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Message-ID: <AANLkTinQq=BAVS1FrH80+VukTfAK1OKOkjEH4=gwZkv6@mail.gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 25 Mar 2011 02:25:04 +0100
From: Alessandro Suardi <alessandro.suardi@...il.com>
To: Kyle Moffett <kyle@...fetthome.net>
Cc: Eric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@...il.com>,
David Miller <davem@...emloft.net>,
linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org, netdev@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH] ipv4: fix fib metrics
On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 2:04 AM, Alessandro Suardi
<alessandro.suardi@...il.com> wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 1:53 AM, Kyle Moffett <kyle@...fetthome.net> wrote:
>> On Thu, Mar 24, 2011 at 20:12, Alessandro Suardi
>> <alessandro.suardi@...il.com> wrote:
>>> On Thu, Mar 24, 2011 at 11:44 PM, Eric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@...il.com> wrote:
>>>> Le jeudi 24 mars 2011 à 15:36 -0700, David Miller a écrit :
>>>>> From: Eric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@...il.com>
>>>>> Date: Thu, 24 Mar 2011 23:32:26 +0100
>>>>>
>>>>> > Then it doesnt work anymore because it parses an ipip field from
>>>>> > ip route get ...
>>>>> >
>>>>> > $ ip ro get 192.168.1.1
>>>>> > 192.168.1.1 dev wlan0 src 192.168.1.21
>>>>> > cache ipid 0x784c mtu 1500 advmss 1460 hoplimit 64
>>>>> >
>>>>> >
>>>>> > Maybe you upgraded iproute2
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm leaning towards app bug too.
>>>>>
>>>>> These default metrics wouldn't get printed before, but now because of
>>>>> how metrics are handled, they will.
>>>>>
>>>>> Userland needs to cope properly with this.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> BTW, ipip is not always printed (even on old kernels) : One needs to
>>>> actually need ipip generation .
>>>>
>>>> edumazet@...mazet-laptop:~$ ping 4.4.4.4
>>>> PING 4.4.4.4 (4.4.4.4) 56(84) bytes of data.
>>>> ^C
>>>>
>>>> edumazet@...mazet-laptop:~$ ip ro get 4.4.4.4
>>>> 4.4.4.4 dev ppp0 src 10.150.51.210
>>>> cache mtu 1500 advmss 1460 hoplimit 64
>>>>
>>>> edumazet@...mazet-laptop:~$ ping -s 2000 4.4.4.4
>>>> PING 4.4.4.4 (4.4.4.4) 2000(2028) bytes of data.
>>>> ^C
>>>>
>>>> edumazet@...mazet-laptop:~$ ip ro get 4.4.4.4
>>>> 4.4.4.4 dev ppp0 src 10.150.51.210
>>>> cache ipid 0xf99a mtu 1500 advmss 1460 hoplimit 64
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> This on a 2.6.35 kernel
>>>>
>>>> I suspect Alessandro tool had a bug anyway.
>>>
>>> I still contend this is a kernel regression :)
>>>
>>>
>>> vpnc is a custom build from trunk as of June 2010, with openssl support
>>> to talk to my corporate VPN concentrator:
>>>
>> [...snip...]
>>>
>>> My iproute package, on this up-to-date Fedora 14 x86_64, has last been
>>> updated on 20 Nov 2010, and back then I was running 2.6.37-rc2-git4
>>> (I keep around my historical .config files, so I know for sure).
>>>
>>> [root@...f ~]# ip -V
>>> ip utility, iproute2-ss100804
>>> [root@...f ~]# rpm -qf /sbin/ip
>>> iproute-2.6.35-6.fc14.x86_64
>>>
>>> The behavior of this version of 'ip' as invoked by this version of 'vpnc'
>>> is something that has worked for the last 4 months, and isn't working
>>> right now. Furthermore, previous versions of 'ip' in Fedora 14 were
>>> also working with the same 'vpnc', which means it's actually 9 months
>>> minimum of working behavior.
>>>
>>> If some change in the kernel broke my userspace, this usually qualifies
>>> as a regression.
>>>
>>> That said, if you can point me to a working version of iproute with the
>>> current kernel, I have no problem in upgrading it :)
>>
>> Historically you could usually take the text output of "ip route get"
>> and feed it right back to "ip route add", and it would work, but this
>> was never guaranteed.
>>
>> Recently, the "ip route get" command started printing extra statistics
>> (like "ipid") after the other information, but obviously those
>> statistics are not valid for an "ip route add" command.
>>
>> The kernel bug was that the "ip" command was not always getting those
>> statistics from the kernel, so obviously they would not be printed.
>>
>> Unfortunately vpnc still tries to pass the entire output of "ip route
>> get" as arguments to "ip route add"; the latter command reports an
>> error when it gets the statistics from the former command as input.
>>
>> So this is certainly not a kernel bug. At *best* it's an iproute bug,
>> depending on whether or not this is considered valid:
>> RT="$(ip route get [...])"
>> ip route flush
>> ip route add ${RT}
>
> Fair enough, I get it.
>
> Looks like the fix_ip_get_output() function in /etc/vpnc/vpnc-script
> needs to be augmented from the current
>
> sed 's/cache//;s/metric \?[0-9]\+ [0-9]\+//g;s/hoplimit [0-9]\+//g'
>
> to something slightly more comprehensive.
>
>
> Thanks for the explanation - will keep around -git2 for my vpnc
> needs until I get this one sorted out :)
...which didn't take that long - one last bugging question and I'm happily
off to sleep; does ipid always come in the form of 0x followed by four
bytes representing hex values ? In a perhaps inelegant but working way
(I'm now writing through the VPN tunnel),
sed 's/cache//;s/metric \?[0-9]\+ [0-9]\+//g;s/hoplimit
[0-9]\+//g;s/ipid 0x....//g'
appears to be Work For Me (TM).
Thanks loads,
--alessandro
"There's always a siren singing you to shipwreck"
(Radiohead, "There There")
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