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With these patches applied, networkd is successfully able to get an
address from a DHCP server on an IPoIB interface.
1)
Makes networkd pass the actual interface type to the dhcp client,
instead of hardcoding it to Ethernet.
2)
Fixes some issues in handling the larger (20 Byte) IB MAC addresses in
the dhcp code.
3)
Add a new field to networkds Link struct, which holds the interface
broadcast address.
3.1)
Modify the DHCP code to also expect the broadcast address as parameter.
On an Ethernet-Interface the Broadcast address never changes and is always
all 6 bytes set to 0xFF.
On an IB one however it is not neccesarily always the same, thus
fetching the actual address from the interface is neccesary.
4)
Only the last 8 bytes of an IB MAC are stable, so when using an IB MAC to
generate a client ID, only pass those 8 bytes.
IPServiceType set to CS6 (network control) causes problems on some old
network setups that continue to interpret the field as IP TOS.
Make DHCP work on such networks by allowing this field to be set to
CS4 (Realtime) instead, as this maps to IPTOS_LOWDELAY.
Signed-off-by: Siddharth Chandrasekaran <csiddharth@vmware.com>
The "chaddr" field is 16 bytes long, with "hlen" being the
length of the address.
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2131#section-4.3.1 says:
The server MUST return to the client:
...
o Any parameters specific to this client (as identified by
the contents of 'chaddr' or 'client identifier' in the DHCPDISCOVER
or DHCPREQUEST message), e.g., as configured by the network
administrator,
It's not clear, whether only the first 'hlen' bytes of 'chaddr'
must correspond or all 16 bytes.
Note that https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4390#section-2.1 says for IPoIB
"chaddr" (client hardware address) field MUST be zeroed.
with having "hlen" zero. This indicates that at least in this case, the
bytes after "hlen" would matter.
As the DHCP client always sets the trailing bytes to zero, we would expect
that the server also replies as such and we could just compare all 16 bytes.
However, let's be liberal and accept any padding here.
This in practice only changes behavior for infiniband, where we
previously would enforce that the first ETH_ALEN bytes are zero.
That seems arbitrary for IPoIB. We should either check all bytes or
none of them. Let's do the latter and don't enforce RFC 4390 in this
regard.
All over the place we define local variables for the various sockopts
that take a bool-like "int" value. Sometimes they are const, sometimes
static, sometimes both, sometimes neither.
Let's clean this up, introduce a common const variable "const_int_one"
(as well as one matching "const_int_zero") and use it everywhere, all
acorss the codebase.
An assertion in dhcp_network_bind_raw_socket() is triggered when
starting an sd_dhcp_client without setting a MAC address first.
- sd_dhcp_client_start()
- client_start()
- client_start_delayed()
- dhcp_network_bind_raw_socket()
In that case, the arp-type and MAC address is still unset. Note that
dhcp_network_bind_raw_socket() already checks for a valid arp-type
and MAC address below, so we should just gracefully return -EINVAL.
Maybe sd_dhcp_client_start() should fail earlier when starting without
MAC address. But the failure here will be correctly propagated and
the start aborted.
Fixes: 76253e73f9
This part of the copyright blurb stems from the GPL use recommendations:
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.en.html
The concept appears to originate in times where version control was per
file, instead of per tree, and was a way to glue the files together.
Ultimately, we nowadays don't live in that world anymore, and this
information is entirely useless anyway, as people are very welcome to
copy these files into any projects they like, and they shouldn't have to
change bits that are part of our copyright header for that.
hence, let's just get rid of this old cruft, and shorten our codebase a
bit.
Files which are installed as-is (any .service and other unit files, .conf
files, .policy files, etc), are left as is. My assumption is that SPDX
identifiers are not yet that well known, so it's better to retain the
extended header to avoid any doubt.
I also kept any copyright lines. We can probably remove them, but it'd nice to
obtain explicit acks from all involved authors before doing that.
This is similar to TAKE_PTR() but operates on file descriptors, and thus
assigns -1 to the fd parameter after returning it.
Removes 60 lines from our codebase. Pretty good too I think.
An infiniband hardware address is 20 bytes, but sockaddr_ll.sll_addr is only 8
bytes. Explicitly ensure that sockaddr_union has enough space for infiniband
addresses, even if they run over sockaddr_ll and add a macro to compute the
proper size to pass to kernel.
This patch removes includes that are not used. The removals were found with
include-what-you-use which checks if any of the symbols from a header is
in use.
Like Infiniband. See RFC 4390 section 2.1 for details on DHCP
and Infiniband; chaddr is zeroed, hlen is set to 0, and htype
is set to ARPHRD_INFINIBAND because IB hardware addresses
are 20 bytes in length.
This allows the sockets to be bound to a specific address before it is configured,
also enable SO_REUSEADDR to allow multiple DHCP clients to run at the same time.
We already ignore IP fragments, because we expect that Fragment
offset (FO) field is not set. However first fragment in a fragmented IP
flow will have all zeroes in FO field. We should ignore such packet as
well, thus we need to look at MF flag in the IP header. Checking MF flag
will filter out all except last packet in fragmented flows. Last one
will be ruled out by next check for value of FO.
Check that received DHCP packets actually include our MAC address in
chaddr field. BPF interpreter has 32 bit wide registers but MAC address
is 48 bits long so we have to do check in two steps.
There is no need to explicitly check version of L3 protocol in the
ethernet header because we bind socket with .sll_protocol set to
ETH_P_IP, thus we only receive IPv4 packets on the socket.
For this to work nicely we need to use REUSEADDR so that more than one socket
can be open at the same time. Also, we request the ifindex to be appended
to incoming messages, so we know whence it came.
Try a bit harder to make the kernel drop packets not for us. This should reduce
the number of wakeups from n^2 to n in the number of dhcp clients, which admittedly
only makes a differenc in very extreme cases.
If they are too small to fit the IP+UDP+DHCP headers they can be of no use, so
don't waste resources parsing them. This is at the cost of losing some verbosity
in the logging.
Filter out everything except UDP packets destined for the DHCP client port,
this should avoid the vast majority of spurious wakeups.
Filter based on [0], with permission.
Possible improvemnts: also check for the DHCP magic cookie to drop invalid
packets. Check for our xid to filter out packets destined for other clients.
[0]: <https://github.com/ambrop72/badvpn/blob/master/dhcpclient/BDHCPClient.c#L57>
Passing the protocol to socket() is redundant as it will be specified again in
bind(). Dropping the redundancy reduces the cost of bind() from ~30ms to ~0ms.
For details see [0].
networkd in a container (i.e., with next to no network latency) can now
negotiate a DHCP lease in 0.7 - 5 ms.
Thanks to Kay for help with debugging and to Daniel Borkmann for the pointer
to fix the problem.
[0]: <https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=902fefb82ef72a50c78cb4a20cc954b037a98d1c>
safe_close() automatically becomes a NOP when a negative fd is passed,
and returns -1 unconditionally. This makes it easy to write lines like
this:
fd = safe_close(fd);
Which will close an fd if it is open, and reset the fd variable
correctly.
By making use of this new scheme we can drop a > 200 lines of code that
was required to test for non-negative fds or to reset the closed fd
variable afterwards.