ospfd: fix - correct neighbor index on changing/p2p/virtual links
ospfd keeps a list of neighbor routers for each configured interface. This
list is indexed using the neighbor router id in case of point-to-point and
virtual link types, otherwise the list is indexed using the neighbor's
source IP (RFC 2328, page 96). The router adds itself as a "pseudo" neighbor
on each link, and also keeps a pointer called (nbr_self) to the neighbor
structure. This takes place when the interface is first configured. Currently
ospfd adds this pseudo neighbor before the link parameters are fully configure,
including whether the link type is point-to-point or virtual link. This causes
the pseudo neighbor to be always indexed using the source IP address regardless
of th link type. For point-to-point and virtual links, this causes the lookup
for the pseudo neighbor to always fail because the lookup is done using the
router id whereas the neighbor was added using its source IP address.
This becomes really problematic if there is a state change that requires a
rebuild of nbr_self, changing the router id for example. When resetting
nbr_self, the router first tries to remove the pseudo neighbor form its
neighbor list on each link by looking it up and resetting any references to it
before freeing the neighbor structure. since the lookup fails to retrieve any
references in the case of point-to-point and virtual links the neighbor
structure is freed leaving dangling references to it. Any access to the
neighbor list after that is bound to stumble over this dangling pointer
causing ospfd to crash.
Signed-off-by: Jafar Al-Gharaibeh <jafar@atcorp.com>
Tested-by: NetDEF CI System <cisystem@netdef.org>
diff --git a/ospfd/ospf_neighbor.c b/ospfd/ospf_neighbor.c
index 862de5e..06e63dd 100644
--- a/ospfd/ospf_neighbor.c
+++ b/ospfd/ospf_neighbor.c
@@ -181,6 +181,35 @@
route_unlock_node (rn);
}
+ else
+ {
+ /*
+ * This neighbor was not found, but before we move on and
+ * free the neighbor structre, make sure that it was not
+ * indexed incorrectly and ended up in the "worng" place
+ */
+
+ /* Reverse the lookup rules */
+ if (oi->type == OSPF_IFTYPE_VIRTUALLINK ||
+ oi->type == OSPF_IFTYPE_POINTOPOINT)
+ p.u.prefix4 = nbr->src;
+ else
+ p.u.prefix4 = nbr->router_id;
+
+ rn = route_node_lookup (oi->nbrs, &p);
+ if (rn){
+ /* We found the neighbor!
+ * Now make sure it is not the exact same neighbor
+ * structure that we are about to free
+ */
+ if (nbr == rn->info){
+ /* Same neighbor, drop the reference to it */
+ rn->info = NULL;
+ route_unlock_node (rn);
+ }
+ route_unlock_node (rn);
+ }
+ }
/* Free ospf_neighbor structure. */
ospf_nbr_free (nbr);
@@ -207,7 +236,9 @@
void
ospf_nbr_self_reset (struct ospf_interface *oi)
{
- ospf_nbr_delete (oi->nbr_self);
+ if (oi->nbr_self)
+ ospf_nbr_delete (oi->nbr_self);
+
oi->nbr_self = ospf_nbr_new (oi);
ospf_nbr_add_self (oi);
}