From: Jay Vosburgh <fubar@us.ibm.com>
To: Brian Haley <brian.haley@hp.com>
Cc: "Andrey Borzenkov" <arvidjaar@mail.ru>,
"J.A. Magall"@us.ibm.com, ón <jamagallon@ono.com>,
netdev@vger.kernel.org,
"Linux Kernel Mailing List" <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>,
"Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@sisk.pl>,
bonding-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: [Bonding-devel] 2.6.29 regression? Bonding tied to IPV6 in 29-rc5
Date: Tue, 17 Feb 2009 14:24:14 -0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <21405.1234909454@death.nxdomain.ibm.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <499B30DC.5040303@hp.com>
Brian Haley <brian.haley@hp.com> wrote:
>Jay Vosburgh wrote:
[...]
>> Putting the ipv6 bits into a different module might not help,
>> either, because the "core" bonding code would still have the call to the
>> ipv6 functions. Unless there's some magic way to somehow know at
>> runtime whether or not the ipv6 module is loaded, and only try to
>> resolve those symbols if ipv6 is loaded. That seems complicated.
>
>This separate bonding_ipv6 module would have to register itself with the
>"core" one with a new proto_ops of some sort. Calls are made for the
>appropriate method, for example bond_ops->send_gratuitous(bond). We'd
>change the IPv4 code too. It's just a theory, does make things more
>complicated.
I don't see any reason to change the IPv4 bits; there won't ever
be a case of ipv4 not being loaded, and this would just add the
complexity of a registration gizmo with no real benefit. A "bonding
ipv6 ops" would be strictly a hack to deal with ipv6 module dependencies
for cases when the kernel is built with CONFIG_IPV6 but the ipv6 module
itself is prevented from loading.
A registration gizmo doesn't need to be especially complicated;
there's only three functions in bond_ipv6.c that are called from the
bonding core: bond_send_unsolicited_na, and the ipv6 notifier register /
unregister. The bonding_ipv6 module can simply be bond_ipv6.c, which
calls some exported "hey, bond_send_unsol_na is here" thing in the
bonding core during init and another "hey, send_unsol_na is gone" during
unload. The bonding_ipv6 module can do its own notifier registration
handing.
>> To answer your question, I have come across this (aliasing ipv6
>> to nothing in modprobe.conf to disable IPv6) from time to time, but
>> didn't think of it when the NA code was added to bonding.
>
>So I guess I'll start hacking the above, unless someone has a better
>suggestion.
Well, I think this is pretty heinous, but I don't have a better
idea at the moment.
-J
---
-Jay Vosburgh, IBM Linux Technology Center, fubar@us.ibm.com
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-02-17 22:24 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 31+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
[not found] <alpine.LFD.2.00.0902131413120.3179@localhost.localdomain>
[not found] ` <20090217095232.5da06b9f@werewolf.home>
2009-02-17 17:01 ` 2.6.29 regression? Bonding tied to IPV6 in 29-rc5 Andrey Borzenkov
2009-02-17 18:17 ` Andrey Borzenkov
2009-02-17 20:08 ` [Bonding-devel] " Jay Vosburgh
2009-02-17 22:49 ` David Miller
2009-02-17 20:10 ` Brian Haley
2009-02-17 20:56 ` Thomas Backlund
2009-02-17 21:06 ` [Bonding-devel] " Jay Vosburgh
2009-02-17 21:49 ` Brian Haley
2009-02-17 22:24 ` Jay Vosburgh [this message]
2009-03-04 11:46 ` Jan Engelhardt
2009-02-17 22:30 ` Nicolas de Pesloüan
2009-02-17 22:54 ` David Miller
2009-02-17 22:51 ` David Miller
2009-02-17 22:29 ` David Miller
2009-02-18 4:41 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
2009-02-18 5:29 ` David Miller
2009-02-18 5:55 ` Roland Dreier
2009-02-18 13:55 ` Theodore Tso
2009-02-18 16:24 ` Chuck Lever
2009-02-18 18:33 ` Vlad Yasevich
2009-02-18 19:57 ` Brian Haley
2009-02-18 21:21 ` John Dykstra
2009-02-18 21:29 ` [Bonding-devel] " Stephen Hemminger
2009-02-19 13:32 ` Herbert Xu
2009-02-18 22:14 ` David Miller
2009-02-19 1:11 ` Vlad Yasevich
2009-02-19 13:29 ` Herbert Xu
2009-02-18 6:55 ` Frank Blaschka
2009-02-19 18:15 ` Randy Dunlap
2009-02-19 18:19 ` Andrey Borzenkov
2009-02-19 18:20 ` Jay Vosburgh
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