diff options
author | Andrew J. Schorr <ajschorr@alumni.princeton.edu> | 2006-12-12 19:18:21 +0000 |
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committer | Andrew J. Schorr <ajschorr@alumni.princeton.edu> | 2006-12-12 19:18:21 +0000 |
commit | e4529636b77124285cca96a62799d0ff6a7addeb (patch) | |
tree | a8a50de7413833d5277ed7309248e03719e9efd3 /ospfd/ospf_lsa.c | |
parent | 43cd33a44e010f818633b7f144b5a0be352b41e7 (diff) |
[PtP over ethernet] New peer flag allows much more addressing flexibility
2006-12-12 Andrew J. Schorr <ajschorr@alumni.princeton.edu>
* if.h: (struct connected) Add new ZEBRA_IFA_PEER flag indicating
whether a peer address has been configured. Comment now shows
the new interpretation of the destination addr: if ZEBRA_IFA_PEER
is set, then it must contain the destination address, otherwise
it may contain the broadcast address or be NULL.
(CONNECTED_DEST_HOST,CONNECTED_POINTOPOINT_HOST) Remove obsolete
macros that were specific to IPv4 and not fully general.
(CONNECTED_PEER) New macro to check ZEBRA_IFA_PEER flag.
(CONNECTED_PREFIX) New macro giving the prefix to insert into
the RIB: if CONNECTED_PEER, then use the destination (peer) address,
else use the address field.
(CONNECTED_ID) New macro to come up with an identifying address
for the struct connected.
* if.c: (if_lookup_address, connected_lookup_address) Streamline
logic with new CONNECTED_PREFIX macro.
* prefix.h: (PREFIX_COPY_IPV4, PREFIX_COPY_IPV6) New macros
for better performance than the general prefix_copy function.
* zclient.c: (zebra_interface_address_read) For non-null destination
addresses, set prefixlen to equal the address prefixlen. This
is needed to get the new CONNECTED_PREFIX macro to work properly.
* connected.c: (connected_up_ipv4, connected_down_ipv4,
connected_up_ipv6, connected_down_ipv6) Simplify logic using the
new CONNECTED_PREFIX macro.
(connected_add_ipv4) Set prefixlen in destination addresses (required
by the CONNECTED_PREFIX macro). Use CONNECTED_PEER macro instead
of testing for IFF_POINTOPOINT. Delete invalid warning message.
Warn about cases where the ZEBRA_IFA_PEER is set but no
destination address has been supplied (and turn off the flag).
(connected_add_ipv6) Add new flags argument so callers may set
the ZEBRA_IFA_PEER flag. If peer/broadcast address satisfies
IN6_IS_ADDR_UNSPECIFIED, then reject it with a warning.
Set prefixlen in destination address so CONNECTED_PREFIX will work.
* connected.h: (connected_add_ipv6) Add new flags argument so
callers may set the ZEBRA_IFA_PEER flag.
* interface.c: (connected_dump_vty) Use CONNECTED_PEER macro
to decide whether the destination address is a peer or broadcast
address (instead of checking IFF_BROADCAST and IFF_POINTOPOINT).
* if_ioctl.c: (if_getaddrs) Instead of setting a peer address
only when the IFF_POINTOPOINT is set, we now accept a peer
address whenever it is available and not the same as the local
address. Otherwise (no peer address assigned), we check
for a broadcast address (regardless of the IFF_BROADCAST flag).
And must now pass a flags value of ZEBRA_IFA_PEER to
connected_add_ipv4 when a peer address is assigned.
The same new logic is used with the IPv6 code as well (and we
pass the new flags argument to connected_add_ipv6).
(if_get_addr) Do not bother to check IFF_POINTOPOINT: just
issue the SIOCGIFDSTADDR ioctl and see if we get back
a peer address not matching the local address (and set
the ZEBRA_IFA_PEER in that case). If there's no peer address,
try to grab SIOCGIFBRDADDR regardless of whether IFF_BROADCAST is set.
* if_ioctl_solaris.c: (if_get_addr) Just try the SIOCGLIFDSTADDR ioctl
without bothering to check the IFF_POINTOPOINT flag. And if
no peer address was found, just try the SIOCGLIFBRDADDR ioctl
without checking the IFF_BROADCAST flag. Call connected_add_ipv4
and connected_add_ipv6 with appropriate flags.
* if_proc.c: (ifaddr_proc_ipv6) Must pass new flags argument to
connected_add_ipv6.
* kernel_socket.c: (ifam_read) Must pass new flags argument to
connected_add_ipv6.
* rt_netlink.c: (netlink_interface_addr) Copy logic from iproute2
to determine local and possible peer address (so there's no longer
a test for IFF_POINTOPOINT). Set ZEBRA_IFA_PEER flag appropriately.
Pass new flags argument to connected_add_ipv6.
(netlink_address) Test !CONNECTED_PEER instead of if_is_broadcast
to determine whether the connected destination address is a
broadcast address.
* bgp_nexthop.c: (bgp_connected_add, bgp_connected_delete)
Simplify logic by using new CONNECTED_PREFIX macro.
* ospf_interface.c: (ospf_if_is_configured, ospf_if_lookup_by_prefix,
ospf_if_lookup_recv_if) Simplify logic using new CONNECTED_PREFIX
macro.
* ospf_lsa.c: (lsa_link_ptop_set) Using the new CONNECTED_PREFIX
macro, both options collapse into the same code.
* ospf_snmp.c: (ospf_snmp_if_update) Simplify logic using new
CONNECTED_ID macro.
(ospf_snmp_is_if_have_addr) Simplify logic using new CONNECTED_PREFIX
macro.
* ospf_vty.c: (show_ip_ospf_interface_sub) Use new CONNECTED_PEER macro
instead of testing the IFF_POINTOPOINT flag.
* ospfd.c: (ospf_network_match_iface) Use new CONNECTED_PEER macro
instead of testing with if_is_pointopoint. And add commented-out
code to implement alternative (in my opinion) more elegant behavior
that has no special-case treatment for PtP addresses.
(ospf_network_run) Use new CONNECTED_ID macro to simplify logic.
* rip_interface.c: (rip_interface_multicast_set) Use new CONNECTED_ID
macro to simplify logic.
(rip_request_interface_send) Fix minor bug: ipv4_broadcast_addr does
not give a useful result if prefixlen is 32 (we require a peer
address in such cases).
* ripd.c: (rip_update_interface) Fix same bug as above.
Diffstat (limited to 'ospfd/ospf_lsa.c')
-rw-r--r-- | ospfd/ospf_lsa.c | 31 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 23 deletions
diff --git a/ospfd/ospf_lsa.c b/ospfd/ospf_lsa.c index 05eed35e..b9a70a66 100644 --- a/ospfd/ospf_lsa.c +++ b/ospfd/ospf_lsa.c @@ -543,7 +543,7 @@ link_info_set (struct stream *s, struct in_addr id, return 1; } -/* Describe Point-to-Point link. */ +/* Describe Point-to-Point link (Section 12.4.1.1). */ static int lsa_link_ptop_set (struct stream *s, struct ospf_interface *oi) { @@ -564,28 +564,13 @@ lsa_link_ptop_set (struct stream *s, struct ospf_interface *oi) LSA_LINK_TYPE_POINTOPOINT, 0, cost); } - if (CONNECTED_DEST_HOST(oi->connected)) - { - /* Option 1: - link_type = LSA_LINK_TYPE_STUB; - link_id = nbr->address.u.prefix4; - link_data.s_addr = 0xffffffff; - link_cost = o->output_cost; */ - - id.s_addr = oi->connected->destination->u.prefix4.s_addr; - mask.s_addr = 0xffffffff; - links += link_info_set (s, id, mask, LSA_LINK_TYPE_STUB, 0, - oi->output_cost); - } - else - { - /* Option 2: We need to include link to a stub - network regardless of the state of the neighbor */ - masklen2ip (oi->address->prefixlen, &mask); - id.s_addr = oi->address->u.prefix4.s_addr & mask.s_addr; - links += link_info_set (s, id, mask, LSA_LINK_TYPE_STUB, 0, - oi->output_cost); - } + /* Regardless of the state of the neighboring router, we must + add a Type 3 link (stub network). + N.B. Options 1 & 2 share basically the same logic. */ + masklen2ip (oi->address->prefixlen, &mask); + id.s_addr = CONNECTED_PREFIX(oi->connected)->u.prefix4.s_addr & mask.s_addr; + links += link_info_set (s, id, mask, LSA_LINK_TYPE_STUB, 0, + oi->output_cost); return links; } |