From: Ben Greear <greearb@candelatech.com>
To: Brian Haley <brian.haley@hp.com>
Cc: netdev@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [iproute2] iproute2: Fix 'addr flush secondary' logic.
Date: Thu, 12 Aug 2010 12:10:36 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4C64472C.9000302@candelatech.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4C6444EA.1070704@hp.com>
On 08/12/2010 12:00 PM, Brian Haley wrote:
> On 08/11/2010 06:48 PM, Ben Greear wrote:
>> Looks like the code was broken in several different places.
>>
>> * It ran only a single filter if there were multiple.
>> * Don't want to flush in a loop if you are doing primary
>> because otherwise promoted seconaries will get deleted
>> for each additional loop (10 in upstream code).
>> * No idea what a while (0); statement at the end of a for
>> loop does, but I don't think it needed to be there!
>>
>> The attached patch makes it work for me, supporting
>> flushing primary or secondary addresses.
>
>> diff --git a/ip/ipaddress.c b/ip/ipaddress.c
>> index 5f0789c..803df17 100644
>> --- a/ip/ipaddress.c
>> +++ b/ip/ipaddress.c
>> @@ -637,7 +637,7 @@ int print_addrinfo_primary(const struct sockaddr_nl *who, struct nlmsghdr *n,
>> {
>> struct ifaddrmsg *ifa = NLMSG_DATA(n);
>>
>> - if (!ifa->ifa_flags& IFA_F_SECONDARY)
>> + if (ifa->ifa_flags& IFA_F_SECONDARY)
> return 0;
>
> This should be:
>
> if (!(ifa->ifa_flags& IFA_F_SECONDARY))
>
> as this function does the opposite of what it seems.
I see no reason to let it do the opposite of what it seems.
From what I can tell, the original code never even called this
method anyway since it was the second filter and only the first
filter was used.
>> @@ -648,7 +648,7 @@ int print_addrinfo_secondary(const struct sockaddr_nl *who, struct nlmsghdr *n,
>> {
>> struct ifaddrmsg *ifa = NLMSG_DATA(n);
>>
>> - if (ifa->ifa_flags& IFA_F_SECONDARY)
>> + if (!(ifa->ifa_flags& IFA_F_SECONDARY))
> return 0;
>
>> From testing, the original code here was correct.
It deleted addresses, but not how it was intended to work,
I think.
>> @@ -865,6 +865,13 @@ static int ipaddr_list_or_flush(int argc, char **argv, int flush)
>> printf("\n*** Round %d, deleting %d addresses ***\n", round, filter.flushed);
>> fflush(stdout);
>> }
>> +
>> + /* If we are flushing, and specifying primary, then we want to flush only a single round.
>> + * Otherwise, we'll start flushing secondaries that were promoted to primaries
>> + */
>> + if (!(filter.flags& IFA_F_SECONDARY)&& (filter.flagmask& IFA_F_SECONDARY)) {
>> + return 0;
>> + }
>
> This doesn't seem to do anything, I see all my IPv4 addresses flushed if I
> run 'ip -4 -s a flush primary dev eth2'. And it says it only deleted one
> when it deleted two addresses :-/ Also, if it did work, it should really goto
> a few lines above so it prints the summary stats:
>
> if (filter.flushed == 0) {
> flush_done:
> if (show_stats) {
>
> Even when I corrected the lines above, it didn't work:
>
> # ip -4 a s dev eth2
> 2: eth2:<BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc mq state UP qlen 1000
> inet 192.168.6.4/24 brd 192.168.6.255 scope global eth2
>
> # ip a a 192.168.6.100/24 brd + dev eth2
> # ip -4 a s dev eth2
> 2: eth2:<BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc mq state UP qlen 1000
> inet 192.168.6.4/24 brd 192.168.6.255 scope global eth2
> inet 192.168.6.100/24 brd 192.168.6.255 scope global secondary eth2
>
> # ./ip -4 -s -s -o a flush primary dev eth2
> 2: eth2 inet 192.168.6.4/24 brd 192.168.6.255 scope global eth2
>
> *** Round 1, deleting 1 addresses ***
> [missing *** Flush is complete after 1 round ***]
>
> # ip -4 a s dev eth2
> [nothing]
>
> Where did my .100 secondary address go? Now this will bug me until I figure
> out why. Maybe it's because I'm booted to 2.6.32.
Do you have the 'promote secondaries' sysctl enabled? I think you
need that to have the secondaries not just dissappear upon removal
of the primary.
>> diff --git a/lib/libnetlink.c b/lib/libnetlink.c
>> index cfeb894..d18e8a0 100644
>
> Can you give an example of how you tested this double filter change? My
> distro /sbin/ip seemed to work just fine.
>
>> - if (status) {
>> + if (msglen) {
>> fprintf(stderr, "!!!Remnant of size %d\n", status);
>> exit(1);
>> }
>
> Should the arg to the fprintf() be msglen too?
Yes, that should be fixed.
Thanks for the review..I'll make this change and show you the commands
I used for testing.
Thanks,
Ben
--
Ben Greear <greearb@candelatech.com>
Candela Technologies Inc http://www.candelatech.com
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-08-12 19:10 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-08-11 17:19 [iproute2] iproute2: Fix 'addr flush secondary' logic Ben Greear
2010-08-11 20:41 ` Brian Haley
2010-08-11 20:53 ` Ben Greear
2010-08-11 22:48 ` Ben Greear
2010-08-12 19:00 ` Brian Haley
2010-08-12 19:10 ` Ben Greear [this message]
2010-08-13 19:49 ` Ben Greear
2010-08-16 15:58 ` Brian Haley
2010-08-16 17:01 ` Ben Greear
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