it again when going from INITIAL to STARTING. This has been done for
passive or auto-conecting interfaces always, but not for permanent
ones.
This fixes session reestablishement for PPPoE interfaces without LINK1 set,
and probably also closes PR kern/11161.
Thanks to Jared D. McNeill and Ross Harvey for sugesting debug methology.
Collect both local and remote address and set them to the interface in
one step (the peer adress was not set at all before).
This causes the peer address now to show up on the interface and all
messages to the routing socket to be send with correct data. The latter
has been the last missing piece to complete PPPoE support.
the bit mask of open NCPs got out of sync.
Defer the (potential) closing of LCP after a NCP went down until after
the state machines got updated.
This fixes PR kern/11161.
In this mode, the PPP packets start with the protocol identifier and don't
have any explicit framing (which may be added by the lower level driver).
Make input/output statistics a little bit more correct by adding a hardware
driver adjustable framing length for each packet (instead of the constant
value "3" used before).
While there, bump authentication name length from 32 to 48 (I have a
connection where I need more than 32). XXX - this should not be artificialy
limited at all.
the link level name for the interface (ifp->if_sadl) is allocated
before ifp->if_addrlen is initialized, which could lead to allocating
too little space for the link level address.
Do this by splitting allocation of the link level name out of
if_attach() and into if_alloc_sadl(), which is normally called
by functions like ether_ifattach(). Network interfaces which
don't have a link-specific attach routine must call if_alloc_sadl()
themselves (example: gif).
Link level names are freed by if_free_sadl(), which can be called
from e.g. ether_ifdetach(). Drivers never need call if_free_sadl()
themselves as if_detach() will do it if it is not already done.
While here, add the ability to pass an AF_LINK address to
SIOCSIFADDR in ether_ioctl() (this is what caused me to notice
the problem that the above fixes).
Rumors say there are archs without ISA busses, so avoid including
(uneccesarily) isa bus headers in MI files.
XXX this is the minimal solution, layer interface calls will have
XXX to be revisited later
the interface tries to negotiate ifid with the other end by using IPv6CP.
other changes:
- do not share ppp sequence number across protocols.
- if LCP proto-rej is received, drop the protocol mentioned by the message.
this is to be friendly with non-IPv6 peer (if the peer complains due to
lack of IPv6CP, drop IPv6CP). this basically implements "RXJ+" state
transition in the RFC.
- cleanup debugging message. always print blank just before message.
CAVEAT:
- if the peer uses the same MAC address as our side (pretty unlikely)
the code may go into req-rej loop.
- even though we negotiate ifid, we don't configure destination address
onto the interface. it is not really necessary to do so (IMHO).
- I've tested this code on a NetBSD 1.4.2 node, which was with fair amount
of modifications. not sure if the committed code does it right... (please
test and send reports)
timeout()/untimeout() API:
- Clients supply callout handle storage, thus eliminating problems of
resource allocation.
- Insertion and removal of callouts is constant time, important as
this facility is used quite a lot in the kernel.
The old timeout()/untimeout() API has been removed from the kernel.