vtysh will print out the `stupidly large FD limit` upon
every run of the program if the ulimit is set stupidly
large. Prevent this from being displayed for vtysh.
Fixes: #16516
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Correct FRR startup counts on a daemon's vty socket to be open when the
parent process exits. The parent process waits for `frr_check_detach()`
to be called by the child before exiting. The problem is when the
`FRR_MANUAL_VTY_START` flag is set the vty socket was not opened but
`frr_check_detach()` was called anyway.
Instead add a bool option for `frr_check_detach()` to be called when the
socket is opened with `frr_vty_serv_start()`, and do so when "manually"
calling said function (i.e., when FRR_MANUAL_VTY_START is set).
The `FRR_MANUAL_VTY_START` flag is only set by mgmtd. The reason we
wait to open the vty socket is so that mgmtd can parse the various
daemon specific config files it has taken over, after the event loop has
started, but before we receive any possible new config from `vtysh`.
fixes#16362
Signed-off-by: Christian Hopps <chopps@labn.net>
Add a new start option "-K" to libfrr to denote a graceful start,
and use it in zebra and bgpd.
zebra will use this option to denote a planned FRR graceful restart
(supporting only bgpd currently) to wait for a route sync completion
from bgpd before cleaning up old stale routes from the FIB. An optional
timer provides an upper-bounds for this cleanup.
bgpd will use this option to denote either a planned FRR graceful
restart or a bgpd-only graceful restart, and this will drive the BGP
GR restarting router procedures.
Signed-off-by: Vivek Venkatraman <vivek@nvidia.com>
We're not calling any other termination functions to free allocated
memory when daemonizing except these two. There's no reason for such an
exception, and because of these calls we have the following libyang
warnings every time FRR is started:
```
MGMTD: libyang: String "15" not freed from the dictionary, refcount 2
MGMTD: libyang: String "200" not freed from the dictionary, refcount 2
MGMTD: libyang: String "mrib-then-urib" not freed from the dictionary, refcount 2
MGMTD: libyang: String "1000" not freed from the dictionary, refcount 2
MGMTD: libyang: String "10" not freed from the dictionary, refcount 2
MGMTD: libyang: String "5" not freed from the dictionary, refcount 2
```
Remove these calls to get rid of the unnecessary warnings.
Signed-off-by: Igor Ryzhov <iryzhov@nfware.com>
Create a single registry of default port values that daemons
are using. Most of these are vty ports, but there are some
others for features like ospfapi and zebra FPM.
Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@labn.net>
Use consistent `e_somepath` names for expanded versions of `somepath`.
Also remove all paths from `config.h` and put them into
`lib/config_paths.h` - this is to make more obvious when someone is
doing something probably not quite properly structured.
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@opensourcerouting.org>
Both of these belong in `/var/lib`, not `/var/run`.
Rather hilariously, the history read in
`mgmt_history_read_cmt_record_index` was always failing, because it was
doing a `file_exists(MGMTD_COMMIT_FILE_PATH)` check. Which is the wrong
macro - it's `.../commit-%s.json`, including the unprocessed `%s`, which
would never exist.
I guess noone ever tried if this actually works. Cool.
On the plus side, this means I don't have to implement legacy
compatibility for this, since it never worked to begin with.
(SQLite3 DB location is also changed in this commit since it also uses
`DAEMON_DB_DIR`.)
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@opensourcerouting.org>
These functions load daemon-specific persistent state from
`/var/lib/frr` and supersede open-coded variants of similar calls in
ospfd, ospf6d and isisd to save GR state and/or sequence numbers.
Unlike the open-coded variants, the save call correctly `fsync()`s the
saved data to ensure disk contents are consistent.
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@opensourcerouting.org>
This needs to be used for persistent state, which currently is misplaced
into `/var/run` / `/run` where it gets deleted across reboots.
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@opensourcerouting.org>
Also:
- replace all /* fallthrough */ comments with portable fallthrough;
pseudo keyword to accomodate both gcc and clang
- add missing break; statements as required by older versions of gcc
- cleanup some code to remove unnecessary fallthrough
Signed-off-by: Igor Ryzhov <iryzhov@nfware.com>
Effectively a massive search and replace of
`struct thread` to `struct event`. Using the
term `thread` gives people the thought that
this event system is a pthread when it is not
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Pass context argument by value on initialization to be clear that the
value is used/saved but not a pointer to the value. Previously the
northbound code was incorrectly holding a pointer to stack allocated
context structs.
However, the structure definition also had some musings (ifdef'd out
code) and a comment that might be taken to imply that user data could
follow the structure and thus be maintained by the code; it won't; so it
can't; so get rid of the disabled misleading code/text from the
structure definition.
The common use case worked b/c the transaction which cached the pointer
was created and freed inside a single function
call (`nb_condidate_commit`) that executed below the stack allocation.
All other use cases (grpc, confd, sysrepo, and -- coming soon -- mgmtd)
were bugs.
Signed-off-by: Christian Hopps <chopps@labn.net>
- The parent of the daemonizing fork reports memleaks for the early
northbound allocations (libyang). If these were real memleaks these
would show up in the child as well; however, ignoring all memleaks in
the parent of the fork is too hard a sale. Instead, spend some CPU
cycles cleaning up the allocations in the parent after the fork and
immeidatley prior to exiting the parent after the daemonizing fork.
Signed-off-by: Christian Hopps <chopps@labn.net>
Currently, it is possible to rename the default VRF either by passing
`-o` option to zebra or by creating a file in `/var/run/netns` and
binding it to `/proc/self/ns/net`.
In both cases, only zebra knows about the rename and other daemons learn
about it only after they connect to zebra. This is a problem, because
daemons may read their config before they connect to zebra. To handle
this rename after the config is read, we have some special code in every
single daemon, which is not very bad but not desirable in my opinion.
But things are getting worse when we need to handle this in northbound
layer as we have to manually rewrite the config nodes. This approach is
already hacky, but still works as every daemon handles its own NB
structures. But it is completely incompatible with the central
management daemon architecture we are aiming for, as mgmtd doesn't even
have a connection with zebra to learn from it. And it shouldn't have it,
because operational state changes should never affect configuration.
To solve the problem and simplify the code, I propose to expand the `-o`
option to all daemons. By using the startup option, we let daemons know
about the rename before they read their configs so we don't need any
special code to deal with it. There's an easy way to pass the option to
all daemons by using `frr_global_options` variable.
Unfortunately, the second way of renaming by creating a file in
`/var/run/netns` is incompatible with the new mgmtd architecture.
Theoretically, we could force daemons to read their configs only after
they connect to zebra, but it means adding even more code to handle a
very specific use-case. And anyway this won't work for mgmtd as it
doesn't have a connection with zebra. So I had to remove this option.
Signed-off-by: Igor Ryzhov <iryzhov@nfware.com>
New `FRR_NO_SPLIT_CONFIG` flag for newly added daemons where we're just
rolling without split config and always expect configs to be loaded via
vtysh/integrated config.
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@opensourcerouting.org>
frrmod_load() attempts to dlopen() several possible paths
(constructed from its basename argument) until one succeeds.
Each dlopen() attempt may fail for a different reason, and
the important one might not be the last one. Example:
dlopen(a/foo): file not found
dlopen(b/foo): symbol "bar" missing
dlopen(c/foo): file not found
Previous code reported only the most recent error. Now frrmod_load()
describes each dlopen() failure.
Signed-off-by: G. Paul Ziemba <paulz@labn.net>
This replaces the external libsystemd dependency with... pretty much the
same amount of built-in code. But with one fewer dependency and build
switch needed.
Also check `JOURNAL_STREAM` for future logging integration.
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@diac24.net>
Compile with v2.0.0 tag of `libyang2` branch of:
https://github.com/CESNET/libyang
staticd init load time of 10k routes now 6s vs ly1 time of 150s
Signed-off-by: Christian Hopps <chopps@labn.net>
Creating any threads before we fork() into the background (if `-d` is
given) is an extremely dangerous footgun; the threads are created in
the parent and terminated when that exits.
This is extra dangerous because while testing, you'd often run the
daemon in foreground without `-d`, and everything works as expected.
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@opensourcerouting.org>
... for any initialization that needs to run after forking, but that
would be racy if it were just scheduled on the thread_master (since the
config load is also just a thread callback, ordering would be undefined
for another scheduled thread callback.)
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@opensourcerouting.org>
very_late_init doesn't really say what this does, config_post is much
more descriptive. (A config_pre is coming in a jiffy.)
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@opensourcerouting.org>
... by referencing all autogenerated headers relative to the root
directory. (90% of the changes here is `version.h`.)
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@opensourcerouting.org>