Squashed commit of the following:
net/tmp: Rename the unacked field of the tcp connection structure to tx_unacked. Too confusing with the implementation of delayed RX ACKs.
net/tcp: Initial implementation of TCP delayed ACKs.
net/tcp: Add delayed ACK configuration selection. Rename tcp_ack() to tcp_synack(). It may or may not send a ACK. It will always send SYN or SYN/ACK.
1. For buffered tcp/udp case, if CONFIG_NET_ARP_SEND/CONFIG_NET_ARP_IPIN/CONFIG_NET_ICMPv6_NEIGHBOR isn't enabled and the table doesn't contain ip<->ethaddr mapping yet, the logic will skip the realtransmission and then arp/neighbor can't steal the final buffer to generate arp/icmpv6 packet.
2.for all other case, the tcp layer or user program should already contain the retransmit logic, the check is redundancy and may generate many duplicated packets if arp/icmpv6 response is too slow because the cursor stop forward. If user still concern about the very first packet lost, he could fix the issue by enabling CONFIG_NET_ARP_SEND/CONFIG_NET_ICMPv6_NEIGHBOR at begin.
Iobinstrumentation
* mm/iob: Introduces producer/consumer id to every iob call. This is so that the calls can be instrumented to monitor the IOB resources.
* iob instrumentation - Merges producer/consumer enumeration for simpler IOB user.
* fs/procfs: Starts adding support for /proc/iobinfo
* fs/procfs: Finishes first pass of simple IOB user stastics and /proc/iobinfo entry
Approved-by: Gregory Nutt <gnutt@nuttx.org>
Squashed commit of the following:
net/: Fix some naming inconsistencies, Fix final compilation issies.
net/inet/inet_close(): Now that we have logic to drain the buffered TX data, we can implement a proper lingering close.
net/inet,tcp,udp: Add functions to wait for write buffers to drain.
net/udp: Add support for notification when the UDP write buffer becomes empty.
net/tcp: Add support for notification when the TCP write buffer becomes empty.
arch/: Removed all references to CONFIG_DISABLE_POLL. The standard POSIX poll() can not longer be disabled.
sched/ audio/ crypto/: Removed all references to CONFIG_DISABLE_POLL. The standard POSIX poll() can not longer be disabled.
Documentation/: Removed all references to CONFIG_DISABLE_POLL. The standard POSIX poll() can not longer be disabled.
fs/: Removed all references to CONFIG_DISABLE_POLL. The standard POSIX poll() can not longer be disabled.
graphics/: Removed all references to CONFIG_DISABLE_POLL. The standard POSIX poll() can not longer be disabled.
net/: Removed all references to CONFIG_DISABLE_POLL. The standard POSIX poll() can not longer be disabled.
drivers/: Removed all references to CONFIG_DISABLE_POLL. The standard POSIX poll() can not longer be disabled.
include/, syscall/, wireless/: Removed all references to CONFIG_DISABLE_POLL. The standard POSIX poll() can not longer be disabled.
configs/: Remove all references to CONFIG_DISABLE_POLL. Standard POSIX poll can no longer be disabled.
Squashed commit of the following:
sched/sched/sched_getsockets.c: Fix an error in conditional compilation.
fs/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
Documentation/: Remove all references to CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
include/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
libs/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
net/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
sched/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
syscall/: Remove all conditional logic based on CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS == 0
tools/: Fixups for CONFIG_NSOCKET_DESCRIPTORS no longer used to disable sockets.
sched/wqueue/kwork_notifier.c: Redesign some data structures. struct works_s must appear at the beginning of the notifier entry structure. That is because it contains the work queue indices. This solves a harfault issue.
net/tcp/tcp_netpoll.c: tcp_iob_work() needs to free the allocated argument when it is finished.
net/tcp/tcp_send_buffered.c: Extend psock_tcp_cansend() so that it also requires that at least on IOB is also avaialble.
mm/iob: iob_navail() was returning the number of free IOB chain queue entries, not the number of free IOBs. Completely misnamed.
net/tcp/tcp_netpoll.c: Add logic to receive notifications when IOBs are freed (Needs CONFIG_NET_TCP_WRITE_BUFFERS and CONFIG_IOB_NOTIFIER). At present, does nothing because the logic in in psock_tcp_cansend() does not check for the availability of IOBs. That will change.
Squashed commit of the following:
Fix up some final compile isses.
net/netdev: Convert the network down notification logic to use the new wqueue-based notification factility.
net/udp: Convert the UDP readahead notification logic to use the new wqueue-based notification factility.
net/tcp: Convert the TCP readahead notification logic to use the new wqueue-based notification factility.
mm/iob: Convert the IOB notification logic to use the new wqueue-based notification factility.
sched/wqueue: Signals are not good IPCs to support the target poll functionality for several reasons including the amount of data that can be passed with a signal and in the fact that in protected and kernel modes, user threads executing signal handlers in protected, kernel memory is problematic. Instead, convert the same logic to perform the notifications via function callback on the high priority work queue.
Squashed commit of the following:
net/tcp: Add signal notification for the case when UDP read-ahead data is buffered. This is basically of clone of the TCP notification logic with naming adapted for UDP.
net/tcp: Add signal notification for the case when TCP read-ahead data is buffered.
net/utils: return from net_breaklock() was being clobbered.
net/: Replace all calls to iob_alloc() with calls to net_ioballoc() which will release the network lock, if necessary.
net/utils, tcp, include/net: Separate out the special IOB allocation logic and place it in its own function. Prototype is available in a public header file where it can also be used by network drivers.
net/utils: net_timedwait() now uses new net_breaklock() and net_restorelock().
This makes the user interface a little hostile. People thing of an MTU of 1500 bytes, but the corresponding packet is really 1514 bytes (including the 14 byte Ethernet header). A more friendly solution would configure the MTU (as before), but then derive the packet buffer size by adding the MAC header length. Instead, we define the packet buffer size then derive the MTU.
The MTU is not common currency in networking. On the wire, the only real issue is the MSS which is derived from MTU by subtracting the IP header and TCP header sizes (for the case of TCP). Now it is derived for the PKTSIZE by subtracting the IP header, the TCP header, and the MAC header sizes. So we should be all good and without the recurring 14 byte error in MTU's and MSS's.
Squashed commit of the following:
Trivial update to fix some spacing issues.
net/: Rename several macros containing _MTU to _PKTSIZE.
net/: Rename CONFIG_NET_SLIP_MTU to CONFIG_NET_SLIP_PKTSIZE and similarly for CONFIG_NET_TUN_MTU. These are not the MTU which does not include the size of the link layer header. These are the full size of the packet buffer memory (minus any GUARD bytes).
net/: Rename CONFIG_NET_6LOWPAN_MTU to CONFIG_NET_6LOWPAN_PKTSIZE and similarly for CONFIG_NET_TUN_MTU. These are not the MTU which does not include the size of the link layer header. These are the full size of the packet buffer memory (minus any GUARD bytes).
net/: Rename CONFIG_NET_ETH_MTU to CONFIG_NET_ETH_PKTSIZE. This is not the MTU which does not include the size of the link layer header. This is the full size of the packet buffer memory (minus any GUARD bytes).
net/: Rename the file d_mtu in the network driver structure to d_pktsize. That value saved there is not the MTU. The packetsize is the memory large enough to hold the maximum packet PLUS the size of the link layer header. The MTU does not include the link layer header.
Fix a few typo/compilation problems.
net/: Remove all CONFIG_NET_xxx_TCP_RECVWNDO configuration variables. They were used only to initialize the d_recwndo of the network device structure which no longer exists.
net/: Remove the device TCP receive window field (d_recvwndo) from the device structure. That value is no longer retained, but is calculated dynamically.
Remove some dangling references to CONFIG_NET_TCP_RWND_CONTROL.
net/tcp: Take read-ahead throttling into account when calculating the TCP receive window size.
net/tcp: tcp_get_recvwindow() now returns the receive window size directly (vs. indirectly via the device structure).
net/tcp: Remove CONFIG_NET_TCP_RWND_CONTROL. TCP window algorithm is now trigged only by CONFIG_NET_TCP_READAHEAD.
Squashed commit of the following:
sched: Rename all use of system_t to clock_t.
syscall: Rename all use of system_t to clock_t.
net: Rename all use of system_t to clock_t.
libs: Rename all use of system_t to clock_t.
fs: Rename all use of system_t to clock_t.
drivers: Rename all use of system_t to clock_t.
arch: Rename all use of system_t to clock_t.
include: Remove definition of systime_t; rename all use of system_t to clock_t.
net/tcp: Add logic to send probes when SO_KEEPALIVE is enabled.
net/tcp: TCP socket should not have to be connected to configure KeepAlive.
net/: Add a separate configuration to enable/disable KEEPALIVE socket options.
net/tcp: Arguments to TCP keep-alive timing functions probably should be struct timeval as are the times for other time-related socket options.
net/tcp: Fix a backward conditional
net/tcp: Add some more checks and debug output to TCP-protocol socket options.
net/tcp: Cosmetic changes to some alignment.
net/: Adds socket options needed to manage TCP-keepalive and TCP state machine logic to detect if that the remote peer is alive. Still missing the timer poll logic to send the keep-alive probes and the state machine logic to respond to probes.
Squashed commit of the following:
net/udp: Address most of the issues with UDP write buffering. There is a remaining issue with handling one network going down in a multi-network environment. None of this has been test but it is certainly ready for test. Hence, the feature is marked EXPERIMENTAL.
net/udp: Some baby steps toward a corrected write buffering design.
net/udp: Remove pesky write buffer macros.
Eliminate trailing space at the end of lines.
net/udp: A little more UDP write buffering logic. Still at least on big gaping hole in the design.
net/udp: Undefined CONFIG_NET_SENDTO_TIMEOUT.
net/udp: Crude, naive port of the TCP write buffering logic into UDP. This commit is certainly non-functional and is simply a starting point for the implementatin of UDP write buffering.
net/udp: Rename udp/udp_psock_sendto.c udp/udp_psock_sendto_unbuffered.c.
net/tcp: Introduce tcp receive window control based on I/O buffer
NOTE: The algorithm is still experimental but useful for http streaming.
Signed-off-by: Masayuki Ishikawa <Masayuki.Ishikawa@jp.sony.com>
Approved-by: Gregory Nutt <gnutt@nuttx.org>
This commit backs out most of commit b4747286b1. That change was added because sem_wait() would sometimes cause cancellation points inappropriated. But with these recent changes, nxsem_wait() is used instead and it is not a cancellation point.
In the OS, all calls to sem_wait() changed to nxsem_wait(). nxsem_wait() does not return errors via errno so each place where nxsem_wait() is now called must not examine the errno variable.
In all OS functions (not libraries), change sem_wait() to nxsem_wait(). This will prevent the OS from creating bogus cancellation points and from modifying the per-task errno variable.
sched/semaphore: Add the function nxsem_wait(). This is a new internal OS interface. It is functionally equivalent to sem_wait() except that (1) it is not a cancellation point, and (2) it does not set the per-thread errno value on return.
sched/semaphore: Add nxsem_post() which is identical to sem_post() except that it never modifies the errno variable. Changed all references to sem_post in the OS to nxsem_post().
sched/semaphore: Add nxsem_destroy() which is identical to sem_destroy() except that it never modifies the errno variable. Changed all references to sem_destroy() in the OS to nxsem_destroy().
libc/semaphore and sched/semaphore: Add nxsem_getprotocol() and nxsem_setprotocola which are identical to sem_getprotocol() and set_setprotocol() except that they never modifies the errno variable. Changed all references to sem_setprotocol in the OS to nxsem_setprotocol(). sem_getprotocol() was not used in the OS
libc/semaphore: Add nxsem_getvalue() which is identical to sem_getvalue() except that it never modifies the errno variable. Changed all references to sem_getvalue in the OS to nxsem_getvalue().
sched/semaphore: Rename all internal private functions from sem_xyz to nxsem_xyz. The sem_ prefix is (will be) reserved only for the application semaphore interfaces.
libc/semaphore: Add nxsem_init() which is identical to sem_init() except that it never modifies the errno variable. Changed all references to sem_init in the OS to nxsem_init().
sched/semaphore: Rename sem_tickwait() to nxsem_tickwait() so that it is clear this is an internal OS function.
sched/semaphoate: Rename sem_reset() to nxsem_reset() so that it is clear this is an internal OS function.
net/socket/recvfrom.c: Check fromlen integrity before using it.
net/socket/net_sockets.c: Always check for valid psock before using.
net/tcp/tcp_send_unbuffered.c: Avoid using psock beforing checking its integrity.
sched/timer/timer_create.c: Fix watchdog resource leak if cannot allocate a new timer.
User-space networking stack API allows user-space daemon to
provide TCP/IP stack implementation for NuttX network.
Main use for this is to allow use and seamless integration of
HW-provided TCP/IP stacks to NuttX.
For example, user-space daemon can translate /dev/usrsock
API requests to HW TCP/IP API requests while rest of the
user-space can access standard socket API, with socket
descriptors that can be used with NuttX system calls.
If there is no active connection (e.g. it is waiting in accept), then
the connection object, which doesn't yet exist, should not be cleaned
up when the socket is closed.
During a write, if there is no more buffer space for the user data,
return the amount that was written instead of waiting until there
is free space. If nothing has been written yet, then block as before.
This solves a deadlock that occurs if the user data is too large to
fit in the available buffer: the write thread will block before any
data is added to the write queue, leaving no possibility that more
buffers will free up when they are ACKed (since they have not yet been
sent). The write thread will then block forever and hold all of the
buffers.
When a poll requesting POLLOUT happens, the poll should return
immediately if a write will not block. This change adds that, as
opposed to the old behaviour of blocking until a timer from the
Ethernet driver eventually triggers the poll to complete.
This is only implemented for buffered TCP. Unbuffered TCP should
behave as before.
The solution here is to eliminate the device devices semaphore altogether. This eliminates netdev_semtake() and netdev_semgive() and replaces them with net_lock() and net_unlock() which have larger scope as needed for this purpose.
int hello_main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
uint32_t i;
for(i = 0; i < 65536; i++)
{
printf("Hello, World!!\n");
}
printf("press any key!!\n");
if (getchar()=='t')
return 0;
else
return 1;
}
When ran in a Telnet session, the "press any key" is not displayed because the tcp session closed unexpectedly with:
tcp_input: ERROR: conn->sndseq xx, conn->unacked xx"
This is fixed by increasing the width of conn->sent to 32-bits to prevent overflow.
From Rony XLN
This was fixed by duplicating most of the IOB interfaces: The versions that waited are still present (like iob_alloc()), but now there are non-waiting verisons of the same interfaces (like iob_tryalloc()). The TCP read-ahead logic now uses only these non-waiting interfaces.