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author | David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> | 2016-08-30 20:42:14 +0100 |
---|---|---|
committer | David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> | 2016-09-01 16:43:27 -0700 |
commit | d001648ec7cf8b21ae9eec8b9ba4a18295adfb14 (patch) | |
tree | 830a6ec7dbc683675ba088750caeb5eafb4c8012 /net/rxrpc/skbuff.c | |
parent | 95ac3994514015823634ef1f7116dce24f26aa97 (diff) | |
download | linux-d001648ec7cf8b21ae9eec8b9ba4a18295adfb14.tar.gz linux-d001648ec7cf8b21ae9eec8b9ba4a18295adfb14.tar.bz2 linux-d001648ec7cf8b21ae9eec8b9ba4a18295adfb14.zip |
rxrpc: Don't expose skbs to in-kernel users [ver #2]
Don't expose skbs to in-kernel users, such as the AFS filesystem, but
instead provide a notification hook the indicates that a call needs
attention and another that indicates that there's a new call to be
collected.
This makes the following possibilities more achievable:
(1) Call refcounting can be made simpler if skbs don't hold refs to calls.
(2) skbs referring to non-data events will be able to be freed much sooner
rather than being queued for AFS to pick up as rxrpc_kernel_recv_data
will be able to consult the call state.
(3) We can shortcut the receive phase when a call is remotely aborted
because we don't have to go through all the packets to get to the one
cancelling the operation.
(4) It makes it easier to do encryption/decryption directly between AFS's
buffers and sk_buffs.
(5) Encryption/decryption can more easily be done in the AFS's thread
contexts - usually that of the userspace process that issued a syscall
- rather than in one of rxrpc's background threads on a workqueue.
(6) AFS will be able to wait synchronously on a call inside AF_RXRPC.
To make this work, the following interface function has been added:
int rxrpc_kernel_recv_data(
struct socket *sock, struct rxrpc_call *call,
void *buffer, size_t bufsize, size_t *_offset,
bool want_more, u32 *_abort_code);
This is the recvmsg equivalent. It allows the caller to find out about the
state of a specific call and to transfer received data into a buffer
piecemeal.
afs_extract_data() and rxrpc_kernel_recv_data() now do all the extraction
logic between them. They don't wait synchronously yet because the socket
lock needs to be dealt with.
Five interface functions have been removed:
rxrpc_kernel_is_data_last()
rxrpc_kernel_get_abort_code()
rxrpc_kernel_get_error_number()
rxrpc_kernel_free_skb()
rxrpc_kernel_data_consumed()
As a temporary hack, sk_buffs going to an in-kernel call are queued on the
rxrpc_call struct (->knlrecv_queue) rather than being handed over to the
in-kernel user. To process the queue internally, a temporary function,
temp_deliver_data() has been added. This will be replaced with common code
between the rxrpc_recvmsg() path and the kernel_rxrpc_recv_data() path in a
future patch.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'net/rxrpc/skbuff.c')
-rw-r--r-- | net/rxrpc/skbuff.c | 1 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/net/rxrpc/skbuff.c b/net/rxrpc/skbuff.c index 20529205bb8c..9752f8b1fdd0 100644 --- a/net/rxrpc/skbuff.c +++ b/net/rxrpc/skbuff.c @@ -127,7 +127,6 @@ void rxrpc_kernel_data_consumed(struct rxrpc_call *call, struct sk_buff *skb) call->rx_data_recv = sp->hdr.seq; rxrpc_hard_ACK_data(call, skb); } -EXPORT_SYMBOL(rxrpc_kernel_data_consumed); /* * Destroy a packet that has an RxRPC control buffer |