Re: [PATCH 7/8] net: Allow setting the network namespace by fd
From: jamal
Date: Fri Sep 24 2010 - 09:33:03 EST
On Fri, 2010-09-24 at 14:57 +0200, David Lamparter wrote:
> No. While you sure could associate routes with devices, they don't
> *functionally* reside on top of network devices. They reside on top of
> the entire IP configuration,
I think i am not clearly making my point. There are data dependencies;
If you were to move routes, youd need everything that routes depend on.
IOW, if i was to draw a functional graph, routes would appear on top
of netdevs (I dont care what other functional blocks you put in between
or sideways to them).
> and in case of BGP they even reside on top
> of your set of peerings and their data.
> Even if you could "move" routes together with a network device, the
> result would be utter nonsense.
You could argue that moving a netdevice where some of its fundamental
properties such as an ifindex change is utter nonsense. But you can
work around it.
> The routes depend on your BGP view, and
> if your set of interfaces (and peers) changes, your routes will change.
> Your bgpd will, either way, need to set up new peerings and redo best
> path evaluations.
Worst case scenario, yes. I am beginning to get a feeling we are trying
to achieve different goals maybe? Why are you even migrating netdevs?
> (On an unrelated note, how often are you planning to move stuff between
> namespaces? I don't expect to be moving stuff except on configuration
> events...)
Triggering on config events is useful and it is likely the only
possibility if you assumed the other namespace is remote. But if could
send a single command to migrate several things in the kernel (in my
case to recover state to a different ns), then that is much simpler and
uses the least resources (memory, cpu, bandwidth). I admit it is very
hard to do in most cases where the underlying dependencies are evolving
and synchronizing via user space is the best approach. The example
of route table i pointed to is simple.
Besides that: dynamic state created in the kernel that doesnt have to be
recreated by the next arriving 100K packets helps to improve recovery.
cheers,
jamal
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