diff options
author | Tuong Lien <tuong.t.lien@dektech.com.au> | 2019-07-24 08:56:12 +0700 |
---|---|---|
committer | David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> | 2019-07-25 15:55:47 -0700 |
commit | 2320bcdae62887555701ea78a46b640ff6b63868 (patch) | |
tree | 9823f2ab5b41438842517ae8647904c9aa7b943b /net/tipc/msg.h | |
parent | 4929a932be334d68d333089872bc67e4f1d97475 (diff) |
tipc: fix changeover issues due to large packet
In conjunction with changing the interfaces' MTU (e.g. especially in
the case of a bonding) where the TIPC links are brought up and down
in a short time, a couple of issues were detected with the current link
changeover mechanism:
1) When one link is up but immediately forced down again, the failover
procedure will be carried out in order to failover all the messages in
the link's transmq queue onto the other working link. The link and node
state is also set to FAILINGOVER as part of the process. The message
will be transmited in form of a FAILOVER_MSG, so its size is plus of 40
bytes (= the message header size). There is no problem if the original
message size is not larger than the link's MTU - 40, and indeed this is
the max size of a normal payload messages. However, in the situation
above, because the link has just been up, the messages in the link's
transmq are almost SYNCH_MSGs which had been generated by the link
synching procedure, then their size might reach the max value already!
When the FAILOVER_MSG is built on the top of such a SYNCH_MSG, its size
will exceed the link's MTU. As a result, the messages are dropped
silently and the failover procedure will never end up, the link will
not be able to exit the FAILINGOVER state, so cannot be re-established.
2) The same scenario above can happen more easily in case the MTU of
the links is set differently or when changing. In that case, as long as
a large message in the failure link's transmq queue was built and
fragmented with its link's MTU > the other link's one, the issue will
happen (there is no need of a link synching in advance).
3) The link synching procedure also faces with the same issue but since
the link synching is only started upon receipt of a SYNCH_MSG, dropping
the message will not result in a state deadlock, but it is not expected
as design.
The 1) & 3) issues are resolved by the last commit that only a dummy
SYNCH_MSG (i.e. without data) is generated at the link synching, so the
size of a FAILOVER_MSG if any then will never exceed the link's MTU.
For the 2) issue, the only solution is trying to fragment the messages
in the failure link's transmq queue according to the working link's MTU
so they can be failovered then. A new function is made to accomplish
this, it will still be a TUNNEL PROTOCOL/FAILOVER MSG but if the
original message size is too large, it will be fragmented & reassembled
at the receiving side.
Acked-by: Ying Xue <ying.xue@windriver.com>
Acked-by: Jon Maloy <jon.maloy@ericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Tuong Lien <tuong.t.lien@dektech.com.au>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'net/tipc/msg.h')
-rw-r--r-- | net/tipc/msg.h | 18 |
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/net/tipc/msg.h b/net/tipc/msg.h index fca042cdff88..1c8c8dd32a4e 100644 --- a/net/tipc/msg.h +++ b/net/tipc/msg.h @@ -721,12 +721,26 @@ static inline void msg_set_last_bcast(struct tipc_msg *m, u32 n) msg_set_bits(m, 4, 16, 0xffff, n); } +static inline u32 msg_nof_fragms(struct tipc_msg *m) +{ + return msg_bits(m, 4, 0, 0xffff); +} + +static inline void msg_set_nof_fragms(struct tipc_msg *m, u32 n) +{ + msg_set_bits(m, 4, 0, 0xffff, n); +} + +static inline u32 msg_fragm_no(struct tipc_msg *m) +{ + return msg_bits(m, 4, 16, 0xffff); +} + static inline void msg_set_fragm_no(struct tipc_msg *m, u32 n) { msg_set_bits(m, 4, 16, 0xffff, n); } - static inline u16 msg_next_sent(struct tipc_msg *m) { return msg_bits(m, 4, 0, 0xffff); @@ -1045,6 +1059,8 @@ bool tipc_msg_bundle(struct sk_buff *skb, struct tipc_msg *msg, u32 mtu); bool tipc_msg_make_bundle(struct sk_buff **skb, struct tipc_msg *msg, u32 mtu, u32 dnode); bool tipc_msg_extract(struct sk_buff *skb, struct sk_buff **iskb, int *pos); +int tipc_msg_fragment(struct sk_buff *skb, const struct tipc_msg *hdr, + int pktmax, struct sk_buff_head *frags); int tipc_msg_build(struct tipc_msg *mhdr, struct msghdr *m, int offset, int dsz, int mtu, struct sk_buff_head *list); bool tipc_msg_lookup_dest(struct net *net, struct sk_buff *skb, int *err); |