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Re: workqueue for pr_input



Apologies all for the blob of text :(

I resent with better formatting but that's likely in a spam queue
somewhere...

So I'll try and summarise in a readable fashion:

(1) patch introduces new locks for per-packet processing when the
architectural goal is lock-less. What would this patch look like if done
to be lock-less?
(2) queuing has a memory cost. There are DoS attacks introduced that
need to be mitigated.
(3) do all packets need this workqueue approach or only some? Can
selective queuing help with (2)?
(4) does workqueue and this patch suggest that <sys/queue.h> needs
enhancing for optimal processing of lists?

Cheers,
Darren

On 26/01/2017 12:02 PM, Darren Reed wrote:
> On 23/01/2017 7:58 PM, Ryota Ozaki wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I propose a controversial change that makes some
>> pr_input workqueue: icmp_input, icmp6_input and
>> carp_input.
>>
>> ...
> Since you are redirecting icmp6_input()...
>
> In response to (say) a ping flood, how large can or will the work queue
> grow?Or unreachable flood? How does this change prevent a DoS attack
> against NetBSD kernel memory through ICMP message flooding of ICMP6 and
> growing the workqueue? Granted there are certain ICMP6 messages that are
> more complex to deal with that will benefit from this change but there
> are also a number of ICMP6 messages for which this change means
> "nothing" (the 30usec increase in time to respond to ping is not what
> I'd call meaningful.) Do they all need to be handled in this fashion
> when the above attack scenario is considered? Is it worth being able to
> distinguish using this input function for handling ICMP6 messages that
> are local to the directly attached subnet only vs those that are not
> local to the subnet? And a comment for workqueue, If I declare a work
> queue like this: + error = workqueue_create(&icmp6_input_wq,
> "icmp6_input", + icmp6_input_work, NULL, PRI_SOFTNET, IPL_SOFTNET,
> WQ_MPSAFE); then the work queue function like this:
> +icmp6_input_work(struct work *wk, void *arg) +{ ... + s = splsoftnet();
> should not need a second explicit reference to an already nominated SPL.
> This should be something like: s = workqueue_spl(w); "But the
> IPL_SOFTNET is for something else." Sure, some workqueue instances may
> use a different IPL inside the work to that used to that in the process
> of doing work. (Why does workqueue_init() not use the "ipl" arg?
> subr_workqueue.c v1.33) On a similar note this: + s = splsoftnet(); +
> mutex_enter(softnet_lock); might be better done as this: s =
> splsoftnet_lock() but then how does this work: +
> mutex_exit(softnet_lock); + splx(s); (for which I don't have a better
> answer than splxsoftnet_unlock() and I don't know that this is even a
> good answer. Anyway, back to the task at hand...) In terms of flooding,
> this change introduces at least four new memory bus synchronisation
> events per input packet. In a push for lock-less networking, is this
> desirable (even if the packets are not processed in-line)? Not including
> SPL changes. A way to halve that would be for icmp6_input_work to simply
> take the entire chain of work at the start of icmp6_input_work() and
> work on that privately, rather than do each item individually. Nothing
> else is going to look at what's on the work queue so there should be no
> problem. Look at workqueue_worker() for an example of how to save on
> locking and if the abstraction violation comment is anything to go by
> then maybe a new set of interfaces is required for <sys/queue.h> to
> support queues, etc, being copied privately and then reset. Or maybe
> there are other ways to approach this problem with changes to workqueue
> but the way the patch is not the best. How would you implement this
> change without adding any new locks to icmp6.c? Cheers, Darren
>



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