• YOSHIFUJI Hideaki / 吉藤英明's avatar
    firewire net, ipv4 arp: Extend hardware address and remove driver-level packet inspection. · 6752c8db
    YOSHIFUJI Hideaki / 吉藤英明 authored
    Inspection of upper layer protocol is considered harmful, especially
    if it is about ARP or other stateful upper layer protocol; driver
    cannot (and should not) have full state of them.
    
    IPv4 over Firewire module used to inspect ARP (both in sending path
    and in receiving path), and record peer's GUID, max packet size, max
    speed and fifo address.  This patch removes such inspection by extending
    our "hardware address" definition to include other information as well:
    max packet size, max speed and fifo.  By doing this, The neighbour
    module in networking subsystem can cache them.
    
    Note: As we have started ignoring sspd and max_rec in ARP/NDP, those
          information will not be used in the driver when sending.
    
    When a packet is being sent, the IP layer fills our pseudo header with
    the extended "hardware address", including GUID and fifo.  The driver
    can look-up node-id (the real but rather volatile low-level address)
    by GUID, and then the module can send the packet to the wire using
    parameters provided in the extendedn hardware address.
    
    This approach is realistic because IP over IEEE1394 (RFC2734) and IPv6
    over IEEE1394 (RFC3146) share same "hardware address" format
    in their address resolution protocols.
    
    Here, extended "hardware address" is defined as follows:
    
    union fwnet_hwaddr {
    	u8 u[16];
    	struct {
    		__be64 uniq_id;		/* EUI-64			*/
    		u8 max_rec;		/* max packet size		*/
    		u8 sspd;		/* max speed			*/
    		__be16 fifo_hi;		/* hi 16bits of FIFO addr	*/
    		__be32 fifo_lo;		/* lo 32bits of FIFO addr	*/
    	} __packed uc;
    };
    
    Note that Hardware address is declared as union, so that we can map full
    IP address into this, when implementing MCAP (Multicast Cannel Allocation
    Protocol) for IPv6, but IP and ARP subsystem do not need to know this
    format in detail.
    
    One difference between original ARP (RFC826) and 1394 ARP (RFC2734)
    is that 1394 ARP Request/Reply do not contain the target hardware address
    field (aka ar$tha).  This difference is handled in the ARP subsystem.
    
    CC: Stephan Gatzka <stephan.gatzka@gmail.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarYOSHIFUJI Hideaki <yoshfuji@linux-ipv6.org>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
    6752c8db
net.c 40.4 KB