On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 4:11 PM Adel Abouchaev <adel.abushaev@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > QUIC requires end to end encryption of the data. The application usually > prepares the data in clear text, encrypts and calls send() which implies > multiple copies of the data before the packets hit the networking stack. > Similar to kTLS, QUIC kernel offload of cryptography reduces the memory > pressure by reducing the number of copies. > > The scope of kernel support is limited to the symmetric cryptography, > leaving the handshake to the user space library. For QUIC in particular, > the application packets that require symmetric cryptography are the 1RTT > packets with short headers. Kernel will encrypt the application packets > on transmission and decrypt on receive. This series implements Tx only, > because in QUIC server applications Tx outweighs Rx by orders of > magnitude. > > Supporting the combination of QUIC and GSO requires the application to > correctly place the data and the kernel to correctly slice it. The > encryption process appends an arbitrary number of bytes (tag) to the end > of the message to authenticate it. The GSO value should include this > overhead, the offload would then subtract the tag size to parse the > input on Tx before chunking and encrypting it. > > With the kernel cryptography, the buffer copy operation is conjoined > with the encryption operation. The memory bandwidth is reduced by 5-8%. > When devices supporting QUIC encryption in hardware come to the market, > we will be able to free further 7% of CPU utilization which is used > today for crypto operations. > > Adel Abouchaev (6): > Documentation on QUIC kernel Tx crypto. > Define QUIC specific constants, control and data plane structures > Add UDP ULP operations, initialization and handling prototype > functions. > Implement QUIC offload functions > Add flow counters and Tx processing error counter > Add self tests for ULP operations, flow setup and crypto tests > > Documentation/networking/index.rst | 1 + > Documentation/networking/quic.rst | 185 ++++ > include/net/inet_sock.h | 2 + > include/net/netns/mib.h | 3 + > include/net/quic.h | 63 ++ > include/net/snmp.h | 6 + > include/net/udp.h | 33 + > include/uapi/linux/quic.h | 60 + > include/uapi/linux/snmp.h | 9 + > include/uapi/linux/udp.h | 4 + > net/Kconfig | 1 + > net/Makefile | 1 + > net/ipv4/Makefile | 3 +- > net/ipv4/udp.c | 15 + > net/ipv4/udp_ulp.c | 192 ++++ > net/quic/Kconfig | 16 + > net/quic/Makefile | 8 + > net/quic/quic_main.c | 1417 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ > net/quic/quic_proc.c | 45 + > tools/testing/selftests/net/.gitignore | 4 +- > tools/testing/selftests/net/Makefile | 3 +- > tools/testing/selftests/net/quic.c | 1153 +++++++++++++++++++ > tools/testing/selftests/net/quic.sh | 46 + > 23 files changed, 3267 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) > create mode 100644 Documentation/networking/quic.rst > create mode 100644 include/net/quic.h > create mode 100644 include/uapi/linux/quic.h > create mode 100644 net/ipv4/udp_ulp.c > create mode 100644 net/quic/Kconfig > create mode 100644 net/quic/Makefile > create mode 100644 net/quic/quic_main.c > create mode 100644 net/quic/quic_proc.c > create mode 100644 tools/testing/selftests/net/quic.c > create mode 100755 tools/testing/selftests/net/quic.sh > > > base-commit: fd78d07c7c35de260eb89f1be4a1e7487b8092ad > -- > 2.30.2 > Hi, Adel, I don't see how the key update(rfc9001#section-6) is handled on the TX path, which is not using TLS Key update, and "Key Phase" indicates which key will be used after rekeying. Also, I think it is almost impossible to handle the peer rekeying on the RX path either based on your current model in the future. The patch seems to get the crypto_ctx by doing a connection hash table lookup in the sendmsg(), which is not good from the performance side. One QUIC connection can go over multiple UDP sockets, but I don't think one socket can be used by multiple QUIC connections. So why not save the ctx in the socket instead? The patch is to reduce the copying operations between user space and the kernel. I might miss something in your user space code, but the msg to send is *already packed* into the Stream Frame in user space, what's the difference if you encrypt it in userspace and then sendmsg(udp_sk) with zero-copy to the kernel. Didn't really understand the "GSO" you mentioned, as I don't see any code about kernel GSO, I guess it's just "Fragment size", right? BTW, it‘s not common to use "//" for the kernel annotation. I'm not sure if it's worth adding a ULP layer over UDP for this QUIC TX only. Honestly, I'm more supporting doing a full QUIC stack in the kernel independently with socket APIs to use it: https://github.com/lxin/tls_hs. Thanks.