Hi Alexei, On Sat, Feb 22, 2020 at 12:47 AM GMT, Alexei Starovoitov wrote: > On Fri, Feb 21, 2020 at 1:41 PM Daniel Borkmann <daniel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> On 2/18/20 6:10 PM, Jakub Sitnicki wrote: >> > This patch set turns SOCK{MAP,HASH} into generic collections for TCP >> > sockets, both listening and established. Adding support for listening >> > sockets enables us to use these BPF map types with reuseport BPF programs. >> > >> > Why? SOCKMAP and SOCKHASH, in comparison to REUSEPORT_SOCKARRAY, allow the >> > socket to be in more than one map at the same time. >> > >> > Having a BPF map type that can hold listening sockets, and gracefully >> > co-exist with reuseport BPF is important if, in the future, we want >> > BPF programs that run at socket lookup time [0]. Cover letter for v1 of >> > this series tells the full story of how we got here [1]. >> > >> > Although SOCK{MAP,HASH} are not a drop-in replacement for SOCKARRAY just >> > yet, because UDP support is lacking, it's a step in this direction. We're >> > working with Lorenz on extending SOCK{MAP,HASH} to hold UDP sockets, and >> > expect to post RFC series for sockmap + UDP in the near future. >> > >> > I've dropped Acks from all patches that have been touched since v6. >> > >> > The audit for missing READ_ONCE annotations for access to sk_prot is >> > ongoing. Thus far I've found one location specific to TCP listening sockets >> > that needed annotating. This got fixed it in this iteration. I wonder if >> > sparse checker could be put to work to identify places where we have >> > sk_prot access while not holding sk_lock... >> > >> > The patch series depends on another one, posted earlier [2], that has been >> > split out of it. >> > >> > Thanks, >> > jkbs >> > >> > [0] https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20190828072250.29828-1-jakub@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ >> > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191123110751.6729-1-jakub@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ >> > [2] https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200217121530.754315-1-jakub@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ >> > >> > v6 -> v7: >> > >> > - Extended the series to cover SOCKHASH. (patches 4-8, 10-11) (John) >> > >> > - Rebased onto recent bpf-next. Resolved conflicts in recent fixes to >> > sk_state checks on sockmap/sockhash update path. (patch 4) >> > >> > - Added missing READ_ONCE annotation in sock_copy. (patch 1) >> > >> > - Split out patches that simplify sk_psock_restore_proto [2]. >> >> Applied, thanks! > > Jakub, > > what is going on here? > # test_progs -n 40 > #40 select_reuseport:OK > Summary: 1/126 PASSED, 30 SKIPPED, 0 FAILED > > Does it mean nothing was actually tested? > I really don't like to see 30 skipped tests. > Is it my environment? > If so please make them hard failures. > I will fix whatever I need to fix in my setup. The UDP tests for sock{map,hash} are marked as skipped, because UDP support is not implemented yet. Sorry for the confusion. Having read the recent thread about BPF selftests [0] I now realize that this is not the best idea. It sends the wrong signal to the developer. I propose to exclude the UDP tests w/ sock{map,hash} by not registering them with test__start_subtest at all. Failing them would indicate a regression, which is not true. While skipping them points to a potential problem with the test environment, which isn't true, either. I'll follow up with a patch for this, if that sounds good to you. [0] https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200220191845.u62nhohgzngbrpib@ast-mbp/T/#t