XNB(4) | Device Drivers Manual | XNB(4) |
xnb
— Xen
Paravirtualized Backend Ethernet Driver
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following lines in your kernel configuration file:
options XENHVM
device xenpci
The xnb
driver provides the back half of a
paravirtualized xen(4) network connection. The netback and
netfront drivers appear to their respective operating systems as Ethernet
devices linked by a crossover cable. Typically, xnb
will run on Domain 0 and the netfront driver will run on a guest domain.
However, it is also possible to run xnb
on a guest
domain. It may be bridged or routed to provide the netfront domain access to
other guest domains or to a physical network.
In most respects, the xnb
device appears
to the OS as any other Ethernet device. It can be configured at runtime
entirely with ifconfig(8). In particular, it supports MAC
changing, arbitrary MTU sizes, checksum offload for IP, UDP, and TCP for
both receive and transmit, and TSO. However, see
CAVEATS before enabling txcsum, rxcsum, or
tso.
The following read-only variables are available via sysctl(8):
The xnb
device driver first appeared in
FreeBSD 10.0.
The xnb
driver was written by
Alan Somers
<asomers@FreeBSD.org>
and John Suykerbuyk.
Packets sent through Xennet pass over shared memory, so the
protocol includes no form of link-layer checksum or CRC. Furthermore, Xennet
drivers always report to their hosts that they support receive and transmit
checksum offloading. They "offload" the checksum calculation by
simply skipping it. That works fine for packets that are exchanged between
two domains on the same machine. However, when a Xennet interface is bridged
to a physical interface, a correct checksum must be attached to any packets
bound for that physical interface. Currently,
FreeBSD lacks any mechanism for an Ethernet device
to inform the OS that newly received packets are valid even though their
checksums are not. So if the netfront driver is configured to offload
checksum calculations, it will pass non-checksumed packets to
xnb
, which must then calculate the checksum in
software before passing the packet to the OS.
For this reason, it is recommended that if
xnb
is bridged to a physical interface, then
transmit checksum offloading should be disabled on the netfront. The Xennet
protocol does not have any mechanism for the netback to request the netfront
to do this; the operator must do it manually.
The xnb
driver does not properly checksum
UDP datagrams that span more than one Ethernet frame. Nor does it correctly
checksum IPv6 packets. To workaround that bug, disable transmit checksum
offloading on the netfront driver.
June 6, 2014 | Debian |