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skbuff: rewrite the doc for data-only skbs
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The comment about shinfo->dataref split is really unhelpful,
at least to me. Rewrite it and render it to skb documentation.

Reviewed-by: David Ahern <dsahern@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
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Jakub Kicinski committed May 11, 2022
1 parent ddccc9e commit 9ec7ea1
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Showing 3 changed files with 37 additions and 12 deletions.
1 change: 1 addition & 0 deletions Documentation/networking/index.rst
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -97,6 +97,7 @@ Contents:
sctp
secid
seg6-sysctl
skbuff
smc-sysctl
statistics
strparser
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6 changes: 6 additions & 0 deletions Documentation/networking/skbuff.rst
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Expand Up @@ -23,3 +23,9 @@ skb_clone() allows for fast duplication of skbs. None of the data buffers
get copied, but caller gets a new metadata struct (struct sk_buff).
&skb_shared_info.refcount indicates the number of skbs pointing at the same
packet data (i.e. clones).

dataref and headerless skbs
---------------------------

.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/skbuff.h
:doc: dataref and headerless skbs
42 changes: 30 additions & 12 deletions include/linux/skbuff.h
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Expand Up @@ -727,16 +727,32 @@ struct skb_shared_info {
skb_frag_t frags[MAX_SKB_FRAGS];
};

/* We divide dataref into two halves. The higher 16 bits hold references
* to the payload part of skb->data. The lower 16 bits hold references to
* the entire skb->data. A clone of a headerless skb holds the length of
* the header in skb->hdr_len.
*
* All users must obey the rule that the skb->data reference count must be
* greater than or equal to the payload reference count.
*
* Holding a reference to the payload part means that the user does not
* care about modifications to the header part of skb->data.
/**
* DOC: dataref and headerless skbs
*
* Transport layers send out clones of payload skbs they hold for
* retransmissions. To allow lower layers of the stack to prepend their headers
* we split &skb_shared_info.dataref into two halves.
* The lower 16 bits count the overall number of references.
* The higher 16 bits indicate how many of the references are payload-only.
* skb_header_cloned() checks if skb is allowed to add / write the headers.
*
* The creator of the skb (e.g. TCP) marks its skb as &sk_buff.nohdr
* (via __skb_header_release()). Any clone created from marked skb will get
* &sk_buff.hdr_len populated with the available headroom.
* If there's the only clone in existence it's able to modify the headroom
* at will. The sequence of calls inside the transport layer is::
*
* <alloc skb>
* skb_reserve()
* __skb_header_release()
* skb_clone()
* // send the clone down the stack
*
* This is not a very generic construct and it depends on the transport layers
* doing the right thing. In practice there's usually only one payload-only skb.
* Having multiple payload-only skbs with different lengths of hdr_len is not
* possible. The payload-only skbs should never leave their owner.
*/
#define SKB_DATAREF_SHIFT 16
#define SKB_DATAREF_MASK ((1 << SKB_DATAREF_SHIFT) - 1)
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -2027,8 +2043,10 @@ static inline int skb_header_unclone(struct sk_buff *skb, gfp_t pri)
}

/**
* __skb_header_release - release reference to header
* @skb: buffer to operate on
* __skb_header_release() - allow clones to use the headroom
* @skb: buffer to operate on
*
* See "DOC: dataref and headerless skbs".
*/
static inline void __skb_header_release(struct sk_buff *skb)
{
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