Commit 5493a2ad authored by Jakub Kicinski's avatar Jakub Kicinski

docs: netlink: clarify the historical baggage of Netlink flags

nlmsg_flags are full of historical baggage, inconsistencies and
strangeness. Try to document it more thoroughly. Explain the meaning
of the ECHO flag (and while at it clarify the comment in the uAPI).
Handwave a little about the NEW request flags and how they make
sense on the surface but cater to really old paradigm before commands
were a thing.

I will add more notes on how to make use of ECHO and discouragement
for reuse of flags to the kernel-side documentation.

Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220927212306.823862-1-kuba@kernel.orgSigned-off-by: default avatarJakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
parent accc3b4a
......@@ -623,22 +623,57 @@ Even though other protocols and Generic Netlink commands often use
the same verbs in their message names (``GET``, ``SET``) the concept
of request types did not find wider adoption.
Message flags
-------------
Notification echo
-----------------
``NLM_F_ECHO`` requests for notifications resulting from the request
to be queued onto the requesting socket. This is useful to discover
the impact of the request.
Note that this feature is not universally implemented.
Other request-type-specific flags
---------------------------------
Classic Netlink defined various flags for its ``GET``, ``NEW``
and ``DEL`` requests in the upper byte of nlmsg_flags in struct nlmsghdr.
Since request types have not been generalized the request type specific
flags are rarely used (and considered deprecated for new families).
For ``GET`` - ``NLM_F_ROOT`` and ``NLM_F_MATCH`` are combined into
``NLM_F_DUMP``, and not used separately. ``NLM_F_ATOMIC`` is never used.
For ``DEL`` - ``NLM_F_NONREC`` is only used by nftables and ``NLM_F_BULK``
only by FDB some operations.
The flags for ``NEW`` are used most commonly in classic Netlink. Unfortunately,
the meaning is not crystal clear. The following description is based on the
best guess of the intention of the authors, and in practice all families
stray from it in one way or another. ``NLM_F_REPLACE`` asks to replace
an existing object, if no matching object exists the operation should fail.
``NLM_F_EXCL`` has the opposite semantics and only succeeds if object already
existed.
``NLM_F_CREATE`` asks for the object to be created if it does not
exist, it can be combined with ``NLM_F_REPLACE`` and ``NLM_F_EXCL``.
A comment in the main Netlink uAPI header states::
4.4BSD ADD NLM_F_CREATE|NLM_F_EXCL
4.4BSD CHANGE NLM_F_REPLACE
The earlier section has already covered the basic request flags
(``NLM_F_REQUEST``, ``NLM_F_ACK``, ``NLM_F_DUMP``) and the ``NLMSG_ERROR`` /
``NLMSG_DONE`` flags (``NLM_F_CAPPED``, ``NLM_F_ACK_TLVS``).
Dump flags were also mentioned (``NLM_F_MULTI``, ``NLM_F_DUMP_INTR``).
True CHANGE NLM_F_CREATE|NLM_F_REPLACE
Append NLM_F_CREATE
Check NLM_F_EXCL
Those are the main flags of note, with a small exception (of ``ieee802154``)
Generic Netlink does not make use of other flags. If the protocol needs
to communicate special constraints for a request it should use
an attribute, not the flags in struct nlmsghdr.
which seems to indicate that those flags predate request types.
``NLM_F_REPLACE`` without ``NLM_F_CREATE`` was initially used instead
of ``SET`` commands.
``NLM_F_EXCL`` without ``NLM_F_CREATE`` was used to check if object exists
without creating it, presumably predating ``GET`` commands.
Classic Netlink, however, defined various flags for its ``GET``, ``NEW``
and ``DEL`` requests. Since request types have not been generalized
the request type specific flags should not be used either.
``NLM_F_APPEND`` indicates that if one key can have multiple objects associated
with it (e.g. multiple next-hop objects for a route) the new object should be
added to the list rather than replacing the entire list.
uAPI reference
==============
......
......@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ struct nlmsghdr {
#define NLM_F_REQUEST 0x01 /* It is request message. */
#define NLM_F_MULTI 0x02 /* Multipart message, terminated by NLMSG_DONE */
#define NLM_F_ACK 0x04 /* Reply with ack, with zero or error code */
#define NLM_F_ECHO 0x08 /* Echo this request */
#define NLM_F_ECHO 0x08 /* Receive resulting notifications */
#define NLM_F_DUMP_INTR 0x10 /* Dump was inconsistent due to sequence change */
#define NLM_F_DUMP_FILTERED 0x20 /* Dump was filtered as requested */
......
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