Blame view

kernel/linux-imx6_3.14.28/Documentation/networking/x25-iface.txt 4.77 KB
6b13f685e   김민수   BSP 최초 추가
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
  			X.25 Device Driver Interface 1.1
  
  			   Jonathan Naylor 26.12.96
  
  This is a description of the messages to be passed between the X.25 Packet
  Layer and the X.25 device driver. They are designed to allow for the easy
  setting of the LAPB mode from within the Packet Layer.
  
  The X.25 device driver will be coded normally as per the Linux device driver
  standards. Most X.25 device drivers will be moderately similar to the
  already existing Ethernet device drivers. However unlike those drivers, the
  X.25 device driver has a state associated with it, and this information
  needs to be passed to and from the Packet Layer for proper operation.
  
  All messages are held in sk_buff's just like real data to be transmitted
  over the LAPB link. The first byte of the skbuff indicates the meaning of
  the rest of the skbuff, if any more information does exist.
  
  
  Packet Layer to Device Driver
  -----------------------------
  
  First Byte = 0x00 (X25_IFACE_DATA)
  
  This indicates that the rest of the skbuff contains data to be transmitted
  over the LAPB link. The LAPB link should already exist before any data is
  passed down.
  
  First Byte = 0x01 (X25_IFACE_CONNECT)
  
  Establish the LAPB link. If the link is already established then the connect
  confirmation message should be returned as soon as possible.
  
  First Byte = 0x02 (X25_IFACE_DISCONNECT)
  
  Terminate the LAPB link. If it is already disconnected then the disconnect
  confirmation message should be returned as soon as possible.
  
  First Byte = 0x03 (X25_IFACE_PARAMS)
  
  LAPB parameters. To be defined.
  
  
  Device Driver to Packet Layer
  -----------------------------
  
  First Byte = 0x00 (X25_IFACE_DATA)
  
  This indicates that the rest of the skbuff contains data that has been
  received over the LAPB link.
  
  First Byte = 0x01 (X25_IFACE_CONNECT)
  
  LAPB link has been established. The same message is used for both a LAPB
  link connect_confirmation and a connect_indication.
  
  First Byte = 0x02 (X25_IFACE_DISCONNECT)
  
  LAPB link has been terminated. This same message is used for both a LAPB
  link disconnect_confirmation and a disconnect_indication.
  
  First Byte = 0x03 (X25_IFACE_PARAMS)
  
  LAPB parameters. To be defined.
  
  
  
  Possible Problems
  =================
  
  (Henner Eisen, 2000-10-28)
  
  The X.25 packet layer protocol depends on a reliable datalink service.
  The LAPB protocol provides such reliable service. But this reliability
  is not preserved by the Linux network device driver interface:
  
  - With Linux 2.4.x (and above) SMP kernels, packet ordering is not
    preserved. Even if a device driver calls netif_rx(skb1) and later
    netif_rx(skb2), skb2 might be delivered to the network layer
    earlier that skb1.
  - Data passed upstream by means of netif_rx() might be dropped by the
    kernel if the backlog queue is congested.
  
  The X.25 packet layer protocol will detect this and reset the virtual
  call in question. But many upper layer protocols are not designed to
  handle such N-Reset events gracefully. And frequent N-Reset events
  will always degrade performance.
  
  Thus, driver authors should make netif_rx() as reliable as possible:
  
  SMP re-ordering will not occur if the driver's interrupt handler is
  always executed on the same CPU. Thus,
  
  - Driver authors should use irq affinity for the interrupt handler.
  
  The probability of packet loss due to backlog congestion can be
  reduced by the following measures or a combination thereof:
  
  (1) Drivers for kernel versions 2.4.x and above should always check the
      return value of netif_rx(). If it returns NET_RX_DROP, the
      driver's LAPB protocol must not confirm reception of the frame
      to the peer. 
      This will reliably suppress packet loss. The LAPB protocol will
      automatically cause the peer to re-transmit the dropped packet
      later.
      The lapb module interface was modified to support this. Its
      data_indication() method should now transparently pass the
      netif_rx() return value to the (lapb module) caller.
  (2) Drivers for kernel versions 2.2.x should always check the global
      variable netdev_dropping when a new frame is received. The driver
      should only call netif_rx() if netdev_dropping is zero. Otherwise
      the driver should not confirm delivery of the frame and drop it.
      Alternatively, the driver can queue the frame internally and call
      netif_rx() later when netif_dropping is 0 again. In that case, delivery
      confirmation should also be deferred such that the internal queue
      cannot grow to much.
      This will not reliably avoid packet loss, but the probability
      of packet loss in netif_rx() path will be significantly reduced.
  (3) Additionally, driver authors might consider to support
      CONFIG_NET_HW_FLOWCONTROL. This allows the driver to be woken up
      when a previously congested backlog queue becomes empty again.
      The driver could uses this for flow-controlling the peer by means
      of the LAPB protocol's flow-control service.