Commits
Danny Schweizer committed 4ada1282d86
Bluetooth: Do not filter multicast addresses by default A Linux PC is connected with another device over Bluetooth PAN using a BNEP interface. Whenever a packet is tried to be sent over the BNEP interface, the function "bnep_net_xmit()" in "net/bluetooth/bnep/netdev.c" is called. This function calls "bnep_net_mc_filter()", which checks (if the destination address is multicast) if the address is set in a certain multicast filter (&s->mc_filter). If it is not, then it is not sent out. This filter is only changed in two other functions, found in net/bluetooth/bnep/core.c": in "bnep_ctrl_set_mc_filter()", which is only called if a message of type "BNEP_FILTER_MULTI_ADDR_SET" is received. Otherwise, it is set in "bnep_add_connection()", where it is set to a default value which only adds the broadcast address to the filter: set_bit(bnep_mc_hash(dev->broadcast), (ulong *) &s->mc_filter); To sum up, if the BNEP interface does not receive any message of type "BNEP_FILTER_MULTI_ADDR_SET", it will not send out any messages with multicast destination addresses except for broadcast. However, in the BNEP specification (page 27 in http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/15/Bluetooth/BNEP.pdf), it is said that per default, all multicast addresses should not be filtered, i.e. the BNEP interface should be able to send packets with any multicast destination address. It seems that the default case is wrong: the multicast filter should not block almost all multicast addresses, but should not filter out any. This leads to the problem that e.g. Neighbor Solicitation messages sent with Bluetooth PAN over the BNEP interface to a multicast destination address other than broadcast are blocked and not sent out. Therefore, in the default case, we set the mc_filter to ~0LL to not filter out any multicast addresses. Signed-off-by: Danny Schweizer <danny.schweizer@proofnet.de> Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>