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authorDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>2020-06-30 12:29:39 -0700
committerDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>2020-06-30 12:29:39 -0700
commitb9fcf0a0d826a3a556ae368a42461c920928c6c5 (patch)
treeb208f21f9d66e179bf519fbd98b70af99a9760d1 /drivers/mfd/intel_pmc_bxt.c
parentbf64ff4c2aac65d680dc639a511c781cf6b6ec08 (diff)
parent8f9a1fa4308363944ba94a961f69646c4b0ff26b (diff)
Merge branch 'support-AF_PACKET-for-layer-3-devices'
Jason A. Donenfeld says: ==================== support AF_PACKET for layer 3 devices Hans reported that packets injected by a correct-looking and trivial libpcap-based program were not being accepted by wireguard. In investigating that, I noticed that a few devices weren't properly handling AF_PACKET-injected packets, and so this series introduces a bit of shared infrastructure to support that. The basic problem begins with socket(AF_PACKET, SOCK_RAW, htons(ETH_P_ALL)) sockets. When sendto is called, AF_PACKET examines the headers of the packet with this logic: static void packet_parse_headers(struct sk_buff *skb, struct socket *sock) { if ((!skb->protocol || skb->protocol == htons(ETH_P_ALL)) && sock->type == SOCK_RAW) { skb_reset_mac_header(skb); skb->protocol = dev_parse_header_protocol(skb); } skb_probe_transport_header(skb); } The middle condition there triggers, and we jump to dev_parse_header_protocol. Note that this is the only caller of dev_parse_header_protocol in the kernel, and I assume it was designed for this purpose: static inline __be16 dev_parse_header_protocol(const struct sk_buff *skb) { const struct net_device *dev = skb->dev; if (!dev->header_ops || !dev->header_ops->parse_protocol) return 0; return dev->header_ops->parse_protocol(skb); } Since AF_PACKET already knows which netdev the packet is going to, the dev_parse_header_protocol function can see if that netdev has a way it prefers to figure out the protocol from the header. This, again, is the only use of parse_protocol in the kernel. At the moment, it's only used with ethernet devices, via eth_header_parse_protocol. This makes sense, as mostly people are used to AF_PACKET-injecting ethernet frames rather than layer 3 frames. But with nothing in place for layer 3 netdevs, this function winds up returning 0, and skb->protocol then is set to 0, and then by the time it hits the netdev's ndo_start_xmit, the driver doesn't know what to do with it. This is a problem because drivers very much rely on skb->protocol being correct, and routinely reject packets where it's incorrect. That's why having this parsing happen for injected packets is quite important. In wireguard, ipip, and ipip6, for example, packets from AF_PACKET are just dropped entirely. For tun devices, it's sort of uglier, with the tun "packet information" header being passed to userspace containing a bogus protocol value. Some userspace programs are ill-equipped to deal with that. (But of course, that doesn't happen with tap devices, which benefit from the similar shared infrastructure for layer 2 netdevs, further motiviating this patchset for layer 3 netdevs.) This patchset addresses the issue by first adding a layer 3 header parse function, much akin to the existing one for layer 2 packets, and then adds a shared header_ops structure that, also much akin to the existing one for layer 2 packets. Then it wires it up to a few immediate places that stuck out as requiring it, and does a bit of cleanup. This patchset seems like it's fixing real bugs, so it might be appropriate for stable. But they're also very old bugs, so if you'd rather not backport to stable, that'd make sense to me too. ==================== Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/mfd/intel_pmc_bxt.c')
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