The 09/23/2020 20:45, Vladimir Oltean wrote: > > On Wed, Sep 23, 2020 at 10:35:30PM +0200, Horatiu Vultur wrote: > > The 09/23/2020 20:22, Vladimir Oltean wrote: > > > On Wed, Sep 23, 2020 at 10:08:00PM +0200, Horatiu Vultur wrote: > > > > The 09/23/2020 14:24, Vladimir Oltean wrote: > > > > > + if (ocelot_port->ptp_cmd == IFH_REW_OP_TWO_STEP_PTP) { > > > > > + struct sk_buff *clone; > > > > > + > > > > > + clone = skb_clone_sk(skb); > > > > > + if (!clone) { > > > > > + kfree_skb(skb); > > > > > + return NETDEV_TX_OK; > > > > > > > > Why do you return NETDEV_TX_OK? > > > > Because the frame is not sent yet. > > > > > > I suppose I _could_ increment the tx_dropped counters, if that's what > > > you mean. > > > > Yeah, something like that I was thinking. > > > > Also I am just thinking, not sure if it is correct but, can you return > > NETDEV_TX_BUSY and not free the skb? > > > > Do you have a use case for NETDEV_TX_BUSY instead of plain dropping the > skb, some situation where it would be better?
Not really. > > I admit I haven't tested this particular code path, but my intuition > tells me that under OOM, the last thing you need is some networking > driver just trying and trying again to send a packet. Yes, I totally understand your point and I aggree with you. > > Documentation/networking/driver.rst: I looked also initially in this document, that is the reason why I was not sure if it is correct to return NETDEV_TX_BUSY. > > 1) The ndo_start_xmit method must not return NETDEV_TX_BUSY under > any normal circumstances. It is considered a hard error unless > there is no way your device can tell ahead of time when it's > transmit function will become busy. > > Looking up the uses of NETDEV_TX_BUSY, I see pretty much only congestion > type of events. > > Thanks, > -Vladimir -- /Horatiu