On Sun, Sep 6, 2020 at 5:18 AM Xie He <xie.he.0...@gmail.com> wrote: > > This comment is outdated and no longer reflects the actual implementation > of af_packet.c.
If it was previously true, can you point to a commit that changes the behavior? > > Reasons for the new comment: > > 1. > > In this file, the function packet_snd first reserves a headroom of > length (dev->hard_header_len + dev->needed_headroom). > Then if the socket is a SOCK_DGRAM socket, it calls dev_hard_header, > which calls dev->header_ops->create, to create the link layer header. > If the socket is a SOCK_RAW socket, it "un-reserves" a headroom of > length (dev->hard_header_len), and checks if the user has provided a > header of length (dev->hard_header_len) (in dev_validate_header). Not entirely, a header greater than dev->min_header_len that passes dev_validate_header. > This shows the developers of af_packet.c expect hard_header_len to > be consistent with header_ops. > > 2. > > In this file, the function packet_sendmsg_spkt has a FIXME comment. > That comment states that prepending an LL header internally in a driver > is considered a bug. I believe this bug can be fixed by setting > hard_header_len to 0, making the internal header completely invisible > to af_packet.c (and requesting the headroom in needed_headroom instead). Ack. > 3. > > There is a commit for a WiFi driver: > commit 9454f7a895b8 ("mwifiex: set needed_headroom, not hard_header_len") > According to the discussion about it at: > https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/11407493/ > The author tried to set the WiFi driver's hard_header_len to the Ethernet > header length, and request additional header space internally needed by > setting needed_headroom. This means this usage is already adopted by > driver developers. > > Cc: Willem de Bruijn <willemdebruijn.ker...@gmail.com> > Cc: Eric Dumazet <eric.duma...@gmail.com> > Cc: Brian Norris <briannor...@chromium.org> > Cc: Cong Wang <xiyou.wangc...@gmail.com> > Signed-off-by: Xie He <xie.he.0...@gmail.com> > --- > net/packet/af_packet.c | 15 +++++++++------ > 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/net/packet/af_packet.c b/net/packet/af_packet.c > index 2b33e977a905..c808c76efa71 100644 > --- a/net/packet/af_packet.c > +++ b/net/packet/af_packet.c > @@ -93,12 +93,15 @@ > > /* > Assumptions: > - - if device has no dev->hard_header routine, it adds and removes ll header > - inside itself. In this case ll header is invisible outside of device, > - but higher levels still should reserve dev->hard_header_len. > - Some devices are enough clever to reallocate skb, when header > - will not fit to reserved space (tunnel), another ones are silly > - (PPP). > + - If the device has no dev->header_ops, there is no LL header visible > + outside of the device. In this case, its hard_header_len should be 0. Such a constraint is more robustly captured with a compile time BUILD_BUG_ON check. Please do add a comment that summarizes why the invariant holds. More about the older comment, but if reusing: it's not entirely clear to me what "outside of the device" means. The upper layers that receive data from the device and send data to it, including packet_snd, I suppose? Not the lower layers, clearly. Maybe that can be more specific. > + The device may prepend its own header internally. In this case, its > + needed_headroom should be set to the space needed for it to add its > + internal header. > + For example, a WiFi driver pretending to be an Ethernet driver should > + set its hard_header_len to be the Ethernet header length, and set its > + needed_headroom to be (the real WiFi header length - the fake Ethernet > + header length). > - packet socket receives packets with pulled ll header, > so that SOCK_RAW should push it back. > > -- > 2.25.1 >