Hi, All, I noticed through code inspection that ICMP redirects behavior is different after commit 5943634fc5592037db0693b261f7f4bea6bb9457.
In v2.6 kernel, it used to be that ip_rt_redirect() calls arp_bind_neighbour() which returns 0 and then the state of the neigh for the new_gw is checked. If the state isn't valid then the redirected route is deleted. From what I can tell, this behavior is maintained up to v3.5.7 by check_peer_redirect() because rt->rt_gateway is assigned to peer->redirect_learned.a4 before calling ipv4_neigh_lookup(). After the commit, ipv4_neigh_lookup() is performed without the rt_gateway assigned to the new_gw. In my case since rt_gateway (old_gw) isn't zero, the function uses it as the key. The neigh is valid since that gateway is the one that sends the ICMP redirect message. Then the new_gw is assigned. The problem is: the new_gw ARP never gets resolved and the traffic is blackholed. My version is v3.18.24. Is there a justification for this behavioral change? I traced the origin of the code to v2.1.15 where the check is performed when rfc1620_redirects is set. I propose the following patch to restore the previous behavior. diff --git a/net/ipv4/route.c b/net/ipv4/route.c index 62d4d90..510045c 100644 --- a/net/ipv4/route.c +++ b/net/ipv4/route.c @@ -753,7 +753,9 @@ static void __ip_do_redirect(struct rtable *rt, struct sk_buff *skb, struct flow goto reject_redirect; } + rt->rt_gateway = 0; n = ipv4_neigh_lookup(&rt->dst, NULL, &new_gw); + rt->rt_gateway = old_gw; if (!IS_ERR(n)) { if (!(n->nud_state & NUD_VALID)) { neigh_event_send(n, NULL); Regards, Stephen.