[PATCH] [NETNS49] support for per/namespace routing cache cleanup

Daniel Lezcano dlezcano at fr.ibm.com
Wed Oct 17 08:05:36 PDT 2007


Denis V. Lunev wrote:
> Daniel Lezcano wrote:
>> Denis V. Lunev wrote:
>>> Daniel Lezcano wrote:
>>>> Denis V. Lunev wrote:
>>>>> /proc/sys/net/route/flush should be accessible inside the net 
>>>>> namespace.
>>>>> Though, the complete opening of this file will result in a DoS or
>>>>> significant entire host slowdown if a namespace process will 
>>>>> continually
>>>>> flush routes.
>>>>>
>>>>> This patch introduces per/namespace route flush facility.
>>>>>
>>>>> Each namespace wanted to flush a cache copies global generation 
>>>>> count to
>>>>> itself and starts the timer. The cache is dropped for a specific 
>>>>> namespace
>>>>> iff the namespace counter is greater or equal global ones.
>>>>>
>>>>> So, in general, unwanted namespaces do nothing. They hold very old low
>>>>> counter and they are unaffected by the requested cleanup.
>>>>>
>>>>> Signed-of-by: Denis V. Lunev <den at openvz.org>
>>>>
>>>> That's right and that will happen when manipulating ip addresses of 
>>>> the network devices too. But I am not confortable with your 
>>>> patchset. It touches the routing flush function too hardly and it 
>>>> uses current->nsproxy->net_ns.
>>>>
>>>> IMHO we should have two flush functions. One taking a network 
>>>> namespace parameter and one without the network namespace parameter. 
>>>> The first one is called when a write to 
>>>> /proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/flush is done (we must use the network 
>>>> namespace of the writer) or when a interface address is changed or 
>>>> shutdown|up. The last one is called by the timer, so we have a 
>>>> global timer flushing the routing cache for all the namespaces.
>>>
>>> we can't :( The unfortunate thing is that the actual cleanup is 
>>> called indirectly and asynchronously. The user _schedule_ the garbage 
>>> collector to run NOW and we are moving over a large routing cache. 
>>> Really large.
>>>
>>> The idea to iterate over the list of each namespace to flush is bad. 
>>> We are in atomic context. The list is protected by the mutex.

Oh, by the way, I forgot something important you spotted with the list 
protected by the mutex.

When looking at ipv6/fib_hash.c with Benjamin, we need to browse the 
network namespaces list for the garbage collecting, but we are in an 
interrupt handler, so I can not use rtnl_lock.

Why is not possible to protect the list with a simple spinlock ? so we 
can call spin_lock_bh when we are in interrupt handler.





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