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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH] libxl: made vm mac address assignment deterministic
Wei Liu writes ("Re: [PATCH] libxl: made vm mac address assignment
deterministic"):
> On Wed, Sep 05, 2018 at 12:25:55PM +0000, Joshua Perrett wrote:
> > Uses MD5 on the host mac address, vm name and vif index to generate the
> > last three bytes of the vm mac address (for each vm).
There is no such thing as "the" host mac address. The host might
have several. However, generally there is a specific interface that
will be used for this guest, depending on the vif connection mode. In
bridge mode, for example, there is the mac address of the bridge. I
think you should make sure to use the right interface.
I think you need to add something to the documentation. You should
mention that this approach is only deterministic *on the same host*
(so in setups where the guest might be started on multiple hosts, with
networked storage, it won't work) and only *with the same physical
nic* (so swapping out the physical nic will change all the guests'
addresses).
> > MD5 code is originally from the public domain (written by Colin Plumb in
> > 1993), files found in xen/tools/blktap2/drivers/.
You are duplicating these files within the Xen tree. That's pretty
ugly. Can we not do this a better way ?
> > +static int libxl__get_host_mac(libxl__gc *gc, unsigned char *buf)
> > +{
> > + int rc = ERROR_FAIL;
>
> Having a blank line makes things a bit clearer.
>
> > + #ifdef __linux__
> > + struct ifaddrs *iface_list;
Can we not have #ifdefs here please ? The Linux-specific part should
go in libxl_linux.c.
> > + memcpy(&value, s->sll_addr, 6);
>
> Please use sizeof(s->sll_addr) instead of 6.
Err, are you sure ? Let me quote the proposed code:
> > + if (s->sll_halen == 6) {
> > + uint64_t value = 0;
> > + memcpy(&value, s->sll_addr, 6);
This is very strange. How can it possibly be right to overwrite the
first 6 bytes of value ? That does a different thing on big-endian
and little-endian machines. (
Also why are we not checking sll_hatype ?
> > + if (value > largest) {
> > + memcpy(buf, s->sll_addr, 6);
> > + largest = value;
> > + rc = 0;
>
> Interesting algorithm, but I don't know anything better at the moment.
> :)
There is some reason for choosing the lexically largest address, IIRC.
But the reason should be in a comment in the code. (ISTR reading
something about this in the Debian bridge-interfaces(5) manpage.)
Thanks,
Ian.
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