• G
    dccp: Do not let initial option overhead shrink the MPS · 86739fb9
    Gerrit Renker 提交于
    This fixes a problem caused by the overlap of the connection-setup and
    established-state phases of DCCP connections.
    
    During connection setup, the client retransmits Confirm Feature-Negotiation
    options until a response from the server signals that it can move from the
    half-established PARTOPEN into the OPEN state, whereupon the connection is
    fully established on both ends (RFC 4340, 8.1.5).
    
    However, since the client may already send data while it is in the PARTOPEN
    state, consequences arise for the Maximum Packet Size: the problem is that the
    initial option overhead is much higher than for the subsequent established
    phase, as it involves potentially many variable-length list-type options
    (server-priority options, RFC 4340, 6.4).
    
    Applying the standard MPS is insufficient here: especially with larger
    payloads this can lead to annoying, counter-intuitive EMSGSIZE errors.
    
    On the other hand, reducing the MPS available for the established phase by
    the added initial overhead is highly wasteful and inefficient.
    
    The solution chosen therefore is a two-phase strategy:
    
       If the payload length of the DataAck in PARTOPEN is too large, an Ack is sent
       to carry the options, and the feature-negotiation list is then flushed.
    
       This means that the server gets two Acks for one Response. If both Acks get
       lost, it is probably better to restart the connection anyway and devising yet
       another special-case does not seem worth the extra complexity.
    
    The result is a higher utilisation of the available packet space for the data
    transmission phase (established state) of a connection.
    
    The patch (over-)estimates the initial overhead to be 32*4 bytes -- commonly
    seen values were around 90 bytes for initial feature-negotiation options.
    
    It uses sizeof(u32) to mean "aligned units of 4 bytes".
    For consistency, another use of 4-byte alignment is adapted.
    Signed-off-by: NGerrit Renker <gerrit@erg.abdn.ac.uk>
    Signed-off-by: NDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
    86739fb9
output.c 18.3 KB