commit e92539843a0c7e5116254382626cce226bf2135e
Author: Patrick McHardy <kaber@trash.net>
Date: Thu Oct 23 13:46:16 2008 +0200
libnl: nfqueue: add nfqueue specific socket allocation function
nfqueue users usually send verdict messages from the receive callback.
When waiting for ACKs, the receive callback might be called again
recursively until the stack blows up.
Add a nfqueue specific socket allocation function that automatically
disables ACKing for the socket.
Signed-off-by: Patrick McHardy <kaber@trash.net>
we're using libnl-1.1 for a project. When trying to delete all
addresses of an interface by only setting interface index and
address family of an rtnl_addr and executing rtnl_addr_delete()
we received some error (I don't remember what it was).
The bug(?) is in build_addr_msg() in lib/route/addr.c:
IFA_ADDRESS is set to a_local when a_peer is not set,
without checking if a_local was set. We just added
if (tmpl->ce_mask & ADDR_ATTR_LOCAL)
after the "else" (line 496 in the current git).
This changes make nfnl_ct_get_src_port() and others return the value
in host byte order rather than in network byte order.
Also splits printing into details and statistical section and
improves readability.
The idea of a common handle is long revised and only misleading,
nl_handle really represents a socket with some additional
action handlers assigned to it.
Alias for nl_handle is kept for backwards compatibility.
Replaces obsolete calls to nla_get_addr() and nla_get_data()
with nl_addr_alloc_attr() respectively nl_data_alloc_attr().
Also fixes missing error handling while parsing routing multipath
configuration.
In order for the interface to become more thread safe, the error
handling was revised to no longer depend on a static errno and
error string buffer.
This patch converts all error paths to return a libnl specific
error code which can be translated to a error message using
nl_geterror(int error). The functions nl_error() and
nl_get_errno() are therefore obsolete.
This change required various sets of function prototypes to be
changed in order to return an error code, the most prominent
are:
struct nl_cache *foo_alloc_cache(...);
changed to:
int foo_alloc_cache(..., struct nl_cache **);
struct nl_msg *foo_build_request(...);
changed to:
int foo_build_request(..., struct nl_msg **);
struct foo *foo_parse(...);
changed to:
int foo_parse(..., struct foo **);
This pretty much only leaves trivial allocation functions to
still return a pointer object which can still return NULL to
signal out of memory.
This change is a serious API and ABI breaker, sorry!
Added rtnl_route_foreach_nexthop() to walk the list of nexthops invoking a
caller-provided callback for each nexthop entry, and added rtnl_route_nexthop_n()
to retrieve the Nth nexthop entry in the list.
Using rtnl_route_get_metric() for route comparison became a bottleneck
because each metric which was not available resulted in the generation
of an error message. This changeset avoids this by accessing rt_metrics
and rt_metrics_mask directly while comparing route objects.
As pointed out by Regis Hanna, a considerable performance gain can be
achieved by using malloc() over calloc() when allocating netlink message
buffers. This is likely due to the fact that we use a complete page for
each message.
This changesets adds the possibility to fill a nl_cache with
the contents of the route cache. It also adds the possibility
to limit route caches to certain address families.
New netem-related functionality:
Added ability to save new settings to the kernel. In netem.c, the
netem_get_opts() stub has been replaced with netem_build_msg() which
manipulates the nl_msg data directly and returns an error code instead
of a new nl_msg. Modifications to qdisc_build() in qdisc.c and struct
rtnl_qdisc_ops were necessary for this.
Added support for getting/setting corruption probability/correlation.
Added support for setting a delay distribution.
Fixed tbf_msg_parser() to call tbf_alloc() instead of tbf_qdisc() to
prevent a seg fault.
I stepped over libnl always freeing the messages and it
kind of made it awkward to reuse the message data without
reallocating.
The basic idea is: if a callback return value has a bit set,
don't free that message. The calling application owns it.
By default, things stay as before (messages are freed).
Signed-off-by: Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky@linux.intel.com>
Adds all missing routing attributes and brings the routing
related code to a working state. In the process the API
was broken several times with the justification that nobody
is using this code yet.
The changes include new example code which is also a prototype
for how plain CLI tools could look like to control routes.