Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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There were more conflicts that I'd like to see, most notably in route
export. If a bisect identifies this commit with something related, it
may be simply true that this commit introduces that bug. Let's hope it
doesn't happen.
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Changes in internal API:
* Every route attribute must be defined as struct ea_class somewhere.
* Registration of route attributes known at startup must be done by
ea_register_init() from protocol build functions.
* Every attribute has now its symbol registered in a global symbol table
defined as SYM_ATTRIBUTE
* All attribute ID's are dynamically allocated.
* Attribute value custom formatting hook is defined in the ea_class.
* Attribute names are the same for display and filters, always prefixed
by protocol name.
Also added some unit testing code for filters with route attributes.
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unnecessary syscalls"
This reverts commit 7f0e59820899c30a243c18556ce2e3fb72d6d221.
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This feature is intended mostly for checking that BIRD's allocation
strategies don't consume much memory space. There are some cases where
withdrawing routes in a specific order lead to memory fragmentation and
this output should give the user at least a notion of how much memory is
actually used for data storage and how much memory is "just allocated"
or used for overhead.
Also raising the "system allocator overhead estimation" from 8 to 16
bytes; it is probably even more. I've found 16 as a local minimum in
best scenarios among reachable machines. I couldn't find any reasonable
method to estimate this value when BIRD starts up.
This commit also fixes the inaccurate computation of memory overhead for
slabs where the "system allocater overhead estimation" was improperly
added to the size of mmap-ed memory.
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unnecessary syscalls
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From now, there are no auxiliary pointers stored in the free slab nodes.
This led to strange debugging problems if use-after-free happened in
slab-allocated structures, especially if the structure's first member is
a next pointer.
This also reduces the memory needed by 1 pointer per allocated object.
OTOH, we now rely on pages being aligned to their size's multiple, which
is quite common anyway.
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The babel protocol code was initialising objects returned from the slab
allocator by assigning to each of the struct members individually, but
wasn't touching the NODE member while doing so. This leads to warnings on
debug builds since commit:
baac7009063d ("List expensive check.")
To fix this, introduce an sl_allocz() variant of the slab allocator which
will zero out the memory before returning it, and switch all the babel call
sites to use this version. The overhead for doing this should be negligible
for small objects, and in the case of babel, the largest object being
allocated was being zeroed anyway, so we can drop the memset in
babel_read_tlv().
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Also change linpool.current ptr to really point to thr current chunk.
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The RPKI protocol (RFC 6810) using the RTRLib
(http://rpki.realmv6.org/) that is integrated inside
the BIRD's code.
Implemeted transports are:
- unprotected transport over TCP
- secure transport over SSHv2
Example configuration of bird.conf:
...
roa4 table r4;
roa6 table r6;
protocol rpki {
debug all;
# Import both IPv4 and IPv6 ROAs
roa4 { table r4; };
roa6 { table r6; };
# Set cache server (validator) address,
# overwrite default port 323
remote "rpki-validator.realmv6.org" port 8282;
# Overwrite default time intervals
retry 10; # Default 600 seconds
refresh 60; # Default 3600 seconds
expire 600; # Default 7200 seconds
}
protocol rpki {
debug all;
# Import only IPv4 routes
roa4 { table r4; };
# Set cache server address to localhost,
# use default ports tcp => 323 or ssh => 22
remote 127.0.0.1;
# Use SSH transport instead of unprotected transport over TCP
ssh encryption {
bird private key "/home/birdgeek/.ssh/id_rsa";
remote public key "/home/birdgeek/.ssh/known_hosts";
user "birdgeek";
};
}
...
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Now it compiles and mostly works.
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Also does some reorganization in RT LSA announcement.
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to see what resource does the address given as a parameter belong to.
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xmalloc to bird_xmalloc internally.
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memory available for subsequent allocations from the same pool. Both flushing
and re-using the memory costs just few instructions.
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over EFence and also hopefully smaller memory overhead, but sadly it's non-free
for commercial use).
If the DMALLOC_OPTIONS environment variable is not set, switch on `reasonable'
checks by default.
Also introduced mb_allocz() for cleared mb_alloc().
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- cfg_strcpy() -> cfg_strdup()
- mempool -> linpool, mp_* -> lp_* [to avoid confusion with memblock, mb_*]
Anyway, it might be better to stop ranting about names and do some *real* work.
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Complete resource manages and IP address handling.
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gcc -MM can be used to separate them from the system ones.
Added automatic generation of dependencies.
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