On 6/17/19 8:13 AM, Stefano Brivio wrote: >> >> With strict checking (5.0 and forward): >> - RTM_F_CLONED NOT set means dump only FIB entries >> - RTM_F_CLONED set means dump only exceptions > > Okay. Should we really ignore the RFC and NLM_F_MATCH though? If we add > field(s) to the filter, it comes almost for free, something like: > > if (nlh->nlmsg_flags & NLM_F_MATCH) > filter->dump_exceptions = rtm->rtm_flags & RTM_F_CLONED; > > instead of: > > filter->dump_exceptions = rtm->rtm_flags & RTM_F_CLONED;
This is where you keep losing me. iproute2 has always set NLM_F_MATCH on dump requests, so that flag can not be used as a discriminator here. > >> Without strict checking (old iproute2 on any kernel): >> - dump all, userspace has to sort >> >> Kernel side this can be handled with new field, dump_exceptions, in the >> filter that defaults to true and then is reset in the strict path if the >> flag is not set. > > I guess we need to add two fields, we'll need a 'dump_routes' too. > > Otherwise, the dump functions can't distinguish between the three cases > ('no strict checking', 'strict checking and RTM_F_CLONED', 'strict > checking and no RTM_F_CLONED'). How would you do this with a single > additional field? > sure, separate fields are needed for the pre-strict mode use case. So, I take it we are converging on this: 1. non-strict mode, dump both (FIB entries and exceptions). Userspace has to filter. This is the legacy behavior you are trying to restore. 2. strict mode: a. dump only FIB entries if RTM_F_CLONED is not set b. dump only exception entries if RTM_F_CLONED is set Agreed? Martin, others, ok with this?