From 1f1e030bf75774b6a283518e1534d598e14147d4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: NeilBrown Date: Fri, 6 Jan 2006 00:09:49 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] [PATCH] knfsd: fix hash function for IP addresses on 64bit little-endian machines. The hash.h hash_long function, when used on a 64 bit machine, ignores many of the middle-order bits. (The prime chosen it too bit-sparse). IP addresses for clients of an NFS server are very likely to differ only in the low-order bits. As addresses are stored in network-byte-order, these bits become middle-order bits in a little-endian 64bit 'long', and so do not contribute to the hash. Thus you can have the situation where all clients appear on one hash chain. So, until hash_long is fixed (or maybe forever), us a hash function that works well on IP addresses - xor the bytes together. Thanks to "Iozone" for identifying this problem. Cc: "Iozone" Signed-off-by: Neil Brown Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds --- net/sunrpc/svcauth_unix.c | 14 +++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 13 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/net/sunrpc/svcauth_unix.c b/net/sunrpc/svcauth_unix.c index cac2e774dd..3e6c694bba 100644 --- a/net/sunrpc/svcauth_unix.c +++ b/net/sunrpc/svcauth_unix.c @@ -101,10 +101,22 @@ static void ip_map_put(struct cache_head *item, struct cache_detail *cd) } } +#if IP_HASHBITS == 8 +/* hash_long on a 64 bit machine is currently REALLY BAD for + * IP addresses in reverse-endian (i.e. on a little-endian machine). + * So use a trivial but reliable hash instead + */ +static inline int hash_ip(unsigned long ip) +{ + int hash = ip ^ (ip>>16); + return (hash ^ (hash>>8)) & 0xff; +} +#endif + static inline int ip_map_hash(struct ip_map *item) { return hash_str(item->m_class, IP_HASHBITS) ^ - hash_long((unsigned long)item->m_addr.s_addr, IP_HASHBITS); + hash_ip((unsigned long)item->m_addr.s_addr); } static inline int ip_map_match(struct ip_map *item, struct ip_map *tmp) { -- 2.39.5