VirtualBox

source: vbox/trunk/src/VBox/Devices/Network/slirp/tcp_timer.c@ 15444

Last change on this file since 15444 was 14964, checked in by vboxsync, 16 years ago

slirp: code cosmetics for better readability (no semantics change)

  • Property svn:eol-style set to native
File size: 11.4 KB
Line 
1/*
2 * Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1993
3 * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
4 *
5 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
7 * are met:
8 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
9 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
11 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
12 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
14 * must display the following acknowledgement:
15 * This product includes software developed by the University of
16 * California, Berkeley and its contributors.
17 * 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
18 * may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
19 * without specific prior written permission.
20 *
21 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
22 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
23 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
24 * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
25 * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
26 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
27 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
28 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
29 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
30 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
31 * SUCH DAMAGE.
32 *
33 * @(#)tcp_timer.c 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/10/93
34 * tcp_timer.c,v 1.2 1994/08/02 07:49:10 davidg Exp
35 */
36
37#include <slirp.h>
38
39
40/*
41 * Fast timeout routine for processing delayed acks
42 */
43void
44tcp_fasttimo(PNATState pData)
45{
46 register struct socket *so;
47 register struct tcpcb *tp;
48
49 DEBUG_CALL("tcp_fasttimo");
50
51 so = tcb.so_next;
52 if (so)
53 for (; so != &tcb; so = so->so_next)
54 if ( (tp = (struct tcpcb *)so->so_tcpcb)
55 && (tp->t_flags & TF_DELACK))
56 {
57 tp->t_flags &= ~TF_DELACK;
58 tp->t_flags |= TF_ACKNOW;
59 tcpstat.tcps_delack++;
60 (void) tcp_output(pData, tp);
61 }
62}
63
64/*
65 * Tcp protocol timeout routine called every 500 ms.
66 * Updates the timers in all active tcb's and
67 * causes finite state machine actions if timers expire.
68 */
69void
70tcp_slowtimo(PNATState pData)
71{
72 register struct socket *ip, *ipnxt;
73 register struct tcpcb *tp;
74 register int i;
75
76 DEBUG_CALL("tcp_slowtimo");
77
78 /*
79 * Search through tcb's and update active timers.
80 */
81 ip = tcb.so_next;
82 if (ip == 0)
83 return;
84 for (; ip != &tcb; ip = ipnxt)
85 {
86 ipnxt = ip->so_next;
87 tp = sototcpcb(ip);
88 if (tp == 0)
89 continue;
90 for (i = 0; i < TCPT_NTIMERS; i++)
91 {
92 if (tp->t_timer[i] && --tp->t_timer[i] == 0)
93 {
94 tcp_timers(pData, tp,i);
95 if (ipnxt->so_prev != ip)
96 goto tpgone;
97 }
98 }
99 tp->t_idle++;
100 if (tp->t_rtt)
101 tp->t_rtt++;
102tpgone:
103 ;
104 }
105 tcp_iss += TCP_ISSINCR / PR_SLOWHZ; /* increment iss */
106#ifdef TCP_COMPAT_42
107 if ((int)tcp_iss < 0)
108 tcp_iss = 0; /* XXX */
109#endif
110 tcp_now++; /* for timestamps */
111}
112
113/*
114 * Cancel all timers for TCP tp.
115 */
116void
117tcp_canceltimers(struct tcpcb *tp)
118{
119 register int i;
120
121 for (i = 0; i < TCPT_NTIMERS; i++)
122 tp->t_timer[i] = 0;
123}
124
125const int tcp_backoff[TCP_MAXRXTSHIFT + 1] =
126{
127 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 64, 64, 64, 64, 64, 64
128};
129
130/*
131 * TCP timer processing.
132 */
133struct tcpcb *
134tcp_timers(PNATState pData, register struct tcpcb *tp, int timer)
135{
136 register int rexmt;
137
138 DEBUG_CALL("tcp_timers");
139
140 switch (timer)
141 {
142 /*
143 * 2 MSL timeout in shutdown went off. If we're closed but
144 * still waiting for peer to close and connection has been idle
145 * too long, or if 2MSL time is up from TIME_WAIT, delete connection
146 * control block. Otherwise, check again in a bit.
147 */
148 case TCPT_2MSL:
149 if (tp->t_state != TCPS_TIME_WAIT &&
150 tp->t_idle <= tcp_maxidle)
151 tp->t_timer[TCPT_2MSL] = tcp_keepintvl;
152 else
153 tp = tcp_close(pData, tp);
154 break;
155
156 /*
157 * Retransmission timer went off. Message has not
158 * been acked within retransmit interval. Back off
159 * to a longer retransmit interval and retransmit one segment.
160 */
161 case TCPT_REXMT:
162 /*
163 * XXX If a packet has timed out, then remove all the queued
164 * packets for that session.
165 */
166 if (++tp->t_rxtshift > TCP_MAXRXTSHIFT)
167 {
168 /*
169 * This is a hack to suit our terminal server here at the uni of canberra
170 * since they have trouble with zeroes... It usually lets them through
171 * unharmed, but under some conditions, it'll eat the zeros. If we
172 * keep retransmitting it, it'll keep eating the zeroes, so we keep
173 * retransmitting, and eventually the connection dies...
174 * (this only happens on incoming data)
175 *
176 * So, if we were gonna drop the connection from too many retransmits,
177 * don't... instead halve the t_maxseg, which might break up the NULLs and
178 * let them through
179 *
180 * *sigh*
181 */
182 tp->t_maxseg >>= 1;
183 if (tp->t_maxseg < 32)
184 {
185 /*
186 * We tried our best, now the connection must die!
187 */
188 tp->t_rxtshift = TCP_MAXRXTSHIFT;
189 tcpstat.tcps_timeoutdrop++;
190 tp = tcp_drop(pData, tp, tp->t_softerror);
191 /* tp->t_softerror : ETIMEDOUT); */ /* XXX */
192 return (tp); /* XXX */
193 }
194
195 /*
196 * Set rxtshift to 6, which is still at the maximum
197 * backoff time
198 */
199 tp->t_rxtshift = 6;
200 }
201 tcpstat.tcps_rexmttimeo++;
202 rexmt = TCP_REXMTVAL(tp) * tcp_backoff[tp->t_rxtshift];
203 TCPT_RANGESET(tp->t_rxtcur, rexmt,
204 (short)tp->t_rttmin, TCPTV_REXMTMAX); /* XXX */
205 tp->t_timer[TCPT_REXMT] = tp->t_rxtcur;
206 /*
207 * If losing, let the lower level know and try for
208 * a better route. Also, if we backed off this far,
209 * our srtt estimate is probably bogus. Clobber it
210 * so we'll take the next rtt measurement as our srtt;
211 * move the current srtt into rttvar to keep the current
212 * retransmit times until then.
213 */
214 if (tp->t_rxtshift > TCP_MAXRXTSHIFT / 4)
215 {
216/* in_losing(tp->t_inpcb); */
217 tp->t_rttvar += (tp->t_srtt >> TCP_RTT_SHIFT);
218 tp->t_srtt = 0;
219 }
220 tp->snd_nxt = tp->snd_una;
221 /*
222 * If timing a segment in this window, stop the timer.
223 */
224 tp->t_rtt = 0;
225 /*
226 * Close the congestion window down to one segment
227 * (we'll open it by one segment for each ack we get).
228 * Since we probably have a window's worth of unacked
229 * data accumulated, this "slow start" keeps us from
230 * dumping all that data as back-to-back packets (which
231 * might overwhelm an intermediate gateway).
232 *
233 * There are two phases to the opening: Initially we
234 * open by one mss on each ack. This makes the window
235 * size increase exponentially with time. If the
236 * window is larger than the path can handle, this
237 * exponential growth results in dropped packet(s)
238 * almost immediately. To get more time between
239 * drops but still "push" the network to take advantage
240 * of improving conditions, we switch from exponential
241 * to linear window opening at some threshold size.
242 * For a threshold, we use half the current window
243 * size, truncated to a multiple of the mss.
244 *
245 * (the minimum cwnd that will give us exponential
246 * growth is 2 mss. We don't allow the threshold
247 * to go below this.)
248 */
249 {
250 u_int win = min(tp->snd_wnd, tp->snd_cwnd) / 2 / tp->t_maxseg;
251 if (win < 2)
252 win = 2;
253 tp->snd_cwnd = tp->t_maxseg;
254 tp->snd_ssthresh = win * tp->t_maxseg;
255 tp->t_dupacks = 0;
256 }
257 (void) tcp_output(pData, tp);
258 break;
259
260 /*
261 * Persistence timer into zero window.
262 * Force a byte to be output, if possible.
263 */
264 case TCPT_PERSIST:
265 tcpstat.tcps_persisttimeo++;
266 tcp_setpersist(tp);
267 tp->t_force = 1;
268 (void) tcp_output(pData, tp);
269 tp->t_force = 0;
270 break;
271
272 /*
273 * Keep-alive timer went off; send something
274 * or drop connection if idle for too long.
275 */
276 case TCPT_KEEP:
277 tcpstat.tcps_keeptimeo++;
278 if (tp->t_state < TCPS_ESTABLISHED)
279 goto dropit;
280/* if (tp->t_socket->so_options & SO_KEEPALIVE && */
281 if ((so_options) && tp->t_state <= TCPS_CLOSE_WAIT) {
282 if (tp->t_idle >= tcp_keepidle + tcp_maxidle)
283 goto dropit;
284 /*
285 * Send a packet designed to force a response
286 * if the peer is up and reachable:
287 * either an ACK if the connection is still alive,
288 * or an RST if the peer has closed the connection
289 * due to timeout or reboot.
290 * Using sequence number tp->snd_una-1
291 * causes the transmitted zero-length segment
292 * to lie outside the receive window;
293 * by the protocol spec, this requires the
294 * correspondent TCP to respond.
295 */
296 tcpstat.tcps_keepprobe++;
297#ifdef TCP_COMPAT_42
298 /*
299 * The keepalive packet must have nonzero length
300 * to get a 4.2 host to respond.
301 */
302 tcp_respond(tp, &tp->t_template, (struct mbuf *)NULL,
303 tp->rcv_nxt - 1, tp->snd_una - 1, 0);
304#else
305 tcp_respond(pData, tp, &tp->t_template, (struct mbuf *)NULL,
306 tp->rcv_nxt, tp->snd_una - 1, 0);
307#endif
308 tp->t_timer[TCPT_KEEP] = tcp_keepintvl;
309 }
310 else
311 tp->t_timer[TCPT_KEEP] = tcp_keepidle;
312 break;
313
314 dropit:
315 tcpstat.tcps_keepdrops++;
316 tp = tcp_drop(pData, tp, 0); /* ETIMEDOUT); */
317 break;
318 }
319
320 return tp;
321}
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