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When a packet enters kernel datapath and there is no flow to handle it, packet goes to userspace through a MISS upcall. With per-CPU upcall dispatch mechanism, we're using the current CPU id to select the Netlink PID on which to send this packet. This allows us to send packets from the same traffic flow through the same handler. The handler will process the packet, install required flow into the kernel and re-inject the original packet via OVS_PACKET_CMD_EXECUTE. While handling OVS_PACKET_CMD_EXECUTE, however, we may hit a recirculation action that will pass the (likely modified) packet through the flow lookup again. And if the flow is not found, the packet will be sent to userspace again through another MISS upcall. However, the handler thread in userspace is likely running on a different CPU core, and the OVS_PACKET_CMD_EXECUTE request is handled in the syscall context of that thread. So, when the time comes to send the packet through another upcall, the per-CPU dispatch will choose a different Netlink PID, and this packet will end up processed by a different handler thread on a different CPU. The process continues as long as there are new recirculations, each time the packet goes to a different handler thread before it is sent out of the OVS datapath to the destination port. In real setups the number of recirculations can go up to 4 or 5, sometimes more. There is always a chance to re-order packets while processing upcalls, because userspace will first install the flow and then re-inject the original packet. So, there is a race window when the flow is already installed and the second packet can match it inside the kernel and be forwarded to the destination before the first packet is re-injected. But the fact that packets are going through multiple upcalls handled by different userspace threads makes the reordering noticeably more likely, because we not only have a race between the kernel and a userspace handler (which is hard to avoid), but also between multiple userspace handlers. For example, let's assume that 10 packets got enqueued through a MISS upcall for handler-1, it will start processing them, will install the flow into the kernel and start re-injecting packets back, from where they will go through another MISS to handler-2. Handler-2 will install the flow into the kernel and start re-injecting the packets, while handler-1 continues to re-inject the last of the 10 packets, they will hit the flow installed by handler-2 and be forwarded without going to the handler-2, while handler-2 still re-injects the first of these 10 packets. Given multiple recirculations and misses, these 10 packets may end up completely mixed up on the output from the datapath. Let's provide the original upcall PID via the new netlink attribute OVS_PACKET_ATTR_UPCALL_PID. This way the upcall triggered during the execution will go to the same handler. Packets will be enqueued to the same socket and re-injected in the same order. This doesn't eliminate re-ordering as stated above, since we still have a race between the kernel and the handler thread, but it allows to eliminate races between multiple handlers. The openvswitch kernel module ignores unknown attributes for the OVS_PACKET_CMD_EXECUTE, so it's safe to provide it even on older kernels. Reported-at: https://issues.redhat.com/browse/FDP-1479 Link: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20250702155043.2331772-1-i.maximets@ovn.org/ Acked-by: Eelco Chaudron <echaudro@redhat.com> Acked-by: Flavio Leitner <fbl@sysclose.org> Signed-off-by: Ilya Maximets <i.maximets@ovn.org>