Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH] xen-netfront: Fix handling packets on compound pages with skb_linearize

From: Zoltan Kiss
Date: Mon Dec 01 2014 - 08:59:20 EST




On 01/12/14 13:36, David Vrabel wrote:
On 01/12/14 08:55, Stefan Bader wrote:
On 11.08.2014 19:32, Zoltan Kiss wrote:
There is a long known problem with the netfront/netback interface: if the guest
tries to send a packet which constitues more than MAX_SKB_FRAGS + 1 ring slots,
it gets dropped. The reason is that netback maps these slots to a frag in the
frags array, which is limited by size. Having so many slots can occur since
compound pages were introduced, as the ring protocol slice them up into
individual (non-compound) page aligned slots. The theoretical worst case
scenario looks like this (note, skbs are limited to 64 Kb here):
linear buffer: at most PAGE_SIZE - 17 * 2 bytes, overlapping page boundary,
using 2 slots
first 15 frags: 1 + PAGE_SIZE + 1 bytes long, first and last bytes are at the
end and the beginning of a page, therefore they use 3 * 15 = 45 slots
last 2 frags: 1 + 1 bytes, overlapping page boundary, 2 * 2 = 4 slots
Although I don't think this 51 slots skb can really happen, we need a solution
which can deal with every scenario. In real life there is only a few slots
overdue, but usually it causes the TCP stream to be blocked, as the retry will
most likely have the same buffer layout.
This patch solves this problem by linearizing the packet. This is not the
fastest way, and it can fail much easier as it tries to allocate a big linear
area for the whole packet, but probably easier by an order of magnitude than
anything else. Probably this code path is not touched very frequently anyway.

Signed-off-by: Zoltan Kiss <zoltan.kiss@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Wei Liu <wei.liu2@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Ian Campbell <Ian.Campbell@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Paul Durrant <paul.durrant@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

This does not seem to be marked explicitly as stable. Has someone already asked
David Miller to put it on his stable queue? IMO it qualifies quite well and the
actual change should be simple to pick/backport.

I think it's a candidate, yes.

Can you expand on the user visible impact of the bug this patch fixes?
I think it results in certain types of traffic not working (because the
domU always generates skb's with the problematic frag layout), but I
can't remember the details.

Yes, this line in the comment talks about it: "In real life there is only a few slots overdue, but usually it causes the TCP stream to be blocked, as the retry will most likely have the same buffer layout."
Maybe we can add what kind of traffic triggered this so far, AFAIK NFS was one of them, and Stefan had an another use case. But my memories are blur about this.

Zoli
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