54502cca7f
To send frames on the tap interface, the UDP uses a fairly complicated two level batching. First multiple frames are gathered into a single "message" for the qemu stream socket, then multiple messages are send with sendmmsg(). We now have tap_send_frames() which already deals with sending a number of frames, including batching and handling partial sends. Use that to considerably simplify things. This does make a couple of behavioural changes: * We used to split messages to keep them under 32kiB (except when a single frame was longer than that). The comments claim this is needed to stop qemu from closing the connection, but we don't have any equivalent logic for TCP. I wasn't able to reproduce the problem with this series, although it was apparently easy to reproduce earlier. My suspicion is that there was never an inherent need to keep messages small, however with larger messages (and default kernel buffer sizes) the chances of needing more than one resend for partial send()s is greatly increased. We used not to correctly handle that case of multiple resends, but now we do. * Previously when we got a partial send on UDP, we would resend the remainder of the entire "message", including multiple frames. The common code now only resends the remainder of a single frame, simply dropping any frames which weren't even partially sent. This is what TCP always did and is probably a better idea for UDP too. Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
13 lines
332 B
C
13 lines
332 B
C
/* SPDX-License-Identifier: AGPL-3.0-or-later
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* Copyright (c) 2021 Red Hat GmbH
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* Author: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
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*/
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#ifndef PCAP_H
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#define PCAP_H
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void pcap(const char *pkt, size_t len);
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void pcap_multiple(const struct iovec *iov, unsigned int n, size_t offset);
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void pcap_init(struct ctx *c);
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#endif /* PCAP_H */
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