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author | Jon Paul Maloy <jon.maloy@ericsson.com> | 2015-03-13 16:08:11 -0400 |
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committer | David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> | 2015-03-14 14:38:32 -0400 |
commit | e3eea1eb47ac616ee09cf0ae5d1e7790ef8461ea (patch) | |
tree | 8d940842c102ed18354bc51ef64598374deb893c /net/tipc/msg.c | |
parent | 05dcc5aa4dcced4f59f925625cea669e82b75519 (diff) | |
download | op-kernel-dev-e3eea1eb47ac616ee09cf0ae5d1e7790ef8461ea.zip op-kernel-dev-e3eea1eb47ac616ee09cf0ae5d1e7790ef8461ea.tar.gz |
tipc: clean up handling of message priorities
Messages transferred by TIPC are assigned an "importance priority", -an
integer value indicating how to treat the message when there is link or
destination socket congestion.
There is no separate header field for this value. Instead, the message
user values have been chosen in ascending order according to perceived
importance, so that the message user field can be used for this.
This is not a good solution. First, we have many more users than the
needed priority levels, so we end up with treating more priority
levels than necessary. Second, the user field cannot always
accurately reflect the priority of the message. E.g., a message
fragment packet should really have the priority of the enveloped
user data message, and not the priority of the MSG_FRAGMENTER user.
Until now, we have been working around this problem in different ways,
but it is now time to implement a consistent way of handling such
priorities, although still within the constraint that we cannot
allocate any more bits in the regular data message header for this.
In this commit, we define a new priority level, TIPC_SYSTEM_IMPORTANCE,
that will be the only one used apart from the four (lower) user data
levels. All non-data messages map down to this priority. Furthermore,
we take some free bits from the MSG_FRAGMENTER header and allocate
them to store the priority of the enveloped message. We then adjust
the functions msg_importance()/msg_set_importance() so that they
read/set the correct header fields depending on user type.
This small protocol change is fully compatible, because the code at
the receiving end of a link currently reads the importance level
only from user data messages, where there is no change.
Reviewed-by: Erik Hugne <erik.hugne@ericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Jon Maloy <jon.maloy@ericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'net/tipc/msg.c')
-rw-r--r-- | net/tipc/msg.c | 5 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/net/tipc/msg.c b/net/tipc/msg.c index 47c8fd8..0c6dad8 100644 --- a/net/tipc/msg.c +++ b/net/tipc/msg.c @@ -272,6 +272,7 @@ int tipc_msg_build(struct tipc_msg *mhdr, struct msghdr *m, FIRST_FRAGMENT, INT_H_SIZE, msg_destnode(mhdr)); msg_set_size(&pkthdr, pktmax); msg_set_fragm_no(&pkthdr, pktno); + msg_set_importance(&pkthdr, msg_importance(mhdr)); /* Prepare first fragment */ skb = tipc_buf_acquire(pktmax); @@ -467,7 +468,6 @@ bool tipc_msg_reverse(u32 own_addr, struct sk_buff *buf, u32 *dnode, int err) { struct tipc_msg *msg = buf_msg(buf); - uint imp = msg_importance(msg); struct tipc_msg ohdr; uint rdsz = min_t(uint, msg_data_sz(msg), MAX_FORWARD_SIZE); @@ -479,9 +479,6 @@ bool tipc_msg_reverse(u32 own_addr, struct sk_buff *buf, u32 *dnode, if (msg_errcode(msg)) goto exit; memcpy(&ohdr, msg, msg_hdr_sz(msg)); - imp = min_t(uint, imp + 1, TIPC_CRITICAL_IMPORTANCE); - if (msg_isdata(msg)) - msg_set_importance(msg, imp); msg_set_errcode(msg, err); msg_set_origport(msg, msg_destport(&ohdr)); msg_set_destport(msg, msg_origport(&ohdr)); |