Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Sun, Feb 13, 2022 at 7:17 AM Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >> > On Fri, Feb 11, 2022 at 3:49 PM Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> >> >> When receiving netlink messages, libbpf was using a statically allocated >> >> stack buffer of 4k bytes. This happened to work fine on systems with a 4k >> >> page size, but on systems with larger page sizes it can lead to truncated >> >> messages. The user-visible impact of this was that libbpf would insist no >> >> XDP program was attached to some interfaces because that bit of the netlink >> >> message got chopped off. >> >> >> >> Fix this by switching to a dynamically allocated buffer; we borrow the >> >> approach from iproute2 of using recvmsg() with MSG_PEEK|MSG_TRUNC to get >> >> the actual size of the pending message before receiving it, adjusting the >> >> buffer as necessary. While we're at it, also add retries on interrupted >> >> system calls around the recvmsg() call. >> >> >> >> v2: >> >> - Move peek logic to libbpf_netlink_recv(), don't double free on ENOMEM. >> >> >> >> Reported-by: Zhiqian Guan <zhguan@xxxxxxxxxx> >> >> Fixes: 8bbb77b7c7a2 ("libbpf: Add various netlink helpers") >> >> Acked-by: Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi <memxor@xxxxxxxxx> >> >> Signed-off-by: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@xxxxxxxxxx> >> >> --- >> > >> > Applied to bpf-next. >> >> Awesome, thanks! >> >> > One improvement would be to avoid initial malloc of 4096, especially >> > if that size is enough for most cases. You could detect this through >> > iov.iov_base == buf and not free(iov.iov_base) at the end. Seems >> > reliable and simple enough. I'll leave it up to you to follow up, if >> > you think it's a good idea. >> >> Hmm, seems distributions tend to default the stack size limit to 8k; so >> not sure if blowing half of that on a buffer just to avoid a call to >> malloc() in a non-performance-sensitive is ideal to begin with? I think >> I'd prefer to just keep the dynamic allocation... > > 8KB for user-space thread stack, really? Not 2MB by default? Are you > sure you are not confusing this with kernel threads? Ha, oops! I was looking in the right place, just got the units wrong; those were kbytes not bytes, so 8M stack size. Sorry for the confusion :) -Toke