From: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>
To: "Morten Brørup" <mb@smartsharesystems.com>
Cc: <dev@dpdk.org>, <stable@dpdk.org>,
"Konstantin Ananyev" <konstantin.ananyev@huawei.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH 2/6] ip_frag: discard datagrams with overlapping fragments
Date: Mon, 22 Jun 2026 08:03:59 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20260622080359.28ab3022@phoenix.local> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <98CBD80474FA8B44BF855DF32C47DC35F65934@smartserver.smartshare.dk>
On Mon, 22 Jun 2026 17:01:18 +0200
Morten Brørup <mb@smartsharesystems.com> wrote:
> > From: Stephen Hemminger [mailto:stephen@networkplumber.org]
> > Sent: Friday, 19 June 2026 19.01
> >
> > On Fri, 19 Jun 2026 15:12:21 +0200
> > Morten Brørup <mb@smartsharesystems.com> wrote:
> >
> > > > + /*
> > > > + * Overlap with an existing fragment. Per RFC 8200 section
> > > > 4.5
> > > > + * (and RFC 5722) the datagram must be discarded; the same
> > > > is
> > > > + * applied to IPv4. Free all collected fragments, drop this
> > > > one,
> > > > + * and invalidate the entry.
> > > > + */
> > > > + if (ofs < fp->frags[i].ofs + fp->frags[i].len &&
> > > > + fp->frags[i].ofs < ofs + len) {
> > >
> > > This only catches fragments that are smaller than existing fragments,
> > i.e. fit within one of the existing fragments.
> > > It should be:
> > > if ((ofs >= fp->frags[i].ofs &&
> > > ofs < fp->frags[i].ofs + fp->frags[i].len) ||
> > > (ofs + len >= fp->frags[i].ofs &&
> > > ofs + len < fp->frags[i].ofs + fp->frags[i].len)) {
> > >
> > > > + ip_frag_free(fp, dr);
> >
> > The code here is comparing an incoming fragment N against existing
> > fragment E,
> > using half-open ranges [start, end).
> >
> > The test in the patch is symmetric in N and E.
> > ofs < e.ofs + e.len && e.ofs < ofs + len
> >
> > The one you propose tests that either endpoint of N lands inside E.
> >
> > Take a fixed stored fragment E = [200, 400) and run several incoming
> > fragments through both.
> > N0 = ofs, N1 = ofs+len.
> >
> > N inside E: N = [250, 300)
> >
> > E: |=========| (200..400)
> > N: |===| (250..300)
> >
> > Patch: 250 < 400 && 200 < 300 → T && T → overlap.
> > Proposed: (250≥200 && 250<400) → T → overlap.
> > Both agree.
> >
> > N encloses E: N = [100, 500)
> >
> > E: |=========| (200..400)
> > N: |=============| (100..500)
> >
> > Patch: 100 < 400 && 200 < 500 → T && T → overlap.
> > Proposed: (100≥200 && …) → F, (500≥200 && 500<400) → T && F → F, so F
> > || F → no overlap, MISSED.
> >
> > This is the case the new version version drops. Neither endpoint of N
> > (100 or 500) sits inside [200,400),
> > because N straddles E completely, so new version endpoint-in-E check
> > fails even though the ranges clearly overlap.
> > Patch version catches it because the interval test doesn't care which
> > range is larger.
> >
> > N partial on the left: N = [100, 300)
> >
> > E: |=========| (200..400)
> > N: |======| (100..300)
> >
> > Patch: 100 < 400 && 200 < 300 → T → overlap.
> > Proposed: (300≥200 && 300<400) → T → overlap.
> > Agree.
> >
> > N partial on the right: N = [300, 500) — symmetric to the above, both
> > catch it.
> >
> > So on the four genuine-overlap geometries, your suggestion catches all
> > four and his misses the enclosing one.
> > That is not right since the enclosing overlap is a legitimate attack
> > shape (a big fragment overwriting a smaller stored one).
> >
> > There is another issue.
> > The >= on the exclusive end produces a false positive on fragments that
> > merely abut, which is the normal case.
> > Take E already stored as [1400, 2800) and an in-order-but-late fragment
> > N = [0, 1400) arriving after it (ordinary out-of-order delivery):
> >
> > N: |======| (0..1400)
> > E: |======| (1400..2800)
> >
> > These share no bytes; byte 1400 belongs only to E.
> > Patch: 0 < 2800 && 1400 < 1400 → T && F → no overlap, correct.
> > Proposed: (1400≥1400 && 1400<2800) → T && T → overlap, wrong.
> > This test would discard a perfectly valid datagram whenever a left-
> > abutting fragment arrives after its neighbor.
> > Adjacent fragments abutting is what fragmentation produces by design,
> > so this would fire constantly under reordering.
> >
> > Bottom line: the patch was correct as far as I can tell.
>
> Thank you for the detailed explanation, Stephen.
> Agreed, and sorry about the noise. :-)
>
I will give credit to Claude for the detail. I reviewed the general
code here; but had to prod it into giving a more detailed explaination
because it was confusing..
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2026-06-22 15:04 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 13+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2026-06-16 21:05 [PATCH 0/6] ip_frag: fix reassembly defects and add test Stephen Hemminger
2026-06-16 21:05 ` [PATCH 1/6] ip_frag: tolerate duplicate fragments Stephen Hemminger
2026-06-16 21:05 ` [PATCH 2/6] ip_frag: discard datagrams with overlapping fragments Stephen Hemminger
2026-06-19 13:12 ` Morten Brørup
2026-06-19 17:01 ` Stephen Hemminger
2026-06-22 15:01 ` Morten Brørup
2026-06-22 15:03 ` Stephen Hemminger [this message]
2026-06-16 21:05 ` [PATCH 3/6] ip_frag: include protocol in IPv4 reassembly key Stephen Hemminger
2026-06-16 21:05 ` [PATCH 4/6] ip_frag: drop IPv6 fragments with unexpected headers Stephen Hemminger
2026-06-16 21:05 ` [PATCH 5/6] ip_frag: reject oversized reassembled datagrams Stephen Hemminger
2026-06-16 21:05 ` [PATCH 6/6] app/test: add test for IP reassembly Stephen Hemminger
2026-06-19 13:24 ` [PATCH 0/6] ip_frag: fix reassembly defects and add test Morten Brørup
2026-06-22 15:03 ` Morten Brørup
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