On Mon, Jan 25, 2021 at 04:19:11PM +0100, Alexander Bluhm wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 22, 2021 at 06:07:59PM +1000, David Gwynne wrote:
> > --- sys/conf/GENERIC        30 Sep 2020 14:51:17 -0000      1.273
> > +++ sys/conf/GENERIC        22 Jan 2021 07:33:30 -0000
> > @@ -82,6 +82,7 @@ pseudo-device     msts    1       # MSTS line discipl
> >  pseudo-device      endrun  1       # EndRun line discipline
> >  pseudo-device      vnd     4       # vnode disk devices
> >  pseudo-device      ksyms   1       # kernel symbols device
> > +pseudo-device      kstat
> >  #pseudo-device     dt              # Dynamic Tracer
> >
> >  # clonable devices
> 
> This is an unrelated chunk.

oh yeah...

> > +pf_route(struct pf_pdesc *pd, struct pf_state *s)
> ...
> > +   if (pd->dir == PF_IN) {
> >             if (pf_test(AF_INET, PF_OUT, ifp, &m0) != PF_PASS)
> 
> Yes, this is the correct logic.  When the packet comes in, pf
> overrides forwarding, tests the out rules, and sends it.  For
> outgoing packets on out route-to rules we have already tested the
> rules.  It also works for reply-to the other way around.

yep.

> But what about dup-to?  The packet is duplicated for both directions.
> I guess the main use case for dup-to is implementing a monitor port.
> There you have to pass packets stateless, otherwise it would not
> work anyway.  The strange semantics is not related to this diff.

are you saying i should skip pf_test for all dup-to generated packets?

> We are reaching a state where this diff can go in.  I just startet
> a regress run with it.  OK bluhm@

hopefully i fixed the pfctl error messages up so the regress tests arent
too unhappy.

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