Thomas Graf wrote:
* Patrick McHardy <[email protected]> 2005-11-05 01:34
You assume all addresses following the primary addresses are secondary
addresses of the primary, which is not true with multiple primaries.
This patch (untested) makes sure only to send notification for real
secondaries of the deleted address.
Even this corrected version is only a workaround, the real bug is that
or whatever reason all local routes of seconaries get deleted upon an
address promotion. I started debugging it a bit by looking at the
requests generated by fib_magic() and the resulting notifications, the
local routes just disappear when they shouldn't.
Situation is: 10.0.0.[1-4]/24 on dev0, 10.0.0.1 is the primary address
and gets deleted while address promotion is enabled. The following
happens:
[Format:]
Request generated by fib_magic()
Notification event received
RTM_DELROUTE 10.0.0.0/24 dev eth0 scope link
unicast table main protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.1
RTM_DELROUTE 10.0.0.0/24 dev eth0 scope link
unicast table main protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.1
RTM_DELROUTE 10.0.0.255 dev eth0 scope link
broadcast table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.1
RTM_DELROUTE 10.0.0.255 dev eth0 scope link
broadcast table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.1
RTM_DELROUTE 10.0.0.0 dev eth0 scope link
broadcast table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.1
RTM_DELROUTE 10.0.0.0 dev eth0 scope link
broadcast table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.1
RTM_DELROUTE 10.0.0.1 dev eth0 scope host
local table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.1
RTM_DELROUTE 10.0.0.1 dev eth0 scope host
local table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.1
RTM_NEWROUTE 10.0.0.2 dev eth0 scope host
local table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.2
RTM_NEWROUTE 10.0.0.2 dev eth0 scope host
local table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.2
RTM_NEWROUTE 10.0.0.0/24 dev eth0 scope link
unicast table main protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.2
RTM_NEWROUTE 10.0.0.0/24 dev eth0 scope link
unicast table main protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.2
RTM_NEWROUTE 10.0.0.0 dev eth0 scope link
broadcast table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.2
RTM_NEWROUTE 10.0.0.0 dev eth0 scope link
broadcast table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.2
RTM_NEWROUTE 10.0.0.255 dev eth0 scope link
broadcast table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.2
RTM_NEWROUTE 10.0.0.255 dev eth0 scope link
broadcast table local protocol 2 preferred-src 10.0.0.2
State afterwards:
4: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP> mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 1000
inet 10.0.0.2/24 scope global eth0
inet 10.0.0.3/24 scope global secondary eth0
inet 10.0.0.4/24 scope global secondary eth0
broadcast 10.0.0.0 proto kernel scope link src 10.0.0.2
local 10.0.0.2 proto kernel scope host src 10.0.0.2
broadcast 10.0.0.255 proto kernel scope link src 10.0.0.2
Local routes for 10.0.0.3 and 10.0.0.4 have disappeared _without_
any notification.
I think the correct way to fix this is to prevent the deletion of
the local routes, not just readding them. _If_ the deletion of them
is intended, which I doubt, then at least notifications must be
sent out.
I agree, the routes should ideally not be deleted at all. The missing
notifications appear to be a different bug. Let me have another look ..
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