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authorPeilin Ye <peilin.ye@bytedance.com>2021-07-28 04:33:15 +0300
committerDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>2021-07-28 15:19:31 +0300
commit56af5e749f20c3a540310c207dcc373f4f09156e (patch)
treecca2f1d48c4c9e4771a04fad97ee2067f243d70d /include
parentd80f6d6665a6aa5875327f12491c90f428bf50b1 (diff)
downloadlinux-56af5e749f20c3a540310c207dcc373f4f09156e.tar.xz
net/sched: act_skbmod: Add SKBMOD_F_ECN option support
Currently, when doing rate limiting using the tc-police(8) action, the easiest way is to simply drop the packets which exceed or conform the configured bandwidth limit. Add a new option to tc-skbmod(8), so that users may use the ECN [1] extension to explicitly inform the receiver about the congestion instead of dropping packets "on the floor". The 2 least significant bits of the Traffic Class field in IPv4 and IPv6 headers are used to represent different ECN states [2]: 0b00: "Non ECN-Capable Transport", Non-ECT 0b10: "ECN Capable Transport", ECT(0) 0b01: "ECN Capable Transport", ECT(1) 0b11: "Congestion Encountered", CE As an example: $ tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1: protocol ip prio 10 \ matchall action skbmod ecn Doing the above marks all ECT(0) and ECT(1) packets as CE. It does NOT affect Non-ECT or non-IP packets. In the tc-police scenario mentioned above, users may pipe a tc-police action and a tc-skbmod "ecn" action together to achieve ECN-based rate limiting. For TCP connections, upon receiving a CE packet, the receiver will respond with an ECE packet, asking the sender to reduce their congestion window. However ECN also works with other L4 protocols e.g. DCCP and SCTP [2], and our implementation does not touch or care about L4 headers. The updated tc-skbmod SYNOPSIS looks like the following: tc ... action skbmod { set SETTABLE | swap SWAPPABLE | ecn } ... Only one of "set", "swap" or "ecn" shall be used in a single tc-skbmod command. Trying to use more than one of them at a time is considered undefined behavior; pipe multiple tc-skbmod commands together instead. "set" and "swap" only affect Ethernet packets, while "ecn" only affects IPv{4,6} packets. It is also worth mentioning that, in theory, the same effect could be achieved by piping a "police" action and a "bpf" action using the bpf_skb_ecn_set_ce() helper, but this requires eBPF programming from the user, thus impractical. Depends on patch "net/sched: act_skbmod: Skip non-Ethernet packets". [1] https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3168 [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explicit_Congestion_Notification Reviewed-by: Cong Wang <cong.wang@bytedance.com> Signed-off-by: Peilin Ye <peilin.ye@bytedance.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'include')
-rw-r--r--include/uapi/linux/tc_act/tc_skbmod.h1
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/tc_act/tc_skbmod.h b/include/uapi/linux/tc_act/tc_skbmod.h
index c525b3503797..af6ef2cfbf3d 100644
--- a/include/uapi/linux/tc_act/tc_skbmod.h
+++ b/include/uapi/linux/tc_act/tc_skbmod.h
@@ -17,6 +17,7 @@
#define SKBMOD_F_SMAC 0x2
#define SKBMOD_F_ETYPE 0x4
#define SKBMOD_F_SWAPMAC 0x8
+#define SKBMOD_F_ECN 0x10
struct tc_skbmod {
tc_gen;