On Thu, 2019-08-01 at 02:14 -0500, Denis Kenzior wrote: > + /* > + * auto-detect support for large buffer sizes: af_netlink > + * will allocate skbufs larger than 4096 in cases where > + * it detects that the client receive buffer (given to > + * recvmsg) is bigger. In such cases we can assume that > + * performing split dumps is wasteful since the client > + * can likely safely consume the entire un-split wiphy > + * message in one go without the extra message header > + * overhead. > + */ > + if (skb_tailroom(skb) > 4096) { > + state->large_message = true; > + state->split = false; > + } Hmm. That's kinda a neat idea, but I don't think it's a good idea. Have you checked how long the message is now? Since we *did* in fact hit the previous limit, and have added a *lot* of things since then (this was years ago, after all), I wouldn't be surprised if we're reasonably close to the new limit you propose even now already. Also, keep in mind that there are some devices that just have an *enormous* amount of channels, and that's only going to increase (right now with 6/7 GHz, etc.) So in general, given all the variable things we have here, all this buffer size estimation doesn't seem very robust to me. You could have any number of variable things in a message: * channel list - which we alleviated somewhat by having a separate channel dump, so not all data is included here (which I guess you'll complain about next :P) * nl80211_send_mgmt_stypes() things are also a bit variable, and we keep adding interface types etc., and some devices may support lots of frames (there's an upper bound, but it's not that small) * interface combinations - only getting more complex with more complex devices and more concurrency use cases * vendor commands have no real limit * I'm sure measurement use cases will only increases * and generally of course we keep adding to everything Also, I don't really buy the *need* for this since you're just removing a few kernel/user roundtrips here when new devices are discovered, a rare event. The parsing isn't really any more complicated for the userspace side. Regarding the other patch, I think most of the above also applies there. I can sort of see how you think it's *nice* to have all the data right there, but I really don't see why you're so hung up about having to request the full information ... And I really don't want to see this hit the wall again in the future, in some weird scenarios with devices that have lots of <any of the above information>. > It should be safe to assume that any users of these new unsolicited > NEW_WIPHY events are non-legacy clients, which can use a > larger receive buffer for netlink messages. Since older, legacy clients > did not utilize NEW_WIPHY events (they did not exist), it is assumed > that even if the client receives such a message (even if truncated), no > harm would result and backwards-compatibility would be kept. Interesting idea, but no, in general you cannot assume that. Older clients might have added support for NEW_WIPHY without fixing the split dumps first ... Also, you mention in the code that messages are truncated, but I'm pretty sure they're just dropped, not truncated. And finally, I also see no reason to send out many KB of data for what might in the end (e.g. in iw) just be a debug message. But really I think the thing that kills this proposal is the fact that it reintroduces a message size limit (even if higher now) that we're somewhat likely to hit in the future. johannes