Hi Florian & Pablo,

Thank your very much for your quick feedback.

On 02/16/2018 12:28 PM, Pablo Neira Ayuso wrote:
On Fri, Feb 16, 2018 at 12:07:06PM +0100, Florian Westphal wrote:
Gregory Vander Schueren <gregory.vanderschue...@tessares.net> wrote:

[ cc netdev ]

If sysctl bridge-nf-call-iptables is enabled, iptables chains are already
traversed from the bridging code. In such case, tproxy already happened when
reaching ip_rcv. Thus no need to call skb_orphan as this would actually undo
tproxy.

I don't like this because it adds yet another test in fastpath, and for
a use case that has apparently never worked before.

Agreed. I also thought this was not ideal but I did find another way to easily fix this.

We noticed issues when using tproxy with net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables
enabled. In such case, ip_rcv() basically undo tproxy's job. The following
patch proposes a fix.

I question wheter its a good idea to mix tproxy with bridges.

Tproxy relies on policy routing, but a bridge doesn't route :-)

I guess you use bridge snat mac mangling to force local delivery of
packets that are otherwise bridged?

Indeed, we use DNAT MAC mangling.

If yes, can you use ebtables brouting instead?
This would bypass the bridge (so no iptables invocation from bridge
prerouting anymore).

We were actually pondering over the usage of MAC DNAT vs brouting. I'll thus follow your suggestion and use brouting instead then.

We will try to get rid of nf-call-iptables eventually.

Good to know!

There might be (more complicated) ways to avoid this problem without
adding code in normal network path, but lets check other options first.

Agreed.

If there's a fix for this, that should be away from the fast path, not
in ip_rcv().


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