Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines | |
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2017-06-10 | MPLS: cannot delete a path from the CLI | Neale Ranns | 1 | -13/+25 | |
Change-Id: I7f85870ef99405727312a5de6839c8875c9fa1c5 Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com> | |||||
2017-04-11 | Remove usued, redundant and deprecated code from lookup.h | Neale Ranns | 1 | -2/+2 | |
Change-Id: Ic16bc10d0b2877b2afdf052615f9334f31b9519f Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com> | |||||
2017-04-07 | MPLS Mcast | Neale Ranns | 1 | -8/+9 | |
1 - interface-DPO Used in the Data-plane to change a packet's input interface 2 - MPLS multicast FIB entry Same as a unicast entry but it links to a replicate not a load-balance DPO 3 - Multicast MPLS tunnel Update MPLS tunnels to use a FIB path-list to describe the endpoint[s]. Use the path-list to generate the forwarding chain (DPOs) to link to . 4 - Resolve a path via a local label (of an mLDP LSP) For IP multicast entries to use an LSP in the replication list, we need to decribe the 'resolve-via-label' where the label is that of a multicast LSP. 5 - MPLS disposition path sets RPF-ID For a interface-less LSP (i.e. mLDP not RSVP-TE) at the tail of the LSP we still need to perform an RPF check. An MPLS disposition DPO performs the MPLS pop validation checks and sets the RPF-ID in the packet. 6 - RPF check with per-entry RPF-ID An RPF-ID is used instead of a real interface SW if index in the case the IP traffic arrives from an LSP that does not have an associated interface. Change-Id: Ib92e177be919147bafeb599729abf3d1abc2f4b3 Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com> | |||||
2017-03-17 | MPLS performance improvments. | Neale Ranns | 1 | -0/+8 | |
1 - Quad loop lookup and label imposition. 2 - optimise imposition for the 1 label case 3 - input gets TTL from header directly (no byte swap) Change-Id: I59204c9e5d134b0df75d7afa43e360f946d1ffe7 Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com> | |||||
2017-02-22 | VPP-635: CLI Memory leak with invalid parameter | Billy McFall | 1 | -0/+2 | |
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> | |||||
2016-12-28 | Reorganize source tree to use single autotools instance | Damjan Marion | 1 | -0/+511 | |
Change-Id: I7b51f88292e057c6443b12224486f2d0c9f8ae23 Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com> |