rewrite of rt_check() (now rt_check_fib())
Julian Elischer
julian at elischer.org
Wed Sep 10 00:25:17 UTC 2008
Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
> Hi Julian.
>
> Has anyone else tested this patch? I'm going to have a bit of time to
> try reproducing this again in the following days. Is this patch version
> the last one you have written? Should I patch with this one and give it
> a try?
I think this was the last one.
>
> FWIW, reading through this version of rt_check_fib() is nicer, and I
> really liked the comment that explains how it works :-)
>
> On Fri, 05 Sep 2008 16:13:53 -0700, Julian Elischer <julian at elischer.org> wrote:
>> this time with less (I hope) bugs...
>>
>> new macros...
>>
>> #define RT_TEMP_UNLOCK(_rt) do { \
>> RT_ADDREF(_rt); \
>> RT_UNLOCK(_rt); \
>> } while (0)
>>
>> #define RT_RELOCK(_rt) do { \
>> RT_LOCK(_rt) \
>> if ((_rt)->rt_refcnt <= 1) \
>> rtfree(_rt); \
>> _rt = 0; /* signal that it went away */ \
>> else { \
>> RT_REMREF(_rt); \
>> /* note that _rt is still valid */ \
>> } \
>> } while (0)
>>
>>
>> with (better) code attached:
>>
>> /*
>> * rt_check() is invoked on each layer 2 output path, prior to
>> * encapsulating outbound packets.
>> *
>> * The function is mostly used to find a routing entry for the gateway,
>> * which in some protocol families could also point to the link-level
>> * address for the gateway itself (the side effect of revalidating the
>> * route to the destination is rather pointless at this stage, we did it
>> * already a moment before in the pr_output() routine to locate the ifp
>> * and gateway to use).
>> *
>> * When we remove the layer-3 to layer-2 mapping tables from the
>> * routing table, this function can be removed.
>> *
>> * === On input ===
>> * *dst is the address of the NEXT HOP (which coincides with the
>> * final destination if directly reachable);
>> * *lrt0 points to the cached route to the final destination;
>> * *lrt is not meaningful;
>> * fibnum is the index to the correct network fib for this packet
>> * (*lrt0 has not ref held on it so REMREF is not needed )
>> *
>> * === Operation ===
>> * If the route is marked down try to find a new route. If the route
>> * to the gateway is gone, try to setup a new route. Otherwise,
>> * if the route is marked for packets to be rejected, enforce that.
>> * Note that rtalloc returns an rtentry with an extra REF that we need to lose.
>> *
>> * === On return ===
>> * *dst is unchanged;
>> * *lrt0 points to the (possibly new) route to the final destination
>> * *lrt points to the route to the next hop [LOCKED]
>> *
>> * Their values are meaningful ONLY if no error is returned.
>> *
>> * To follow this you have to remember that:
>> * RT_REMREF reduces the reference count by 1 but doesn't check it for 0 (!)
>> * RTFREE_LOCKED includes an RT_REMREF (or an rtfree if refs == 1)
>> * and an RT_UNLOCK
>> * RTFREE does an RT_LOCK and an RTFREE_LOCKED
>> * The gwroute pointer counts as a reference on the rtentry to which it points.
>> * so when we add it we use the ref that rtalloc gives us and when we lose it
>> * we need to remove the reference.
>> */
>> int
>> rt_check(struct rtentry **lrt, struct rtentry **lrt0, struct sockaddr *dst)
>> {
>> return (rt_check_fib(lrt, lrt0, dst, 0));
>> }
>>
>> int
>> rt_check_fib(struct rtentry **lrt, struct rtentry **lrt0, struct sockaddr *dst,
>> u_int fibnum)
>> {
>> struct rtentry *rt;
>> struct rtentry *rt0;
>> int error;
>>
>> KASSERT(*lrt0 != NULL, ("rt_check"));
>> rt0 = *lrt0;
>> rt = NULL;
>>
>> /* NB: the locking here is tortuous... */
>> RT_LOCK(rt0);
>> retry:
>> if (rt0 && (rt0->rt_flags & RTF_UP) == 0) {
>> /* Current rt0 is useless, try get a replacement. */
>> RT_UNLOCK(rt0);
>> rt0 = NULL;
>> }
>> if (rt0 == NULL) {
>> rt0 = rtalloc1_fib(dst, 1, 0UL, fibnum);
>> if (rt0 == NULL) {
>> return (EHOSTUNREACH);
>> }
>> RT_REMREF(rt0); /* don't need the reference. */
>> }
>>
>> if (rt0->rt_flags & RTF_GATEWAY) {
>> if ((rt = rt0->rt_gwroute) != NULL) {
>> RT_LOCK(rt); /* NB: gwroute */
>> if ((rt->rt_flags & RTF_UP) == 0) {
>> /* gw route is dud. ignore/lose it */
>> RTFREE_LOCKED(rt); /* unref (&unlock) gwroute */
>> rt = rt0->rt_gwroute = NULL;
>> }
>> }
>>
>> if (rt == NULL) { /* NOT AN ELSE CLAUSE */
>> RT_TEMP_UNLOCK(rt0); /* MUST return to undo this */
>> rt = rtalloc1_fib(rt0->rt_gateway, 1, 0UL, fibnum);
>> if ((rt == rt0) || (rt == NULL)) {
>> /* the best we can do is not good enough */
>> if (rt) {
>> RT_REMREF(rt); /* assumes ref > 0 */
>> RT_UNLOCK(rt);
>> }
>> RT_FREE(rt0); /* lock, unref, (unlock) */
>> return (ENETUNREACH);
>> }
>> /*
>> * Relock it and lose the added reference.
>> * All sorts of things could have happenned while we
>> * had no lock on it, so check for them.
>> */
>> RT_RELOCK(rt0);
>> if (rt0 == NULL || ((rt0->rt_flags & RTF_UP) == 0))
>> /* Ru-roh.. what we had is no longer any good */
>> goto retry;
>> /*
>> * While we were away, someone replaced the gateway.
>> * Since a reference count is involved we can't just
>> * overwrite it.
>> */
>> if (rt0->rt_gwroute) {
>> if (rt0->rt_gwroute != rt) {
>> RT_FREE_LOCKED(rt);
>> goto retry;
>> }
>> } else {
>> rt0->rt_gwroute = rt;
>> }
>> }
>> RT_LOCK_ASSERT(rt);
>> RT_UNLOCK(rt0);
>> } else {
>> /* think of rt as having the lock from now on.. */
>> rt = rt0;
>> }
>> /* XXX why are we inspecting rmx_expire? */
>> if ((rt->rt_flags & RTF_REJECT) &&
>> (rt->rt_rmx.rmx_expire == 0 ||
>> time_uptime < rt->rt_rmx.rmx_expire)) {
>> RT_UNLOCK(rt);
>> return (rt == rt0 ? EHOSTDOWN : EHOSTUNREACH);
>> }
>>
>> *lrt = rt;
>> *lrt0 = rt0;
>> return (0);
>> }
More information about the freebsd-net
mailing list