On 07/09, Julian Schindel wrote: > On 09.07.24 11:23, Magnus Karlsson wrote: > > On Sun, 7 Jul 2024 at 17:06, Julian Schindel <mail@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Hi, > >> > >> [...] > > Thank you for reporting this Julian. This seems to be a bug. If I > > check the value of sizeof(struct xdp_umem_reg_v2), I get 32 bytes too > > on my system, compiling with gcc 11.4. I am not a compiler guy so do > > not know what the rules are for padding structs, but I read the > > following from [0]: > > > > "Pad the entire struct to a multiple of 64-bits if the structure > > contains 64-bit types - the structure size will otherwise differ on > > 32-bit versus 64-bit. Having a different structure size hurts when > > passing arrays of structures to the kernel, or if the kernel checks > > the structure size, which e.g. the drm core does." > > > > I compiled for 64-bits and I believe you did too, but we still get > > this padding. > Yes, I did also compile for 64-bits. If I understood the resource you > linked correctly, the compiler automatically adding padding to align to > 64-bit boundaries is expected for 64-bit platforms: > > "[...] 32-bit platforms don’t necessarily align 64-bit values to 64-bit > boundaries, but 64-bit platforms do. So we always need padding to the > natural size to get this right." > > What is sizeof(struct xdp_umem_reg) for you before the > > patch that added tx_metadata_len? > I would expect this to be the same as sizeof(struct xdp_umem_reg_v2) > after the patch. I'm not sure how to check this with different kernel > versions. > > Maybe the following code helps show all the sizes > of xdp_umem_reg[_v1/_v2] on my system (compiled with "gcc test.c -o > test" using gcc 14.1.1): > > #include <stdio.h> > #include <sys/types.h> > > typedef __uint32_t __u32; > typedef __uint64_t __u64; > > struct xdp_umem_reg_v1 { > __u64 addr; /* Start of packet data area */ > __u64 len; /* Length of packet data area */ > __u32 chunk_size; > __u32 headroom; > }; > > struct xdp_umem_reg_v2 { > __u64 addr; /* Start of packet data area */ > __u64 len; /* Length of packet data area */ > __u32 chunk_size; > __u32 headroom; > __u32 flags; > }; > > struct xdp_umem_reg { > __u64 addr; /* Start of packet data area */ > __u64 len; /* Length of packet data area */ > __u32 chunk_size; > __u32 headroom; > __u32 flags; > __u32 tx_metadata_len; > }; > > int main() { > printf("__u32: \t\t\t %lu\n", sizeof(__u32)); > printf("__u64: \t\t\t %lu\n", sizeof(__u64)); > printf("xdp_umem_reg_v1: \t %lu\n", sizeof(struct xdp_umem_reg_v1)); > printf("xdp_umem_reg_v2: \t %lu\n", sizeof(struct xdp_umem_reg_v2)); > printf("xdp_umem_reg: \t\t %lu\n", sizeof(struct xdp_umem_reg)); > } > > Running "./test" produced this output: > > __u32: 4 > __u64: 8 > xdp_umem_reg_v1: 24 > xdp_umem_reg_v2: 32 > xdp_umem_reg: 32 > > [0]: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v5.4/ioctl/botching-up-ioctls.html Hmm, true, this means our version check won't really work :-/ I don't see a good way to solve it without breaking the uapi. We can either add some new padding field to xdp_umem_reg to make it larger than _v2. Or we can add a new flag to signify the presence of tx_metadata_len and do the validation based on that. Btw, what are you using to setup umem? Looking at libxsk, it does `memset(&mr, 0, sizeof(mr));` which should clear the padding as well.