When forwarding a datagram to a socket, we need to find a socket with a
suitable local address to send it. Currently we keep track of such sockets
in an array indexed by local port, but this can't properly handle cases
where we have multiple local addresses in active use.
For "spliced" (socket to socket) cases, improve this by instead opening
a socket specifically for the target side of the flow. We connect() as
well as bind()ing that socket, so that it will only receive the flow's
reply packets, not anything else. We direct datagrams sent via that socket
using the addresses from the flow table, effectively replacing bespoke
addressing logic with the unified logic in fwd.c
When we create the flow, we also take a duplicate of the originating
socket, and use that to deliver reply datagrams back to the origin, again
using addresses from the flow table entry.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
This implements the first steps of tracking UDP packets with the flow table
rather than its own (buggy) set of port maps. Specifically we create flow
table entries for datagrams received from a socket (PIF_HOST or
PIF_SPLICE).
When splitting datagrams from sockets into batches, we group by the flow
as well as splicesrc. This may result in smaller batches, but makes things
easier down the line. We can re-optimise this later if necessary. For now
we don't do anything else with the flow, not even match reply packets to
the same flow.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>