On Wed, Sep 28, 2016 at 10:20 PM GMT, Jarod Wilson wrote: > While looking into an MTU issue with sfc, I started noticing that almost > every NIC driver with an ndo_change_mtu function implemented almost > exactly the same range checks, and in many cases, that was the only > practical thing their ndo_change_mtu function was doing. Quite a few > drivers have either 68, 64, 60 or 46 as their minimum MTU value checked, > and then various sizes from 1500 to 65535 for their maximum MTU value. We > can remove a whole lot of redundant code here if we simple store min_mtu > and max_mtu in net_device, and check against those in net/core/dev.c's > dev_set_mtu(). > > In theory, there should be zero functional change with this patch, it just > puts the infrastructure in place. Subsequent patches will attempt to start > using said infrastructure, with theoretically zero change in > functionality. > > CC: "David S. Miller" <da...@davemloft.net> > CC: netdev@vger.kernel.org > Signed-off-by: Jarod Wilson <ja...@redhat.com> > ---
[...] > diff --git a/net/core/dev.c b/net/core/dev.c > index c0c291f..5343799 100644 > --- a/net/core/dev.c > +++ b/net/core/dev.c > @@ -6493,9 +6493,17 @@ int dev_set_mtu(struct net_device *dev, int new_mtu) > if (new_mtu == dev->mtu) > return 0; > > - /* MTU must be positive. */ > - if (new_mtu < 0) > + if (new_mtu < dev->min_mtu) { Ouch, integral promotions. Looks like you need to keep the < 0 check. Otherwise new_mtu gets promoted to unsigned int and negative values will pass the check. Thanks, Jakub