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Formerly, when a packet is constructed or parsed, all headers are set by the
client code. This almost always involved prepending to pk.Header buffer or
trimming pk.Data portion. This is known to prone to bugs, due to the complexity
and number of the invariants assumed across netstack to maintain.
In the new PacketHeader API, client will call Push()/Consume() method to
construct/parse an outgoing/incoming packet. All invariants, such as slicing
and trimming, are maintained by the API itself.
NewPacketBuffer() is introduced to create new PacketBuffer. Zero value is no
longer valid.
PacketBuffer now assumes the packet is a concatenation of following portions:
* LinkHeader
* NetworkHeader
* TransportHeader
* Data
Any of them could be empty, or zero-length.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 326507688
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Envoy (#170) uses this to get the original destination of redirected
packets.
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 322882426
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Fixes a NAT bug that manifested as:
- A SYN was sent from gVisor to another host, unaffected by iptables.
- The corresponding SYN/ACK was NATted by a PREROUTING REDIRECT rule
despite being part of the existing connection.
- The socket that sent the SYN never received the SYN/ACK and thus a
connection could not be established.
We handle this (as Linux does) by tracking all connections, inserting a
no-op conntrack rule for new connections with no rules of their own.
Needed for istio support (#170).
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For iptables users, Check() is a hot path called for every packet one or more
times. Let's avoid a bunch of map lookups.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 322678699
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This is no longer necessary, as we always set NetworkHeader before calling
iptables.Check.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 321461978
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As in Linux, we must periodically clean up unused connections.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 321003353
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- Split connTrackForPacket into 2 functions instead of switching on flag
- Replace hash with struct keys.
- Remove prefixes where possible
- Remove unused connStatus, timeout
- Flatten ConnTrack struct a bit - some intermediate structs had no meaning
outside of the context of their parent.
- Protect conn.tcb with a mutex
- Remove redundant error checking (e.g. when is pkt.NetworkHeader valid)
- Clarify that HandlePacket and CreateConnFor are the expected entrypoints for
ConnTrack
PiperOrigin-RevId: 318407168
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Users that never set iptables rules shouldn't incur the iptables performance
cost. Suggested by Ian (@iangudger).
PiperOrigin-RevId: 317232921
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Metadata was useful for debugging and safety, but enough tests exist that we
should see failures when (de)serialization is broken. It made stack
initialization more cumbersome and it's also getting in the way of ip6tables.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 317210653
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IPTables.connections contains a sync.RWMutex. Copying it will trigger copylocks
analysis. Tested by manually enabling nogo tests.
sync.RWMutex is added to IPTables for the additional race condition discovered.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 314817019
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Historically we've been passing PacketBuffer by shallow copying through out
the stack. Right now, this is only correct as the caller would not use
PacketBuffer after passing into the next layer in netstack.
With new buffer management effort in gVisor/netstack, PacketBuffer will
own a Buffer (to be added). Internally, both PacketBuffer and Buffer may
have pointers and shallow copying shouldn't be used.
Updates #2404.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 314610879
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Enables commands with -o (--out-interface) for iptables rules.
$ iptables -A OUTPUT -o eth0 -j ACCEPT
PiperOrigin-RevId: 310642286
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Connection tracking is used to track packets in prerouting and
output hooks of iptables. The NAT rules modify the tuples in
connections. The connection tracking code modifies the packets by
looking at the modified tuples.
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 309491861
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 308674219
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These methods let users eaily break the VectorisedView abstraction, and
allowed netstack to slip into pseudo-enforcement of the "all headers are
in the first View" invariant. Removing them and replacing with PullUp(n)
breaks this reliance and will make it easier to add iptables support and
rework network buffer management.
The new View.PullUp(n) method is low cost in the common case, when when
all the headers fit in the first View.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 308163542
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 307598974
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These methods let users eaily break the VectorisedView abstraction, and
allowed netstack to slip into pseudo-enforcement of the "all headers are
in the first View" invariant. Removing them and replacing with PullUp(n)
breaks this reliance and will make it easier to add iptables support and
rework network buffer management.
The new View.PullUp(n) method is low cost in the common case, when when
all the headers fit in the first View.
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Software GSO implementation currently has a complicated code path with
implicit assumptions that all packets to WritePackets carry same Data
and it does this to avoid allocations on the path etc. But this makes it
hard to reuse the WritePackets API.
This change breaks all such assumptions by introducing a new Vectorised
View API ReadToVV which can be used to cleanly split a VV into multiple
independent VVs. Further this change also makes packet buffers linkable
to form an intrusive list. This allows us to get rid of the array of
packet buffers that are passed in the WritePackets API call and replace
it with a list of packet buffers.
While this code does introduce some more allocations in the benchmarks
it doesn't cause any degradation.
Updates #231
PiperOrigin-RevId: 304731742
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This is a precursor to be being able to build an intrusive list
of PacketBuffers for use in queuing disciplines being implemented.
Updates #2214
PiperOrigin-RevId: 302677662
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