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Type: feature
Change-Id: I20c56e0d3103624407f18365c2bc1273dea5c199
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Type: style
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I26a19e42076e031ec5399d5ca05cb49fd6fbe1cd
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Cleanup L2/L3 mode switch to not redirect to/from ethernet-input node
as it is no longer necessary.
L2 patch should use sw_if_index for device feature enable/disable.
Type: fix
Signed-off-by: John Lo <loj@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I0f24161d027b07c188fd1e05276146f94c075710
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Without understanding what is going on,
a pattern from l2_fwd.c is applied to l2_patch.c file.
Type: fix
Fixes: d770cfc96257f9bd9e0c96c8ebe50e4531dc1bc5
Ticket: VPP-1799
Change-Id: Ia97d448f9d1846549f57ea69044ae15fa39bb942
Signed-off-by: Vratko Polak <vrpolak@cisco.com>
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Credits to ray.kinsella@intel.com who spotted the issue and identified
root cause.
Type: fix
Change-Id: I4afe74c47769484309f6aebca2de56ad32c8041f
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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-fno-common makes sure we do not have multiple declarations of the same
global symbol across compilation units. It helps debug nasty linkage
bugs by guaranteeing that all reference to a global symbol use the same
underlying object.
It also helps avoiding benign mistakes such as declaring enum as global
objects instead of types in headers (hence the minor fixes scattered
across the source).
Change-Id: I55c16406dc54ff8a6860238b90ca990fa6b179f1
Signed-off-by: Benoît Ganne <bganne@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I30487bd736407378fb5a6d313e4eef12bbb262b8
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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The change can save 1.1 clocks per packet on Intel Atom C3858 platform,
It downgraded from 2.05e1 to 1.94e1 clocks per packet.
The change can save 0.3 clocks per packet on Intel Xeon CPU E5-2699 v4 @ 2.20GHz,
It downgraded from 1.26e1 to 1.23e1 clocks per packet.
Change-Id: I1ede77fb592a797d86940a8abad9ca291a89f1c7
Signed-off-by: Yulong Pei <yulong.pei@intel.com>
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In the CLI parsing, below is a common pattern:
/* Get a line of input. */
if (!unformat_user (input, unformat_line_input, line_input))
return 0;
while (unformat_check_input (line_input) != UNFORMAT_END_OF_INPUT)
{
if (unformat (line_input, "x"))
x = 1;
:
else
return clib_error_return (0, "unknown input `%U'",
format_unformat_error, line_input);
}
unformat_free (line_input);
The 'else' returns if an unknown string is encountered. There a memory
leak because the 'unformat_free(line_input)' is not called. There is a
large number of instances of this pattern.
Replaced the previous pattern with:
/* Get a line of input. */
if (!unformat_user (input, unformat_line_input, line_input))
return 0;
while (unformat_check_input (line_input) != UNFORMAT_END_OF_INPUT)
{
if (unformat (line_input, "x"))
x = 1;
:
else
{
error = clib_error_return (0, "unknown input `%U'",
format_unformat_error, line_input);
goto done:
}
}
/* ...Remaining code... */
done:
unformat_free (line_input);
return error;
}
In multiple files, 'unformat_free (line_input);' was never called, so
there was a memory leak whether an invalid string was entered or not.
Also, there were multiple instance where:
error = clib_error_return (0, "unknown input `%U'",
format_unformat_error, line_input);
used 'input' as the last parameter instead of 'line_input'. The result
is that output did not contain the substring in error, instead just an
empty string. Fixed all of those as well.
There are a lot of file, and very mind numbing work, so tried to keep
it to a pattern to avoid mistakes.
Change-Id: I8902f0c32a47dd7fb3bb3471a89818571702f1d2
Signed-off-by: Billy McFall <bmcfall@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Barach <dave@barachs.net>
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Change-Id: I7b51f88292e057c6443b12224486f2d0c9f8ae23
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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