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Re: [RFC PATCH v3 00/10] net: Handle short frames for SLiRP/TAP interfac


From: Bin Meng
Subject: Re: [RFC PATCH v3 00/10] net: Handle short frames for SLiRP/TAP interfaces
Date: Mon, 8 Mar 2021 09:51:45 +0800

On Thu, Mar 4, 2021 at 3:12 AM Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@redhat.com> wrote:
>
> This is Bin's series but using iovec structure in 1st patch
> for zero copy.
>
> Bin's cover:
>
> The minimum Ethernet frame length is 60 bytes. For short frames with
> smaller length like ARP packets (only 42 bytes), on a real world NIC
> it can choose either padding its length to the minimum required 60
> bytes, or sending it out directly to the wire. Such behavior can be
> hardcoded or controled by a register bit. Similarly on the receive
> path, NICs can choose either dropping such short frames directly or
> handing them over to software to handle.
>
> On the other hand, for the network backends SLiRP/TAP, they don't
> expose a way to control the short frame behavior. As of today they
> just send/receive data from/to the other end connected to them,
> which means any sized packet is acceptable. So they can send and
> receive short frames without any problem. It is observed that ARP
> packets sent from SLiRP/TAP are 42 bytes, and SLiRP/TAP just send
> these ARP packets to the other end which might be a NIC model that
> does not allow short frames to pass through.
>
> To provide better compatibility, for packets sent from SLiRP/TAP, we
> change to pad short frames before sending it out to the other end.
> This ensures SLiRP/TAP as an Ethernet sender do not violate the spec.
> But with this change, the behavior of dropping short frames in the
> NIC model cannot be emulated because it always receives a packet that
> is spec complaint. The capability of sending short frames from NIC
> models are still supported and short frames can still pass through
> SLiRP/TAP interfaces.
>
> This commit should be able to fix the issue as reported with some
> NIC models before, that ARP requests get dropped, preventing the
> guest from becoming visible on the network. It was workarounded in
> these NIC models on the receive path, that when a short frame is
> received, it is padded up to 60 bytes.

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