6.2 mtu now limits size of incomming packet
Eli Dart
dart at es.net
Fri Jul 20 19:09:45 UTC 2007
see below...
Julian Elischer wrote:
> Eli Dart wrote:
>>
>>
>> Stephen Clark wrote:
>>
>>>>
>>> So was any decision reached on this issue - will FreeBSD changed
>>> to accept a packet on an interface that is larger than the mtu on
>>> that interface?
>>
>> If possible, I'd like to see the ability to enforce interface MTU
>> for received packets preserved in a sysctl if it is removed for the
>> default config... In other words, something like:
>>
>> net.link.mtu_limits_received_pktsize = 0|1
>>
>> Then, default it to 0 to preserve 4.x behavior.
>
> what would this achieve?
>
> Answering himself.. it MAY allow a driver to optimise a bit by not
> needing to cope with the posibility of receiving jubo packets? I can
> not think of any other reason.. (except to break networks that are
> apparently working fine).
The networks that are apparently working fine are most likely
misconfigured, IMHO.
Others have made a case for permitting an interface to accept as large a
packet as it can, regardless of configured MTU. That's fine for theory.
My operational experience leads me to a different place. If an
interface receives a packet that is larger than its configured MTU, I
would prefer that the packet be dropped as a giant and a giants counter
incremented, regardless of whether the hardware can theoretically
receive the packet. In modern networks, an MTU mismatch within a
broadcast domain indicates a broken network, IMHO. If the devices in
the network are configured to enforce MTU for both tx and rx, more
problems get spotted during turnup, rather than surfacing later on as
difficult-to-diagnose problems that users only call about after they are
truly frustrated. And, if you have a giants counter (or input error
counter) you can look at, it makes it straightforward to spot the problem.
(one could also stretch a bit and say that enforcing MTU on rx might
provide less surprise to code that consumes packets and has knowledge of
the MTU setting of an interface.....unfortunately I don't know enough
about the details of the network stack to know if this is a real concern)
Many thanks,
--eli
--
Eli Dart Office: (510) 486-5629
ESnet Network Engineering Group Fax: (510) 486-6712
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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