From: Greg Jumper The function rds_tcp_get_peer_sport() should return the peer port of a socket, even when the socket is not currently connected, so that RDS can reliably determine the MPRDS "lane" corresponding to the port. rds_tcp_get_peer_sport() calls kernel_getpeername() to get the port number; however, when paths between endpoints frequently drop and reconnect, kernel_getpeername() can return -ENOTCONN, causing rds_tcp_get_peer_sport() to return an error, and ultimately causing RDS to use the wrong lane for a port when reconnecting to a peer. This patch modifies rds_tcp_get_peer_sport() to directly call the socket-specific get-name function (inet_getname() in this case) that kernel_getpeername() also calls. The socket-specific function offers an additional argument which, when set to a value greater than 1, causes the function to return the socket's peer name even when the socket is not connected, which in turn allows rds_tcp_get_peer_sport() to return the correct port number. Signed-off-by: Greg Jumper Signed-off-by: Allison Henderson --- net/rds/tcp_listen.c | 9 ++++++++- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/net/rds/tcp_listen.c b/net/rds/tcp_listen.c index 8fb8f7d26683..db4938fd1672 100644 --- a/net/rds/tcp_listen.c +++ b/net/rds/tcp_listen.c @@ -67,7 +67,14 @@ rds_tcp_get_peer_sport(struct socket *sock) } saddr; int sport; - if (kernel_getpeername(sock, &saddr.addr) >= 0) { + /* Call the socket's getname() function (inet_getname() in this case) + * with a final argument greater than 1 to get the peer's port + * regardless of whether the socket is currently connected. + * Using peer=2 will get the peer port even during reconnection states + * (TCPF_CLOSE, TCPF_SYN_SENT). This avoids -ENOTCONN while + * inet_dport still contains the correct peer port. + */ + if (sock->ops->getname(sock, &saddr.addr, 2) >= 0) { switch (saddr.addr.sa_family) { case AF_INET: sport = ntohs(saddr.sin.sin_port); -- 2.43.0