gtphub: track tunnels explicitly.

So far, gtphub worked perfectly by only tracking single TEIs ... for probably
most uses. But a Ctrl plane tunnel may have expired despite a still active
corresponding User plane tunnel. The User plane would continue to work
indefinitely, but if any Ctrl messages followed after more than six hours of
Ctrl silence, they would have been dropped due to an expired TEI mapping.

We want to
- combine expiry of a user TEI with its ctrl TEI. (done in this patch)
- upon delete PDP context, remove both user and ctrl TEI mappings. (future)
- when a peer indicates a restart counter bump, invalidate its tunnels.
  (future)

To facilitate these, track tunnels, complete with both SGSN's and GGSN's
address, original and replaced TEIs, all for both user and ctrl plane, in a
single struct. A single expiry entry handles the entire tunnel, instead of
previously four separate expiries for each endpoint identifier.

Add the concept of a "side", being either GGSN or SGSN, to index tunnel
endpoint structs, and so on.

Track the originating side in the gtp_packet_desc.

Add header_tei_rx: set_tei() overwrites header_tei, but the originally received
header TEI is still needed to match a Create PDP Context Response up with its
Request (and for logging).

Adjust the test suite to expect tunnel listing strings instead of TEI mappings,
with a bonus of making it a lot easier to grok, and including the IP addresses.

Add regression test for refreshing tunnel expiry upon use.

Note: the current implementation is as slow as can possibly be, iterating all
the tunnels all the time. Optimizations are kept for a future commit, on
purpose.

BTW, the sequence number mapping/unmapping structures remain unchanged.

Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
5 files changed
tree: e508fd06bc542dd6f67abe698f55b8690a4aa683
  1. debian/
  2. hlrsync/
  3. linux-kernel/
  4. openbsc/
  5. wireshark/
  6. .gitignore