On Tue, Feb 2, 2021 at 12:03 AM Jonas Bonn <jo...@norrbonn.se> wrote: > > > > On 02/02/2021 07:56, Pravin Shelar wrote: > > On Mon, Feb 1, 2021 at 9:24 PM Jonas Bonn <jo...@norrbonn.se> wrote: > >> > >> Hi Jakub, > >> > >> On 01/02/2021 21:44, Jakub Kicinski wrote: > >>> On Sat, 30 Jan 2021 12:05:40 -0800 Pravin Shelar wrote: > >>>> On Sat, Jan 30, 2021 at 10:44 AM Jakub Kicinski <k...@kernel.org> wrote: > >>>>> On Fri, 29 Jan 2021 22:59:06 -0800 Pravin Shelar wrote: > >>>>>> On Fri, Jan 29, 2021 at 6:08 AM Jonas Bonn <jo...@norrbonn.se> wrote: > >>>>>> Following are the reasons for extracting the header and populating > >>>>>> metadata. > >>>>>> 1. That is the design used by other tunneling protocols > >>>>>> implementations for handling optional headers. We need to have a > >>>>>> consistent model across all tunnel devices for upper layers. > >>>>> > >>>>> Could you clarify with some examples? This does not match intuition, > >>>>> I must be missing something. > >>>> > >>>> You can look at geneve_rx() or vxlan_rcv() that extracts optional > >>>> headers in ip_tunnel_info opts. > >>> > >>> Okay, I got confused what Jonas was inquiring about. I thought that the > >>> extension headers were not pulled, rather than not parsed. Copying them > >>> as-is to info->opts is right, thanks! > >>> > >> > >> No, you're not confused. The extension headers are not being pulled in > >> the current patchset. > >> > >> Incoming packet: > >> > >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- > >> | flags | type | len | TEID | N-PDU | SEQ | Ext | EXT.Hdr | IP | ... > >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- > >> <--------- GTP header ------<<Optional GTP elements>>-----><- Pkt ---> > >> > >> The "collect metadata" path of the patchset copies 'flags' and 'type' to > >> info->opts, but leaves the following: > >> > >> ----------------------------------------- > >> | N-PDU | SEQ | Ext | EXT.Hdr | IP | ... > >> ----------------------------------------- > >> <--------- GTP header -------><- Pkt ---> > >> > >> So it's leaving _half_ the header and making it a requirement that there > >> be further intelligence down the line that can handle this. This is far > >> from intuitive. > >> > > > > The patch supports Echo, Echo response and End marker packet. > > Issue with pulling the entire extension header is that it would result > > in zero length skb, such packets can not be passed on to the upper > > layer. That is the reason I kept the extension header in skb and added > > indication in tunnel metadata that it is not a IP packet. so that > > upper layer can process the packet. > > IP packet without an extension header would be handled in a fast path > > without any special handling. > > > > Obviously In case of PDU session container extension header GTP driver > > would need to process the entire extension header in the module. This > > way we can handle these user data packets in fastpath. > > I can make changes to use the same method for all extension headers if > > needed. > > > > The most disturbing bit is the fact that the upper layer needs to > understand that part of the header info is in info->opts whereas the > remainder is on the SKB itself. If it is going to access the SKB > anyway, why not just leave the entire GTP header in place and let the > upper layer just get all the information from there? What's the > advantage of info->opts in this case? > > Normally, the gtp module extracts T-PDU's from the GTP packet and passes > them on (after validating their IP address) to the network stack. For > _everything else_, it just passes them along the socket for handling > elsewhere. > > It sounds like you are trying to do exactly the same thing: extract > T-PDU and inject into network stack for T-PDU's, and pass everything > else to another handler. > > So what is different in your case from the normal case? > - there's metadata on the packet... can't we detect this and set the > tunnel ID from the TEID in that case? Or can't we just always have > metadata on the packet? > - the upper layer handler is in kernel space instead of userspace; but > they are doing pretty much the same thing, right? why does the kernel > space variant need something (info->opts) that userspace can get by without? > This is how OVS/eBPF abstracts tunneling implementation. Tunnel context is represented in tunnel metadata. I am trying to integrate GTP tunnel with LTW framework. This way we can make use of GTP tunnel as any other LWT device.
I am fine with the GTP extension header handling that passes GTP packet as is in case extension header. Can you make those changes in this series and post Non RFC Patch Set.