From: "Robin Jarry" <rjarry@redhat.com>
To: "Morten Brørup" <mb@smartsharesystems.com>,
"Medvedkin, Vladimir" <vladimir.medvedkin@intel.com>,
dev@dpdk.org
Subject: Re: rte_fib network order bug
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 2024 15:28:33 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <D5MTNHCSEMOQ.18ENWI4TZGKD1@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <98CBD80474FA8B44BF855DF32C47DC35E9F8CD@smartserver.smartshare.dk>
Morten Brørup, Nov 15, 2024 at 14:52:
> Robin, you've totally won me over on this endian discussion. :-)
> Especially the IPv6 comparison make it clear why IPv4 should also be
> network byte order.
>
> API/ABI stability is a pain... we're stuck with host endian IPv4
> addresses; e.g. for the RTE_IPV4() macro, which I now agree produces
> the wrong endian value (on little endian CPUs).
At least for 24.11 it is too late. But maybe we could make it right for
the next LTS?
>> Vladimir, could we at least consider adding a real network order mode
>> for the rib and fib libraries? So that we can have consistent APIs
>> between IPv4 and IPv6?
>
> And/or rename RTE_FIB_F_NETWORK_ORDER to
> RTE_FIB_F_NETWORK_ORDER_LOOKUP or similar. This is important if real
> network order mode is added (now or later)!
Maybe we could revert that patch and defer a complete change of the
rib/fib APIs to only expose network order addresses? It would be an ABI
breakage but if properly announced in advance, it should be possible.
Thinking about it some more. Having a flag for such a drastic change in
behaviour does not seem right.
>> On that same topic, I wonder if it would make sense to change the API
>> parameters to use an opaque rte_ipv4_addr_t type instead of a native
>> uint32_t to avoid any confusion.
>
> It could be considered an IPv4 address type (like the IPv6 address
> type) (which should be in network endian), which it is not, so I don't
> like this idea.
>
> What the API really should offer is a choice (or a union) of uint32_t
> and rte_be32_t, but that's not possible, so also using uint32_t for
> big endian values seems like a viable compromise.
>
> Another alternative, using void* for the IPv4 address array, seems
> overkill to me, since compilers don't warn about mixing uint32_t with
> rte_be32_t values (like mixing signed and unsigned emits warnings).
If what I proposed above is possible, then all these APIs could be using
rte_be32_t values (or even better, an rte_ipv4_addr_t alias for
consistency with IPv6). That would make everything much simpler.
Thoughts?
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2024-11-15 14:28 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 12+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2024-11-12 9:31 Robin Jarry
2024-11-13 10:42 ` Medvedkin, Vladimir
2024-11-13 13:27 ` Robin Jarry
2024-11-13 19:39 ` Medvedkin, Vladimir
2024-11-14 7:43 ` Morten Brørup
2024-11-14 10:18 ` Robin Jarry
2024-11-14 14:35 ` Morten Brørup
2024-11-15 13:01 ` Robin Jarry
2024-11-15 13:52 ` Morten Brørup
2024-11-15 14:07 ` Bruce Richardson
2024-11-15 14:28 ` Robin Jarry [this message]
2024-11-15 16:20 ` Stephen Hemminger
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