ip_output(). This flag, if set, causes ip_output() to set
DF in the IP header if the MTU in the route is not locked.
This allows a bunch of redundant code, which I was never
really all that happy about adding in the first place, to
be eliminated.
Inspired by a similar change made by provos@openbsd.org when
he integrated NetBSD's Path MTU Discovery code into OpenBSD.
basis. default: 100pps
set default value for net.inet.tcp.rstratelimit to 0 (disabled),
NOTE: it does not work right for smaller-than-1/hz interval. maybe we should
nuke it, or make it impossible to set smaller-than-1/hz value.
unspecified address (::) to mean "unbounded" or "unconnected",
and can be confused by packets from outside.
use of :: as source is not documented well in IPv6 specification.
not sure if it presents a real threat. the worst case scenario is a DoS
against TCP listening socket:
- outsider transmit TCP SYN with :: as IPv6 source
- receiving side creates TCP control block with:
local address = my addres
remote address = :: (meaning "unconnected")
state = SYN_RCVD
note that SYN ACK will not be sent due to ip6_output() filter.
this stays until it timeouts.
- the TCP control block prevents listening TCP control block from
being contacted (DoS).
udp6/raw6 socket may have similar problem, but as they are connectionless,
it may too much to filter it out.
- add protection mechanism against ND cache corruption due to bad NUD hints.
- more stats
- icmp6 pps limitation. TOOD: should implement ppsratecheck(9).
between protocol handlers.
ipsec socket pointers, ipsec decryption/auth information, tunnel
decapsulation information are in my mind - there can be several other usage.
at this moment, we use this for ipsec socket pointer passing. this will
avoid reuse of m->m_pkthdr.rcvif in ipsec code.
due to the change, MHLEN will be decreased by sizeof(void *) - for example,
for i386, MHLEN was 100 bytes, but is now 96 bytes.
we may want to increase MSIZE from 128 to 256 for some of our architectures.
take caution if you use it for keeping some data item for long period
of time - use extra caution on M_PREPEND() or m_adj(), as they may result
in loss of m->m_pkthdr.aux pointer (and mbuf leak).
this will bump kernel version.
(as discussed in tech-net, tested in kame tree)
- Filter out multicast destinations explicitly for every incoming packet,
not just SYNs. Previously, non-SYN multicast destination would be
filtered out as a side effect of PCB lookup. Remove now redundant
similar checks in the dropwithreset case and in syn_cache_add().
- Defer the TCP checksum until we know that we want to process the
packet (i.e. have a non-CLOSED connection or a listen socket).
- interop issues in ipcomp is fixed
- padding type (after ESP) is configurable
- key database memory management (need more fixes)
- policy specification is revisited
XXX m->m_pkthdr.rcvif is still overloaded - hope to fix it soon
due to massive changes in KAME side.
- IPv6 output goes through nd6_output
- faith can capture IPv4 packets as well - you can run IPv4-to-IPv6 translator
using heavily modified DNS servers
- per-interface statistics (required for IPv6 MIB)
- interface autoconfig is revisited
- udp input handling has a big change for mapped address support.
- introduce in4_cksum() for non-overwriting checksumming
- introduce m_pulldown()
- neighbor discovery cleanups/improvements
- netinet/in.h strictly conforms to RFC2553 (no extra defs visible to userland)
- IFA_STATS is fixed a bit (not tested)
- and more more more.
TODO:
- cleanup os-independency #ifdef
- avoid rcvif dual use (for IPsec) to help ifdetach
(sorry for jumbo commit, I can't separate this any more...)
MSS advertisement must always be:
max(if mtu) - ip hdr siz - tcp hdr siz
We violated this in the previous code so it was fixed.
tcp_mss_to_advertise() now takes af (af on wire) as its argument,
to compute right ip hdr siz.
tcp_segsize() will take care of IPsec header size.
One thing I'm not really sure is how to handle IPsec header size in
*rxsegsizep (inbound segment size estimation).
The current code subtracts possible *outbound* IPsec size from *rxsegsizep,
hoping that the peer is using the same IPsec policy as me.
It may not be applicable, could TCP gulu please comment...
New Reno fast recovery code was being executed even when New Reno was
disabled, resulting in an unfortunate interaction with the traditional
fast recovery code, the end resulting being that the very condition
that would trigger the traditional fast recovery mechanism caused fast
recovery to be disabled!
Problem reported by Ted Lemon, and some analytical help from Charles Hannum.
Stale syn cache entries are useless because none of them will be used
if there is no listening socket, as tcp_input looks up listening socket by
in_pcblookup*() before looking into syn cache.
This fixes race condition due to dangling socket pointer from syn cache
entries to listening socket (this was introduced when ipsec is merged in).
This should preserve currently implemented behavior (but not 4.4BSD
behavior prior to syn cache).
Tested in KAME repository before commit, but we'd better run some
regression tests.
- Make sure that snd_recover is always at least snd_una. If we don't do
this, there can be confusion when sequence numbers wrap around on a
large loss-free data transfer.
- When doing a New Reno retransmit, snd_una hasn't been updated yet,
and the socket's send buffer has not yet dropped off ACK'd data, so
don't muddle with snd_una, so that tcp_output() gets the correct data
offset.
- When doing a New Reno retransmit, make sure the congestion window is
open one segment beyond the ACK'd data, so that we can actually perform
the retransmit.
Partially derived from, although more complete than, similar changes in
OpenBSD, which in turn originated from Tom Henderson <tomh@cs.berkeley.edu>.
when ip header and tcp header are not adjacent to each other
(i.e. when ip6 options are attached).
To test this, try
telnet @::1@::1 port
toward a port without responding server. Prior to the fix, the kernel will
generate broken RST packet.
(Sorry for a big commit, I can't separate this into several pieces...)
Pls check sys/netinet6/TODO and sys/netinet6/IMPLEMENTATION for details.
- sys/kern: do not assume single mbuf, accept chained mbuf on passing
data from userland to kernel (or other way round).
- "midway" ATM card: ATM PVC pseudo device support, like those done in ALTQ
package (ftp://ftp.csl.sony.co.jp/pub/kjc/).
- sys/netinet/tcp*: IPv4/v6 dual stack tcp support.
- sys/netinet/{ip6,icmp6}.h, sys/net/pfkeyv2.h: IETF document assumes those
file to be there so we patch it up.
- sys/netinet: IPsec additions are here and there.
- sys/netinet6/*: most of IPv6 code sits here.
- sys/netkey: IPsec key management code
- dev/pci/pcidevs: regen
In my understanding no code here is subject to export control so it
should be safe.
where one side can think a connection exists, where the other side thinks
the connection was never established.
The original problem was first reported by Ty Sarna in PR #5909. The
original fix I made to the code didn't cover all cases. The problem this
fix addresses was reported by Christoph Badura via private e-mail.
Many thanks to Bill Sommerfeld for helping me to test this code, and
for finding a subtle bug.
- Don't use tcp_respond(), instead create the tcp/ip header from scratch,
and send it ourself.
- Reuse the mbuf that carried the SYN, or allocate one if that is not
available.
- Cache the route we look up to do the Path MTU Discovery check, and
transfer the reference to that route to the inpcb when the connection
completes.
* Macro'ize a small, but often repeated code fragment.