|
|
|
Re: [PATCH 1/1] tcp: Wrong timeout for SYN segments | |
| [Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
|
|
On Wed, 2012-08-22 at 01:29 +0200, Alex Bergmann wrote: > Hi David, > > I'm not 100% sure, but it looks like I found an RFC mismatch with the > current default values of the TCP implementation. > > Alex > > From 8b854a525eb45f64ad29dfab16f9d9f681e84495 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 > From: Alexander Bergmann <alex@xxxxxxxxxx> > Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2012 00:29:08 +0200 > Subject: [PATCH 1/1] tcp: Wrong timeout for SYN segments > > Commit 9ad7c049 changed the initRTO from 3secs to 1sec in accordance to > RFC6298 (former RFC2988bis). This introduced a gap with RFC1122 that > defines a minimum retransmission window for SYN segments of at least > 180secs. > > Prior to 9ad7c049 the timeout was defined with 189secs. Now we have only > a timeout of 63secs. > > ((2 << 5) - 1) * 3 secs = 189 secs > ((2 << 5) - 1) * 1 secs = 63 secs Strange maths ... here I have : (1+2+4+8+16) * 3 = 93 secs vs (1+2+4+8+16) * 1 = 31 secs So even before said commit, we were not rfc1122 compliant. Using 7 retries would give 127 seconds, still not rfc compliant. > > To fulfill the MUST constraint in RFC1122 section 4.2.3.5 about R2 for > SYN segments, the values of TCP_SYN_RETRIES and TCP_SYNACK_RETRIES must > be changed to 7 reties. > > ((2 << 7) - 1) * 1 secs = 255 secs > > This would result in an ETIMEDOUT of 4 minutes 15 seconds. > > Signed-off-by: Alexander Bergmann <alex@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > include/net/tcp.h | 4 ++-- > 1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/include/net/tcp.h b/include/net/tcp.h > index 1f000ff..7eaae19 100644 > --- a/include/net/tcp.h > +++ b/include/net/tcp.h > @@ -98,10 +98,10 @@ extern void tcp_time_wait(struct sock *sk, int state, int timeo); > * 15 is ~13-30min depending on RTO. > */ > > -#define TCP_SYN_RETRIES 5 /* number of times to retry active opening a > +#define TCP_SYN_RETRIES 7 /* number of times to retry active opening a > * connection: ~180sec is RFC minimum */ > > -#define TCP_SYNACK_RETRIES 5 /* number of times to retry passive opening a > +#define TCP_SYNACK_RETRIES 7 /* number of times to retry passive opening a > * connection: ~180sec is RFC minimum */ > > #define TCP_TIMEWAIT_LEN (60*HZ) /* how long to wait to destroy TIME-WAIT Nice catch ! I kind of disagree with the SYNACK part. RFC 1122 says in 4.2.3.5 : However, the values of R1 and R2 may be different for SYN and data segments. In particular, R2 for a SYN segment MUST be set large enough to provide retransmission of the segment for at least 3 minutes. The application can close the connection (i.e., give up on the open attempt) sooner, of course. I am not sure SYNACK segments were considered as a 'SYN segment' in this section. (as the application cannot 'close' the connection on the passive side, only kernel is aware of a SYN_RECV socket) Increasing TCP_SYNACK_RETRIES from 5 to 7 or 8 amplifies the SYN/synflood problem. A valid client should retransmit its SYN packet for 180 seconds, I dont believe we should make sure the SYNACK will be sent for 180 seconds as well. If we _really_ want to have a 3 minutes R2 for SYNACK, I suggest changing things to that we dont send more than 5 SYNACKS, maybe using RTO=6 after one retransmit current situation : 1 sec 2 sec 4 sec 8 sec 16 sec ---- total of 31 seconds 1 sec 12 sec // switch to RTO = 6 24 sec 48 sec 96 sec ----- total of 181 seconds -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
[Other Archives] [Linux Kernel Newbies] [Linux Driver Development] [Linux Kbuild] [Fedora Kernel] [Linux Kernel Testers] [Linux SH] [Linux Omap] [Linux Tape] [Linux Input] [Linux LEDS] [Linux Kernel Janitors] [Linux Kernel Packagers] [Linux Doc] [Linux Man Pages] [Linux API] [Linux Memory Management] [Linux Modules] [Linux Standards] [Kernel Announce] [Netdev] [Git] [Linux PCI] Linux CAN Development [Linux I2C] [Linux RDMA] [Linux NUMA] [Netfilter] [Netfilter Devel] [SELinux] [Bugtraq] [FIO] [Linux Perf Users] [Linux Serial] [Linux PPP] [Linux ISDN] [Linux Next] [Kernel Stable Commits] [Linux Tip Commits] [Kernel MM Commits] [Linux Security Module] [AutoFS] [Filesystem Development] [Ext3 Filesystem] [Linux bcache] [Ext4 Filesystem] [Linux BTRFS] [Linux CEPH Filesystem] [Linux XFS] [XFS] [Linux NFS] [Linux CIFS] [Ecryptfs] [Linux NILFS] [Linux Cachefs] [Reiser FS] [Initramfs] [Linux FB Devel] [Linux OpenGL] [DRI Devel] [Fastboot] [Linux RT Users] [Linux RT Stable] [eCos] [Corosync] [Linux Clusters] [LVS Devel] [Hot Plug] [Linux Virtualization] [KVM] [KVM PPC] [KVM ia64] [Linux Containers] [Linux Hexagon] [Linux Cgroups] [Util Linux] [Wireless] [Linux Bluetooth] [Bluez Devel] [Ethernet Bridging] [Embedded Linux] [Barebox] [Linux MMC] [Linux IIO] [Sparse] [Smatch] [Linux Arch] [x86 Platform Driver] [Linux ACPI] [Linux IBM ACPI] [LM Sensors] [CPU Freq] [Linux Power Management] [Linmodems] [Linux DCCP] [Linux SCTP] [ALSA Devel] [Linux USB] [Linux PA RISC] [Linux Samsung SOC] [MIPS Linux] [IBM S/390 Linux] [ARM Linux] [ARM Kernel] [ARM MSM] [Tegra Devel] [Sparc Linux] [Linux Security] [Linux Sound] [Linux Media] [Video 4 Linux] [Linux IRDA Users] [Linux for the blind] [Linux RAID] [Linux ATA RAID] [Device Mapper] [Linux SCSI] [SCSI Target Devel] [Linux SCSI Target Infrastructure] [Linux IDE] [Linux SMP] [Linux AXP] [Linux Alpha] [Linux M68K] [Linux ia64] [Linux 8086] [Linux x86_64] [Linux Config] [Linux Apps] [Linux MSDOS] [Linux X.25] [Linux Crypto] [DM Crypt] [Linux Trace Users] [Linux Btrace] [Linux Watchdog] [Utrace Devel] [Linux C Programming] [Linux Assembly] [Dash] [DWARVES] [Hail Devel] [Linux Kernel Debugger] [Linux gcc] [Gcc Help] [X.Org] [Wine]
![]() |
![]() |
[Older Kernel Discussion] [Yosemite National Park Forum] [Large Format Photos] [Gimp] [Yosemite Photos] [Stuff]