From: Andreas Langer <an.langer@gmx.de>
To: b.a.t.m.a.n@lists.open-mesh.org
Subject: Re: [B.A.T.M.A.N.] [PATCH] batman-adv: layer2 unicast packet fragmentation enhancements
Date: Mon, 13 Sep 2010 17:45:31 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20100913174531.21580041@rechenknecht> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <201009122211.07839.sven.eckelmann@gmx.de>
Am Sun, 12 Sep 2010 22:11:06 +0200
schrieb Sven Eckelmann <sven.eckelmann@gmx.de>:
> Marek Lindner wrote:
> > On Saturday 11 September 2010 11:26:37 Sven Eckelmann wrote:
> > > Is it possible to split the patch in those parts? It would make it easier
> > > to read it and understand the patches later.
> >
> > I'm not sure that will do much good. He managed to reorganize the code and
> > thereby remove redundancies. The second patch would probably be no bigger
> > than 3-5 lines of code.
>
> That would not be bad. But refactoring and adding two new features isn't
> something I personally like. Guessing what part could belong to which other
> part just makes it hard to find the real problems. Take for example the
> missing failure checks in the patch.
>
> Something I had in mind would be a patch which adds frag_send_skb and starts
> to use it, one that removes the duplicated code, another one that does the
> cleanup/renaming stuff, the next adds the fragmentation on routing and finally
> there is the defragmentation (probably skipped some steps) - you could much
> more easily check the actual change in its own context. That would for example
> remove the question why those lines were removed - the patch itself would
> answer that question using its commit message which states: "hey those lines
> aren't needed because we already check that fact here and there and don't need
> that information before".
>
> And if a patch real adds a cool feature only by changing some lines and
> without rewriting the whole code then we must have done something right.
>
> If you think different - ok, leave it that way.
No it's ok, you are right. I will split the patch.
>
> > > > - /* packet for me */
> > > > - if (is_my_mac(unicast_packet->dest)) {
> > > > - interface_rx(recv_if->soft_iface, skb, hdr_size);
> > > > - return NET_RX_SUCCESS;
> > > > - }
> > > > -
> > >
> > > There are different parts of the patch which makes ma a little bit
> > > curious - for example: why it is possible to drop that check entirely?
> > > Could that be an extra patch with an explanation why that can be
> > > dropped? Is it only valid in context of the new fragmentation handling?
> > > ...
> >
> > I ran into the same question as it looks a bit odd here but if you apply
> > the patch it all looks good. As I said: it seems he managed to purge quite
> > a bit of redundancy (fragmented and non-fragmented packets are almost
> > identical after all).
>
> Andreas Langer wrote:
> > what are the other parts which makes you curious ?
>
> That a failure in frag_reassemble_skb is a good successfully rx, that
> frag_create_buffer is magically always successful even when the called
> functions can fail, that you use skb_pull and directly afterward access the
> data pointer, that no one frees the skb when frag_reassemble_skb cannot find a
> matching originator, ...
I will look into it.Thanks for your hints.
regards,
andreas
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-09-13 15:45 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-09-10 16:47 [B.A.T.M.A.N.] batman-adv: unicast fragmentation enhancements Andreas Langer
2010-09-10 16:48 ` [B.A.T.M.A.N.] [PATCH] batman-adv: layer2 unicast packet " Andreas Langer
2010-09-11 9:26 ` Sven Eckelmann
2010-09-11 23:56 ` Marek Lindner
2010-09-12 20:11 ` Sven Eckelmann
2010-09-13 15:45 ` Andreas Langer [this message]
2010-09-12 1:14 ` Andreas Langer
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