On 10/8/20 7:53 AM, Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote: > The bpf_fib_lookup() helper performs a neighbour lookup for the destination > IP and returns BPF_FIB_LKUP_NO_NEIGH if this fails, with the expectation > that the BPF program will pass the packet up the stack in this case. > However, with the addition of bpf_redirect_neigh() that can be used instead > to perform the neighbour lookup. > > However, for that we still need the target ifindex, and since > bpf_fib_lookup() already has that at the time it performs the neighbour > lookup, there is really no reason why it can't just return it in any case. > With this fix, a BPF program can do the following to perform a redirect > based on the routing table that will succeed even if there is no neighbour > entry: > > ret = bpf_fib_lookup(skb, &fib_params, sizeof(fib_params), 0); > if (ret == BPF_FIB_LKUP_RET_SUCCESS) { > __builtin_memcpy(eth->h_dest, fib_params.dmac, ETH_ALEN); > __builtin_memcpy(eth->h_source, fib_params.smac, ETH_ALEN); > > return bpf_redirect(fib_params.ifindex, 0); > } else if (ret == BPF_FIB_LKUP_RET_NO_NEIGH) { > return bpf_redirect_neigh(fib_params.ifindex, 0); > } > There are a lot of assumptions in this program flow and redundant work. fib_lookup is generic and allows the caller to control the input parameters. direct_neigh does a fib lookup based on network header data from the skb. I am fine with the patch, but users need to be aware of the subtle details.