diff options
author | Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de> | 2020-02-03 17:37:07 +0100 |
---|---|---|
committer | Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org> | 2020-02-17 10:55:14 +0100 |
commit | 6a757c07e51f80ac34325fcd558490d2d1439e1b (patch) | |
tree | ca7743f40a95ceb0cdf04fe91cd79b90829aec23 /include/uapi/linux | |
parent | bb89abe52bf426f1f40850c441efc77426cc31e1 (diff) |
netfilter: conntrack: allow insertion of clashing entries
This patch further relaxes the need to drop an skb due to a clash with
an existing conntrack entry.
Current clash resolution handles the case where the clash occurs between
two identical entries (distinct nf_conn objects with same tuples), i.e.:
Original Reply
existing: 10.2.3.4:42 -> 10.8.8.8:53 10.2.3.4:42 <- 10.0.0.6:5353
clashing: 10.2.3.4:42 -> 10.8.8.8:53 10.2.3.4:42 <- 10.0.0.6:5353
... existing handling will discard the unconfirmed clashing entry and
makes skb->_nfct point to the existing one. The skb can then be
processed normally just as if the clash would not have existed in the
first place.
For other clashes, the skb needs to be dropped.
This frequently happens with DNS resolvers that send A and AAAA queries
back-to-back when NAT rules are present that cause packets to get
different DNAT transformations applied, for example:
-m statistics --mode random ... -j DNAT --dnat-to 10.0.0.6:5353
-m statistics --mode random ... -j DNAT --dnat-to 10.0.0.7:5353
In this case the A or AAAA query is dropped which incurs a costly
delay during name resolution.
This patch also allows this collision type:
Original Reply
existing: 10.2.3.4:42 -> 10.8.8.8:53 10.2.3.4:42 <- 10.0.0.6:5353
clashing: 10.2.3.4:42 -> 10.8.8.8:53 10.2.3.4:42 <- 10.0.0.7:5353
In this case, clash is in original direction -- the reply direction
is still unique.
The change makes it so that when the 2nd colliding packet is received,
the clashing conntrack is tagged with new IPS_NAT_CLASH_BIT, gets a fixed
1 second timeout and is inserted in the reply direction only.
The entry is hidden from 'conntrack -L', it will time out quickly
and it can be early dropped because it will never progress to the
ASSURED state.
To avoid special-casing the delete code path to special case
the ORIGINAL hlist_nulls node, a new helper, "hlist_nulls_add_fake", is
added so hlist_nulls_del() will work.
Example:
CPU A: CPU B:
1. 10.2.3.4:42 -> 10.8.8.8:53 (A)
2. 10.2.3.4:42 -> 10.8.8.8:53 (AAAA)
3. Apply DNAT, reply changed to 10.0.0.6
4. 10.2.3.4:42 -> 10.8.8.8:53 (AAAA)
5. Apply DNAT, reply changed to 10.0.0.7
6. confirm/commit to conntrack table, no collisions
7. commit clashing entry
Reply comes in:
10.2.3.4:42 <- 10.0.0.6:5353 (A)
-> Finds a conntrack, DNAT is reversed & packet forwarded to 10.2.3.4:42
10.2.3.4:42 <- 10.0.0.7:5353 (AAAA)
-> Finds a conntrack, DNAT is reversed & packet forwarded to 10.2.3.4:42
The conntrack entry is deleted from table, as it has the NAT_CLASH
bit set.
In case of a retransmit from ORIGINAL dir, all further packets will get
the DNAT transformation to 10.0.0.6.
I tried to come up with other solutions but they all have worse
problems.
Alternatives considered were:
1. Confirm ct entries at allocation time, not in postrouting.
a. will cause uneccesarry work when the skb that creates the
conntrack is dropped by ruleset.
b. in case nat is applied, ct entry would need to be moved in
the table, which requires another spinlock pair to be taken.
c. breaks the 'unconfirmed entry is private to cpu' assumption:
we would need to guard all nfct->ext allocation requests with
ct->lock spinlock.
2. Make the unconfirmed list a hash table instead of a pcpu list.
Shares drawback c) of the first alternative.
3. Document this is expected and force users to rearrange their
ruleset (e.g. by using "-m cluster" instead of "-m statistics").
nft has the 'jhash' expression which can be used instead of 'numgen'.
Major drawback: doesn't fix what I consider a bug, not very realistic
and I believe its reasonable to have the existing rulesets to 'just
work'.
4. Document this is expected and force users to steer problematic
packets to the same CPU -- this would serialize the "allocate new
conntrack entry/nat table evaluation/perform nat/confirm entry", so
no race can occur. Similar drawback to 3.
Another advantage of this patch compared to 1) and 2) is that there are
no changes to the hot path; things are handled in the udp tracker and
the clash resolution path.
Cc: rcu@vger.kernel.org
Cc: "Paul E. McKenney" <paulmck@kernel.org>
Cc: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
Cc: Jozsef Kadlecsik <kadlec@netfilter.org>
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'include/uapi/linux')
-rw-r--r-- | include/uapi/linux/netfilter/nf_conntrack_common.h | 12 |
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/netfilter/nf_conntrack_common.h b/include/uapi/linux/netfilter/nf_conntrack_common.h index 336014bf8868..b6f0bb1dc799 100644 --- a/include/uapi/linux/netfilter/nf_conntrack_common.h +++ b/include/uapi/linux/netfilter/nf_conntrack_common.h @@ -97,6 +97,15 @@ enum ip_conntrack_status { IPS_UNTRACKED_BIT = 12, IPS_UNTRACKED = (1 << IPS_UNTRACKED_BIT), +#ifdef __KERNEL__ + /* Re-purposed for in-kernel use: + * Tags a conntrack entry that clashed with an existing entry + * on insert. + */ + IPS_NAT_CLASH_BIT = IPS_UNTRACKED_BIT, + IPS_NAT_CLASH = IPS_UNTRACKED, +#endif + /* Conntrack got a helper explicitly attached via CT target. */ IPS_HELPER_BIT = 13, IPS_HELPER = (1 << IPS_HELPER_BIT), @@ -110,7 +119,8 @@ enum ip_conntrack_status { */ IPS_UNCHANGEABLE_MASK = (IPS_NAT_DONE_MASK | IPS_NAT_MASK | IPS_EXPECTED | IPS_CONFIRMED | IPS_DYING | - IPS_SEQ_ADJUST | IPS_TEMPLATE | IPS_OFFLOAD), + IPS_SEQ_ADJUST | IPS_TEMPLATE | IPS_UNTRACKED | + IPS_OFFLOAD), __IPS_MAX_BIT = 15, }; |