Re: [PATCH v6 2/2] lib: checksum: Use aligned accesses for ip_fast_csum and csum_ipv6_magic tests

From: Charlie Jenkins
Date: Mon Feb 12 2024 - 13:41:42 EST


On Mon, Feb 12, 2024 at 10:34:10AM -0800, Guenter Roeck wrote:
> On 2/12/24 10:12, Al Viro wrote:
> > On Mon, Feb 12, 2024 at 09:18:14AM -0800, Guenter Roeck wrote:
> >
> > > Almost. Turns out the csum parameter of csum_ipv6_magic() needs to be in
> > > network byte order, and the length parameter needs to be in host byte order.
> > > So instead of
> > > data.len = data_ptr->len;
> > > data.csum = (__force __wsum)htonl((__force u32)data_ptr->csum);
> > > it needs to be something like
> > > data.len = ntohl(data_ptr->len);
> > > data.csum = data_ptr->csum;
> > >
> > > Also, as you mentioned, either the returned checksum or the expected
> > > checksum needs to be converted for the comparison because one is in
> > > network byte order and the other in host byte order.
> >
> > for (int i = 0; i < NUM_IPv6_TESTS; i++) {
> > struct args {
> > struct in6_addr saddr;
> > struct in6_addr daddr;
> > __be32 len;
> > __wsum csum;
> > unsigned char proto;
> > } __packed data = (struct args *)(random_buf + i);
> > CHECK_EQ(cpu_to_le16(expected_csum_ipv6_magic[i]),
> > csum_ipv6_magic(data.saddr, data.daddr, ntohl(data.len),
> > data.proto, data.sum));
> > }
> > and to hell with field-by-field copying. __packed here will tell the compiler
> > that alignment of the entire thing is 1 - the total size of fields is 41 bytes,
> > so "no padding" translates into "can't even assume that address is even".
> >
>
> Except that the data pointer needs to be aligned because otherwise architectures
> not supporting unaligned accesses will bail out (as observed on mps2-an385).
> But then I am no longer sure if that is correct - maybe csum_ipv6_magic()
> is supposed to be able to handle unaligned accesses. If so, maybe it would be
> more appropriate to skip this test on the affected architectures.
>
> Guenter
>

We can align this against IP_ALIGNMENT since it should always be aligned
against the IP header + NET_IP_ALIGN.

- Charlie