[Kernel-packages] [Bug 2113868] Re: Backport request for fix for IPsec UDP GRO option issue

2025-07-28 Thread Tobias Brunner
The fix mentioned in my last comment has been backported to the 6.15 and 6.12 stable trees. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to linux in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/2113868 Title: Backport request for fix for IPs

[Kernel-packages] [Bug 2113868] Re: Backport request for fix for IPsec UDP GRO option issue

2025-07-04 Thread Tobias Brunner
Thanks! Sorry for the long delay. During testing, I actually noticed a regression. While my patch fixes the packet drops I observed if the esp4|6_offload module is *not* loaded, by not modifying the skb metadata of the received packets. The latter actually breaks GRO offload for UDP- encapsulated

[Kernel-packages] [Bug 2113868] Re: Backport request for fix for IPsec UDP GRO option issue

2025-06-11 Thread Tobias Brunner
> The 6.11 kernel will get the stable paches from 6.12 longterm tree, so 6.11 will include the fix automatically. Great, thanks. > Since you are the author of the fix, if you could backport the fix to 6.6 longterm tree, the ubuntu-6.8 kernel will include the fix automatically as well. 6.6 is not

[Kernel-packages] [Bug 2113868] [NEW] Backport request for fix for IPsec UDP GRO option issue

2025-06-10 Thread Tobias Brunner
Public bug reported: Since kernel v6.7, GRO offloading of UDP-encapsulated ESP packets is supported. This is enabled for individual UDP sockets via the UDP_ENCAP_ESPINUDP and UDP_GRO options. Unfortunately, the original implementation caused issues in some cases. In particular, if the esp4_offloa

[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1771276] Re: linux 4.15 currupts ipsec packets over non ethernet devices

2019-02-20 Thread Tobias Brunner
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 1795653 *** https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1795653 ** This bug has been marked a duplicate of bug 1795653 87cdf3148b11 was never backported to 4.15 -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to