11.51Sozaki$NetBSD: TODO.smpnet,v 1.51 2025/06/17 02:00:25 ozaki-r Exp $ 21.1Sozaki 31.2SozakiMP-safe components 41.2Sozaki================== 51.1Sozaki 61.21SozakiThey work without the big kernel lock (KERNEL_LOCK), i.e., with NET_MPSAFE 71.21Sozakikernel option. Some components scale up and some don't. 81.21Sozaki 91.7Sozaki - Device drivers 101.30Smsaitoh - aq(4) 111.50Snia - awge(4) 121.41Smrg - bcmgenet(4) 131.47Snia - bge(4) 141.48Snia - ena(4) 151.41Smrg - iavf(4) 161.41Smrg - ixg(4) 171.41Smrg - ixl(4) 181.41Smrg - ixv(4) 191.41Smrg - mcx(4) 201.41Smrg - rge(4) 211.41Smrg - se(4) 221.41Smrg - sunxi_emac(4) 231.7Sozaki - vioif(4) 241.7Sozaki - vmx(4) 251.7Sozaki - wm(4) 261.41Smrg - xennet(4) 271.41Smrg - usbnet(4) based adapters: 281.41Smrg - axe(4) 291.41Smrg - axen(4) 301.41Smrg - cdce(4) 311.41Smrg - cue(4) 321.41Smrg - kue(4) 331.41Smrg - mos(4) 341.41Smrg - mue(4) 351.41Smrg - smsc(4) 361.41Smrg - udav(4) 371.41Smrg - upl(4) 381.41Smrg - ure(4) 391.41Smrg - url(4) 401.41Smrg - urndis(4) 411.7Sozaki - Layer 2 421.7Sozaki - Ethernet (if_ethersubr.c) 431.7Sozaki - bridge(4) 441.7Sozaki - STP 451.7Sozaki - Fast forward (ipflow) 461.7Sozaki - Layer 3 471.7Sozaki - All except for items in the below section 481.7Sozaki - Interfaces 491.43Snia - canloop(4) 501.7Sozaki - gif(4) 511.22Sozaki - ipsecif(4) 521.7Sozaki - l2tp(4) 531.43Snia - lagg(4) 541.7Sozaki - pppoe(4) 551.7Sozaki - if_spppsubr.c 561.40Snia - tap(4) 571.7Sozaki - tun(4) 581.43Snia - vether(4) 591.12Sozaki - vlan(4) 601.7Sozaki - Packet filters 611.7Sozaki - npf(7) 621.49Smrg - ipf(4) 631.7Sozaki - Others 641.7Sozaki - bpf(4) 651.12Sozaki - ipsec(4) 661.12Sozaki - opencrypto(9) 671.7Sozaki - pfil(9) 681.2Sozaki 691.2SozakiNon MP-safe components and kernel options 701.2Sozaki========================================= 711.2Sozaki 721.21SozakiThe components and options aren't MP-safe, i.e., requires the big kernel lock, 731.21Sozakiyet. Some of them can be used safely even if NET_MPSAFE is enabled because 741.21Sozakithey're still protected by the big kernel lock. The others aren't protected and 751.21Sozakiso unsafe, e.g, they may crash the kernel. 761.21Sozaki 771.21SozakiProtected ones 781.21Sozaki-------------- 791.21Sozaki 801.7Sozaki - Device drivers 811.7Sozaki - Most drivers other than ones listed in the above section 821.21Sozaki - Layer 4 831.21Sozaki - DCCP 841.21Sozaki - SCTP 851.21Sozaki - TCP 861.21Sozaki - UDP 871.21Sozaki 881.21SozakiUnprotected ones 891.21Sozaki---------------- 901.21Sozaki 911.6Sozaki - Layer 2 921.6Sozaki - ARCNET (if_arcsubr.c) 931.6Sozaki - IEEE 1394 (if_ieee1394subr.c) 941.6Sozaki - IEEE 802.11 (ieee80211(4)) 951.6Sozaki - Layer 3 961.6Sozaki - IPSELSRC 971.6Sozaki - MROUTING 981.6Sozaki - PIM 991.6Sozaki - MPLS (mpls(4)) 1001.17Sozaki - IPv6 address selection policy 1011.6Sozaki - Interfaces 1021.6Sozaki - agr(4) 1031.6Sozaki - carp(4) 1041.6Sozaki - faith(4) 1051.6Sozaki - gre(4) 1061.6Sozaki - ppp(4) 1071.6Sozaki - sl(4) 1081.6Sozaki - stf(4) 1091.6Sozaki - if_srt 1101.6Sozaki - Packet filters 1111.6Sozaki - pf(4) 1121.6Sozaki - Others 1131.6Sozaki - AppleTalk (sys/netatalk/) 1141.6Sozaki - Bluetooth (sys/netbt/) 1151.6Sozaki - altq(4) 1161.6Sozaki - kttcp(4) 1171.6Sozaki - NFS 1181.2Sozaki 1191.2SozakiKnow issues 1201.2Sozaki=========== 1211.1Sozaki 1221.15SozakiNOMPSAFE 1231.15Sozaki-------- 1241.15Sozaki 1251.15SozakiWe use "NOMPSAFE" as a mark that indicates that the code around it isn't MP-safe 1261.15Sozakiyet. We use it in comments and also use as part of function names, for example 1271.15Sozakim_get_rcvif_NOMPSAFE. Let's use "NOMPSAFE" to make it easy to find non-MP-safe 1281.15Sozakicodes by grep. 1291.15Sozaki 1301.1Sozakibpf 1311.2Sozaki--- 1321.1Sozaki 1331.1SozakiMP-ification of bpf requires all of bpf_mtap* are called in normal LWP context 1341.1Sozakior softint context, i.e., not in hardware interrupt context. For Tx, all 1351.44Sandvarbpf_mtap satisfy the requirement. For Rx, most of bpf_mtap are called in softint. 1361.1SozakiUnfortunately some bpf_mtap on Rx are still called in hardware interrupt context. 1371.1Sozaki 1381.1SozakiThis is the list of the functions that have such bpf_mtap: 1391.1Sozaki 1401.1Sozaki - sca_frame_process() @ sys/dev/ic/hd64570.c 1411.1Sozaki 1421.1SozakiIdeally we should make the functions run in softint somehow, but we don't have 1431.1Sozakiactual devices, no time (or interest/love) to work on the task, so instead we 1441.1Sozakiprovide a deferred bpf_mtap mechanism that forcibly runs bpf_mtap in softint 1451.1Sozakicontext. It's a workaround and once the functions run in softint, we should use 1461.1Sozakithe original bpf_mtap again. 1471.10Sozaki 1481.35Sjdolecekif_mcast_op() - SIOCADDMULTI/SIOCDELMULTI 1491.35Sjdolecek----------------------------------------- 1501.35SjdolecekHelper function is called to add or remove multicast addresses for 1511.35Sjdolecekinterface. When called via ioctl it takes IFNET_LOCK(), when called 1521.35Sjdolecekvia sosetopt() it doesn't. 1531.35Sjdolecek 1541.35SjdolecekVarious network drivers can't assert IFNET_LOCKED() in their if_ioctl 1551.35Sjdolecekbecause of this. Generally drivers still take care to splnet() even 1561.35Sjdolecekwith NET_MPSAFE before calling ether_ioctl(), but they do not take 1571.35SjdolecekKERNEL_LOCK(), so this is actually unsafe. 1581.35Sjdolecek 1591.10SozakiLingering obsolete variables 1601.10Sozaki----------------------------- 1611.10Sozaki 1621.10SozakiSome obsolete global variables and member variables of structures remain to 1631.10Sozakiavoid breaking old userland programs which directly access such variables via 1641.10Sozakikvm(3). 1651.10Sozaki 1661.10SozakiThe following programs still use kvm(3) to get some information related to 1671.10Sozakithe network stack. 1681.10Sozaki 1691.10Sozaki - netstat(1) 1701.10Sozaki - vmstat(1) 1711.10Sozaki - fstat(1) 1721.10Sozaki 1731.10Sozakinetstat(1) accesses ifnet_list, the head of a list of interface objects 1741.10Sozaki(struct ifnet), and traverses each object through ifnet#if_list member variable. 1751.10Sozakiifnet_list and ifnet#if_list is obsoleted by ifnet_pslist and 1761.10Sozakiifnet#if_pslist_entry respectively. netstat also accesses the IP address list 1771.46Sandvarof an interface through ifnet#if_addrlist. struct ifaddr, struct in_ifaddr 1781.10Sozakiand struct in6_ifaddr are accessed and the following obsolete member variables 1791.10Sozakiare stuck: ifaddr#ifa_list, in_ifaddr#ia_hash, in_ifaddr#ia_list, 1801.10Sozakiin6_ifaddr#ia_next and in6_ifaddr#_ia6_multiaddrs. Note that netstat already 1811.10Sozakiimplements alternative methods to fetch the above information via sysctl(3). 1821.10Sozaki 1831.10Sozakivmstat(1) shows statistics of hash tables created by hashinit(9) in the kernel. 1841.10SozakiThe statistic information is retrieved via kvm(3). The global variables 1851.10Sozakiin_ifaddrhash and in_ifaddrhashtbl, which are for a hash table of IPv4 1861.10Sozakiaddresses and obsoleted by in_ifaddrhash_pslist and in_ifaddrhashtbl_pslist, 1871.10Sozakiare kept for this purpose. We should provide a means to fetch statistics of 1881.10Sozakihash tables via sysctl(3). 1891.10Sozaki 1901.10Sozakifstat(1) shows information of bpf instances. Each bpf instance (struct bpf) is 1911.10Sozakiobtained via kvm(3). bpf_d#_bd_next, bpf_d#_bd_filter and bpf_d#_bd_list 1921.10Sozakimember variables are obsolete but remain. ifnet#if_xname is also accessed 1931.10Sozakivia struct bpf_if and obsolete ifnet#if_list is required to remain to not change 1941.11Sozakithe offset of ifnet#if_xname. The statistic counters (bpf#bd_rcount, 1951.11Sozakibpf#bd_dcount and bpf#bd_ccount) are also victims of this restriction; for 1961.11Sozakiscalability the statistic counters should be per-CPU and we should stop using 1971.11Sozakiatomic operations for them however we have to remain the counters and atomic 1981.11Sozakioperations. 1991.13Sozaki 2001.13SozakiScalability 2011.13Sozaki----------- 2021.13Sozaki 2031.13Sozaki - Per-CPU rtcaches (used in say IP forwarding) aren't scalable on multiple 2041.13Sozaki flows per CPU 2051.13Sozaki - ipsec(4) isn't scalable on the number of SA/SP; the cost of a look-up 2061.13Sozaki is O(n) 2071.14Sknakahar - opencrypto(9)'s crypto_newsession()/crypto_freesession() aren't scalable 2081.14Sknakahar as they are serialized by one mutex 2091.16Sozaki 2101.18SozakiALTQ 2111.18Sozaki---- 2121.18Sozaki 2131.18SozakiIf ALTQ is enabled in the kernel, it enforces to use just one Tx queue (if_snd) 2141.18Sozakifor packet transmissions, resulting in serializing all Tx packet processing on 2151.18Sozakithe queue. We should probably design and implement an alternative queuing 2161.18Sozakimechanism that deals with multi-core systems at the first place, not making the 2171.18Sozakiexisting ALTQ MP-safe because it's just annoying. 2181.27Spgoyette 2191.27SpgoyetteUsing kernel modules 2201.27Spgoyette-------------------- 2211.27Spgoyette 2221.27SpgoyettePlease note that if you enable NET_MPSAFE in your kernel, and you use and 2231.27Spgoyetteloadable kernel modules (including compat_xx modules or individual network 2241.27Spgoyetteinterface if_xxx device driver modules), you will need to build custom 2251.27Spgoyettemodules. For each module you will need to add the following line to its 2261.27SpgoyetteMakefile: 2271.27Spgoyette 2281.27Spgoyette CPPFLAGS+= NET_MPSAFE 2291.27Spgoyette 2301.27SpgoyetteFailure to do this may result in unpredictable behavior. 2311.28Sozaki 2321.28SozakiIPv4 address initialization atomicity 2331.28Sozaki------------------------------------- 2341.28Sozaki 2351.28SozakiAn IPv4 address is referenced by several data structures: an associated 2361.28Sozakiinterface, its local route, a connected route (if necessary), the global list, 2371.28Sozakithe global hash table, etc. These data structures are not updated atomically, 2381.28Sozakii.e., there can be inconsistent states on an IPv4 address in the kernel during 2391.28Sozakithe initialization of an IPv4 address. 2401.28Sozaki 2411.28SozakiOne known failure of the issue is that incoming packets destinating to an 2421.28Sozakiinitializing address can loop in the network stack in a short period of time. 2431.28SozakiThe address initialization creates an local route first and then registers an 2441.28Sozakiinitializing address to the global hash table that is used to decide if an 2451.28Sozakiincoming packet destinates to the host by checking the destination of the packet 2461.44Sandvaris registered to the hash table. So, if the host allows forwarding, an incoming 2471.28Sozakipacket can match on a local route of an initializing address at ip_output while 2481.28Sozakiit fails the to-self check described above at ip_input. Because a matched local 2491.28Sozakiroute points a loopback interface as its destination interface, an incoming 2501.28Sozakipacket sends to the network stack (ip_input) again, which results in looping. 2511.28SozakiThe loop stops once an initializing address is registered to the hash table. 2521.28Sozaki 2531.28SozakiOne solution of the issue is to reorder the address initialization instructions, 2541.28Sozakifirst register an address to the hash table then create its routes. Another 2551.28Sozakisolution is to use the routing table for the to-self check instead of using the 2561.28Sozakiglobal hash table, like IPv6. 2571.29Sozaki 2581.29Sozakiif_flags 2591.29Sozaki-------- 2601.29Sozaki 2611.29SozakiTo avoid data race on if_flags it should be protected by a lock (currently it's 2621.29SozakiIFNET_LOCK). Thus, if_flags should not be accessed on packet processing to 2631.29Sozakiavoid performance degradation by lock contentions. Traditionally IFF_RUNNING, 2641.29SozakiIFF_UP and IFF_OACTIVE flags of if_flags are checked on packet processing. If 2651.29Sozakiyou make a driver MP-safe you must remove such checks. 2661.29Sozaki 2671.45SriastradDrivers should not touch IFF_ALLMULTI. They are tempted to do so when updating 2681.45Sriastradhardware multicast filters on SIOCADDMULTI/SIOCDELMULTI. Instead, they should 2691.45Sriastraduse the ETHER_F_ALLMULTI bit in struct ethercom::ec_flags, under ETHER_LOCK. 2701.45Sriastradether_ioctl takes care of presenting IFF_ALLMULTI according to the current state 2711.45Sriastradof ETHER_F_ALLMULTI when queried with SIOCGIFFLAGS. 2721.29Sozaki 2731.29SozakiAlso IFF_PROMISC is checked in ether_input and we should get rid of it somehow. 2741.51Sozaki 2751.51SozakiToo many kpreempt_disable/kpreempt_enable 2761.51Sozaki----------------------------------------- 2771.51Sozaki 2781.51SozakiPacket counters in the network stack such as if_statadd() and ip_statinc() are 2791.51Sozakiimplemented with percpu(9) to avoid atomic operations. The implementation seems 2801.51Sozakigood for scalability, however, it introduces another issue. Since percpu(9) 2811.51Sozakirequires kpreempt_{dis,en}able() for each per-cpu operation, we have to call 2821.51Sozakithem for each packet counting. An observation shows that 2831.51Sozakikpreempt_{dis,en}able()s over 10 times are called for each packet on forwarding. 2841.51SozakiFor better performance on a single flow, we should reduce per-packet operations 2851.51Sozakias much as possible. 2861.51Sozaki 2871.51SozakiOne possible solution for the issue is to make the whole network stack 2881.51Sozakinon-preemptive so that we don't need to kpreempt_{dis,en}able()s for each packet 2891.51Sozakicounting. 290