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PiperOrigin-RevId: 258859507
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iptables also relies on IPPROTO_RAW in a way. It opens such a socket to
manipulate the kernel's tables, but it doesn't actually use any of the
functionality. Blegh.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 257903078
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The implementation is similar to linux where we track the number of bytes
consumed by the application to grow the receive buffer of a given TCP endpoint.
This ensures that the advertised window grows at a reasonable rate to accomodate
for the sender's rate and prevents large amounts of data being held in stack
buffers if the application is not actively reading or not reading fast enough.
The original paper that was used to implement the linux receive buffer auto-
tuning is available @ https://public.lanl.gov/radiant/pubs/drs/lacsi2001.pdf
NOTE: Linux does not implement DRS as defined in that paper, it's just a good
reference to understand the solution space.
Updates #230
PiperOrigin-RevId: 253168283
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This can be merged after:
https://github.com/google/gvisor-website/pull/77
or
https://github.com/google/gvisor-website/pull/78
PiperOrigin-RevId: 253132620
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This is necessary for implementing network diagnostic interfaces like
/proc/net/{tcp,udp,unix} and sock_diag(7).
For pass-through endpoints such as hostinet, we obtain the socket
state from the backend. For netstack, we add explicit tracking of TCP
states.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 251934850
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Multicast packets are special in that their destination address does not
identify a specific interface. When sending out such a packet the multicast
address is the remote address, but for incoming packets it is the local
address. Hence, when looping a multicast packet, the route needs to be
tweaked to reflect this.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 251739298
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These wakers are uselessly allocated and passed around; nothing ever
listens for notifications on them. The code here appears to be
vestigial, so removing it and allowing a nil waker to be passed seems
appropriate.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 249879320
Change-Id: Icd209fb77cc0dd4e5c49d7a9f2adc32bf88b4b71
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 249511348
Change-Id: I34539092cc85032d9473ff4dd308fc29dc9bfd6b
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 246536003
Change-Id: I118b745f45040be9c70cb6a1028acdb06c78d8c9
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Fixed a small logic error that broke proper accounting of MultiPortEndpoints.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 246502126
Change-Id: I1a7d6ea134f811612e545676212899a3707bc2c2
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This requires two changes:
1) Support for more than one socket to join a given multicast group.
2) Duplicate delivery of incoming multicast packets to all sockets listening
for it.
In addition, I tweaked the code (and added a test) to disallow duplicates
IP_ADD_MEMBERSHIP calls for the same group and NIC. This is how Linux does
it.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 246437315
Change-Id: Icad8300b4a8c3f501d9b4cd283bd3beabef88b72
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Based on the guidelines at
https://opensource.google.com/docs/releasing/authors/.
1. $ rg -l "Google LLC" | xargs sed -i 's/Google LLC.*/The gVisor Authors./'
2. Manual fixup of "Google Inc" references.
3. Add AUTHORS file. Authors may request to be added to this file.
4. Point netstack AUTHORS to gVisor AUTHORS. Drop CONTRIBUTORS.
Fixes #209
PiperOrigin-RevId: 245823212
Change-Id: I64530b24ad021a7d683137459cafc510f5ee1de9
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 245818639
Change-Id: I03703ef0fb9b6675955637b9fe2776204c545789
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 245511019
Change-Id: Ia9562a301b46458988a6a1f0bbd5f07cbfcb0615
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 242704699
Change-Id: I87db368ca343b3b4bf4f969b17d3aa4ce2f8bd4f
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Having raw socket code together will make it easier to add support for other raw
network protocols. Currently, only ICMP uses the raw endpoint. However, adding
support for other protocols such as UDP shouldn't be much more difficult than
adding a few switch cases.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 241564875
Change-Id: I77e03adafe4ce0fd29ba2d5dfdc547d2ae8f25bf
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The linux packet socket can handle GSO packets, so we can segment packets to
64K instead of the MTU which is usually 1500.
Here are numbers for the nginx-1m test:
runsc: 579330.01 [Kbytes/sec] received
runsc-gso: 1794121.66 [Kbytes/sec] received
runc: 2122139.06 [Kbytes/sec] received
and for tcp_benchmark:
$ tcp_benchmark --duration 15 --ideal
[ 4] 0.0-15.0 sec 86647 MBytes 48456 Mbits/sec
$ tcp_benchmark --client --duration 15 --ideal
[ 4] 0.0-15.0 sec 2173 MBytes 1214 Mbits/sec
$ tcp_benchmark --client --duration 15 --ideal --gso 65536
[ 4] 0.0-15.0 sec 19357 MBytes 10825 Mbits/sec
PiperOrigin-RevId: 240809103
Change-Id: I2637f104db28b5d4c64e1e766c610162a195775a
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This is a preparation for GSO changes (cl/234508902).
RELNOTES[gofers]: Refactor checksum code to include length, which
it already did, but in a convoluted way. Should be a no-op.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 240460794
Change-Id: I537381bc670b5a9f5d70a87aa3eb7252e8f5ace2
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 239194420
Change-Id: Ie193e8ac2b7a6db21195ac85824a335930483971
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HandleLocal is very similar conceptually to MULTICAST_LOOP, so we can unify
the implementations. This has the benefit of making HandleLocal apply even when
the fdbased link endpoint isn't in use.
In addition, move looping logic to route creation so that it doesn't need to be
run for each packet. This should improve performance.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 238099480
Change-Id: I72839f16f25310471453bc9d3fb8544815b25c23
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IP_MULTICAST_LOOP controls whether or not multicast packets sent on the default
route are looped back. In order to implement this switch, support for sending
and looping back multicast packets on the default route had to be implemented.
For now we only support IPv4 multicast.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 237534603
Change-Id: I490ac7ff8e8ebef417c7eb049a919c29d156ac1c
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 236926132
Change-Id: I5cf103f22766e6e65a581de780c7bb9ca0fa3181
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...in accordance with RFCs 1112 and 2464.
Fixes IPv4 multicast when IP_MULTICAST_IF is specified.
Don't return ErrNoRoute when no route is needed.
Don't set Route.NextHop when no route is needed.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 236199813
Change-Id: I48ed33e1b7f760deaa37e18ad7f1b8b62819ab43
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Broadly, this change:
* Enables sockets to be created via `socket(AF_INET, SOCK_RAW, IPPROTO_ICMP)`.
* Passes the network-layer (IP) header up the stack to the transport endpoint,
which can pass it up to the socket layer. This allows a raw socket to return
the entire IP packet to users.
* Adds functions to stack.TransportProtocol, stack.Stack, stack.transportDemuxer
that enable incoming packets to be delivered to raw endpoints. New raw sockets
of other protocols (not ICMP) just need to register with the stack.
* Enables ping.endpoint to return IP headers when created via SOCK_RAW.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 235993280
Change-Id: I60ed994f5ff18b2cbd79f063a7fdf15d093d845a
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Also exposes ipv4.MaxTotalSize since it is a generally useful constant.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 235799755
Change-Id: I1fa8d5294bf355acf5527cfdf274b3687d3c8b13
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An earlier CL excessively minimizes the period in which it
holds a lock on NIC. This earlier CL had done this out of
the mistaken impression it fixed a broken test, when in
fact it just reduced the rate of failure of a flaky test
in tcp_test.go. This new change holds the lock on NIC
for the duration of the loop over n.endpoints.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 235732487
Change-Id: I53ee6df264f093ddc4d29e9acdcba6b4838cb112
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cl/234850781 introduced a race condition in NIC.DeliverNetworkPacket
by failing to hold a lock. This change fixes this regressesion by acquiring
a read lock before iterating through n.endpoints, and then releasing the lock
once iteration is complete.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 235549770
Change-Id: Ib0133288be512d478cf759c3314dc95ec3205d4b
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This change adds support for the SO_BROADCAST socket option in gVisor Netstack.
This support includes getsockopt()/setsockopt() functionality for both UDP and
TCP endpoints (the latter being a NOOP), dispatching broadcast messages up and
down the stack, and route finding/creation for broadcast packets. Finally, a
suite of tests have been implemented, exercising this functionality through the
Linux syscall API.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 234850781
Change-Id: If3e666666917d39f55083741c78314a06defb26c
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This allows setting a default send interface for IPv4 multicast. IPv6 support
will come later.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 234251379
Change-Id: I65922341cd8b8880f690fae3eeb7ddfa47c8c173
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Also includes a few fixes for IPv4 multicast support. IPv6 support is coming in
a followup CL.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 233008638
Change-Id: If7dae6222fef43fda48033f0292af77832d95e82
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 232937200
Change-Id: I5c3709cc8f1313313ff618a45e48c14a3a111cb4
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Nothing reads them and they can simply get stale.
Generated with:
$ sed -i "s/licenses(\(.*\)).*/licenses(\1)/" **/BUILD
PiperOrigin-RevId: 231818945
Change-Id: Ibc3f9838546b7e94f13f217060d31f4ada9d4bf0
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Also adds a test for regular NIC forwarding.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 231495279
Change-Id: Ic7edec249568e9ad0280cea77eac14478c9073e1
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This option allows multiple sockets to be bound to the same port.
Incoming packets are distributed to sockets using a hash based on source and
destination addresses. This means that all packets from one sender will be
received by the same server socket.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 227153413
Change-Id: I59b6edda9c2209d5b8968671e9129adb675920cf
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Same as with broadcast packets, sending of a multicast packet shouldn't require
accessing the route table. The same applies to IPv6 link-local addresses, which
aren't routable at all (they don't belong to any subnet by definition).
PiperOrigin-RevId: 225775870
Change-Id: Ic53e6560c125a83be2be9c3d112e66b36e8dfe7b
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Currently sending a broadcast packet (for DHCP, e.g.) requires a "default
route" of the format "0.0.0.0/0 via 0.0.0.0 <intf>". There is no good reason
for this and on devices with several ports this creates a rather akward route
table with lots of such default routes (which defeats the purpose of a default
route).
PiperOrigin-RevId: 224378769
Change-Id: Icd7ec8a206eb08083cff9a837f6f9ab231c73a19
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This removes code that should have never made it in in the first place, but did so due to incomplete testing. With the new tests the original code fails, the new code passes.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 224086966
Change-Id: I646fef76977f4528f3705f497b95fad6b3ec32bc
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...to (remote, local), reflecting the (correct) names in the implementation of
DeliverNetworkPacket (see tcpip/stack/nic.go).
Also trim the names in DeliverNetworkPacket and elsewhere to avoid stuttering;
since the type is tcpip.LinkAddress, there's no need to include "LinkAddr" in
the parameter names.
Note that every callsite passes arguments in the order (src, dst).
PiperOrigin-RevId: 221514396
Change-Id: I3637454ad0d6e62a19e4dcbc2a16493798bd0f09
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 220866996
Change-Id: I89d48215df57c00d6a6ec512fc18712a2ea9080b
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Increase timeout to prevent the entry from being
found when there is delay on the address resolution
goroutine that doesn't mark the request as failed.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 220504789
Change-Id: I7e44fd95d8624bd69962f862fbf5517a81395f2a
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The channels {cancel,resCh} have roughly the same lifetime and are used for
roughly the same purpose as an entry's waiters; we can unify the state
management of the two mechanisms, while also reducing unncessary mutex locking
and unlocking.
Made some cosmetic changes while I'm here.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 218343915
Change-Id: Ic69546a2b7b390162b2231f07f335dd6199472d7
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 217951017
Change-Id: Ie08bf6987f98467d07457bcf35b5f1ff6e43c035
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Previously, if address resolution for UDP or Ping sockets required sending
packets using Write in Transport layer, Resolve would return ErrWouldBlock
and Write would return ErrNoLinkAddress. Meanwhile startAddressResolution
would run in background. Further calls to Write using same address would also
return ErrNoLinkAddress until resolution has been completed successfully.
Since Write is not allowed to block and System Calls need to be
interruptible in System Call layer, the caller to Write is responsible for
blocking upon return of ErrWouldBlock.
Now, when startAddressResolution is called a notification channel for
the completion of the address resolution is returned.
The channel will traverse up to the calling function of Write as well as
ErrNoLinkAddress. Once address resolution is complete (success or not) the
channel is closed. The caller would call Write again to send packets and
check if address resolution was compeleted successfully or not.
Fixes google/gvisor#5
Change-Id: Idafaf31982bee1915ca084da39ae7bd468cebd93
PiperOrigin-RevId: 214962200
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This allows a NetworkDispatcher to implement transparent bridging,
assuming all implementations of LinkEndpoint.WritePacket call eth.Encode
with header.EthernetFields.SrcAddr set to the passed
Route.LocalLinkAddress, if it is provided.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 213686651
Change-Id: I446a4ac070970202f0724ef796ff1056ae4dd72a
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 213323501
Change-Id: I0996ddbdcf097588745efe35481085d42dbaf446
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 213053370
Change-Id: I60ea89572b4fca53fd126c870fcbde74fcf52562
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 212757571
Change-Id: I04200df9e45c21eb64951cd2802532fa84afcb1a
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 212750821
Change-Id: I822fd63e48c684b45fd91f9ce057867b7eceb792
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Now that it's possible to remove subnets, we must iterate over them with locks
held.
Also do the removal more efficiently while I'm here.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 211737416
Change-Id: I29025ec8b0c3ad11f22d4447e8ad473f1c785463
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Makes it possible to avoid copying or allocating in cases where DeliverNetworkPacket (rx)
needs to turn around and call WritePacket (tx) with its VectorisedView.
Also removes the restriction on having VectorisedViews with multiple views in the write path.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 211728717
Change-Id: Ie03a65ecb4e28bd15ebdb9c69f05eced18fdfcff
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