Commit Graph

471557 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nathan Lynch 9cc6d9e5da ARM: 8178/1: fix set_tls for !CONFIG_KUSER_HELPERS
Joachim Eastwood reports that commit fbfb872f5f "ARM: 8148/1: flush
TLS and thumbee register state during exec" causes a boot-time crash
on a Cortex-M4 nommu system:

Freeing unused kernel memory: 68K (281e5000 - 281f6000)
Unhandled exception: IPSR = 00000005 LR = fffffff1
CPU: 0 PID: 1 Comm: swapper Not tainted 3.17.0-rc6-00313-gd2205fa30aa7 #191
task: 29834000 ti: 29832000 task.ti: 29832000
PC is at flush_thread+0x2e/0x40
LR is at flush_thread+0x21/0x40
pc : [<2800954a>] lr : [<2800953d>] psr: 4100000b
sp : 29833d60 ip : 00000000 fp : 00000001
r10: 00003cf8 r9 : 29b1f000 r8 : 00000000
r7 : 29b0bc00 r6 : 29834000 r5 : 29832000 r4 : 29832000
r3 : ffff0ff0 r2 : 29832000 r1 : 00000000 r0 : 282121f0
xPSR: 4100000b
CPU: 0 PID: 1 Comm: swapper Not tainted 3.17.0-rc6-00313-gd2205fa30aa7 #191
[<2800afa5>] (unwind_backtrace) from [<2800a327>] (show_stack+0xb/0xc)
[<2800a327>] (show_stack) from [<2800a963>] (__invalid_entry+0x4b/0x4c)

The problem is that set_tls is attempting to clear the TLS location in
the kernel-user helper page, which isn't set up on V7M.

Fix this by guarding the write to the kuser helper page with
a CONFIG_KUSER_HELPERS ifdef.

Fixes: fbfb872f5f ARM: 8148/1: flush TLS and thumbee register state during exec

Reported-by: Joachim Eastwood <manabian@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Joachim Eastwood <manabian@gmail.com>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Nathan Lynch <nathan_lynch@mentor.com>
Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk>
2014-09-30 16:55:23 +01:00
Krzysztof Kozlowski ebc77251a4 ARM: 8177/1: cacheflush: Fix v7_exit_coherency_flush exynos build breakage on ARMv6
This fixes build breakage of platsmp.c if ARMv6 was chosen for compile
time options (e.g. by building allmodconfig):

$ make allmodconfig
$ make
  CC      arch/arm/mach-exynos/platsmp.o
/tmp/ccdQM0Eg.s: Assembler messages:
/tmp/ccdQM0Eg.s:432: Error: selected processor does not support ARM mode `isb '
/tmp/ccdQM0Eg.s:437: Error: selected processor does not support ARM mode `isb '
/tmp/ccdQM0Eg.s:438: Error: selected processor does not support ARM mode `dsb '
make[1]: *** [arch/arm/mach-exynos/platsmp.o] Error 1

The error was introduced in commit "ARM: EXYNOS: Move code from
hotplug.c to platsmp.c".  Previously code using
v7_exit_coherency_flush() macro was built with '-march=armv7-a' flag but
this flag dissapeared during the movement.

Fix this by annotating the v7_exit_coherency_flush() asm code with
armv7-a architecture.

Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Kozlowski <k.kozlowski@samsung.com>
Reported-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Kukjin Kim <kgene.kim@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk>
2014-09-30 16:55:22 +01:00
Amitkumar Karwar 6a57dba9f0 Bluetooth: btusb: remove redundant lock variable
This variable is nowhere used in the code.

Signed-off-by: Amitkumar Karwar <akarwar@marvell.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
2014-09-30 14:13:29 +02:00
Xinming Hu 3907d55801 Bluetooth: btmrvl: support Marvell Bluetooth device SD8887
This patch adds driver support for marvell SD8887 chip.

Signed-off-by: Xinming Hu <huxm@marvell.com>
Signed-off-by: Kevin Gan <ganhy@marvell.com>
Signed-off-by: Cathy Luo <cluo@marvell.com>
Signed-off-by: Amitkumar Karwar <akarwar@marvell.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
2014-09-30 14:13:29 +02:00
Amitkumar Karwar 1e3e492c3d Bluetooth: btmrvl: rename definitions from 88xx to 8897
Register offsets are different for SD8897 and newer chip SD8887.
We can not have common btmrvl_sdio_card_reg map for them.

Signed-off-by: Amitkumar Karwar <akarwar@marvell.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
2014-09-30 14:13:29 +02:00
David S. Miller 213d61386e Merge branch 'am335x'
Markus Pargmann says:

====================
net: cpsw: Support for am335x chip MACIDs

This series adds support to the cpsw driver to read the MACIDs of the am335x
chip and use them as fallback. These addresses are only used if there are no
mac addresses in the devicetree, for example set by a bootloader.
====================

Acked-by: Mugunthan V N <mugunthanvnm@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:30:50 -04:00
Markus Pargmann fa5f4adf3a arm: dts: am33xx, Add syscon phandle to cpsw node
There are 2 MACIDs stored in the control module of the am33xx. These are
read by the cpsw driver if no valid MACID was found in the devicetree.

Signed-off-by: Markus Pargmann <mpa@pengutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
Acked-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:30:43 -04:00
Markus Pargmann c9aaf87cd0 am33xx: define syscon control module device node
Signed-off-by: Markus Pargmann <mpa@pengutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
Acked-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:30:43 -04:00
Markus Pargmann 0ba517b18a net: cpsw: Add am33xx MACID readout
This patch adds a function to get the MACIDs from the am33xx SoC
control module registers which hold unique vendor MACIDs. This is only
used if of_get_mac_address() fails to get a valid mac address.

Signed-off-by: Markus Pargmann <mpa@pengutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
Tested-by: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org>
Acked-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:30:43 -04:00
Markus Pargmann 56fdb2e046 net: cpsw: Replace pr_err by dev_err
Use dev_err instead of pr_err.

Signed-off-by: Markus Pargmann <mpa@pengutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:30:43 -04:00
Markus Pargmann bd07d34f00 net: cpsw: header, Add missing include
"MII_BUS_ID_SIZE" is defined in linux/phy.h which is not included in the
cpsw.h file.

Signed-off-by: Markus Pargmann <mpa@pengutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:30:43 -04:00
Markus Pargmann 4d507dffe7 net: cpsw: Add missing return value
ret is set 0 at this point, so jumping to that error label would result
in a return value of 0. Set ret to -ENOMEM to return a proper error
value.

Signed-off-by: Markus Pargmann <mpa@pengutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:30:42 -04:00
Markus Pargmann e4a9839b85 DT doc: net: cpsw mac-address is optional
mac-address is an optional property. If no mac-address is set, a random
mac-address will be generated.

Signed-off-by: Markus Pargmann <mpa@pengutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:30:42 -04:00
KY Srinivasan dedb845ded hyperv: Fix a bug in netvsc_start_xmit()
After the packet is successfully sent, we should not touch the skb
as it may have been freed. This patch is based on the work done by
Long Li <longli@microsoft.com>.

In this version of the patch I have fixed issues pointed out by David.
David, please queue this up for stable.

Signed-off-by: K. Y. Srinivasan <kys@microsoft.com>
Tested-by: Long Li <longli@microsoft.com>
Tested-by: Sitsofe Wheeler <sitsofe@yahoo.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:21:03 -04:00
Andy Gospodarek 5f0c5f73e5 bonding: make global bonding stats more reliable
As the code stands today, bonding stats are based simply on the stats
from the member interfaces.  If a member was to be removed from a bond,
the stats would instantly drop.  This would be confusing to an admin
would would suddonly see interface stats drop while traffic is still
flowing.

In addition to preventing the stats drops mentioned above, new members
will now be added to the bond and only traffic received after the member
was added to the bond will be counted as part of bonding stats.  Bonding
counters will also be updated when any slaves are dropped to make sure
the reported stats are reliable.

v2: Changes suggested by Nik to properly allocate/free stats memory.
v3: Properly destroy workqueue and fix netlink configuration path.
v4: Moved cached stats into bonding and slave structs as there does not
seem to be a complexity/performance benefit to using alloc'd memory vs
in-struct memory.

Signed-off-by: Andy Gospodarek <gospo@cumulusnetworks.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:20:07 -04:00
John Fastabend b0ab6f9275 net: sched: enable per cpu qstats
After previous patches to simplify qstats the qstats can be
made per cpu with a packed union in Qdisc struct.

Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.r.fastabend@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:02:26 -04:00
John Fastabend 6401585366 net: sched: restrict use of qstats qlen
This removes the use of qstats->qlen variable from the classifiers
and makes it an explicit argument to gnet_stats_copy_queue().

The qlen represents the qdisc queue length and is packed into
the qstats at the last moment before passnig to user space. By
handling it explicitely we avoid, in the percpu stats case, having
to figure out which per_cpu variable to put it in.

It would probably be best to remove it from qstats completely
but qstats is a user space ABI and can't be broken. A future
patch could make an internal only qstats structure that would
avoid having to allocate an additional u32 variable on the
Qdisc struct. This would make the qstats struct 128bits instead
of 128+32.

Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.r.fastabend@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:02:26 -04:00
John Fastabend 25331d6ce4 net: sched: implement qstat helper routines
This adds helpers to manipulate qstats logic and replaces locations
that touch the counters directly. This simplifies future patches
to push qstats onto per cpu counters.

Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.r.fastabend@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:02:26 -04:00
John Fastabend 22e0f8b932 net: sched: make bstats per cpu and estimator RCU safe
In order to run qdisc's without locking statistics and estimators
need to be handled correctly.

To resolve bstats make the statistics per cpu. And because this is
only needed for qdiscs that are running without locks which is not
the case for most qdiscs in the near future only create percpu
stats when qdiscs set the TCQ_F_CPUSTATS flag.

Next because estimators use the bstats to calculate packets per
second and bytes per second the estimator code paths are updated
to use the per cpu statistics.

Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.r.fastabend@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-30 01:02:26 -04:00
Kweh, Hock Leong c5bb86c384 net: stmmac: fix stmmac_pci_probe failed when CONFIG_HAVE_CLK is selected
When the CONFIG_HAVE_CLK is selected for the system, the stmmac_pci_probe
will fail with dmesg:
[    2.167225] stmmaceth 0000:00:14.6: enabling device (0000 -> 0002)
[    2.178267] stmmaceth 0000:00:14.6: enabling bus mastering
[    2.178436] stmmaceth 0000:00:14.6: irq 24 for MSI/MSI-X
[    2.178703] stmmaceth 0000:00:14.6: stmmac_dvr_probe: warning: cannot
get CSR clock
[    2.186503] stmmac_pci_probe: main driver probe failed
[    2.194003] stmmaceth 0000:00:14.6: disabling bus mastering
[    2.196473] stmmaceth: probe of 0000:00:14.6 failed with error -2

This patch fix the issue by breaking the dependency to devm_clk_get()
as the CSR clock can be obtained at priv->plat->clk_csr from pci driver.

Reported-by: Tobias Klausmann <tobias.johannes.klausmann@mni.thm.de>
Signed-off-by: Kweh, Hock Leong <hock.leong.kweh@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 16:36:58 -04:00
Michael Braun 79cf79abce macvlan: add source mode
This patch adds a new mode of operation to macvlan, called "source".
It allows one to set a list of allowed mac address, which is used
to match against source mac address from received frames on underlying
interface.
This enables creating mac based VLAN associations, instead of standard
port or tag based. The feature is useful to deploy 802.1x mac based
behavior, where drivers of underlying interfaces doesn't allows that.

Configuration is done through the netlink interface using e.g.:
 ip link add link eth0 name macvlan0 type macvlan mode source
 ip link add link eth0 name macvlan1 type macvlan mode source
 ip link set link dev macvlan0 type macvlan macaddr add 00:11:11:11:11:11
 ip link set link dev macvlan0 type macvlan macaddr add 00:22:22:22:22:22
 ip link set link dev macvlan0 type macvlan macaddr add 00:33:33:33:33:33
 ip link set link dev macvlan1 type macvlan macaddr add 00:33:33:33:33:33
 ip link set link dev macvlan1 type macvlan macaddr add 00:44:44:44:44:44

This allows clients with MAC addresses 00:11:11:11:11:11,
00:22:22:22:22:22 to be part of only VLAN associated with macvlan0
interface. Clients with MAC addresses 00:44:44:44:44:44 with only VLAN
associated with macvlan1 interface. And client with MAC address
00:33:33:33:33:33 to be associated with both VLANs.

Based on work of Stefan Gula <steweg@gmail.com>

v8: last version of Stefan Gula for Kernel 3.2.1
v9: rework onto linux-next 2014-03-12 by Michael Braun
    add MACADDR_SET command, enable to configure mac for source mode
    while creating interface
v10:
  - reduce indention level
  - rename source_list to source_entry
  - use aligned 64bit ether address
  - use hash_64 instead of addr[5]
v11:
  - rebase for 3.14 / linux-next 20.04.2014
v12
  - rebase for linux-next 2014-09-25

Signed-off-by: Michael Braun <michael-dev@fami-braun.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 15:37:01 -04:00
Ignacy Gawędzki 17c9c82326 ematch: Fix matching of inverted containers.
Negated expressions and sub-expressions need to have their flags checked for
TCF_EM_INVERT and their result negated accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Ignacy Gawędzki <ignacy.gawedzki@green-communications.fr>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 15:31:29 -04:00
Eric Dumazet 73d3fe6d1c gro: fix aggregation for skb using frag_list
In commit 8a29111c7c ("net: gro: allow to build full sized skb")
I added a regression for linear skb that traditionally force GRO
to use the frag_list fallback.

Erez Shitrit found that at most two segments were aggregated and
the "if (skb_gro_len(p) != pinfo->gso_size)" test was failing.

This is because pinfo at this spot still points to the last skb in the
chain, instead of the first one, where we find the correct gso_size
information.

Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Fixes: 8a29111c7c ("net: gro: allow to build full sized skb")
Reported-by: Erez Shitrit <erezsh@mellanox.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 15:17:59 -04:00
David S. Miller 852248449c Merge git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/pablo/nf-next
Pablo Neira Ayuso says:

====================
pull request: netfilter/ipvs updates for net-next

The following patchset contains Netfilter/IPVS updates for net-next,
most relevantly they are:

1) Four patches to make the new nf_tables masquerading support
   independent of the x_tables infrastructure. This also resolves a
   compilation breakage if the masquerade target is disabled but the
   nf_tables masq expression is enabled.

2) ipset updates via Jozsef Kadlecsik. This includes the addition of the
   skbinfo extension that allows you to store packet metainformation in the
   elements. This can be used to fetch and restore this to the packets through
   the iptables SET target, patches from Anton Danilov.

3) Add the hash:mac set type to ipset, from Jozsef Kadlecsick.

4) Add simple weighted fail-over scheduler via Simon Horman. This provides
   a fail-over IPVS scheduler (unlike existing load balancing schedulers).
   Connections are directed to the appropriate server based solely on
   highest weight value and server availability, patch from Kenny Mathis.

5) Support IPv6 real servers in IPv4 virtual-services and vice versa.
   Simon Horman informs that the motivation for this is to allow more
   flexibility in the choice of IP version offered by both virtual-servers
   and real-servers as they no longer need to match: An IPv4 connection
   from an end-user may be forwarded to a real-server using IPv6 and
   vice versa. No ip_vs_sync support yet though. Patches from Alex Gartrell
   and Julian Anastasov.

6) Add global generation ID to the nf_tables ruleset. When dumping from
   several different object lists, we need a way to identify that an update
   has ocurred so userspace knows that it needs to refresh its lists. This
   also includes a new command to obtain the 32-bits generation ID. The
   less significant 16-bits of this ID is also exposed through res_id field
   in the nfnetlink header to quickly detect the interference and retry when
   there is no risk of ID wraparound.

7) Move br_netfilter out of the bridge core. The br_netfilter code is
   built in the bridge core by default. This causes problems of different
   kind to people that don't want this: Jesper reported performance drop due
   to the inconditional hook registration and I remember to have read complains
   on netdev from people regarding the unexpected behaviour of our bridging
   stack when br_netfilter is enabled (fragmentation handling, layer 3 and
   upper inspection). People that still need this should easily undo the
   damage by modprobing the new br_netfilter module.

8) Dump the set policy nf_tables that allows set parameterization. So
   userspace can keep user-defined preferences when saving the ruleset.
   From Arturo Borrero.

9) Use __seq_open_private() helper function to reduce boiler plate code
   in x_tables, From Rob Jones.

10) Safer default behaviour in case that you forget to load the protocol
   tracker. Daniel Borkmann and Florian Westphal detected that if your
   ruleset is stateful, you allow traffic to at least one single SCTP port
   and the SCTP protocol tracker is not loaded, then any SCTP traffic may
   be pass through unfiltered. After this patch, the connection tracking
   classifies SCTP/DCCP/UDPlite/GRE packets as invalid if your kernel has
   been compiled with support for these modules.
====================

Trivially resolved conflict in include/linux/skbuff.h, Eric moved some
netfilter skbuff members around, and the netfilter tree adjusted the
ifdef guards for the bridging info pointer.

Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 14:46:53 -04:00
Florian Westphal 735d383117 tcp: change TCP_ECN prefixes to lower case
Suggested by Stephen. Also drop inline keyword and let compiler decide.

gcc 4.7.3 decides to no longer inline tcp_ecn_check_ce, so split it up.
The actual evaluation is not inlined anymore while the ECN_OK test is.

Suggested-by: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 14:41:22 -04:00
Florian Westphal d82bd12298 tcp: move TCP_ECN_create_request out of header
After Octavian Purdilas tcp ipv4/ipv6 unification work this helper only
has a single callsite.

While at it, convert name to lowercase, suggested by Stephen.

Suggested-by: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 14:41:22 -04:00
David S. Miller 2b7fc477b0 Merge branch 'arcnet-EAE'
Michael Grzeschik says:

====================
ARCNET: add support for EAE multi interfac card

this series adds support for the PLX Bridge based multi interface
pci cards and adds support to change device address on com200xx chips
during runtime.

This series is based on v3.17-rc7.
It is fixed for build against com20020_cs.
====================

Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 14:36:33 -04:00
Michael Grzeschik 5b85bad2a4 ARCNET: enable eae arcnet card support
This patch adds support for the EAE arcnet cards
which has two Interfaces.

Signed-off-by: Michael Grzeschik <m.grzeschik@pengutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 14:36:26 -04:00
Michael Grzeschik c51da42a63 ARCNET: add support for multi interfaces on com20020
The com20020-pci driver is currently designed to instance
one netdev with one pci device. This patch adds support to
instance many cards with one pci device, depending on the device
data in the private data.

Signed-off-by: Michael Grzeschik <m.grzeschik@pengutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 14:36:26 -04:00
Michael Grzeschik 8c14f9c703 ARCNET: add com20020 PCI IDs with metadata
This patch adds metadata for the com20020 to prepare for devices with
multiple io address areas with multi card interfaces.

Signed-off-by: Michael Grzeschik <m.grzeschik@pengutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 14:36:26 -04:00
Michael Grzeschik a0d2e51390 ARCNET: add com20020_set_hwddr to change address
This patch adds com20020_set_hwaddr to make
it possible to change the hwaddr on runtime.

Signed-off-by: Michael Grzeschik <m.grzeschik@pengutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 14:36:26 -04:00
Michael Grzeschik 226ee67515 ARCNET: return IRQ_NONE if the interface isn't running
The interrupt handler needs to return IRQ_NONE in case
two devices are used with the shared interrupt handler.
Otherwise it could steal interrupts from the other
interface.

Signed-off-by: Michael Grzeschik <m.grzeschik@pengutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 14:36:25 -04:00
Li RongQing 41c91996d9 tcp: remove unnecessary assignment.
This variable i is overwritten to 0 by following code

Signed-off-by: Li RongQing <roy.qing.li@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 12:31:12 -04:00
Eric Dumazet b193722731 net: reorganize sk_buff for faster __copy_skb_header()
With proliferation of bit fields in sk_buff, __copy_skb_header() became
quite expensive, showing as the most expensive function in a GSO
workload.

__copy_skb_header() performance is also critical for non GSO TCP
operations, as it is used from skb_clone()

This patch carefully moves all the fields that were not copied in a
separate zone : cloned, nohdr, fclone, peeked, head_frag, xmit_more

Then I moved all other fields and all other copied fields in a section
delimited by headers_start[0]/headers_end[0] section so that we
can use a single memcpy() call, inlined by compiler using long
word load/stores.

I also tried to make all copies in the natural orders of sk_buff,
to help hardware prefetching.

I made sure sk_buff size did not change.

Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 12:27:20 -04:00
Jukka Rissanen 156395c998 Bluetooth: 6lowpan: Enable multicast support
Set multicast support for 6lowpan network interface.
This is needed in every network interface that supports IPv6.

Signed-off-by: Jukka Rissanen <jukka.rissanen@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
2014-09-29 17:06:38 +02:00
Jukka Rissanen 36b3dd250d Bluetooth: 6lowpan: Ensure header compression does not corrupt IPv6 header
If skb is going to multiple destinations, then make sure that we
do not overwrite the common IPv6 headers. So before compressing
the IPv6 headers, we copy the skb and that is then sent to 6LoWPAN
Bluetooth devices.

This is a similar patch as what was done for IEEE 802.154 6LoWPAN
in commit f19f4f9525 ("ieee802154: 6lowpan: ensure header compression
does not corrupt ipv6 header")

Signed-off-by: Jukka Rissanen <jukka.rissanen@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
2014-09-29 17:06:38 +02:00
Florian Westphal db29a9508a netfilter: conntrack: disable generic tracking for known protocols
Given following iptables ruleset:

-P FORWARD DROP
-A FORWARD -m sctp --dport 9 -j ACCEPT
-A FORWARD -p tcp --dport 80 -j ACCEPT
-A FORWARD -p tcp -m conntrack -m state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT

One would assume that this allows SCTP on port 9 and TCP on port 80.
Unfortunately, if the SCTP conntrack module is not loaded, this allows
*all* SCTP communication, to pass though, i.e. -p sctp -j ACCEPT,
which we think is a security issue.

This is because on the first SCTP packet on port 9, we create a dummy
"generic l4" conntrack entry without any port information (since
conntrack doesn't know how to extract this information).

All subsequent packets that are unknown will then be in established
state since they will fallback to proto_generic and will match the
'generic' entry.

Our originally proposed version [1] completely disabled generic protocol
tracking, but Jozsef suggests to not track protocols for which a more
suitable helper is available, hence we now mitigate the issue for in
tree known ct protocol helpers only, so that at least NAT and direction
information will still be preserved for others.

 [1] http://www.spinics.net/lists/netfilter-devel/msg33430.html

Joint work with Daniel Borkmann.

Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Jozsef Kadlecsik <kadlec@blackhole.kfki.hu>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
2014-09-29 12:17:49 +02:00
Arturo Borrero 9363dc4b59 netfilter: nf_tables: store and dump set policy
We want to know in which cases the user explicitly sets the policy
options. In that case, we also want to dump back the info.

Signed-off-by: Arturo Borrero Gonzalez <arturo.borrero.glez@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
2014-09-29 11:28:03 +02:00
Jukka Rissanen 59790aa287 Bluetooth: 6lowpan: Make sure skb exists before accessing it
We need to make sure that the saved skb exists when
resuming or suspending a CoC channel. This can happen if
initial credits is 0 when channel is connected.

Signed-off-by: Jukka Rissanen <jukka.rissanen@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
2014-09-29 10:10:02 +02:00
David S. Miller 842abe08aa Merge branch 'qca7000_spi'
Stefan Wahren says:

====================
add Qualcomm QCA7000 ethernet driver

This patch series adds support for the Qualcomm QCA7000 Homeplug GreenPHY.
The QCA7000 is serial-to-powerline bridge with two interfaces: UART and SPI.
These patches handles only the last one, with an Ethernet over SPI protocol
driver.

This driver based on the Qualcomm code [1], but contains a lot of changes
since last year:

* devicetree support
* DebugFS support
* ethtool support
* better error handling
* performance improvements
* code cleanup
* some bugfixes

The code has been tested only on Freescale i.MX28 boards, but should work
on other platforms.

[1] - https://github.com/IoE/qca7000

Changes in V3:
- Use ether_addr_copy instead of memcpy
- Remove qcaspi_set_mac_address
- Improve DT parsing
- replace OF_GPIO dependancy with OF
- fix compile error caused by SET_ETHTOOL_OPS
- fix possible endless loop when spi read fails
- fix DT documentation
- fix coding style
- fix sparse warnings

Changes in V2:
- replace in DT the SPI intr GPIO with pure interrupt
- make legacy mode a boolean DT property and remove it as module parameter
- make burst length a module parameter instead of DT property
- make pluggable a module parameter instead of DT property
- improve DT documentation
- replace debugFS register dump with ethtool function
- replace debugFS stats with ethtool function
- implement function to get ring parameter via ethtool
- implement function to set TX ring count via ethtool
- fix TX ring state in debugFS
- optimize tx ring flush
- add byte limit for TX ring to avoid bufferbloat
- fix TX queue full and write buffer miss counter
- fix SPI clk speed module parameter
- fix possible packet loss
- fix possible race during transmit
====================

Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:24:00 -04:00
Stefan Wahren 291ab06ecf net: qualcomm: new Ethernet over SPI driver for QCA7000
This patch adds the Ethernet over SPI driver for the
Qualcomm QCA7000 HomePlug GreenPHY.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Wahren <stefan.wahren@i2se.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:23:52 -04:00
Stefan Wahren 7d50df8f72 Documentation: add Device tree bindings for QCA7000
This patch adds the Device tree bindings for the
Ethernet over SPI protocol driver of the Qualcomm
QCA7000 HomePlug GreenPHY.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Wahren <stefan.wahren@i2se.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:23:52 -04:00
David S. Miller a11238ec28 Merge branch 'dctcp'
Daniel Borkmann says:

====================
net: tcp: DCTCP congestion control algorithm

This patch series adds support for the DataCenter TCP (DCTCP) congestion
control algorithm. Please see individual patches for the details.

The last patch adds DCTCP as a congestion control module, and previous
ones add needed infrastructure to extend the congestion control framework.

Joint work between Florian Westphal, Daniel Borkmann and Glenn Judd.

v3 -> v2:
 - No changes anywhere, just a resend as requested by Dave
 - Added Stephen's ACK
v1 -> v2:
 - Rebased to latest net-next
 - Addressed Eric's feedback, thanks!
  - Update stale comment wrt. DCTCP ECN usage
  - Don't call INET_ECN_xmit for every packet
 - Add dctcp ss/inetdiag support to expose internal stats to userspace
====================

Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:13:17 -04:00
Daniel Borkmann e3118e8359 net: tcp: add DCTCP congestion control algorithm
This work adds the DataCenter TCP (DCTCP) congestion control
algorithm [1], which has been first published at SIGCOMM 2010 [2],
resp. follow-up analysis at SIGMETRICS 2011 [3] (and also, more
recently as an informational IETF draft available at [4]).

DCTCP is an enhancement to the TCP congestion control algorithm for
data center networks. Typical data center workloads are i.e.
i) partition/aggregate (queries; bursty, delay sensitive), ii) short
messages e.g. 50KB-1MB (for coordination and control state; delay
sensitive), and iii) large flows e.g. 1MB-100MB (data update;
throughput sensitive). DCTCP has therefore been designed for such
environments to provide/achieve the following three requirements:

  * High burst tolerance (incast due to partition/aggregate)
  * Low latency (short flows, queries)
  * High throughput (continuous data updates, large file
    transfers) with commodity, shallow buffered switches

The basic idea of its design consists of two fundamentals: i) on the
switch side, packets are being marked when its internal queue
length > threshold K (K is chosen so that a large enough headroom
for marked traffic is still available in the switch queue); ii) the
sender/host side maintains a moving average of the fraction of marked
packets, so each RTT, F is being updated as follows:

 F := X / Y, where X is # of marked ACKs, Y is total # of ACKs
 alpha := (1 - g) * alpha + g * F, where g is a smoothing constant

The resulting alpha (iow: probability that switch queue is congested)
is then being used in order to adaptively decrease the congestion
window W:

 W := (1 - (alpha / 2)) * W

The means for receiving marked packets resp. marking them on switch
side in DCTCP is the use of ECN.

RFC3168 describes a mechanism for using Explicit Congestion Notification
from the switch for early detection of congestion, rather than waiting
for segment loss to occur.

However, this method only detects the presence of congestion, not
the *extent*. In the presence of mild congestion, it reduces the TCP
congestion window too aggressively and unnecessarily affects the
throughput of long flows [4].

DCTCP, as mentioned, enhances Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN)
processing to estimate the fraction of bytes that encounter congestion,
rather than simply detecting that some congestion has occurred. DCTCP
then scales the TCP congestion window based on this estimate [4],
thus it can derive multibit feedback from the information present in
the single-bit sequence of marks in its control law. And thus act in
*proportion* to the extent of congestion, not its *presence*.

Switches therefore set the Congestion Experienced (CE) codepoint in
packets when internal queue lengths exceed threshold K. Resulting,
DCTCP delivers the same or better throughput than normal TCP, while
using 90% less buffer space.

It was found in [2] that DCTCP enables the applications to handle 10x
the current background traffic, without impacting foreground traffic.
Moreover, a 10x increase in foreground traffic did not cause any
timeouts, and thus largely eliminates TCP incast collapse problems.

The algorithm itself has already seen deployments in large production
data centers since then.

We did a long-term stress-test and analysis in a data center, short
summary of our TCP incast tests with iperf compared to cubic:

This test measured DCTCP throughput and latency and compared it with
CUBIC throughput and latency for an incast scenario. In this test, 19
senders sent at maximum rate to a single receiver. The receiver simply
ran iperf -s.

The senders ran iperf -c <receiver> -t 30. All senders started
simultaneously (using local clocks synchronized by ntp).

This test was repeated multiple times. Below shows the results from a
single test. Other tests are similar. (DCTCP results were extremely
consistent, CUBIC results show some variance induced by the TCP timeouts
that CUBIC encountered.)

For this test, we report statistics on the number of TCP timeouts,
flow throughput, and traffic latency.

1) Timeouts (total over all flows, and per flow summaries):

            CUBIC            DCTCP
  Total     3227             25
  Mean       169.842          1.316
  Median     183              1
  Max        207              5
  Min        123              0
  Stddev      28.991          1.600

Timeout data is taken by measuring the net change in netstat -s
"other TCP timeouts" reported. As a result, the timeout measurements
above are not restricted to the test traffic, and we believe that it
is likely that all of the "DCTCP timeouts" are actually timeouts for
non-test traffic. We report them nevertheless. CUBIC will also include
some non-test timeouts, but they are drawfed by bona fide test traffic
timeouts for CUBIC. Clearly DCTCP does an excellent job of preventing
TCP timeouts. DCTCP reduces timeouts by at least two orders of
magnitude and may well have eliminated them in this scenario.

2) Throughput (per flow in Mbps):

            CUBIC            DCTCP
  Mean      521.684          521.895
  Median    464              523
  Max       776              527
  Min       403              519
  Stddev    105.891            2.601
  Fairness    0.962            0.999

Throughput data was simply the average throughput for each flow
reported by iperf. By avoiding TCP timeouts, DCTCP is able to
achieve much better per-flow results. In CUBIC, many flows
experience TCP timeouts which makes flow throughput unpredictable and
unfair. DCTCP, on the other hand, provides very clean predictable
throughput without incurring TCP timeouts. Thus, the standard deviation
of CUBIC throughput is dramatically higher than the standard deviation
of DCTCP throughput.

Mean throughput is nearly identical because even though cubic flows
suffer TCP timeouts, other flows will step in and fill the unused
bandwidth. Note that this test is something of a best case scenario
for incast under CUBIC: it allows other flows to fill in for flows
experiencing a timeout. Under situations where the receiver is issuing
requests and then waiting for all flows to complete, flows cannot fill
in for timed out flows and throughput will drop dramatically.

3) Latency (in ms):

            CUBIC            DCTCP
  Mean      4.0088           0.04219
  Median    4.055            0.0395
  Max       4.2              0.085
  Min       3.32             0.028
  Stddev    0.1666           0.01064

Latency for each protocol was computed by running "ping -i 0.2
<receiver>" from a single sender to the receiver during the incast
test. For DCTCP, "ping -Q 0x6 -i 0.2 <receiver>" was used to ensure
that traffic traversed the DCTCP queue and was not dropped when the
queue size was greater than the marking threshold. The summary
statistics above are over all ping metrics measured between the single
sender, receiver pair.

The latency results for this test show a dramatic difference between
CUBIC and DCTCP. CUBIC intentionally overflows the switch buffer
which incurs the maximum queue latency (more buffer memory will lead
to high latency.) DCTCP, on the other hand, deliberately attempts to
keep queue occupancy low. The result is a two orders of magnitude
reduction of latency with DCTCP - even with a switch with relatively
little RAM. Switches with larger amounts of RAM will incur increasing
amounts of latency for CUBIC, but not for DCTCP.

4) Convergence and stability test:

This test measured the time that DCTCP took to fairly redistribute
bandwidth when a new flow commences. It also measured DCTCP's ability
to remain stable at a fair bandwidth distribution. DCTCP is compared
with CUBIC for this test.

At the commencement of this test, a single flow is sending at maximum
rate (near 10 Gbps) to a single receiver. One second after that first
flow commences, a new flow from a distinct server begins sending to
the same receiver as the first flow. After the second flow has sent
data for 10 seconds, the second flow is terminated. The first flow
sends for an additional second. Ideally, the bandwidth would be evenly
shared as soon as the second flow starts, and recover as soon as it
stops.

The results of this test are shown below. Note that the flow bandwidth
for the two flows was measured near the same time, but not
simultaneously.

DCTCP performs nearly perfectly within the measurement limitations
of this test: bandwidth is quickly distributed fairly between the two
flows, remains stable throughout the duration of the test, and
recovers quickly. CUBIC, in contrast, is slow to divide the bandwidth
fairly, and has trouble remaining stable.

  CUBIC                      DCTCP

  Seconds  Flow 1  Flow 2    Seconds  Flow 1  Flow 2
   0       9.93    0          0       9.92    0
   0.5     9.87    0          0.5     9.86    0
   1       8.73    2.25       1       6.46    4.88
   1.5     7.29    2.8        1.5     4.9     4.99
   2       6.96    3.1        2       4.92    4.94
   2.5     6.67    3.34       2.5     4.93    5
   3       6.39    3.57       3       4.92    4.99
   3.5     6.24    3.75       3.5     4.94    4.74
   4       6       3.94       4       5.34    4.71
   4.5     5.88    4.09       4.5     4.99    4.97
   5       5.27    4.98       5       4.83    5.01
   5.5     4.93    5.04       5.5     4.89    4.99
   6       4.9     4.99       6       4.92    5.04
   6.5     4.93    5.1        6.5     4.91    4.97
   7       4.28    5.8        7       4.97    4.97
   7.5     4.62    4.91       7.5     4.99    4.82
   8       5.05    4.45       8       5.16    4.76
   8.5     5.93    4.09       8.5     4.94    4.98
   9       5.73    4.2        9       4.92    5.02
   9.5     5.62    4.32       9.5     4.87    5.03
  10       6.12    3.2       10       4.91    5.01
  10.5     6.91    3.11      10.5     4.87    5.04
  11       8.48    0         11       8.49    4.94
  11.5     9.87    0         11.5     9.9     0

SYN/ACK ECT test:

This test demonstrates the importance of ECT on SYN and SYN-ACK packets
by measuring the connection probability in the presence of competing
flows for a DCTCP connection attempt *without* ECT in the SYN packet.
The test was repeated five times for each number of competing flows.

              Competing Flows  1 |    2 |    4 |    8 |   16
                               ------------------------------
Mean Connection Probability    1 | 0.67 | 0.45 | 0.28 |    0
Median Connection Probability  1 | 0.65 | 0.45 | 0.25 |    0

As the number of competing flows moves beyond 1, the connection
probability drops rapidly.

Enabling DCTCP with this patch requires the following steps:

DCTCP must be running both on the sender and receiver side in your
data center, i.e.:

  sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_congestion_control=dctcp

Also, ECN functionality must be enabled on all switches in your
data center for DCTCP to work. The default ECN marking threshold (K)
heuristic on the switch for DCTCP is e.g., 20 packets (30KB) at
1Gbps, and 65 packets (~100KB) at 10Gbps (K > 1/7 * C * RTT, [4]).

In above tests, for each switch port, traffic was segregated into two
queues. For any packet with a DSCP of 0x01 - or equivalently a TOS of
0x04 - the packet was placed into the DCTCP queue. All other packets
were placed into the default drop-tail queue. For the DCTCP queue,
RED/ECN marking was enabled, here, with a marking threshold of 75 KB.
More details however, we refer you to the paper [2] under section 3).

There are no code changes required to applications running in user
space. DCTCP has been implemented in full *isolation* of the rest of
the TCP code as its own congestion control module, so that it can run
without a need to expose code to the core of the TCP stack, and thus
nothing changes for non-DCTCP users.

Changes in the CA framework code are minimal, and DCTCP algorithm
operates on mechanisms that are already available in most Silicon.
The gain (dctcp_shift_g) is currently a fixed constant (1/16) from
the paper, but we leave the option that it can be chosen carefully
to a different value by the user.

In case DCTCP is being used and ECN support on peer site is off,
DCTCP falls back after 3WHS to operate in normal TCP Reno mode.

ss {-4,-6} -t -i diag interface:

  ... dctcp wscale:7,7 rto:203 rtt:2.349/0.026 mss:1448 cwnd:2054
  ssthresh:1102 ce_state 0 alpha 15 ab_ecn 0 ab_tot 735584
  send 10129.2Mbps pacing_rate 20254.1Mbps unacked:1822 retrans:0/15
  reordering:101 rcv_space:29200

  ... dctcp-reno wscale:7,7 rto:201 rtt:0.711/1.327 ato:40 mss:1448
  cwnd:10 ssthresh:1102 fallback_mode send 162.9Mbps pacing_rate
  325.5Mbps rcv_rtt:1.5 rcv_space:29200

More information about DCTCP can be found in [1-4].

  [1] http://simula.stanford.edu/~alizade/Site/DCTCP.html
  [2] http://simula.stanford.edu/~alizade/Site/DCTCP_files/dctcp-final.pdf
  [3] http://simula.stanford.edu/~alizade/Site/DCTCP_files/dctcp_analysis-full.pdf
  [4] http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-bensley-tcpm-dctcp-00

Joint work with Florian Westphal and Glenn Judd.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Glenn Judd <glenn.judd@morganstanley.com>
Acked-by: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:13:10 -04:00
Florian Westphal 9890092e46 net: tcp: more detailed ACK events and events for CE marked packets
DataCenter TCP (DCTCP) determines cwnd growth based on ECN information
and ACK properties, e.g. ACK that updates window is treated differently
than DUPACK.

Also DCTCP needs information whether ACK was delayed ACK. Furthermore,
DCTCP also implements a CE state machine that keeps track of CE markings
of incoming packets.

Therefore, extend the congestion control framework to provide these
event types, so that DCTCP can be properly implemented as a normal
congestion algorithm module outside of the core stack.

Joint work with Daniel Borkmann and Glenn Judd.

Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Glenn Judd <glenn.judd@morganstanley.com>
Acked-by: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:13:10 -04:00
Florian Westphal 7354c8c389 net: tcp: split ack slow/fast events from cwnd_event
The congestion control ops "cwnd_event" currently supports
CA_EVENT_FAST_ACK and CA_EVENT_SLOW_ACK events (among others).
Both FAST and SLOW_ACK are only used by Westwood congestion
control algorithm.

This removes both flags from cwnd_event and adds a new
in_ack_event callback for this. The goal is to be able to
provide more detailed information about ACKs, such as whether
ECE flag was set, or whether the ACK resulted in a window
update.

It is required for DataCenter TCP (DCTCP) congestion control
algorithm as it makes a different choice depending on ECE being
set or not.

Joint work with Daniel Borkmann and Glenn Judd.

Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Glenn Judd <glenn.judd@morganstanley.com>
Acked-by: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:13:10 -04:00
Daniel Borkmann 30e502a34b net: tcp: add flag for ca to indicate that ECN is required
This patch adds a flag to TCP congestion algorithms that allows
for requesting to mark IPv4/IPv6 sockets with transport as ECN
capable, that is, ECT(0), when required by a congestion algorithm.

It is currently used and needed in DataCenter TCP (DCTCP), as it
requires both peers to assert ECT on all IP packets sent - it
uses ECN feedback (i.e. CE, Congestion Encountered information)
from switches inside the data center to derive feedback to the
end hosts.

Therefore, simply add a new flag to icsk_ca_ops. Note that DCTCP's
algorithm/behaviour slightly diverges from RFC3168, therefore this
is only (!) enabled iff the assigned congestion control ops module
has requested this. By that, we can tightly couple this logic really
only to the provided congestion control ops.

Joint work with Florian Westphal and Glenn Judd.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Glenn Judd <glenn.judd@morganstanley.com>
Acked-by: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:13:10 -04:00
Florian Westphal 55d8694fa8 net: tcp: assign tcp cong_ops when tcp sk is created
Split assignment and initialization from one into two functions.

This is required by followup patches that add Datacenter TCP
(DCTCP) congestion control algorithm - we need to be able to
determine if the connection is moderated by DCTCP before the
3WHS has finished.

As we walk the available congestion control list during the
assignment, we are always guaranteed to have Reno present as
it's fixed compiled-in. Therefore, since we're doing the
early assignment, we don't have a real use for the Reno alias
tcp_init_congestion_ops anymore and can thus remove it.

Actual usage of the congestion control operations are being
made after the 3WHS has finished, in some cases however we
can access get_info() via diag if implemented, therefore we
need to zero out the private area for those modules.

Joint work with Daniel Borkmann and Glenn Judd.

Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Glenn Judd <glenn.judd@morganstanley.com>
Acked-by: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:13:10 -04:00
John Fastabend 53dfd50181 net: sched: cls_rcvp, complete rcu conversion
This completes the cls_rsvp conversion to RCU safe
copy, update semantics.

As a result all cases of tcf_exts_change occur on
empty lists now.

Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.r.fastabend@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:04:55 -04:00
Eric Dumazet 3d9a0d2f82 dql: dql_queued() should write first to reduce bus transactions
While doing high throughput test on a BQL enabled NIC,
I found a very high cost in ndo_start_xmit() when accessing BQL data.

It turned out the problem was caused by compiler trying to be
smart, but involving a bad MESI transaction :

  0.05 │  mov    0xc0(%rax),%edi    // LOAD dql->num_queued
  0.48 │  mov    %edx,0xc8(%rax)    // STORE dql->last_obj_cnt = count
 58.23 │  add    %edx,%edi
  0.58 │  cmp    %edi,0xc4(%rax)
  0.76 │  mov    %edi,0xc0(%rax)    // STORE dql->num_queued += count
  0.72 │  js     bd8

I got an incredible 10 % gain [1] by making sure cpu do not attempt
to get the cache line in Shared mode, but directly requests for
ownership.

New code :
	mov    %edx,0xc8(%rax)  // STORE dql->last_obj_cnt = count
	add    %edx,0xc0(%rax)  // RMW   dql->num_queued += count
	mov    0xc4(%rax),%ecx  // LOAD dql->adj_limit
	mov    0xc0(%rax),%edx  // LOAD dql->num_queued
	cmp    %edx,%ecx

The TX completion was running from another cpu, with high interrupts
rate.

Note that I am using barrier() as a soft hint, as mb() here could be
too heavy cost.

[1] This was a netperf TCP_STREAM with TSO disabled, but GSO enabled.

Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Acked-by: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2014-09-29 00:04:55 -04:00