Thread (19 messages) 19 messages, 7 authors, 2014-12-03

Re: [PATCH net] gso: do GSO for local skb with size bigger than MTU

From: Flavio Leitner <hidden>
Date: 2014-12-02 21:32:43

On Tue, Dec 02, 2014 at 10:06:53AM -0800, Jesse Gross wrote:
On Tue, Dec 2, 2014 at 7:44 AM, Flavio Leitner [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
On Sun, Nov 30, 2014 at 10:08:32AM +0000, Du, Fan wrote:
quoted
quoted
-----Original Message-----
From: Jason Wang [mailto:jasowang@redhat.com]
Sent: Friday, November 28, 2014 3:02 PM
To: Du, Fan
Cc: netdev@vger.kernel.org; davem@davemloft.net; fw@strlen.de; Du, Fan
Subject: Re: [PATCH net] gso: do GSO for local skb with size bigger than MTU



On Fri, Nov 28, 2014 at 2:33 PM, Fan Du [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
Test scenario: two KVM guests sitting in different hosts communicate
to each other with a vxlan tunnel.

All interface MTU is default 1500 Bytes, from guest point of view, its
skb gso_size could be as bigger as 1448Bytes, however after guest skb
goes through vxlan encapuslation, individual segments length of a gso
packet could exceed physical NIC MTU 1500, which will be lost at
recevier side.

So it's possible in virtualized environment, locally created skb len
after encapslation could be bigger than underlayer MTU. In such case,
it's reasonable to do GSO first, then fragment any packet bigger than
MTU as possible.

+---------------+ TX     RX +---------------+
|   KVM Guest   | -> ... -> |   KVM Guest   |
+-+-----------+-+           +-+-----------+-+
  |Qemu/VirtIO|               |Qemu/VirtIO|
  +-----------+               +-----------+
       |                            |
       v tap0                  tap0 v
  +-----------+               +-----------+
  | ovs bridge|               | ovs bridge|
  +-----------+               +-----------+
       | vxlan                vxlan |
       v                            v
  +-----------+               +-----------+
  |    NIC    |    <------>   |    NIC    |
  +-----------+               +-----------+

Steps to reproduce:
 1. Using kernel builtin openvswitch module to setup ovs bridge.
 2. Runing iperf without -M, communication will stuck.
Is this issue specific to ovs or ipv4? Path MTU discovery should help in this case I
believe.
Problem here is host stack push local over-sized gso skb down to NIC, and perform GSO there
without any further ip segmentation.

Reasonable behavior is do gso first at ip level, if gso-ed skb is bigger than MTU && df is set,
Then push ICMP_DEST_UNREACH/ICMP_FRAG_NEEDED message back to sender to adjust mtu.

For PMTU to work, that's another issue I will try to address later on.
quoted
quoted

Signed-off-by: Fan Du <redacted>
---
 net/ipv4/ip_output.c |    7 ++++---
 1 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
diff --git a/net/ipv4/ip_output.c b/net/ipv4/ip_output.c index
bc6471d..558b5f8 100644
--- a/net/ipv4/ip_output.c
+++ b/net/ipv4/ip_output.c
@@ -217,9 +217,10 @@ static int ip_finish_output_gso(struct sk_buff
*skb)
   struct sk_buff *segs;
   int ret = 0;

-  /* common case: locally created skb or seglen is <= mtu */
-  if (((IPCB(skb)->flags & IPSKB_FORWARDED) == 0) ||
-        skb_gso_network_seglen(skb) <= ip_skb_dst_mtu(skb))
+  /* Both locally created skb and forwarded skb could exceed
+   * MTU size, so make a unified rule for them all.
+   */
+  if (skb_gso_network_seglen(skb) <= ip_skb_dst_mtu(skb))
           return ip_finish_output2(skb);

Are you using kernel's vxlan device or openvswitch's vxlan device?

Because for kernel's vxlan devices the MTU accounts for the header
overhead so I believe your patch would work.  However, the MTU is
not visible for the ovs's vxlan devices, so that wouldn't work.
This is being called after the tunnel code, so the MTU that is being
looked at in all cases is the physical device's. Since the packet has
already been encapsulated, tunnel header overhead is already accounted
for in skb_gso_network_seglen() and this should be fine for both OVS
and non-OVS cases.
Right, it didn't work on my first try and that explanation came to mind.

Anyway, I am testing this with containers instead of VMs, so I am using
veth and not Virtio-net.

This is the actual stack trace:

[...]
  do_output
  ovs_vport_send
  vxlan_tnl_send
  vxlan_xmit_skb
  udp_tunnel_xmit_skb
  iptunnel_xmit
   \ skb_scrub_packet => skb->ignore_df = 0;
  ip_local_out_sk
  ip_output
  ip_finish_output (_gso is inlined)
  ip_fragment

and on ip_fragment() it does:

 503         if (unlikely(((iph->frag_off & htons(IP_DF)) && !skb->ignore_df) ||
 504                      (IPCB(skb)->frag_max_size &&
 505                       IPCB(skb)->frag_max_size > mtu))) {
 506                 IP_INC_STATS(dev_net(dev), IPSTATS_MIB_FRAGFAILS);
 507                 icmp_send(skb, ICMP_DEST_UNREACH, ICMP_FRAG_NEEDED,
 508                           htonl(mtu));
 509                 kfree_skb(skb);
 510                 return -EMSGSIZE;
 511         }

Since IP_DF is set and skb->ignore_df is reset to 0, in my case
the packet is dropped and an ICMP is sent back. The connection
remains stuck as before. Doesn't virtio-net set DF bit?

Thanks,
fbl
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