Date: Fri, 18 Sep 1998 19:09:12 -0500 From: Alex Nash <nash@mcs.net> To: Luigi Rizzo <luigi@labinfo.iet.unipi.it> Cc: cvs-committers@FreeBSD.ORG, cvs-all@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: cvs commit: src/sbin/ipfw ipfw.c src/sys/conf files src/sys/i386/isa if_ed.c if_ep.c if_lnc.c src/sys/net if_ethersubr.c srcOR Message-ID: <19980918190912.A16974@pr.mcs.net> In-Reply-To: <199809181924.VAA26938@labinfo.iet.unipi.it>; from Luigi Rizzo on Fri, Sep 18, 1998 at 09:24:12PM %2B0200 References: <19980918133656.A6449@Mcs.Net> <199809181924.VAA26938@labinfo.iet.unipi.it>
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On Fri, Sep 18, 1998 at 09:24:12PM +0200, Luigi Rizzo wrote: > > Changing FW_IFNLEN to an arbitrary value was a step backwards. We were > > already bitten by this once, and that's why it was set to IFNAMSIZ. If > > you want to argue that 16 character interface names will never exist, > > i cannot say never, but for sure they don't exist now, so i'd try > to deal with problems when we believe they are close to appear. There are two problems: - We can't be sure if any third party drivers have been written with interface names dependent on IFNAMSIZ (indeed it was a third party driver, the ET Frame Relay card, that prompted the original change from 6 to IFNAMSIZ bytes). - This dependency will be forgotten until *after* something breaks. > (i even wonder if "config" is able to deal with 16-byte device > names...) :) > > change IFNAMSIZ. Interface name length constraints don't belong in > > ipfw. > > Size constraints are a sad fact of life and it is difficult to get > things right. The reason i reduced FW_IFNLEN was to fit the struct > ipfw within an mbuf. This is not necessary in -current, which is where I believe this code should have gone instead of -stable. > Changin IFNAMSIZ might break some things i > don't have control upon, and certainly would require recompiling > many more binaries because the dependency between machine limits > is not always explicit or checked in include files (e.g. the MH_LEN > vs IFNAMSIZ). What's MH_LEN? > i can put FW_IFNLEN back to IFNAMSIZ, but then we lose the > SKIPTO optimization and dummynet because we lose 8 bytes > on each union ip_fw_if (6 bytes for the name, 2 for alignement) and > the additional 16 bytes will bring the struct ipfw to 112 bytes. I understand the constraints you were working within. I believe the correct approach to the problem would have been to leave 2.2 alone and bring DUMMYNET/BRIDGE into -current. The benefits being: - No IFNAMSIZ issues. - No breakage of ipfw in -stable, an historically problematic area even when notifications are sent to the -stable mailing list. - No bug risk to the -stable tree (I see a few fixes have already been made). > Frankly i don't see an evident advantage, given that my change cannot > break functionality but just binary compatibility for a single program. The change *can* break functionality (see above), although it is unlikely. Alex
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