (freeing resource) and hope the protocol timers will recover. > [2] > It's the original codes that it doesn't return immediately when > sctp_outq_flush_rtx returns error. I guess it just doesn't want > to stop flushing out transport_list only because it fail to flush > rtx. > even sctp_packet_transmit_chunk in sctp_outq_flush also just > put the error into sk->sk_err, instread of returning immediately. > > So we cannot return the err at the first failure as [2], the error > here is always -ENOMEM as [1]. > I think to return the last error here is ok, at least not dangerous, > can also fix the issue "a success return may hide an error" with > clear codes. :) Which code looks at sk->sk_err? It doesn't look right to be setting an error code on the socket due a transmit packet discard. David
Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
> > This style of error handling is dangerous. The first error can be > lost. > > For example, if sctp_outq_flush_rtx() earlier in this function returns > an error, it will be lost if any invocation of the function > sctp_packet_transmit() at the end function signals an error. > > I think you should always preserve the first error that is recorded > into 'error'. > > I also wonder about why sctp_outq_flush_rtx() errors are completely > ignored and don't influence the control flow here in any way. Yes, the first error can be lost. Here we just keep the last error. We don't really have to return the first error or return it on the first failure. [1] Both sctp_outq_flush_rtx and sctp_packet_transmit can ONLY return one error (-ENOMEM), as sctp_outq_flush_rtx also calls sctp_packet_transmit. [2] It's the original codes that it doesn't return immediately when sctp_outq_flush_rtx returns error. I guess it just doesn't want to stop flushing out transport_list only because it fail to flush rtx. even sctp_packet_transmit_chunk in sctp_outq_flush also just put the error into sk->sk_err, instread of returning immediately. So we cannot return the err at the first failure as [2], the error here is always -ENOMEM as [1]. I think to return the last error here is ok, at least not dangerous, can also fix the issue "a success return may hide an error" with clear codes. :)
Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
From: Xin Long Date: Thu, 11 Aug 2016 20:52:58 +0800 > Now in the end of sctp_outq_flush, sctp calls sctp_packet_transmit > in a loop. The return of current sctp_packet_transmit always covers > the prior one's. If the last call of sctp_packet_transmit return a > success, it may hide the error that returns from the prior call. > > This patch is to fix this by keeping the old error until the new > error returns from sctp_packet_transmit. Did TAHI test against this > fix, no regression is found. > > Signed-off-by: Xin Long This style of error handling is dangerous. The first error can be lost. For example, if sctp_outq_flush_rtx() earlier in this function returns an error, it will be lost if any invocation of the function sctp_packet_transmit() at the end function signals an error. I think you should always preserve the first error that is recorded into 'error'. I also wonder about why sctp_outq_flush_rtx() errors are completely ignored and don't influence the control flow here in any way.
Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
On Thu, Aug 11, 2016 at 08:52:58PM +0800, Xin Long wrote: > Now in the end of sctp_outq_flush, sctp calls sctp_packet_transmit > in a loop. The return of current sctp_packet_transmit always covers > the prior one's. If the last call of sctp_packet_transmit return a > success, it may hide the error that returns from the prior call. > > This patch is to fix this by keeping the old error until the new > error returns from sctp_packet_transmit. Did TAHI test against this > fix, no regression is found. > > Signed-off-by: Xin Long > --- > net/sctp/outqueue.c | 2 +- > 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) > > diff --git a/net/sctp/outqueue.c b/net/sctp/outqueue.c > index 72e54a4..b97c8ad 100644 > --- a/net/sctp/outqueue.c > +++ b/net/sctp/outqueue.c > @@ -1193,7 +1193,7 @@ sctp_flush_out: > send_ready); > packet = &t->packet; > if (!sctp_packet_empty(packet)) > - error = sctp_packet_transmit(packet, gfp); > + error = sctp_packet_transmit(packet, gfp) ? : error; > > /* Clear the burst limited state, if any */ > sctp_transport_burst_reset(t); > -- > 2.1.0 > > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sctp" in > the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > Acked-by: Neil Horman
Re: [PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
On Thu, Aug 11, 2016 at 08:52:58PM +0800, Xin Long wrote: > Now in the end of sctp_outq_flush, sctp calls sctp_packet_transmit > in a loop. The return of current sctp_packet_transmit always covers > the prior one's. If the last call of sctp_packet_transmit return a > success, it may hide the error that returns from the prior call. > > This patch is to fix this by keeping the old error until the new > error returns from sctp_packet_transmit. Did TAHI test against this > fix, no regression is found. > > Signed-off-by: Xin Long Acked-by: Marcelo Ricardo Leitner > --- > net/sctp/outqueue.c | 2 +- > 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) > > diff --git a/net/sctp/outqueue.c b/net/sctp/outqueue.c > index 72e54a4..b97c8ad 100644 > --- a/net/sctp/outqueue.c > +++ b/net/sctp/outqueue.c > @@ -1193,7 +1193,7 @@ sctp_flush_out: > send_ready); > packet = &t->packet; > if (!sctp_packet_empty(packet)) > - error = sctp_packet_transmit(packet, gfp); > + error = sctp_packet_transmit(packet, gfp) ? : error; > > /* Clear the burst limited state, if any */ > sctp_transport_burst_reset(t); > -- > 2.1.0 >
[PATCH net] sctp: fix a success return may hide an error
Now in the end of sctp_outq_flush, sctp calls sctp_packet_transmit in a loop. The return of current sctp_packet_transmit always covers the prior one's. If the last call of sctp_packet_transmit return a success, it may hide the error that returns from the prior call. This patch is to fix this by keeping the old error until the new error returns from sctp_packet_transmit. Did TAHI test against this fix, no regression is found. Signed-off-by: Xin Long --- net/sctp/outqueue.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/net/sctp/outqueue.c b/net/sctp/outqueue.c index 72e54a4..b97c8ad 100644 --- a/net/sctp/outqueue.c +++ b/net/sctp/outqueue.c @@ -1193,7 +1193,7 @@ sctp_flush_out: send_ready); packet = &t->packet; if (!sctp_packet_empty(packet)) - error = sctp_packet_transmit(packet, gfp); + error = sctp_packet_transmit(packet, gfp) ? : error; /* Clear the burst limited state, if any */ sctp_transport_burst_reset(t); -- 2.1.0