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SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3================= 4Checksum Offloads 5================= 6 7 8Introduction 9============ 10 11This document describes a set of techniques in the Linux networking stack to 12take advantage of checksum offload capabilities of various NICs. 13 14The following technologies are described: 15 16* TX Checksum Offload 17* LCO: Local Checksum Offload 18* RCO: Remote Checksum Offload 19 20Things that should be documented here but aren't yet: 21 22* RX Checksum Offload 23* CHECKSUM_UNNECESSARY conversion 24 25 26TX Checksum Offload 27=================== 28 29The interface for offloading a transmit checksum to a device is explained in 30detail in comments near the top of include/linux/skbuff.h. 31 32In brief, it allows to request the device fill in a single ones-complement 33checksum defined by the sk_buff fields skb->csum_start and skb->csum_offset. 34The device should compute the 16-bit ones-complement checksum (i.e. the 35'IP-style' checksum) from csum_start to the end of the packet, and fill in the 36result at (csum_start + csum_offset). 37 38Because csum_offset cannot be negative, this ensures that the previous value of 39the checksum field is included in the checksum computation, thus it can be used 40to supply any needed corrections to the checksum (such as the sum of the 41pseudo-header for UDP or TCP). 42 43This interface only allows a single checksum to be offloaded. Where 44encapsulation is used, the packet may have multiple checksum fields in 45different header layers, and the rest will have to be handled by another 46mechanism such as LCO or RCO. 47 48CRC32c can also be offloaded using this interface, by means of filling 49skb->csum_start and skb->csum_offset as described above, and setting 50skb->csum_not_inet: see skbuff.h comment (section 'D') for more details. 51 52No offloading of the IP header checksum is performed; it is always done in 53software. This is OK because when we build the IP header, we obviously have it 54in cache, so summing it isn't expensive. It's also rather short. 55 56The requirements for GSO are more complicated, because when segmenting an 57encapsulated packet both the inner and outer checksums may need to be edited or 58recomputed for each resulting segment. See the skbuff.h comment (section 'E') 59for more details. 60 61A driver declares its offload capabilities in netdev->hw_features; see 62Documentation/networking/netdev-features.txt for more. Note that a device 63which only advertises NETIF_F_IP[V6]_CSUM must still obey the csum_start and 64csum_offset given in the SKB; if it tries to deduce these itself in hardware 65(as some NICs do) the driver should check that the values in the SKB match 66those which the hardware will deduce, and if not, fall back to checksumming in 67software instead (with skb_csum_hwoffload_help() or one of the 68skb_checksum_help() / skb_crc32c_csum_help functions, as mentioned in 69include/linux/skbuff.h). 70 71The stack should, for the most part, assume that checksum offload is supported 72by the underlying device. The only place that should check is 73validate_xmit_skb(), and the functions it calls directly or indirectly. That 74function compares the offload features requested by the SKB (which may include 75other offloads besides TX Checksum Offload) and, if they are not supported or 76enabled on the device (determined by netdev->features), performs the 77corresponding offload in software. In the case of TX Checksum Offload, that 78means calling skb_csum_hwoffload_help(skb, features). 79 80 81LCO: Local Checksum Offload 82=========================== 83 84LCO is a technique for efficiently computing the outer checksum of an 85encapsulated datagram when the inner checksum is due to be offloaded. 86 87The ones-complement sum of a correctly checksummed TCP or UDP packet is equal 88to the complement of the sum of the pseudo header, because everything else gets 89'cancelled out' by the checksum field. This is because the sum was 90complemented before being written to the checksum field. 91 92More generally, this holds in any case where the 'IP-style' ones complement 93checksum is used, and thus any checksum that TX Checksum Offload supports. 94 95That is, if we have set up TX Checksum Offload with a start/offset pair, we 96know that after the device has filled in that checksum, the ones complement sum 97from csum_start to the end of the packet will be equal to the complement of 98whatever value we put in the checksum field beforehand. This allows us to 99compute the outer checksum without looking at the payload: we simply stop 100summing when we get to csum_start, then add the complement of the 16-bit word 101at (csum_start + csum_offset). 102 103Then, when the true inner checksum is filled in (either by hardware or by 104skb_checksum_help()), the outer checksum will become correct by virtue of the 105arithmetic. 106 107LCO is performed by the stack when constructing an outer UDP header for an 108encapsulation such as VXLAN or GENEVE, in udp_set_csum(). Similarly for the 109IPv6 equivalents, in udp6_set_csum(). 110 111It is also performed when constructing an IPv4 GRE header, in 112net/ipv4/ip_gre.c:build_header(). It is *not* currently performed when 113constructing an IPv6 GRE header; the GRE checksum is computed over the whole 114packet in net/ipv6/ip6_gre.c:ip6gre_xmit2(), but it should be possible to use 115LCO here as IPv6 GRE still uses an IP-style checksum. 116 117All of the LCO implementations use a helper function lco_csum(), in 118include/linux/skbuff.h. 119 120LCO can safely be used for nested encapsulations; in this case, the outer 121encapsulation layer will sum over both its own header and the 'middle' header. 122This does mean that the 'middle' header will get summed multiple times, but 123there doesn't seem to be a way to avoid that without incurring bigger costs 124(e.g. in SKB bloat). 125 126 127RCO: Remote Checksum Offload 128============================ 129 130RCO is a technique for eliding the inner checksum of an encapsulated datagram, 131allowing the outer checksum to be offloaded. It does, however, involve a 132change to the encapsulation protocols, which the receiver must also support. 133For this reason, it is disabled by default. 134 135RCO is detailed in the following Internet-Drafts: 136 137* https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-herbert-remotecsumoffload-00 138* https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-herbert-vxlan-rco-00 139 140In Linux, RCO is implemented individually in each encapsulation protocol, and 141most tunnel types have flags controlling its use. For instance, VXLAN has the 142flag VXLAN_F_REMCSUM_TX (per struct vxlan_rdst) to indicate that RCO should be 143used when transmitting to a given remote destination. 144