> > Why don't we update the socket allocation when doing pskb_expand_head()? > > Sure, it could become negative, but is that so bad? > > The socket locked state at this time is variable and unknown. > > The socket must be locked in order to modify these values. > And such locks cannot be taken, for example, from HW interrupt > context, amongst other restrictions. Ok, that makes sense. > > We need more space though. Should we then just increase the built-in > > headroom? > > I simply don't know what to suggest at this point, that's why > we are having this discussion :-) I'm still not sure about the dependencies between LL_MAX_HEADER, dev->hard_header_len and similar. Why, for example, does ipip set it to LL_MAX_HEADER + sizeof(struct iphdr)? Because it doesn't know better since the packets it creates could be routed anywhere? Could mac80211 announce it needs a very long hard_header_len (say 48 (or 54) bytes)? Am I right in thinking that then we'd have to increase LL_MAX_HEADER as well? I haven't found a check somewhere that warns you if you set dev->hard_header_len > LL_MAX_HEADER, should there be one? If I increase dev->hard_header_len, will that have any negative impact on the caching since I'm still just using regular ethernet headers? As far as I understand we have a few options: (a) go along with it as we do now, use pskb_expand_head, just call skb_orphan before. I assume this has a number of requirements just like sock size accounting would have, does this work from within a hard_start_xmit path? I haven't seen any problems with it so far anyway. (b) clone the skb and free the original. pretty much equivalent (c) increase hard_header_len/LL_MAX_HEADER constants to 48 (54). Options (a) and (b) make the accounting pretty useless since that would drop the charge to the socket quite early. (c) doesn't seem to work, I tried just increasing LL_MAX_HEADER doesn't seem to help although MAX_TCP_HEADER suggests it should be getting enough headroom then. Ideally, we'd have enough headroom in the skb to start with, since right now we're apparently reallocating a lot, especially encrypted frames. Not that I understand why we don't get a truesize bug (without the monitors) when we do that. With smart hardware like b43 we could even think about putting the 802.11 header stuff into a separate buffer and have the hardware to gather-dma but there are so many dumb usb devices that this won't help much anyway. johannes
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