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authorJakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>2023-07-26 11:55:29 -0700
committerJakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>2023-07-28 11:35:58 -0700
commit759ab1edb56c88906830fd6b2e7b12514dd32758 (patch)
tree32c06ea620460f98155ed2b221085bdcc2bbea9f /net/core/dev.c
parent083476a2023ce64991e17565707e205a1bf78d63 (diff)
downloadlinux-759ab1edb56c88906830fd6b2e7b12514dd32758.tar.gz
net: store netdevs in an xarray
Iterating over the netdev hash table for netlink dumps is hard. Dumps are done in "chunks" so we need to save the position after each chunk, so we know where to restart from. Because netdevs are stored in a hash table we remember which bucket we were in and how many devices we dumped. Since we don't hold any locks across the "chunks" - devices may come and go while we're dumping. If that happens we may miss a device (if device is deleted from the bucket we were in). We indicate to user space that this may have happened by setting NLM_F_DUMP_INTR. User space is supposed to dump again (I think) if it sees that. Somehow I doubt most user space gets this right.. To illustrate let's look at an example: System state: start: # [A, B, C] del: B # [A, C] with the hash table we may dump [A, B], missing C completely even tho it existed both before and after the "del B". Add an xarray and use it to allocate ifindexes. This way we can iterate ifindexes in order, without the worry that we'll skip one. We may still generate a dump of a state which "never existed", for example for a set of values and sequence of ops: System state: start: # [A, B] add: C # [A, C, B] del: B # [A, C] we may generate a dump of [A], if C got an index between A and B. System has never been in such state. But I'm 90% sure that's perfectly fine, important part is that we can't _miss_ devices which exist before and after. User space which wants to mirror kernel's state subscribes to notifications and does periodic dumps so it will know that C exists from the notification about its creation or from the next dump (next dump is _guaranteed_ to include C, if it doesn't get removed). To avoid any perf regressions keep the hash table for now. Most net namespaces have very few devices and microbenchmarking 1M lookups on Skylake I get the following results (not counting loopback to number of devs): #devs | hash | xa | delta 2 | 18.3 | 20.1 | + 9.8% 16 | 18.3 | 20.1 | + 9.5% 64 | 18.3 | 26.3 | +43.8% 128 | 20.4 | 26.3 | +28.6% 256 | 20.0 | 26.4 | +32.1% 1024 | 26.6 | 26.7 | + 0.2% 8192 |541.3 | 33.5 | -93.8% No surprises since the hash table has 256 entries. The microbenchmark scans indexes in order, if the pattern is more random xa starts to win at 512 devices already. But that's a lot of devices, in practice. Reviewed-by: Leon Romanovsky <leonro@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230726185530.2247698-2-kuba@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'net/core/dev.c')
-rw-r--r--net/core/dev.c82
1 files changed, 54 insertions, 28 deletions
diff --git a/net/core/dev.c b/net/core/dev.c
index e7ffcfa037f79..b58674774a57b 100644
--- a/net/core/dev.c
+++ b/net/core/dev.c
@@ -388,6 +388,8 @@ static void list_netdevice(struct net_device *dev)
hlist_add_head_rcu(&dev->index_hlist,
dev_index_hash(net, dev->ifindex));
write_unlock(&dev_base_lock);
+ /* We reserved the ifindex, this can't fail */
+ WARN_ON(xa_store(&net->dev_by_index, dev->ifindex, dev, GFP_KERNEL));
dev_base_seq_inc(net);
}
@@ -397,8 +399,12 @@ static void list_netdevice(struct net_device *dev)
*/
static void unlist_netdevice(struct net_device *dev, bool lock)
{
+ struct net *net = dev_net(dev);
+
ASSERT_RTNL();
+ xa_erase(&net->dev_by_index, dev->ifindex);
+
/* Unlink dev from the device chain */
if (lock)
write_lock(&dev_base_lock);
@@ -9565,23 +9571,35 @@ err_out:
}
/**
- * dev_new_index - allocate an ifindex
- * @net: the applicable net namespace
+ * dev_index_reserve() - allocate an ifindex in a namespace
+ * @net: the applicable net namespace
+ * @ifindex: requested ifindex, pass %0 to get one allocated
+ *
+ * Allocate a ifindex for a new device. Caller must either use the ifindex
+ * to store the device (via list_netdevice()) or call dev_index_release()
+ * to give the index up.
*
- * Returns a suitable unique value for a new device interface
- * number. The caller must hold the rtnl semaphore or the
- * dev_base_lock to be sure it remains unique.
+ * Return: a suitable unique value for a new device interface number or -errno.
*/
-static int dev_new_index(struct net *net)
+static int dev_index_reserve(struct net *net, u32 ifindex)
{
- int ifindex = net->ifindex;
+ int err;
- for (;;) {
- if (++ifindex <= 0)
- ifindex = 1;
- if (!__dev_get_by_index(net, ifindex))
- return net->ifindex = ifindex;
- }
+ if (!ifindex)
+ err = xa_alloc_cyclic(&net->dev_by_index, &ifindex, NULL,
+ xa_limit_31b, &net->ifindex, GFP_KERNEL);
+ else
+ err = xa_insert(&net->dev_by_index, ifindex, NULL, GFP_KERNEL);
+ if (err < 0)
+ return err;
+
+ return ifindex;
+}
+
+static void dev_index_release(struct net *net, int ifindex)
+{
+ /* Expect only unused indexes, unlist_netdevice() removes the used */
+ WARN_ON(xa_erase(&net->dev_by_index, ifindex));
}
/* Delayed registration/unregisteration */
@@ -10051,11 +10069,10 @@ int register_netdevice(struct net_device *dev)
goto err_uninit;
}
- ret = -EBUSY;
- if (!dev->ifindex)
- dev->ifindex = dev_new_index(net);
- else if (__dev_get_by_index(net, dev->ifindex))
+ ret = dev_index_reserve(net, dev->ifindex);
+ if (ret < 0)
goto err_uninit;
+ dev->ifindex = ret;
/* Transfer changeable features to wanted_features and enable
* software offloads (GSO and GRO).
@@ -10102,7 +10119,7 @@ int register_netdevice(struct net_device *dev)
ret = call_netdevice_notifiers(NETDEV_POST_INIT, dev);
ret = notifier_to_errno(ret);
if (ret)
- goto err_uninit;
+ goto err_ifindex_release;
ret = netdev_register_kobject(dev);
write_lock(&dev_base_lock);
@@ -10158,6 +10175,8 @@ out:
err_uninit_notify:
call_netdevice_notifiers(NETDEV_PRE_UNINIT, dev);
+err_ifindex_release:
+ dev_index_release(net, dev->ifindex);
err_uninit:
if (dev->netdev_ops->ndo_uninit)
dev->netdev_ops->ndo_uninit(dev);
@@ -11035,9 +11054,19 @@ int __dev_change_net_namespace(struct net_device *dev, struct net *net,
}
/* Check that new_ifindex isn't used yet. */
- err = -EBUSY;
- if (new_ifindex && __dev_get_by_index(net, new_ifindex))
- goto out;
+ if (new_ifindex) {
+ err = dev_index_reserve(net, new_ifindex);
+ if (err < 0)
+ goto out;
+ } else {
+ /* If there is an ifindex conflict assign a new one */
+ err = dev_index_reserve(net, dev->ifindex);
+ if (err == -EBUSY)
+ err = dev_index_reserve(net, 0);
+ if (err < 0)
+ goto out;
+ new_ifindex = err;
+ }
/*
* And now a mini version of register_netdevice unregister_netdevice.
@@ -11065,13 +11094,6 @@ int __dev_change_net_namespace(struct net_device *dev, struct net *net,
rcu_barrier();
new_nsid = peernet2id_alloc(dev_net(dev), net, GFP_KERNEL);
- /* If there is an ifindex conflict assign a new one */
- if (!new_ifindex) {
- if (__dev_get_by_index(net, dev->ifindex))
- new_ifindex = dev_new_index(net);
- else
- new_ifindex = dev->ifindex;
- }
rtmsg_ifinfo_newnet(RTM_DELLINK, dev, ~0U, GFP_KERNEL, &new_nsid,
new_ifindex);
@@ -11249,6 +11271,9 @@ static int __net_init netdev_init(struct net *net)
if (net->dev_index_head == NULL)
goto err_idx;
+ net->ifindex = 1;
+ xa_init_flags(&net->dev_by_index, XA_FLAGS_ALLOC);
+
RAW_INIT_NOTIFIER_HEAD(&net->netdev_chain);
return 0;
@@ -11346,6 +11371,7 @@ static void __net_exit netdev_exit(struct net *net)
{
kfree(net->dev_name_head);
kfree(net->dev_index_head);
+ xa_destroy(&net->dev_by_index);
if (net != &init_net)
WARN_ON_ONCE(!list_empty(&net->dev_base_head));
}