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The code path which sets the sw_if_index aimed to restrict the output
did not set the flag to trigger that output.
Change-Id: I0a1a3977fdddbce9a276960df43fed745d099ca0
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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Add a bihash-based ACL lookup mechanism and make it a new default.
This changes the time required to lookup a 5-tuple match
from O(total_N_entries) to O(total_N_mask_types), where
"mask type" is an overall mask on the 5-tuple required
to represent an ACE.
For testing/comparison there is a temporary debug CLI
"set acl-plugin use-hash-acl-matching {0|1}", which,
when set to 0, makes the plugin use the "old" linear lookup,
and when set to 1, makes it use the hash-based lookup.
Based on the discussions on vpp-dev mailing list,
prevent assigning the ACL index to an interface,
when the ACL with that index is not defined,
also prevent deleting an ACL if that ACL is applied.
Also, for the easier debugging of the state, there are
new debug CLI commands to see the ACL plugin state at
several layers:
"show acl-plugin acl [index N]" - show a high-level
ACL representation, used for the linear lookup and
as a base for building the hashtable-based lookup.
Also shows if a given ACL is applied somewhere.
"show acl-plugin interface [sw_if_index N]" - show
which interfaces have which ACL(s) applied.
"show acl-plugin tables" - a lower-level debug command
used to see the state of all of the related data structures
at once. There are specifiers possible, which make
for a more focused and maybe augmented output:
"show acl-plugin tables acl [index N]"
show the "bitmask-ready" representations of the ACLs,
we well as the mask types and their associated indices.
"show acl-plutin tables mask"
show the derived mask types and their indices only.
"show acl-plugin tables applied [sw_if_index N]"
show the table of all of the ACEs applied for a given
sw_if_index or all interfaces.
"show acl-plugin tables hash [verbose N]"
show the 48x8 bihash used for the ACL lookup.
Change-Id: I89fff051424cb44bcb189e3cee04c1b8f76efc28
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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A bihash-per-interface is convenient, but turns out tricky difficult from
the maintenance standpoint with the large number of interfaces.
This patch makes the sessions reside in a single hash table for all the interfaces,
adding the lower 16 bit of sw_if_index as part of the key into the previously
unused space.
There is a tradeoff, that a session with an identical 5-tuple and the same
sw_if_index modulo 65536 will match on either of the interfaces.
The probability of that is deemed sufficiently small to not worry about it.
In case it still happens before the heat death of the universe,
there is a clib_warning and the colliding packet will be dropped,
at which point we will need to bump the hash key size by another u64,
but rather not pay the cost of doing that right now.
Change-Id: I2747839cfcceda73e597cbcafbe1e377fb8f1889
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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The previous iteration of the code used the L2 classifier tables for session storage,
as a result, the table allocations were pretty big. The new ACL plugin
datapath uses the tables just as a redirection mechanism, without adding any
entries. Thus, the tables can be much smaller.
Change-Id: Ieec4a5abf0abda6e513ab4e675f912f14d47e671
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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Change-Id: Ic3c9a914a588824b8abd6668961f731432083c4f
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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code use it
This fixes the undesirable pause in the dump commands in case there is nothing to dump.
Change-Id: I0554556c9e442038aa2a1ed8c88234f21f7fe9b9
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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Add the logic to be able to use stateful ACLs in a multithreaded setup.
Change-Id: I3b0cfa6ca4ea8f46f61648611c3e97b00c3376b6
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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Prior to commit bfd9227e6da567e0e19e026afe94cd4c0b65f725, there was
no clean way to check the lower-level message length as supplied
by the client, so there was no option but to trust that the client
does the right thing and allocates memory correctly.
The absence of checks makes it hard for a misbehaving client
to spot the problem - because everything "appears" to work
correctly for the specific erroneous message exchange.
This commit ensures the message received is at least
as big as we expect, and complains loudly if it is not.
Change-Id: I806eaac7c7f1ab3c64cb2bfa6939ce27da9a2b44
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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(HC2VPP-137 is the client behavior triggering this)
If the user does not unapply the ACLs off the interface,
but deletes the interface, the subsequent reuse of the
sw_if_index might find itself with the datapath
hooked up for ACL processing even though there is
no ACL configured. The fix is to unapply any ACLs
in the callback which is called upon the sw_if_index
addition/deletion.
Change-Id: Icea413d7fbf1ef891844a4818626e1b34fe79cbf
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 4c72e629e5ace392390a9d6109594254525064f7)
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Change-Id: I3d64d5ced38a68f3fa208be00c49d20c4e6d4d0e
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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(VPP-682)
This fixes the previously-implicit "drop all non-first fragments" behavior
to be more in line with security rules: a non-first fragment is treated
for the purposes of matching the ACL as a packet with the port
match succeeding. This allows to change the behavior to permit
the fragmented packets for the default "permit specific rules"
ruleset, but also gives the flexibility to block the non-initial
fragments by inserting into the begining a bogus rule
which would deny the L4 traffic.
Also, add a knob which allows to potentially turn this behavior off
in case of a dire need (and revert to dropping all non-initial fragments),
via a debug CLI.
Change-Id: I546b372b65ff2157d9c68b1d32f9e644f1dd71b4
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 9fc0c26c6b28fd6c8b8142ea52f52eafa7e8c7ac)
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Change-Id: Id15b401223aabe7dacb7566c871ebefc17fbb1fc
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 7fd3f513c7df198c45204eba0a3e9a3abe509593)
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- use the counters in a private struct rather than node error counters
- ensure the timer for the non-idle connections is restarted
- fix the deletion of conn at the current tail the list
Change-Id: I632f63574d2ced95fb75c5e7fb588c78fb3cce1c
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 097051a3bd1f63a177c0728f15375afd84a68918)
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Change-Id: I88b322a5d602f3d6d3310e971479180a89430e0e
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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L3 path support, L2+L3 unified processing node, skip IPv6 EH support.
Change-Id: Iac37a466ba1c035e5c2997b03c0743bfec5c9a08
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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Change-Id: I08ab1fd0abdd1db4aff11a38c9c0134b01368e11
Signed-off-by: Eyal Bari <ebari@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I95113a277b94cce5ff332fcf9f57ec6f385acec0
Signed-off-by: Pavel Kotucek <pkotucek@cisco.com>
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via l2output_main.next_nodes
Before this commit, several output features that happen to be the
last in the list of features to be executed, send the packets directly
to <interfaceName>-output. To do this, they use l2_output_dispatch,
which builds a list of sw_if_index to next index mappings.
When interfaces are deleted and the new interfaces are created,
these mappings become stale, and cause the packets being sent to wrong
interface output nodes.
This patch (thanks John Lo for the brilliant idea!) adds a feature node "output",
whose sole purpose is dispatching the packets to the correct interface output
nodes. To do that, it uses the l2output_main.next_nodes, which is already
taken care of for the case of the sw_if_index reuse, so this makes the dependent
features all work correctly.
Since this changes the packet path, for the features that were always the last ones
it has triggered a side problem of the output feat_next_node_index not being properly
initalized. These two users are l2-output-classify node and the output nodes belonging
to the acl-plugin.
For the first one the less invasive fix is just to initialize that field.
For the acl-plugin nodes, rewrite the affected part of the code to use
feat_bitmap_get_next_node_index since this is essentially what the conditional
in l2_output_dispatch does, and fix the compiler warnings generated.
This fix was first made in stable/1701 under commit e7dcee4027854b0ad076101471afdfff67eb9011.
Change-Id: I32e876ab1e1d498cf0854c19c6318dcf59a93805
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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This patch replaces requirement for vlib_plugin_register function
in the plugin so file and introduces new macro:
VLIB_PLUGIN_REGISTER () = {
.version = "version string",
.version_required = "requred version",
.default_disabled = 1,
.early_init = "early_init_function_name",
};
Plugin will nor be loaded if .default_disabled is set to 1
unless explicitely enabled in startup.conf.
If .verstion_required is set, plugin will not be loaded if there
is version mismatch between plugin and vpp. This can be bypassed
by setting "skip-version-check" for specific plugin.
If .early-init string is present, plugin loader will try to resolve
this specific symbol in the plugin namespace and make a function call.
Following startup.conf configuration is added:
plugins {
path /path/to/plugin/directory
plugin ila_plugin.so { enable skip-version-check }
plugin acl_plugin.so { disable }
}
Change-Id: I706c691dd34d94ffe9e02b59831af8859a95f061
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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The initial assumption was that the MACIP ACL classifier tables would be applied
after the classification of the traffic based on the ethertype, it turned out
to be untrue, but the fix in the code did not happen.
Add the ethertype to the mask, and the logic to create the ACL classifier tables
permitting the ARP ethertype with the correct payload.
Change-Id: I7c05c7893f6df8258998eed8983056c77586df81
Signed-off-by: Andrew Yourtchenko <ayourtch@gmail.com>
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Change-Id: I1c3b87e886603678368428ae56a6bd3327cbc90d
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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