| X.25 Device Driver Interface 1.1 |
| |
| Jonathan Naylor 26.12.96 |
| |
| This is a description of the messages to be passed between the X.25 Packet |
| Layer and the X.25 device driver. They are designed to allow for the easy |
| setting of the LAPB mode from within the Packet Layer. |
| |
| The X.25 device driver will be coded normally as per the Linux device driver |
| standards. Most X.25 device drivers will be moderately similar to the |
| already existing Ethernet device drivers. However unlike those drivers, the |
| X.25 device driver has a state associated with it, and this information |
| needs to be passed to and from the Packet Layer for proper operation. |
| |
| All messages are held in sk_buff's just like real data to be transmitted |
| over the LAPB link. The first byte of the skbuff indicates the meaning of |
| the rest of the skbuff, if any more information does exist. |
| |
| |
| Packet Layer to Device Driver |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| First Byte = 0x00 (X25_IFACE_DATA) |
| |
| This indicates that the rest of the skbuff contains data to be transmitted |
| over the LAPB link. The LAPB link should already exist before any data is |
| passed down. |
| |
| First Byte = 0x01 (X25_IFACE_CONNECT) |
| |
| Establish the LAPB link. If the link is already established then the connect |
| confirmation message should be returned as soon as possible. |
| |
| First Byte = 0x02 (X25_IFACE_DISCONNECT) |
| |
| Terminate the LAPB link. If it is already disconnected then the disconnect |
| confirmation message should be returned as soon as possible. |
| |
| First Byte = 0x03 (X25_IFACE_PARAMS) |
| |
| LAPB parameters. To be defined. |
| |
| |
| Device Driver to Packet Layer |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| First Byte = 0x00 (X25_IFACE_DATA) |
| |
| This indicates that the rest of the skbuff contains data that has been |
| received over the LAPB link. |
| |
| First Byte = 0x01 (X25_IFACE_CONNECT) |
| |
| LAPB link has been established. The same message is used for both a LAPB |
| link connect_confirmation and a connect_indication. |
| |
| First Byte = 0x02 (X25_IFACE_DISCONNECT) |
| |
| LAPB link has been terminated. This same message is used for both a LAPB |
| link disconnect_confirmation and a disconnect_indication. |
| |
| First Byte = 0x03 (X25_IFACE_PARAMS) |
| |
| LAPB parameters. To be defined. |
| |
| |
| |
| Possible Problems |
| ================= |
| |
| (Henner Eisen, 2000-10-28) |
| |
| The X.25 packet layer protocol depends on a reliable datalink service. |
| The LAPB protocol provides such reliable service. But this reliability |
| is not preserved by the Linux network device driver interface: |
| |
| - With Linux 2.4.x (and above) SMP kernels, packet ordering is not |
| preserved. Even if a device driver calls netif_rx(skb1) and later |
| netif_rx(skb2), skb2 might be delivered to the network layer |
| earlier that skb1. |
| - Data passed upstream by means of netif_rx() might be dropped by the |
| kernel if the backlog queue is congested. |
| |
| The X.25 packet layer protocol will detect this and reset the virtual |
| call in question. But many upper layer protocols are not designed to |
| handle such N-Reset events gracefully. And frequent N-Reset events |
| will always degrade performance. |
| |
| Thus, driver authors should make netif_rx() as reliable as possible: |
| |
| SMP re-ordering will not occur if the driver's interrupt handler is |
| always executed on the same CPU. Thus, |
| |
| - Driver authors should use irq affinity for the interrupt handler. |
| |
| The probability of packet loss due to backlog congestion can be |
| reduced by the following measures or a combination thereof: |
| |
| (1) Drivers for kernel versions 2.4.x and above should always check the |
| return value of netif_rx(). If it returns NET_RX_DROP, the |
| driver's LAPB protocol must not confirm reception of the frame |
| to the peer. |
| This will reliably suppress packet loss. The LAPB protocol will |
| automatically cause the peer to re-transmit the dropped packet |
| later. |
| The lapb module interface was modified to support this. Its |
| data_indication() method should now transparently pass the |
| netif_rx() return value to the (lapb mopdule) caller. |
| (2) Drivers for kernel versions 2.2.x should always check the global |
| variable netdev_dropping when a new frame is received. The driver |
| should only call netif_rx() if netdev_dropping is zero. Otherwise |
| the driver should not confirm delivery of the frame and drop it. |
| Alternatively, the driver can queue the frame internally and call |
| netif_rx() later when netif_dropping is 0 again. In that case, delivery |
| confirmation should also be deferred such that the internal queue |
| cannot grow to much. |
| This will not reliably avoid packet loss, but the probability |
| of packet loss in netif_rx() path will be significantly reduced. |
| (3) Additionally, driver authors might consider to support |
| CONFIG_NET_HW_FLOWCONTROL. This allows the driver to be woken up |
| when a previously congested backlog queue becomes empty again. |
| The driver could uses this for flow-controlling the peer by means |
| of the LAPB protocol's flow-control service. |