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alistair23-linux/net/batman-adv/network-coding.c

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/* Copyright (C) 2012-2014 B.A.T.M.A.N. contributors:
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
*
* Martin Hundebøll, Jeppe Ledet-Pedersen
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of version 2 of the GNU General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
* WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
*/
#include <linux/debugfs.h>
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
#include "main.h"
#include "hash.h"
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
#include "network-coding.h"
#include "send.h"
#include "originator.h"
#include "hard-interface.h"
#include "routing.h"
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
static struct lock_class_key batadv_nc_coding_hash_lock_class_key;
static struct lock_class_key batadv_nc_decoding_hash_lock_class_key;
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
static void batadv_nc_worker(struct work_struct *work);
static int batadv_nc_recv_coded_packet(struct sk_buff *skb,
struct batadv_hard_iface *recv_if);
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
/**
* batadv_nc_init - one-time initialization for network coding
*/
int __init batadv_nc_init(void)
{
int ret;
/* Register our packet type */
ret = batadv_recv_handler_register(BATADV_CODED,
batadv_nc_recv_coded_packet);
return ret;
}
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
/**
* batadv_nc_start_timer - initialise the nc periodic worker
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
*/
static void batadv_nc_start_timer(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv)
{
queue_delayed_work(batadv_event_workqueue, &bat_priv->nc.work,
msecs_to_jiffies(10));
}
/**
* batadv_nc_tvlv_container_update - update the network coding tvlv container
* after network coding setting change
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
*/
static void batadv_nc_tvlv_container_update(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv)
{
char nc_mode;
nc_mode = atomic_read(&bat_priv->network_coding);
switch (nc_mode) {
case 0:
batadv_tvlv_container_unregister(bat_priv, BATADV_TVLV_NC, 1);
break;
case 1:
batadv_tvlv_container_register(bat_priv, BATADV_TVLV_NC, 1,
NULL, 0);
break;
}
}
/**
* batadv_nc_status_update - update the network coding tvlv container after
* network coding setting change
* @net_dev: the soft interface net device
*/
void batadv_nc_status_update(struct net_device *net_dev)
{
struct batadv_priv *bat_priv = netdev_priv(net_dev);
batadv_nc_tvlv_container_update(bat_priv);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_tvlv_ogm_handler_v1 - process incoming nc tvlv container
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @orig: the orig_node of the ogm
* @flags: flags indicating the tvlv state (see batadv_tvlv_handler_flags)
* @tvlv_value: tvlv buffer containing the gateway data
* @tvlv_value_len: tvlv buffer length
*/
static void batadv_nc_tvlv_ogm_handler_v1(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_orig_node *orig,
uint8_t flags,
void *tvlv_value,
uint16_t tvlv_value_len)
{
if (flags & BATADV_TVLV_HANDLER_OGM_CIFNOTFND)
orig->capabilities &= ~BATADV_ORIG_CAPA_HAS_NC;
else
orig->capabilities |= BATADV_ORIG_CAPA_HAS_NC;
}
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
/**
* batadv_nc_mesh_init - initialise coding hash table and start house keeping
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
*/
int batadv_nc_mesh_init(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv)
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
{
bat_priv->nc.timestamp_fwd_flush = jiffies;
bat_priv->nc.timestamp_sniffed_purge = jiffies;
if (bat_priv->nc.coding_hash || bat_priv->nc.decoding_hash)
return 0;
bat_priv->nc.coding_hash = batadv_hash_new(128);
if (!bat_priv->nc.coding_hash)
goto err;
batadv_hash_set_lock_class(bat_priv->nc.coding_hash,
&batadv_nc_coding_hash_lock_class_key);
bat_priv->nc.decoding_hash = batadv_hash_new(128);
if (!bat_priv->nc.decoding_hash)
goto err;
batadv_hash_set_lock_class(bat_priv->nc.coding_hash,
&batadv_nc_decoding_hash_lock_class_key);
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
INIT_DELAYED_WORK(&bat_priv->nc.work, batadv_nc_worker);
batadv_nc_start_timer(bat_priv);
batadv_tvlv_handler_register(bat_priv, batadv_nc_tvlv_ogm_handler_v1,
NULL, BATADV_TVLV_NC, 1,
BATADV_TVLV_HANDLER_OGM_CIFNOTFND);
batadv_nc_tvlv_container_update(bat_priv);
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
return 0;
err:
return -ENOMEM;
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
}
/**
* batadv_nc_init_bat_priv - initialise the nc specific bat_priv variables
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
*/
void batadv_nc_init_bat_priv(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv)
{
atomic_set(&bat_priv->network_coding, 1);
bat_priv->nc.min_tq = 200;
bat_priv->nc.max_fwd_delay = 10;
bat_priv->nc.max_buffer_time = 200;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_init_orig - initialise the nc fields of an orig_node
* @orig_node: the orig_node which is going to be initialised
*/
void batadv_nc_init_orig(struct batadv_orig_node *orig_node)
{
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&orig_node->in_coding_list);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&orig_node->out_coding_list);
spin_lock_init(&orig_node->in_coding_list_lock);
spin_lock_init(&orig_node->out_coding_list_lock);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_node_free_rcu - rcu callback to free an nc node and remove
* its refcount on the orig_node
* @rcu: rcu pointer of the nc node
*/
static void batadv_nc_node_free_rcu(struct rcu_head *rcu)
{
struct batadv_nc_node *nc_node;
nc_node = container_of(rcu, struct batadv_nc_node, rcu);
batadv_orig_node_free_ref(nc_node->orig_node);
kfree(nc_node);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_node_free_ref - decrements the nc node refcounter and possibly
* frees it
* @nc_node: the nc node to free
*/
static void batadv_nc_node_free_ref(struct batadv_nc_node *nc_node)
{
if (atomic_dec_and_test(&nc_node->refcount))
call_rcu(&nc_node->rcu, batadv_nc_node_free_rcu);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_path_free_ref - decrements the nc path refcounter and possibly
* frees it
* @nc_path: the nc node to free
*/
static void batadv_nc_path_free_ref(struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path)
{
if (atomic_dec_and_test(&nc_path->refcount))
kfree_rcu(nc_path, rcu);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_packet_free - frees nc packet
* @nc_packet: the nc packet to free
*/
static void batadv_nc_packet_free(struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet)
{
if (nc_packet->skb)
kfree_skb(nc_packet->skb);
batadv_nc_path_free_ref(nc_packet->nc_path);
kfree(nc_packet);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_to_purge_nc_node - checks whether an nc node has to be purged
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @nc_node: the nc node to check
*
* Returns true if the entry has to be purged now, false otherwise
*/
static bool batadv_nc_to_purge_nc_node(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_nc_node *nc_node)
{
if (atomic_read(&bat_priv->mesh_state) != BATADV_MESH_ACTIVE)
return true;
return batadv_has_timed_out(nc_node->last_seen, BATADV_NC_NODE_TIMEOUT);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_to_purge_nc_path_coding - checks whether an nc path has timed out
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @nc_path: the nc path to check
*
* Returns true if the entry has to be purged now, false otherwise
*/
static bool batadv_nc_to_purge_nc_path_coding(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path)
{
if (atomic_read(&bat_priv->mesh_state) != BATADV_MESH_ACTIVE)
return true;
/* purge the path when no packets has been added for 10 times the
* max_fwd_delay time
*/
return batadv_has_timed_out(nc_path->last_valid,
bat_priv->nc.max_fwd_delay * 10);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_to_purge_nc_path_decoding - checks whether an nc path has timed out
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @nc_path: the nc path to check
*
* Returns true if the entry has to be purged now, false otherwise
*/
static bool batadv_nc_to_purge_nc_path_decoding(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path)
{
if (atomic_read(&bat_priv->mesh_state) != BATADV_MESH_ACTIVE)
return true;
/* purge the path when no packets has been added for 10 times the
* max_buffer time
*/
return batadv_has_timed_out(nc_path->last_valid,
bat_priv->nc.max_buffer_time*10);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_purge_orig_nc_nodes - go through list of nc nodes and purge stale
* entries
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @list: list of nc nodes
* @lock: nc node list lock
* @to_purge: function in charge to decide whether an entry has to be purged or
* not. This function takes the nc node as argument and has to return
* a boolean value: true if the entry has to be deleted, false
* otherwise
*/
static void
batadv_nc_purge_orig_nc_nodes(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct list_head *list,
spinlock_t *lock,
bool (*to_purge)(struct batadv_priv *,
struct batadv_nc_node *))
{
struct batadv_nc_node *nc_node, *nc_node_tmp;
/* For each nc_node in list */
spin_lock_bh(lock);
list_for_each_entry_safe(nc_node, nc_node_tmp, list, list) {
/* if an helper function has been passed as parameter,
* ask it if the entry has to be purged or not
*/
if (to_purge && !to_purge(bat_priv, nc_node))
continue;
batadv_dbg(BATADV_DBG_NC, bat_priv,
"Removing nc_node %pM -> %pM\n",
nc_node->addr, nc_node->orig_node->orig);
list_del_rcu(&nc_node->list);
batadv_nc_node_free_ref(nc_node);
}
spin_unlock_bh(lock);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_purge_orig - purges all nc node data attached of the given
* originator
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @orig_node: orig_node with the nc node entries to be purged
* @to_purge: function in charge to decide whether an entry has to be purged or
* not. This function takes the nc node as argument and has to return
* a boolean value: true is the entry has to be deleted, false
* otherwise
*/
void batadv_nc_purge_orig(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_node,
bool (*to_purge)(struct batadv_priv *,
struct batadv_nc_node *))
{
/* Check ingoing nc_node's of this orig_node */
batadv_nc_purge_orig_nc_nodes(bat_priv, &orig_node->in_coding_list,
&orig_node->in_coding_list_lock,
to_purge);
/* Check outgoing nc_node's of this orig_node */
batadv_nc_purge_orig_nc_nodes(bat_priv, &orig_node->out_coding_list,
&orig_node->out_coding_list_lock,
to_purge);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_purge_orig_hash - traverse entire originator hash to check if they
* have timed out nc nodes
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
*/
static void batadv_nc_purge_orig_hash(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv)
{
struct batadv_hashtable *hash = bat_priv->orig_hash;
struct hlist_head *head;
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_node;
uint32_t i;
if (!hash)
return;
/* For each orig_node */
for (i = 0; i < hash->size; i++) {
head = &hash->table[i];
rcu_read_lock();
hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(orig_node, head, hash_entry)
batadv_nc_purge_orig(bat_priv, orig_node,
batadv_nc_to_purge_nc_node);
rcu_read_unlock();
}
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
}
/**
* batadv_nc_purge_paths - traverse all nc paths part of the hash and remove
* unused ones
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @hash: hash table containing the nc paths to check
* @to_purge: function in charge to decide whether an entry has to be purged or
* not. This function takes the nc node as argument and has to return
* a boolean value: true is the entry has to be deleted, false
* otherwise
*/
static void batadv_nc_purge_paths(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_hashtable *hash,
bool (*to_purge)(struct batadv_priv *,
struct batadv_nc_path *))
{
struct hlist_head *head;
struct hlist_node *node_tmp;
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path;
spinlock_t *lock; /* Protects lists in hash */
uint32_t i;
for (i = 0; i < hash->size; i++) {
head = &hash->table[i];
lock = &hash->list_locks[i];
/* For each nc_path in this bin */
spin_lock_bh(lock);
hlist_for_each_entry_safe(nc_path, node_tmp, head, hash_entry) {
/* if an helper function has been passed as parameter,
* ask it if the entry has to be purged or not
*/
if (to_purge && !to_purge(bat_priv, nc_path))
continue;
/* purging an non-empty nc_path should never happen, but
* is observed under high CPU load. Delay the purging
* until next iteration to allow the packet_list to be
* emptied first.
*/
if (!unlikely(list_empty(&nc_path->packet_list))) {
net_ratelimited_function(printk,
KERN_WARNING
"Skipping free of non-empty nc_path (%pM -> %pM)!\n",
nc_path->prev_hop,
nc_path->next_hop);
continue;
}
/* nc_path is unused, so remove it */
batadv_dbg(BATADV_DBG_NC, bat_priv,
"Remove nc_path %pM -> %pM\n",
nc_path->prev_hop, nc_path->next_hop);
hlist_del_rcu(&nc_path->hash_entry);
batadv_nc_path_free_ref(nc_path);
}
spin_unlock_bh(lock);
}
}
/**
* batadv_nc_hash_key_gen - computes the nc_path hash key
* @key: buffer to hold the final hash key
* @src: source ethernet mac address going into the hash key
* @dst: destination ethernet mac address going into the hash key
*/
static void batadv_nc_hash_key_gen(struct batadv_nc_path *key, const char *src,
const char *dst)
{
memcpy(key->prev_hop, src, sizeof(key->prev_hop));
memcpy(key->next_hop, dst, sizeof(key->next_hop));
}
/**
* batadv_nc_hash_choose - compute the hash value for an nc path
* @data: data to hash
* @size: size of the hash table
*
* Returns the selected index in the hash table for the given data.
*/
static uint32_t batadv_nc_hash_choose(const void *data, uint32_t size)
{
const struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path = data;
uint32_t hash = 0;
hash = batadv_hash_bytes(hash, &nc_path->prev_hop,
sizeof(nc_path->prev_hop));
hash = batadv_hash_bytes(hash, &nc_path->next_hop,
sizeof(nc_path->next_hop));
hash += (hash << 3);
hash ^= (hash >> 11);
hash += (hash << 15);
return hash % size;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_hash_compare - comparing function used in the network coding hash
* tables
* @node: node in the local table
* @data2: second object to compare the node to
*
* Returns 1 if the two entry are the same, 0 otherwise
*/
static int batadv_nc_hash_compare(const struct hlist_node *node,
const void *data2)
{
const struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path1, *nc_path2;
nc_path1 = container_of(node, struct batadv_nc_path, hash_entry);
nc_path2 = data2;
/* Return 1 if the two keys are identical */
if (memcmp(nc_path1->prev_hop, nc_path2->prev_hop,
sizeof(nc_path1->prev_hop)) != 0)
return 0;
if (memcmp(nc_path1->next_hop, nc_path2->next_hop,
sizeof(nc_path1->next_hop)) != 0)
return 0;
return 1;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_hash_find - search for an existing nc path and return it
* @hash: hash table containing the nc path
* @data: search key
*
* Returns the nc_path if found, NULL otherwise.
*/
static struct batadv_nc_path *
batadv_nc_hash_find(struct batadv_hashtable *hash,
void *data)
{
struct hlist_head *head;
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path, *nc_path_tmp = NULL;
int index;
if (!hash)
return NULL;
index = batadv_nc_hash_choose(data, hash->size);
head = &hash->table[index];
rcu_read_lock();
hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(nc_path, head, hash_entry) {
if (!batadv_nc_hash_compare(&nc_path->hash_entry, data))
continue;
if (!atomic_inc_not_zero(&nc_path->refcount))
continue;
nc_path_tmp = nc_path;
break;
}
rcu_read_unlock();
return nc_path_tmp;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_send_packet - send non-coded packet and free nc_packet struct
* @nc_packet: the nc packet to send
*/
static void batadv_nc_send_packet(struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet)
{
batadv_send_skb_packet(nc_packet->skb,
nc_packet->neigh_node->if_incoming,
nc_packet->nc_path->next_hop);
nc_packet->skb = NULL;
batadv_nc_packet_free(nc_packet);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_sniffed_purge - Checks timestamp of given sniffed nc_packet.
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @nc_path: the nc path the packet belongs to
* @nc_packet: the nc packet to be checked
*
* Checks whether the given sniffed (overheard) nc_packet has hit its buffering
* timeout. If so, the packet is no longer kept and the entry deleted from the
* queue. Has to be called with the appropriate locks.
*
* Returns false as soon as the entry in the fifo queue has not been timed out
* yet and true otherwise.
*/
static bool batadv_nc_sniffed_purge(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path,
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet)
{
unsigned long timeout = bat_priv->nc.max_buffer_time;
bool res = false;
/* Packets are added to tail, so the remaining packets did not time
* out and we can stop processing the current queue
*/
if (atomic_read(&bat_priv->mesh_state) == BATADV_MESH_ACTIVE &&
!batadv_has_timed_out(nc_packet->timestamp, timeout))
goto out;
/* purge nc packet */
list_del(&nc_packet->list);
batadv_nc_packet_free(nc_packet);
res = true;
out:
return res;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_fwd_flush - Checks the timestamp of the given nc packet.
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @nc_path: the nc path the packet belongs to
* @nc_packet: the nc packet to be checked
*
* Checks whether the given nc packet has hit its forward timeout. If so, the
* packet is no longer delayed, immediately sent and the entry deleted from the
* queue. Has to be called with the appropriate locks.
*
* Returns false as soon as the entry in the fifo queue has not been timed out
* yet and true otherwise.
*/
static bool batadv_nc_fwd_flush(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path,
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet)
{
unsigned long timeout = bat_priv->nc.max_fwd_delay;
/* Packets are added to tail, so the remaining packets did not time
* out and we can stop processing the current queue
*/
if (atomic_read(&bat_priv->mesh_state) == BATADV_MESH_ACTIVE &&
!batadv_has_timed_out(nc_packet->timestamp, timeout))
return false;
/* Send packet */
batadv_inc_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_FORWARD);
batadv_add_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_FORWARD_BYTES,
nc_packet->skb->len + ETH_HLEN);
list_del(&nc_packet->list);
batadv_nc_send_packet(nc_packet);
return true;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_process_nc_paths - traverse given nc packet pool and free timed out
* nc packets
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @hash: to be processed hash table
* @process_fn: Function called to process given nc packet. Should return true
* to encourage this function to proceed with the next packet.
* Otherwise the rest of the current queue is skipped.
*/
static void
batadv_nc_process_nc_paths(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_hashtable *hash,
bool (*process_fn)(struct batadv_priv *,
struct batadv_nc_path *,
struct batadv_nc_packet *))
{
struct hlist_head *head;
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet, *nc_packet_tmp;
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path;
bool ret;
int i;
if (!hash)
return;
/* Loop hash table bins */
for (i = 0; i < hash->size; i++) {
head = &hash->table[i];
/* Loop coding paths */
rcu_read_lock();
hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(nc_path, head, hash_entry) {
/* Loop packets */
spin_lock_bh(&nc_path->packet_list_lock);
list_for_each_entry_safe(nc_packet, nc_packet_tmp,
&nc_path->packet_list, list) {
ret = process_fn(bat_priv, nc_path, nc_packet);
if (!ret)
break;
}
spin_unlock_bh(&nc_path->packet_list_lock);
}
rcu_read_unlock();
}
}
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
/**
* batadv_nc_worker - periodic task for house keeping related to network coding
* @work: kernel work struct
*/
static void batadv_nc_worker(struct work_struct *work)
{
struct delayed_work *delayed_work;
struct batadv_priv_nc *priv_nc;
struct batadv_priv *bat_priv;
unsigned long timeout;
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
delayed_work = container_of(work, struct delayed_work, work);
priv_nc = container_of(delayed_work, struct batadv_priv_nc, work);
bat_priv = container_of(priv_nc, struct batadv_priv, nc);
batadv_nc_purge_orig_hash(bat_priv);
batadv_nc_purge_paths(bat_priv, bat_priv->nc.coding_hash,
batadv_nc_to_purge_nc_path_coding);
batadv_nc_purge_paths(bat_priv, bat_priv->nc.decoding_hash,
batadv_nc_to_purge_nc_path_decoding);
timeout = bat_priv->nc.max_fwd_delay;
if (batadv_has_timed_out(bat_priv->nc.timestamp_fwd_flush, timeout)) {
batadv_nc_process_nc_paths(bat_priv, bat_priv->nc.coding_hash,
batadv_nc_fwd_flush);
bat_priv->nc.timestamp_fwd_flush = jiffies;
}
if (batadv_has_timed_out(bat_priv->nc.timestamp_sniffed_purge,
bat_priv->nc.max_buffer_time)) {
batadv_nc_process_nc_paths(bat_priv, bat_priv->nc.decoding_hash,
batadv_nc_sniffed_purge);
bat_priv->nc.timestamp_sniffed_purge = jiffies;
}
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
/* Schedule a new check */
batadv_nc_start_timer(bat_priv);
}
/**
* batadv_can_nc_with_orig - checks whether the given orig node is suitable for
* coding or not
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @orig_node: neighboring orig node which may be used as nc candidate
* @ogm_packet: incoming ogm packet also used for the checks
*
* Returns true if:
* 1) The OGM must have the most recent sequence number.
* 2) The TTL must be decremented by one and only one.
* 3) The OGM must be received from the first hop from orig_node.
* 4) The TQ value of the OGM must be above bat_priv->nc.min_tq.
*/
static bool batadv_can_nc_with_orig(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_node,
struct batadv_ogm_packet *ogm_packet)
{
struct batadv_orig_ifinfo *orig_ifinfo;
uint32_t last_real_seqno;
uint8_t last_ttl;
orig_ifinfo = batadv_orig_ifinfo_get(orig_node, BATADV_IF_DEFAULT);
if (!orig_ifinfo)
return false;
last_ttl = orig_ifinfo->last_ttl;
last_real_seqno = orig_ifinfo->last_real_seqno;
batadv_orig_ifinfo_free_ref(orig_ifinfo);
if (last_real_seqno != ntohl(ogm_packet->seqno))
return false;
if (last_ttl != ogm_packet->ttl + 1)
return false;
if (!batadv_compare_eth(ogm_packet->orig, ogm_packet->prev_sender))
return false;
if (ogm_packet->tq < bat_priv->nc.min_tq)
return false;
return true;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_find_nc_node - search for an existing nc node and return it
* @orig_node: orig node originating the ogm packet
* @orig_neigh_node: neighboring orig node from which we received the ogm packet
* (can be equal to orig_node)
* @in_coding: traverse incoming or outgoing network coding list
*
* Returns the nc_node if found, NULL otherwise.
*/
static struct batadv_nc_node
*batadv_nc_find_nc_node(struct batadv_orig_node *orig_node,
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_neigh_node,
bool in_coding)
{
struct batadv_nc_node *nc_node, *nc_node_out = NULL;
struct list_head *list;
if (in_coding)
list = &orig_neigh_node->in_coding_list;
else
list = &orig_neigh_node->out_coding_list;
/* Traverse list of nc_nodes to orig_node */
rcu_read_lock();
list_for_each_entry_rcu(nc_node, list, list) {
if (!batadv_compare_eth(nc_node->addr, orig_node->orig))
continue;
if (!atomic_inc_not_zero(&nc_node->refcount))
continue;
/* Found a match */
nc_node_out = nc_node;
break;
}
rcu_read_unlock();
return nc_node_out;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_get_nc_node - retrieves an nc node or creates the entry if it was
* not found
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @orig_node: orig node originating the ogm packet
* @orig_neigh_node: neighboring orig node from which we received the ogm packet
* (can be equal to orig_node)
* @in_coding: traverse incoming or outgoing network coding list
*
* Returns the nc_node if found or created, NULL in case of an error.
*/
static struct batadv_nc_node
*batadv_nc_get_nc_node(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_node,
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_neigh_node,
bool in_coding)
{
struct batadv_nc_node *nc_node;
spinlock_t *lock; /* Used to lock list selected by "int in_coding" */
struct list_head *list;
/* Check if nc_node is already added */
nc_node = batadv_nc_find_nc_node(orig_node, orig_neigh_node, in_coding);
/* Node found */
if (nc_node)
return nc_node;
nc_node = kzalloc(sizeof(*nc_node), GFP_ATOMIC);
if (!nc_node)
return NULL;
if (!atomic_inc_not_zero(&orig_neigh_node->refcount))
goto free;
/* Initialize nc_node */
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&nc_node->list);
ether_addr_copy(nc_node->addr, orig_node->orig);
nc_node->orig_node = orig_neigh_node;
atomic_set(&nc_node->refcount, 2);
/* Select ingoing or outgoing coding node */
if (in_coding) {
lock = &orig_neigh_node->in_coding_list_lock;
list = &orig_neigh_node->in_coding_list;
} else {
lock = &orig_neigh_node->out_coding_list_lock;
list = &orig_neigh_node->out_coding_list;
}
batadv_dbg(BATADV_DBG_NC, bat_priv, "Adding nc_node %pM -> %pM\n",
nc_node->addr, nc_node->orig_node->orig);
/* Add nc_node to orig_node */
spin_lock_bh(lock);
list_add_tail_rcu(&nc_node->list, list);
spin_unlock_bh(lock);
return nc_node;
free:
kfree(nc_node);
return NULL;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_update_nc_node - updates stored incoming and outgoing nc node structs
* (best called on incoming OGMs)
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @orig_node: orig node originating the ogm packet
* @orig_neigh_node: neighboring orig node from which we received the ogm packet
* (can be equal to orig_node)
* @ogm_packet: incoming ogm packet
* @is_single_hop_neigh: orig_node is a single hop neighbor
*/
void batadv_nc_update_nc_node(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_node,
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_neigh_node,
struct batadv_ogm_packet *ogm_packet,
int is_single_hop_neigh)
{
struct batadv_nc_node *in_nc_node = NULL, *out_nc_node = NULL;
/* Check if network coding is enabled */
if (!atomic_read(&bat_priv->network_coding))
goto out;
/* check if orig node is network coding enabled */
if (!(orig_node->capabilities & BATADV_ORIG_CAPA_HAS_NC))
goto out;
/* accept ogms from 'good' neighbors and single hop neighbors */
if (!batadv_can_nc_with_orig(bat_priv, orig_node, ogm_packet) &&
!is_single_hop_neigh)
goto out;
/* Add orig_node as in_nc_node on hop */
in_nc_node = batadv_nc_get_nc_node(bat_priv, orig_node,
orig_neigh_node, true);
if (!in_nc_node)
goto out;
in_nc_node->last_seen = jiffies;
/* Add hop as out_nc_node on orig_node */
out_nc_node = batadv_nc_get_nc_node(bat_priv, orig_neigh_node,
orig_node, false);
if (!out_nc_node)
goto out;
out_nc_node->last_seen = jiffies;
out:
if (in_nc_node)
batadv_nc_node_free_ref(in_nc_node);
if (out_nc_node)
batadv_nc_node_free_ref(out_nc_node);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_get_path - get existing nc_path or allocate a new one
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @hash: hash table containing the nc path
* @src: ethernet source address - first half of the nc path search key
* @dst: ethernet destination address - second half of the nc path search key
*
* Returns pointer to nc_path if the path was found or created, returns NULL
* on error.
*/
static struct batadv_nc_path *batadv_nc_get_path(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_hashtable *hash,
uint8_t *src,
uint8_t *dst)
{
int hash_added;
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path, nc_path_key;
batadv_nc_hash_key_gen(&nc_path_key, src, dst);
/* Search for existing nc_path */
nc_path = batadv_nc_hash_find(hash, (void *)&nc_path_key);
if (nc_path) {
/* Set timestamp to delay removal of nc_path */
nc_path->last_valid = jiffies;
return nc_path;
}
/* No existing nc_path was found; create a new */
nc_path = kzalloc(sizeof(*nc_path), GFP_ATOMIC);
if (!nc_path)
return NULL;
/* Initialize nc_path */
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&nc_path->packet_list);
spin_lock_init(&nc_path->packet_list_lock);
atomic_set(&nc_path->refcount, 2);
nc_path->last_valid = jiffies;
ether_addr_copy(nc_path->next_hop, dst);
ether_addr_copy(nc_path->prev_hop, src);
batadv_dbg(BATADV_DBG_NC, bat_priv, "Adding nc_path %pM -> %pM\n",
nc_path->prev_hop,
nc_path->next_hop);
/* Add nc_path to hash table */
hash_added = batadv_hash_add(hash, batadv_nc_hash_compare,
batadv_nc_hash_choose, &nc_path_key,
&nc_path->hash_entry);
if (hash_added < 0) {
kfree(nc_path);
return NULL;
}
return nc_path;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_random_weight_tq - scale the receivers TQ-value to avoid unfair
* selection of a receiver with slightly lower TQ than the other
* @tq: to be weighted tq value
*/
static uint8_t batadv_nc_random_weight_tq(uint8_t tq)
{
uint8_t rand_val, rand_tq;
get_random_bytes(&rand_val, sizeof(rand_val));
/* randomize the estimated packet loss (max TQ - estimated TQ) */
rand_tq = rand_val * (BATADV_TQ_MAX_VALUE - tq);
/* normalize the randomized packet loss */
rand_tq /= BATADV_TQ_MAX_VALUE;
/* convert to (randomized) estimated tq again */
return BATADV_TQ_MAX_VALUE - rand_tq;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_memxor - XOR destination with source
* @dst: byte array to XOR into
* @src: byte array to XOR from
* @len: length of destination array
*/
static void batadv_nc_memxor(char *dst, const char *src, unsigned int len)
{
unsigned int i;
for (i = 0; i < len; ++i)
dst[i] ^= src[i];
}
/**
* batadv_nc_code_packets - code a received unicast_packet with an nc packet
* into a coded_packet and send it
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @skb: data skb to forward
* @ethhdr: pointer to the ethernet header inside the skb
* @nc_packet: structure containing the packet to the skb can be coded with
* @neigh_node: next hop to forward packet to
*
* Returns true if both packets are consumed, false otherwise.
*/
static bool batadv_nc_code_packets(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct sk_buff *skb,
struct ethhdr *ethhdr,
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet,
struct batadv_neigh_node *neigh_node)
{
uint8_t tq_weighted_neigh, tq_weighted_coding, tq_tmp;
struct sk_buff *skb_dest, *skb_src;
struct batadv_unicast_packet *packet1;
struct batadv_unicast_packet *packet2;
struct batadv_coded_packet *coded_packet;
struct batadv_neigh_node *neigh_tmp, *router_neigh;
struct batadv_neigh_node *router_coding = NULL;
struct batadv_neigh_ifinfo *router_neigh_ifinfo = NULL;
struct batadv_neigh_ifinfo *router_coding_ifinfo = NULL;
uint8_t *first_source, *first_dest, *second_source, *second_dest;
__be32 packet_id1, packet_id2;
size_t count;
bool res = false;
int coding_len;
int unicast_size = sizeof(*packet1);
int coded_size = sizeof(*coded_packet);
int header_add = coded_size - unicast_size;
/* TODO: do we need to consider the outgoing interface for
* coded packets?
*/
router_neigh = batadv_orig_router_get(neigh_node->orig_node,
BATADV_IF_DEFAULT);
if (!router_neigh)
goto out;
router_neigh_ifinfo = batadv_neigh_ifinfo_get(router_neigh,
BATADV_IF_DEFAULT);
if (!router_neigh_ifinfo)
goto out;
neigh_tmp = nc_packet->neigh_node;
router_coding = batadv_orig_router_get(neigh_tmp->orig_node,
BATADV_IF_DEFAULT);
if (!router_coding)
goto out;
router_coding_ifinfo = batadv_neigh_ifinfo_get(router_coding,
BATADV_IF_DEFAULT);
if (!router_coding_ifinfo)
goto out;
tq_tmp = router_neigh_ifinfo->bat_iv.tq_avg;
tq_weighted_neigh = batadv_nc_random_weight_tq(tq_tmp);
tq_tmp = router_coding_ifinfo->bat_iv.tq_avg;
tq_weighted_coding = batadv_nc_random_weight_tq(tq_tmp);
/* Select one destination for the MAC-header dst-field based on
* weighted TQ-values.
*/
if (tq_weighted_neigh >= tq_weighted_coding) {
/* Destination from nc_packet is selected for MAC-header */
first_dest = nc_packet->nc_path->next_hop;
first_source = nc_packet->nc_path->prev_hop;
second_dest = neigh_node->addr;
second_source = ethhdr->h_source;
packet1 = (struct batadv_unicast_packet *)nc_packet->skb->data;
packet2 = (struct batadv_unicast_packet *)skb->data;
packet_id1 = nc_packet->packet_id;
packet_id2 = batadv_skb_crc32(skb,
skb->data + sizeof(*packet2));
} else {
/* Destination for skb is selected for MAC-header */
first_dest = neigh_node->addr;
first_source = ethhdr->h_source;
second_dest = nc_packet->nc_path->next_hop;
second_source = nc_packet->nc_path->prev_hop;
packet1 = (struct batadv_unicast_packet *)skb->data;
packet2 = (struct batadv_unicast_packet *)nc_packet->skb->data;
packet_id1 = batadv_skb_crc32(skb,
skb->data + sizeof(*packet1));
packet_id2 = nc_packet->packet_id;
}
/* Instead of zero padding the smallest data buffer, we
* code into the largest.
*/
if (skb->len <= nc_packet->skb->len) {
skb_dest = nc_packet->skb;
skb_src = skb;
} else {
skb_dest = skb;
skb_src = nc_packet->skb;
}
/* coding_len is used when decoding the packet shorter packet */
coding_len = skb_src->len - unicast_size;
if (skb_linearize(skb_dest) < 0 || skb_linearize(skb_src) < 0)
goto out;
skb_push(skb_dest, header_add);
coded_packet = (struct batadv_coded_packet *)skb_dest->data;
skb_reset_mac_header(skb_dest);
coded_packet->packet_type = BATADV_CODED;
coded_packet->version = BATADV_COMPAT_VERSION;
coded_packet->ttl = packet1->ttl;
/* Info about first unicast packet */
ether_addr_copy(coded_packet->first_source, first_source);
ether_addr_copy(coded_packet->first_orig_dest, packet1->dest);
coded_packet->first_crc = packet_id1;
coded_packet->first_ttvn = packet1->ttvn;
/* Info about second unicast packet */
ether_addr_copy(coded_packet->second_dest, second_dest);
ether_addr_copy(coded_packet->second_source, second_source);
ether_addr_copy(coded_packet->second_orig_dest, packet2->dest);
coded_packet->second_crc = packet_id2;
coded_packet->second_ttl = packet2->ttl;
coded_packet->second_ttvn = packet2->ttvn;
coded_packet->coded_len = htons(coding_len);
/* This is where the magic happens: Code skb_src into skb_dest */
batadv_nc_memxor(skb_dest->data + coded_size,
skb_src->data + unicast_size, coding_len);
/* Update counters accordingly */
if (BATADV_SKB_CB(skb_src)->decoded &&
BATADV_SKB_CB(skb_dest)->decoded) {
/* Both packets are recoded */
count = skb_src->len + ETH_HLEN;
count += skb_dest->len + ETH_HLEN;
batadv_add_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_RECODE, 2);
batadv_add_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_RECODE_BYTES, count);
} else if (!BATADV_SKB_CB(skb_src)->decoded &&
!BATADV_SKB_CB(skb_dest)->decoded) {
/* Both packets are newly coded */
count = skb_src->len + ETH_HLEN;
count += skb_dest->len + ETH_HLEN;
batadv_add_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_CODE, 2);
batadv_add_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_CODE_BYTES, count);
} else if (BATADV_SKB_CB(skb_src)->decoded &&
!BATADV_SKB_CB(skb_dest)->decoded) {
/* skb_src recoded and skb_dest is newly coded */
batadv_inc_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_RECODE);
batadv_add_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_RECODE_BYTES,
skb_src->len + ETH_HLEN);
batadv_inc_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_CODE);
batadv_add_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_CODE_BYTES,
skb_dest->len + ETH_HLEN);
} else if (!BATADV_SKB_CB(skb_src)->decoded &&
BATADV_SKB_CB(skb_dest)->decoded) {
/* skb_src is newly coded and skb_dest is recoded */
batadv_inc_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_CODE);
batadv_add_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_CODE_BYTES,
skb_src->len + ETH_HLEN);
batadv_inc_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_RECODE);
batadv_add_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_RECODE_BYTES,
skb_dest->len + ETH_HLEN);
}
/* skb_src is now coded into skb_dest, so free it */
kfree_skb(skb_src);
/* avoid duplicate free of skb from nc_packet */
nc_packet->skb = NULL;
batadv_nc_packet_free(nc_packet);
/* Send the coded packet and return true */
batadv_send_skb_packet(skb_dest, neigh_node->if_incoming, first_dest);
res = true;
out:
if (router_neigh)
batadv_neigh_node_free_ref(router_neigh);
if (router_coding)
batadv_neigh_node_free_ref(router_coding);
if (router_neigh_ifinfo)
batadv_neigh_ifinfo_free_ref(router_neigh_ifinfo);
if (router_coding_ifinfo)
batadv_neigh_ifinfo_free_ref(router_coding_ifinfo);
return res;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_skb_coding_possible - true if a decoded skb is available at dst.
* @skb: data skb to forward
* @dst: destination mac address of the other skb to code with
* @src: source mac address of skb
*
* Whenever we network code a packet we have to check whether we received it in
* a network coded form. If so, we may not be able to use it for coding because
* some neighbors may also have received (overheard) the packet in the network
* coded form without being able to decode it. It is hard to know which of the
* neighboring nodes was able to decode the packet, therefore we can only
* re-code the packet if the source of the previous encoded packet is involved.
* Since the source encoded the packet we can be certain it has all necessary
* decode information.
*
* Returns true if coding of a decoded packet is allowed.
*/
static bool batadv_nc_skb_coding_possible(struct sk_buff *skb,
uint8_t *dst, uint8_t *src)
{
if (BATADV_SKB_CB(skb)->decoded && !batadv_compare_eth(dst, src))
return false;
else
return true;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_path_search - Find the coding path matching in_nc_node and
* out_nc_node to retrieve a buffered packet that can be used for coding.
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @in_nc_node: pointer to skb next hop's neighbor nc node
* @out_nc_node: pointer to skb source's neighbor nc node
* @skb: data skb to forward
* @eth_dst: next hop mac address of skb
*
* Returns true if coding of a decoded skb is allowed.
*/
static struct batadv_nc_packet *
batadv_nc_path_search(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct batadv_nc_node *in_nc_node,
struct batadv_nc_node *out_nc_node,
struct sk_buff *skb,
uint8_t *eth_dst)
{
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path, nc_path_key;
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet_out = NULL;
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet, *nc_packet_tmp;
struct batadv_hashtable *hash = bat_priv->nc.coding_hash;
int idx;
if (!hash)
return NULL;
/* Create almost path key */
batadv_nc_hash_key_gen(&nc_path_key, in_nc_node->addr,
out_nc_node->addr);
idx = batadv_nc_hash_choose(&nc_path_key, hash->size);
/* Check for coding opportunities in this nc_path */
rcu_read_lock();
hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(nc_path, &hash->table[idx], hash_entry) {
if (!batadv_compare_eth(nc_path->prev_hop, in_nc_node->addr))
continue;
if (!batadv_compare_eth(nc_path->next_hop, out_nc_node->addr))
continue;
spin_lock_bh(&nc_path->packet_list_lock);
if (list_empty(&nc_path->packet_list)) {
spin_unlock_bh(&nc_path->packet_list_lock);
continue;
}
list_for_each_entry_safe(nc_packet, nc_packet_tmp,
&nc_path->packet_list, list) {
if (!batadv_nc_skb_coding_possible(nc_packet->skb,
eth_dst,
in_nc_node->addr))
continue;
/* Coding opportunity is found! */
list_del(&nc_packet->list);
nc_packet_out = nc_packet;
break;
}
spin_unlock_bh(&nc_path->packet_list_lock);
break;
}
rcu_read_unlock();
return nc_packet_out;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_skb_src_search - Loops through the list of neighoring nodes of the
* skb's sender (may be equal to the originator).
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @skb: data skb to forward
* @eth_dst: next hop mac address of skb
* @eth_src: source mac address of skb
* @in_nc_node: pointer to skb next hop's neighbor nc node
*
* Returns an nc packet if a suitable coding packet was found, NULL otherwise.
*/
static struct batadv_nc_packet *
batadv_nc_skb_src_search(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct sk_buff *skb,
uint8_t *eth_dst,
uint8_t *eth_src,
struct batadv_nc_node *in_nc_node)
{
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_node;
struct batadv_nc_node *out_nc_node;
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet = NULL;
orig_node = batadv_orig_hash_find(bat_priv, eth_src);
if (!orig_node)
return NULL;
rcu_read_lock();
list_for_each_entry_rcu(out_nc_node,
&orig_node->out_coding_list, list) {
/* Check if the skb is decoded and if recoding is possible */
if (!batadv_nc_skb_coding_possible(skb,
out_nc_node->addr, eth_src))
continue;
/* Search for an opportunity in this nc_path */
nc_packet = batadv_nc_path_search(bat_priv, in_nc_node,
out_nc_node, skb, eth_dst);
if (nc_packet)
break;
}
rcu_read_unlock();
batadv_orig_node_free_ref(orig_node);
return nc_packet;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_skb_store_before_coding - set the ethernet src and dst of the
* unicast skb before it is stored for use in later decoding
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @skb: data skb to store
* @eth_dst_new: new destination mac address of skb
*/
static void batadv_nc_skb_store_before_coding(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct sk_buff *skb,
uint8_t *eth_dst_new)
{
struct ethhdr *ethhdr;
/* Copy skb header to change the mac header */
skb = pskb_copy_for_clone(skb, GFP_ATOMIC);
if (!skb)
return;
/* Set the mac header as if we actually sent the packet uncoded */
ethhdr = eth_hdr(skb);
ether_addr_copy(ethhdr->h_source, ethhdr->h_dest);
ether_addr_copy(ethhdr->h_dest, eth_dst_new);
/* Set data pointer to MAC header to mimic packets from our tx path */
skb_push(skb, ETH_HLEN);
/* Add the packet to the decoding packet pool */
batadv_nc_skb_store_for_decoding(bat_priv, skb);
/* batadv_nc_skb_store_for_decoding() clones the skb, so we must free
* our ref
*/
kfree_skb(skb);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_skb_dst_search - Loops through list of neighboring nodes to dst.
* @skb: data skb to forward
* @neigh_node: next hop to forward packet to
* @ethhdr: pointer to the ethernet header inside the skb
*
* Loops through list of neighboring nodes the next hop has a good connection to
* (receives OGMs with a sufficient quality). We need to find a neighbor of our
* next hop that potentially sent a packet which our next hop also received
* (overheard) and has stored for later decoding.
*
* Returns true if the skb was consumed (encoded packet sent) or false otherwise
*/
static bool batadv_nc_skb_dst_search(struct sk_buff *skb,
struct batadv_neigh_node *neigh_node,
struct ethhdr *ethhdr)
{
struct net_device *netdev = neigh_node->if_incoming->soft_iface;
struct batadv_priv *bat_priv = netdev_priv(netdev);
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_node = neigh_node->orig_node;
struct batadv_nc_node *nc_node;
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet = NULL;
rcu_read_lock();
list_for_each_entry_rcu(nc_node, &orig_node->in_coding_list, list) {
/* Search for coding opportunity with this in_nc_node */
nc_packet = batadv_nc_skb_src_search(bat_priv, skb,
neigh_node->addr,
ethhdr->h_source, nc_node);
/* Opportunity was found, so stop searching */
if (nc_packet)
break;
}
rcu_read_unlock();
if (!nc_packet)
return false;
/* Save packets for later decoding */
batadv_nc_skb_store_before_coding(bat_priv, skb,
neigh_node->addr);
batadv_nc_skb_store_before_coding(bat_priv, nc_packet->skb,
nc_packet->neigh_node->addr);
/* Code and send packets */
if (batadv_nc_code_packets(bat_priv, skb, ethhdr, nc_packet,
neigh_node))
return true;
/* out of mem ? Coding failed - we have to free the buffered packet
* to avoid memleaks. The skb passed as argument will be dealt with
* by the calling function.
*/
batadv_nc_send_packet(nc_packet);
return false;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_skb_add_to_path - buffer skb for later encoding / decoding
* @skb: skb to add to path
* @nc_path: path to add skb to
* @neigh_node: next hop to forward packet to
* @packet_id: checksum to identify packet
*
* Returns true if the packet was buffered or false in case of an error.
*/
static bool batadv_nc_skb_add_to_path(struct sk_buff *skb,
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path,
struct batadv_neigh_node *neigh_node,
__be32 packet_id)
{
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet;
nc_packet = kzalloc(sizeof(*nc_packet), GFP_ATOMIC);
if (!nc_packet)
return false;
/* Initialize nc_packet */
nc_packet->timestamp = jiffies;
nc_packet->packet_id = packet_id;
nc_packet->skb = skb;
nc_packet->neigh_node = neigh_node;
nc_packet->nc_path = nc_path;
/* Add coding packet to list */
spin_lock_bh(&nc_path->packet_list_lock);
list_add_tail(&nc_packet->list, &nc_path->packet_list);
spin_unlock_bh(&nc_path->packet_list_lock);
return true;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_skb_forward - try to code a packet or add it to the coding packet
* buffer
* @skb: data skb to forward
* @neigh_node: next hop to forward packet to
*
* Returns true if the skb was consumed (encoded packet sent) or false otherwise
*/
bool batadv_nc_skb_forward(struct sk_buff *skb,
struct batadv_neigh_node *neigh_node)
{
const struct net_device *netdev = neigh_node->if_incoming->soft_iface;
struct batadv_priv *bat_priv = netdev_priv(netdev);
struct batadv_unicast_packet *packet;
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path;
struct ethhdr *ethhdr = eth_hdr(skb);
__be32 packet_id;
u8 *payload;
/* Check if network coding is enabled */
if (!atomic_read(&bat_priv->network_coding))
goto out;
/* We only handle unicast packets */
payload = skb_network_header(skb);
packet = (struct batadv_unicast_packet *)payload;
if (packet->packet_type != BATADV_UNICAST)
goto out;
/* Try to find a coding opportunity and send the skb if one is found */
if (batadv_nc_skb_dst_search(skb, neigh_node, ethhdr))
return true;
/* Find or create a nc_path for this src-dst pair */
nc_path = batadv_nc_get_path(bat_priv,
bat_priv->nc.coding_hash,
ethhdr->h_source,
neigh_node->addr);
if (!nc_path)
goto out;
/* Add skb to nc_path */
packet_id = batadv_skb_crc32(skb, payload + sizeof(*packet));
if (!batadv_nc_skb_add_to_path(skb, nc_path, neigh_node, packet_id))
goto free_nc_path;
/* Packet is consumed */
return true;
free_nc_path:
batadv_nc_path_free_ref(nc_path);
out:
/* Packet is not consumed */
return false;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_skb_store_for_decoding - save a clone of the skb which can be used
* when decoding coded packets
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @skb: data skb to store
*/
void batadv_nc_skb_store_for_decoding(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct sk_buff *skb)
{
struct batadv_unicast_packet *packet;
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path;
struct ethhdr *ethhdr = eth_hdr(skb);
__be32 packet_id;
u8 *payload;
/* Check if network coding is enabled */
if (!atomic_read(&bat_priv->network_coding))
goto out;
/* Check for supported packet type */
payload = skb_network_header(skb);
packet = (struct batadv_unicast_packet *)payload;
if (packet->packet_type != BATADV_UNICAST)
goto out;
/* Find existing nc_path or create a new */
nc_path = batadv_nc_get_path(bat_priv,
bat_priv->nc.decoding_hash,
ethhdr->h_source,
ethhdr->h_dest);
if (!nc_path)
goto out;
/* Clone skb and adjust skb->data to point at batman header */
skb = skb_clone(skb, GFP_ATOMIC);
if (unlikely(!skb))
goto free_nc_path;
if (unlikely(!pskb_may_pull(skb, ETH_HLEN)))
goto free_skb;
if (unlikely(!skb_pull_rcsum(skb, ETH_HLEN)))
goto free_skb;
/* Add skb to nc_path */
packet_id = batadv_skb_crc32(skb, payload + sizeof(*packet));
if (!batadv_nc_skb_add_to_path(skb, nc_path, NULL, packet_id))
goto free_skb;
batadv_inc_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_BUFFER);
return;
free_skb:
kfree_skb(skb);
free_nc_path:
batadv_nc_path_free_ref(nc_path);
out:
return;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_skb_store_sniffed_unicast - check if a received unicast packet
* should be saved in the decoding buffer and, if so, store it there
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @skb: unicast skb to store
*/
void batadv_nc_skb_store_sniffed_unicast(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct sk_buff *skb)
{
struct ethhdr *ethhdr = eth_hdr(skb);
if (batadv_is_my_mac(bat_priv, ethhdr->h_dest))
return;
/* Set data pointer to MAC header to mimic packets from our tx path */
skb_push(skb, ETH_HLEN);
batadv_nc_skb_store_for_decoding(bat_priv, skb);
}
/**
* batadv_nc_skb_decode_packet - decode given skb using the decode data stored
* in nc_packet
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @skb: unicast skb to decode
* @nc_packet: decode data needed to decode the skb
*
* Returns pointer to decoded unicast packet if the packet was decoded or NULL
* in case of an error.
*/
static struct batadv_unicast_packet *
batadv_nc_skb_decode_packet(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv, struct sk_buff *skb,
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet)
{
const int h_size = sizeof(struct batadv_unicast_packet);
const int h_diff = sizeof(struct batadv_coded_packet) - h_size;
struct batadv_unicast_packet *unicast_packet;
struct batadv_coded_packet coded_packet_tmp;
struct ethhdr *ethhdr, ethhdr_tmp;
uint8_t *orig_dest, ttl, ttvn;
unsigned int coding_len;
int err;
/* Save headers temporarily */
memcpy(&coded_packet_tmp, skb->data, sizeof(coded_packet_tmp));
memcpy(&ethhdr_tmp, skb_mac_header(skb), sizeof(ethhdr_tmp));
if (skb_cow(skb, 0) < 0)
return NULL;
if (unlikely(!skb_pull_rcsum(skb, h_diff)))
return NULL;
/* Data points to batman header, so set mac header 14 bytes before
* and network to data
*/
skb_set_mac_header(skb, -ETH_HLEN);
skb_reset_network_header(skb);
/* Reconstruct original mac header */
ethhdr = eth_hdr(skb);
*ethhdr = ethhdr_tmp;
/* Select the correct unicast header information based on the location
* of our mac address in the coded_packet header
*/
if (batadv_is_my_mac(bat_priv, coded_packet_tmp.second_dest)) {
/* If we are the second destination the packet was overheard,
* so the Ethernet address must be copied to h_dest and
* pkt_type changed from PACKET_OTHERHOST to PACKET_HOST
*/
ether_addr_copy(ethhdr->h_dest, coded_packet_tmp.second_dest);
skb->pkt_type = PACKET_HOST;
orig_dest = coded_packet_tmp.second_orig_dest;
ttl = coded_packet_tmp.second_ttl;
ttvn = coded_packet_tmp.second_ttvn;
} else {
orig_dest = coded_packet_tmp.first_orig_dest;
ttl = coded_packet_tmp.ttl;
ttvn = coded_packet_tmp.first_ttvn;
}
coding_len = ntohs(coded_packet_tmp.coded_len);
if (coding_len > skb->len)
return NULL;
/* Here the magic is reversed:
* extract the missing packet from the received coded packet
*/
batadv_nc_memxor(skb->data + h_size,
nc_packet->skb->data + h_size,
coding_len);
/* Resize decoded skb if decoded with larger packet */
if (nc_packet->skb->len > coding_len + h_size) {
err = pskb_trim_rcsum(skb, coding_len + h_size);
if (err)
return NULL;
}
/* Create decoded unicast packet */
unicast_packet = (struct batadv_unicast_packet *)skb->data;
unicast_packet->packet_type = BATADV_UNICAST;
unicast_packet->version = BATADV_COMPAT_VERSION;
unicast_packet->ttl = ttl;
ether_addr_copy(unicast_packet->dest, orig_dest);
unicast_packet->ttvn = ttvn;
batadv_nc_packet_free(nc_packet);
return unicast_packet;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_find_decoding_packet - search through buffered decoding data to
* find the data needed to decode the coded packet
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
* @ethhdr: pointer to the ethernet header inside the coded packet
* @coded: coded packet we try to find decode data for
*
* Returns pointer to nc packet if the needed data was found or NULL otherwise.
*/
static struct batadv_nc_packet *
batadv_nc_find_decoding_packet(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv,
struct ethhdr *ethhdr,
struct batadv_coded_packet *coded)
{
struct batadv_hashtable *hash = bat_priv->nc.decoding_hash;
struct batadv_nc_packet *tmp_nc_packet, *nc_packet = NULL;
struct batadv_nc_path *nc_path, nc_path_key;
uint8_t *dest, *source;
__be32 packet_id;
int index;
if (!hash)
return NULL;
/* Select the correct packet id based on the location of our mac-addr */
dest = ethhdr->h_source;
if (!batadv_is_my_mac(bat_priv, coded->second_dest)) {
source = coded->second_source;
packet_id = coded->second_crc;
} else {
source = coded->first_source;
packet_id = coded->first_crc;
}
batadv_nc_hash_key_gen(&nc_path_key, source, dest);
index = batadv_nc_hash_choose(&nc_path_key, hash->size);
/* Search for matching coding path */
rcu_read_lock();
hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(nc_path, &hash->table[index], hash_entry) {
/* Find matching nc_packet */
spin_lock_bh(&nc_path->packet_list_lock);
list_for_each_entry(tmp_nc_packet,
&nc_path->packet_list, list) {
if (packet_id == tmp_nc_packet->packet_id) {
list_del(&tmp_nc_packet->list);
nc_packet = tmp_nc_packet;
break;
}
}
spin_unlock_bh(&nc_path->packet_list_lock);
if (nc_packet)
break;
}
rcu_read_unlock();
if (!nc_packet)
batadv_dbg(BATADV_DBG_NC, bat_priv,
"No decoding packet found for %u\n", packet_id);
return nc_packet;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_recv_coded_packet - try to decode coded packet and enqueue the
* resulting unicast packet
* @skb: incoming coded packet
* @recv_if: pointer to interface this packet was received on
*/
static int batadv_nc_recv_coded_packet(struct sk_buff *skb,
struct batadv_hard_iface *recv_if)
{
struct batadv_priv *bat_priv = netdev_priv(recv_if->soft_iface);
struct batadv_unicast_packet *unicast_packet;
struct batadv_coded_packet *coded_packet;
struct batadv_nc_packet *nc_packet;
struct ethhdr *ethhdr;
int hdr_size = sizeof(*coded_packet);
/* Check if network coding is enabled */
if (!atomic_read(&bat_priv->network_coding))
return NET_RX_DROP;
/* Make sure we can access (and remove) header */
if (unlikely(!pskb_may_pull(skb, hdr_size)))
return NET_RX_DROP;
coded_packet = (struct batadv_coded_packet *)skb->data;
ethhdr = eth_hdr(skb);
/* Verify frame is destined for us */
if (!batadv_is_my_mac(bat_priv, ethhdr->h_dest) &&
!batadv_is_my_mac(bat_priv, coded_packet->second_dest))
return NET_RX_DROP;
/* Update stat counter */
if (batadv_is_my_mac(bat_priv, coded_packet->second_dest))
batadv_inc_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_SNIFFED);
nc_packet = batadv_nc_find_decoding_packet(bat_priv, ethhdr,
coded_packet);
if (!nc_packet) {
batadv_inc_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_DECODE_FAILED);
return NET_RX_DROP;
}
/* Make skb's linear, because decoding accesses the entire buffer */
if (skb_linearize(skb) < 0)
goto free_nc_packet;
if (skb_linearize(nc_packet->skb) < 0)
goto free_nc_packet;
/* Decode the packet */
unicast_packet = batadv_nc_skb_decode_packet(bat_priv, skb, nc_packet);
if (!unicast_packet) {
batadv_inc_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_DECODE_FAILED);
goto free_nc_packet;
}
/* Mark packet as decoded to do correct recoding when forwarding */
BATADV_SKB_CB(skb)->decoded = true;
batadv_inc_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_DECODE);
batadv_add_counter(bat_priv, BATADV_CNT_NC_DECODE_BYTES,
skb->len + ETH_HLEN);
return batadv_recv_unicast_packet(skb, recv_if);
free_nc_packet:
batadv_nc_packet_free(nc_packet);
return NET_RX_DROP;
}
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
/**
* batadv_nc_mesh_free - clean up network coding memory
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
*/
void batadv_nc_mesh_free(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv)
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
{
batadv_tvlv_container_unregister(bat_priv, BATADV_TVLV_NC, 1);
batadv_tvlv_handler_unregister(bat_priv, BATADV_TVLV_NC, 1);
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
cancel_delayed_work_sync(&bat_priv->nc.work);
batadv_nc_purge_paths(bat_priv, bat_priv->nc.coding_hash, NULL);
batadv_hash_destroy(bat_priv->nc.coding_hash);
batadv_nc_purge_paths(bat_priv, bat_priv->nc.decoding_hash, NULL);
batadv_hash_destroy(bat_priv->nc.decoding_hash);
batman-adv: network coding - add the initial infrastructure code Network coding exploits the 802.11 shared medium to allow multiple packets to be sent in a single transmission. In brief, a relay can XOR two packets, and send the coded packet to two destinations. The receivers can decode one of the original packets by XOR'ing the coded packet with the other original packet. This will lead to increased throughput in topologies where two packets cross one relay. In a simple topology with three nodes, it takes four transmissions without network coding to get one packet from Node A to Node B and one from Node B to Node A: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <--- p2 ---- Node R Node B 4. Node A Node R ---- p1 ---> Node B With network coding, the relay only needs one transmission, which saves us one slot of valuable airtime: 1. Node A ---- p1 ---> Node R Node B 2. Node A Node R <--- p2 ---- Node B 3. Node A <- p1 x p2 - Node R - p1 x p2 -> Node B The same principle holds for a topology including five nodes. Here the packets from Node A and Node B are overheard by Node C and Node D, respectively. This allows Node R to send a network coded packet to save one transmission: Node A Node B | \ / | | p1 p2 | | \ / | p1 > Node R < p2 | | | / \ | | p1 x p2 p1 x p2 | v / \ v / \ Node C < > Node D More information is available on the open-mesh.org wiki[1]. This patch adds the initial code to support network coding in batman-adv. It sets up a worker thread to do house keeping and adds a sysfs file to enable/disable network coding. The feature is disabled by default, as it requires a wifi-driver with working promiscuous mode, and also because it adds a small delay at each hop. [1] http://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Catwoman Signed-off-by: Martin Hundebøll <martin@hundeboll.net> Signed-off-by: Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> Signed-off-by: Antonio Quartulli <ordex@autistici.org>
2013-01-25 03:12:38 -07:00
}
/**
* batadv_nc_nodes_seq_print_text - print the nc node information
* @seq: seq file to print on
* @offset: not used
*/
int batadv_nc_nodes_seq_print_text(struct seq_file *seq, void *offset)
{
struct net_device *net_dev = (struct net_device *)seq->private;
struct batadv_priv *bat_priv = netdev_priv(net_dev);
struct batadv_hashtable *hash = bat_priv->orig_hash;
struct batadv_hard_iface *primary_if;
struct hlist_head *head;
struct batadv_orig_node *orig_node;
struct batadv_nc_node *nc_node;
int i;
primary_if = batadv_seq_print_text_primary_if_get(seq);
if (!primary_if)
goto out;
/* Traverse list of originators */
for (i = 0; i < hash->size; i++) {
head = &hash->table[i];
/* For each orig_node in this bin */
rcu_read_lock();
hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(orig_node, head, hash_entry) {
/* no need to print the orig node if it does not have
* network coding neighbors
*/
if (list_empty(&orig_node->in_coding_list) &&
list_empty(&orig_node->out_coding_list))
continue;
seq_printf(seq, "Node: %pM\n", orig_node->orig);
seq_puts(seq, " Ingoing: ");
/* For each in_nc_node to this orig_node */
list_for_each_entry_rcu(nc_node,
&orig_node->in_coding_list,
list)
seq_printf(seq, "%pM ",
nc_node->addr);
seq_puts(seq, "\n");
seq_puts(seq, " Outgoing: ");
/* For out_nc_node to this orig_node */
list_for_each_entry_rcu(nc_node,
&orig_node->out_coding_list,
list)
seq_printf(seq, "%pM ",
nc_node->addr);
seq_puts(seq, "\n\n");
}
rcu_read_unlock();
}
out:
if (primary_if)
batadv_hardif_free_ref(primary_if);
return 0;
}
/**
* batadv_nc_init_debugfs - create nc folder and related files in debugfs
* @bat_priv: the bat priv with all the soft interface information
*/
int batadv_nc_init_debugfs(struct batadv_priv *bat_priv)
{
struct dentry *nc_dir, *file;
nc_dir = debugfs_create_dir("nc", bat_priv->debug_dir);
if (!nc_dir)
goto out;
file = debugfs_create_u8("min_tq", S_IRUGO | S_IWUSR, nc_dir,
&bat_priv->nc.min_tq);
if (!file)
goto out;
file = debugfs_create_u32("max_fwd_delay", S_IRUGO | S_IWUSR, nc_dir,
&bat_priv->nc.max_fwd_delay);
if (!file)
goto out;
file = debugfs_create_u32("max_buffer_time", S_IRUGO | S_IWUSR, nc_dir,
&bat_priv->nc.max_buffer_time);
if (!file)
goto out;
return 0;
out:
return -ENOMEM;
}