1
21. Control Interfaces
3
4The interfaces for receiving network packages timestamps are:
5
6* SO_TIMESTAMP
7  Generates a timestamp for each incoming packet in (not necessarily
8  monotonic) system time. Reports the timestamp via recvmsg() in a
9  control message as struct timeval (usec resolution).
10
11* SO_TIMESTAMPNS
12  Same timestamping mechanism as SO_TIMESTAMP, but reports the
13  timestamp as struct timespec (nsec resolution).
14
15* IP_MULTICAST_LOOP + SO_TIMESTAMP[NS]
16  Only for multicast:approximate transmit timestamp obtained by
17  reading the looped packet receive timestamp.
18
19* SO_TIMESTAMPING
20  Generates timestamps on reception, transmission or both. Supports
21  multiple timestamp sources, including hardware. Supports generating
22  timestamps for stream sockets.
23
24
251.1 SO_TIMESTAMP:
26
27This socket option enables timestamping of datagrams on the reception
28path. Because the destination socket, if any, is not known early in
29the network stack, the feature has to be enabled for all packets. The
30same is true for all early receive timestamp options.
31
32For interface details, see `man 7 socket`.
33
34
351.2 SO_TIMESTAMPNS:
36
37This option is identical to SO_TIMESTAMP except for the returned data type.
38Its struct timespec allows for higher resolution (ns) timestamps than the
39timeval of SO_TIMESTAMP (ms).
40
41
421.3 SO_TIMESTAMPING:
43
44Supports multiple types of timestamp requests. As a result, this
45socket option takes a bitmap of flags, not a boolean. In
46
47  err = setsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_TIMESTAMPING, (void *) val, &val);
48
49val is an integer with any of the following bits set. Setting other
50bit returns EINVAL and does not change the current state.
51
52
531.3.1 Timestamp Generation
54
55Some bits are requests to the stack to try to generate timestamps. Any
56combination of them is valid. Changes to these bits apply to newly
57created packets, not to packets already in the stack. As a result, it
58is possible to selectively request timestamps for a subset of packets
59(e.g., for sampling) by embedding an send() call within two setsockopt
60calls, one to enable timestamp generation and one to disable it.
61Timestamps may also be generated for reasons other than being
62requested by a particular socket, such as when receive timestamping is
63enabled system wide, as explained earlier.
64
65SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RX_HARDWARE:
66  Request rx timestamps generated by the network adapter.
67
68SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RX_SOFTWARE:
69  Request rx timestamps when data enters the kernel. These timestamps
70  are generated just after a device driver hands a packet to the
71  kernel receive stack.
72
73SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_HARDWARE:
74  Request tx timestamps generated by the network adapter.
75
76SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_SOFTWARE:
77  Request tx timestamps when data leaves the kernel. These timestamps
78  are generated in the device driver as close as possible, but always
79  prior to, passing the packet to the network interface. Hence, they
80  require driver support and may not be available for all devices.
81
82SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_SCHED:
83  Request tx timestamps prior to entering the packet scheduler. Kernel
84  transmit latency is, if long, often dominated by queuing delay. The
85  difference between this timestamp and one taken at
86  SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_SOFTWARE will expose this latency independent
87  of protocol processing. The latency incurred in protocol
88  processing, if any, can be computed by subtracting a userspace
89  timestamp taken immediately before send() from this timestamp. On
90  machines with virtual devices where a transmitted packet travels
91  through multiple devices and, hence, multiple packet schedulers,
92  a timestamp is generated at each layer. This allows for fine
93  grained measurement of queuing delay.
94
95SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_ACK:
96  Request tx timestamps when all data in the send buffer has been
97  acknowledged. This only makes sense for reliable protocols. It is
98  currently only implemented for TCP. For that protocol, it may
99  over-report measurement, because the timestamp is generated when all
100  data up to and including the buffer at send() was acknowledged: the
101  cumulative acknowledgment. The mechanism ignores SACK and FACK.
102
103
1041.3.2 Timestamp Reporting
105
106The other three bits control which timestamps will be reported in a
107generated control message. Changes to the bits take immediate
108effect at the timestamp reporting locations in the stack. Timestamps
109are only reported for packets that also have the relevant timestamp
110generation request set.
111
112SOF_TIMESTAMPING_SOFTWARE:
113  Report any software timestamps when available.
114
115SOF_TIMESTAMPING_SYS_HARDWARE:
116  This option is deprecated and ignored.
117
118SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RAW_HARDWARE:
119  Report hardware timestamps as generated by
120  SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_HARDWARE when available.
121
122
1231.3.3 Timestamp Options
124
125The interface supports the options
126
127SOF_TIMESTAMPING_OPT_ID:
128
129  Generate a unique identifier along with each packet. A process can
130  have multiple concurrent timestamping requests outstanding. Packets
131  can be reordered in the transmit path, for instance in the packet
132  scheduler. In that case timestamps will be queued onto the error
133  queue out of order from the original send() calls. It is not always
134  possible to uniquely match timestamps to the original send() calls
135  based on timestamp order or payload inspection alone, then.
136
137  This option associates each packet at send() with a unique
138  identifier and returns that along with the timestamp. The identifier
139  is derived from a per-socket u32 counter (that wraps). For datagram
140  sockets, the counter increments with each sent packet. For stream
141  sockets, it increments with every byte.
142
143  The counter starts at zero. It is initialized the first time that
144  the socket option is enabled. It is reset each time the option is
145  enabled after having been disabled. Resetting the counter does not
146  change the identifiers of existing packets in the system.
147
148  This option is implemented only for transmit timestamps. There, the
149  timestamp is always looped along with a struct sock_extended_err.
150  The option modifies field ee_data to pass an id that is unique
151  among all possibly concurrently outstanding timestamp requests for
152  that socket.
153
154
155SOF_TIMESTAMPING_OPT_CMSG:
156
157  Support recv() cmsg for all timestamped packets. Control messages
158  are already supported unconditionally on all packets with receive
159  timestamps and on IPv6 packets with transmit timestamp. This option
160  extends them to IPv4 packets with transmit timestamp. One use case
161  is to correlate packets with their egress device, by enabling socket
162  option IP_PKTINFO simultaneously.
163
164
165SOF_TIMESTAMPING_OPT_TSONLY:
166
167  Applies to transmit timestamps only. Makes the kernel return the
168  timestamp as a cmsg alongside an empty packet, as opposed to
169  alongside the original packet. This reduces the amount of memory
170  charged to the socket's receive budget (SO_RCVBUF) and delivers
171  the timestamp even if sysctl net.core.tstamp_allow_data is 0.
172  This option disables SOF_TIMESTAMPING_OPT_CMSG.
173
174
175New applications are encouraged to pass SOF_TIMESTAMPING_OPT_ID to
176disambiguate timestamps and SOF_TIMESTAMPING_OPT_TSONLY to operate
177regardless of the setting of sysctl net.core.tstamp_allow_data.
178
179An exception is when a process needs additional cmsg data, for
180instance SOL_IP/IP_PKTINFO to detect the egress network interface.
181Then pass option SOF_TIMESTAMPING_OPT_CMSG. This option depends on
182having access to the contents of the original packet, so cannot be
183combined with SOF_TIMESTAMPING_OPT_TSONLY.
184
185
1861.4 Bytestream Timestamps
187
188The SO_TIMESTAMPING interface supports timestamping of bytes in a
189bytestream. Each request is interpreted as a request for when the
190entire contents of the buffer has passed a timestamping point. That
191is, for streams option SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_SOFTWARE will record
192when all bytes have reached the device driver, regardless of how
193many packets the data has been converted into.
194
195In general, bytestreams have no natural delimiters and therefore
196correlating a timestamp with data is non-trivial. A range of bytes
197may be split across segments, any segments may be merged (possibly
198coalescing sections of previously segmented buffers associated with
199independent send() calls). Segments can be reordered and the same
200byte range can coexist in multiple segments for protocols that
201implement retransmissions.
202
203It is essential that all timestamps implement the same semantics,
204regardless of these possible transformations, as otherwise they are
205incomparable. Handling "rare" corner cases differently from the
206simple case (a 1:1 mapping from buffer to skb) is insufficient
207because performance debugging often needs to focus on such outliers.
208
209In practice, timestamps can be correlated with segments of a
210bytestream consistently, if both semantics of the timestamp and the
211timing of measurement are chosen correctly. This challenge is no
212different from deciding on a strategy for IP fragmentation. There, the
213definition is that only the first fragment is timestamped. For
214bytestreams, we chose that a timestamp is generated only when all
215bytes have passed a point. SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_ACK as defined is easy to
216implement and reason about. An implementation that has to take into
217account SACK would be more complex due to possible transmission holes
218and out of order arrival.
219
220On the host, TCP can also break the simple 1:1 mapping from buffer to
221skbuff as a result of Nagle, cork, autocork, segmentation and GSO. The
222implementation ensures correctness in all cases by tracking the
223individual last byte passed to send(), even if it is no longer the
224last byte after an skbuff extend or merge operation. It stores the
225relevant sequence number in skb_shinfo(skb)->tskey. Because an skbuff
226has only one such field, only one timestamp can be generated.
227
228In rare cases, a timestamp request can be missed if two requests are
229collapsed onto the same skb. A process can detect this situation by
230enabling SOF_TIMESTAMPING_OPT_ID and comparing the byte offset at
231send time with the value returned for each timestamp. It can prevent
232the situation by always flushing the TCP stack in between requests,
233for instance by enabling TCP_NODELAY and disabling TCP_CORK and
234autocork.
235
236These precautions ensure that the timestamp is generated only when all
237bytes have passed a timestamp point, assuming that the network stack
238itself does not reorder the segments. The stack indeed tries to avoid
239reordering. The one exception is under administrator control: it is
240possible to construct a packet scheduler configuration that delays
241segments from the same stream differently. Such a setup would be
242unusual.
243
244
2452 Data Interfaces
246
247Timestamps are read using the ancillary data feature of recvmsg().
248See `man 3 cmsg` for details of this interface. The socket manual
249page (`man 7 socket`) describes how timestamps generated with
250SO_TIMESTAMP and SO_TIMESTAMPNS records can be retrieved.
251
252
2532.1 SCM_TIMESTAMPING records
254
255These timestamps are returned in a control message with cmsg_level
256SOL_SOCKET, cmsg_type SCM_TIMESTAMPING, and payload of type
257
258struct scm_timestamping {
259	struct timespec ts[3];
260};
261
262The structure can return up to three timestamps. This is a legacy
263feature. Only one field is non-zero at any time. Most timestamps
264are passed in ts[0]. Hardware timestamps are passed in ts[2].
265
266ts[1] used to hold hardware timestamps converted to system time.
267Instead, expose the hardware clock device on the NIC directly as
268a HW PTP clock source, to allow time conversion in userspace and
269optionally synchronize system time with a userspace PTP stack such
270as linuxptp. For the PTP clock API, see Documentation/ptp/ptp.txt.
271
2722.1.1 Transmit timestamps with MSG_ERRQUEUE
273
274For transmit timestamps the outgoing packet is looped back to the
275socket's error queue with the send timestamp(s) attached. A process
276receives the timestamps by calling recvmsg() with flag MSG_ERRQUEUE
277set and with a msg_control buffer sufficiently large to receive the
278relevant metadata structures. The recvmsg call returns the original
279outgoing data packet with two ancillary messages attached.
280
281A message of cm_level SOL_IP(V6) and cm_type IP(V6)_RECVERR
282embeds a struct sock_extended_err. This defines the error type. For
283timestamps, the ee_errno field is ENOMSG. The other ancillary message
284will have cm_level SOL_SOCKET and cm_type SCM_TIMESTAMPING. This
285embeds the struct scm_timestamping.
286
287
2882.1.1.2 Timestamp types
289
290The semantics of the three struct timespec are defined by field
291ee_info in the extended error structure. It contains a value of
292type SCM_TSTAMP_* to define the actual timestamp passed in
293scm_timestamping.
294
295The SCM_TSTAMP_* types are 1:1 matches to the SOF_TIMESTAMPING_*
296control fields discussed previously, with one exception. For legacy
297reasons, SCM_TSTAMP_SND is equal to zero and can be set for both
298SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_HARDWARE and SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_SOFTWARE. It
299is the first if ts[2] is non-zero, the second otherwise, in which
300case the timestamp is stored in ts[0].
301
302
3032.1.1.3 Fragmentation
304
305Fragmentation of outgoing datagrams is rare, but is possible, e.g., by
306explicitly disabling PMTU discovery. If an outgoing packet is fragmented,
307then only the first fragment is timestamped and returned to the sending
308socket.
309
310
3112.1.1.4 Packet Payload
312
313The calling application is often not interested in receiving the whole
314packet payload that it passed to the stack originally: the socket
315error queue mechanism is just a method to piggyback the timestamp on.
316In this case, the application can choose to read datagrams with a
317smaller buffer, possibly even of length 0. The payload is truncated
318accordingly. Until the process calls recvmsg() on the error queue,
319however, the full packet is queued, taking up budget from SO_RCVBUF.
320
321
3222.1.1.5 Blocking Read
323
324Reading from the error queue is always a non-blocking operation. To
325block waiting on a timestamp, use poll or select. poll() will return
326POLLERR in pollfd.revents if any data is ready on the error queue.
327There is no need to pass this flag in pollfd.events. This flag is
328ignored on request. See also `man 2 poll`.
329
330
3312.1.2 Receive timestamps
332
333On reception, there is no reason to read from the socket error queue.
334The SCM_TIMESTAMPING ancillary data is sent along with the packet data
335on a normal recvmsg(). Since this is not a socket error, it is not
336accompanied by a message SOL_IP(V6)/IP(V6)_RECVERROR. In this case,
337the meaning of the three fields in struct scm_timestamping is
338implicitly defined. ts[0] holds a software timestamp if set, ts[1]
339is again deprecated and ts[2] holds a hardware timestamp if set.
340
341
3423. Hardware Timestamping configuration: SIOCSHWTSTAMP and SIOCGHWTSTAMP
343
344Hardware time stamping must also be initialized for each device driver
345that is expected to do hardware time stamping. The parameter is defined in
346/include/linux/net_tstamp.h as:
347
348struct hwtstamp_config {
349	int flags;	/* no flags defined right now, must be zero */
350	int tx_type;	/* HWTSTAMP_TX_* */
351	int rx_filter;	/* HWTSTAMP_FILTER_* */
352};
353
354Desired behavior is passed into the kernel and to a specific device by
355calling ioctl(SIOCSHWTSTAMP) with a pointer to a struct ifreq whose
356ifr_data points to a struct hwtstamp_config. The tx_type and
357rx_filter are hints to the driver what it is expected to do. If
358the requested fine-grained filtering for incoming packets is not
359supported, the driver may time stamp more than just the requested types
360of packets.
361
362Drivers are free to use a more permissive configuration than the requested
363configuration. It is expected that drivers should only implement directly the
364most generic mode that can be supported. For example if the hardware can
365support HWTSTAMP_FILTER_V2_EVENT, then it should generally always upscale
366HWTSTAMP_FILTER_V2_L2_SYNC_MESSAGE, and so forth, as HWTSTAMP_FILTER_V2_EVENT
367is more generic (and more useful to applications).
368
369A driver which supports hardware time stamping shall update the struct
370with the actual, possibly more permissive configuration. If the
371requested packets cannot be time stamped, then nothing should be
372changed and ERANGE shall be returned (in contrast to EINVAL, which
373indicates that SIOCSHWTSTAMP is not supported at all).
374
375Only a processes with admin rights may change the configuration. User
376space is responsible to ensure that multiple processes don't interfere
377with each other and that the settings are reset.
378
379Any process can read the actual configuration by passing this
380structure to ioctl(SIOCGHWTSTAMP) in the same way.  However, this has
381not been implemented in all drivers.
382
383/* possible values for hwtstamp_config->tx_type */
384enum {
385	/*
386	 * no outgoing packet will need hardware time stamping;
387	 * should a packet arrive which asks for it, no hardware
388	 * time stamping will be done
389	 */
390	HWTSTAMP_TX_OFF,
391
392	/*
393	 * enables hardware time stamping for outgoing packets;
394	 * the sender of the packet decides which are to be
395	 * time stamped by setting SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_SOFTWARE
396	 * before sending the packet
397	 */
398	HWTSTAMP_TX_ON,
399};
400
401/* possible values for hwtstamp_config->rx_filter */
402enum {
403	/* time stamp no incoming packet at all */
404	HWTSTAMP_FILTER_NONE,
405
406	/* time stamp any incoming packet */
407	HWTSTAMP_FILTER_ALL,
408
409	/* return value: time stamp all packets requested plus some others */
410	HWTSTAMP_FILTER_SOME,
411
412	/* PTP v1, UDP, any kind of event packet */
413	HWTSTAMP_FILTER_PTP_V1_L4_EVENT,
414
415	/* for the complete list of values, please check
416	 * the include file /include/linux/net_tstamp.h
417	 */
418};
419
4203.1 Hardware Timestamping Implementation: Device Drivers
421
422A driver which supports hardware time stamping must support the
423SIOCSHWTSTAMP ioctl and update the supplied struct hwtstamp_config with
424the actual values as described in the section on SIOCSHWTSTAMP.  It
425should also support SIOCGHWTSTAMP.
426
427Time stamps for received packets must be stored in the skb. To get a pointer
428to the shared time stamp structure of the skb call skb_hwtstamps(). Then
429set the time stamps in the structure:
430
431struct skb_shared_hwtstamps {
432	/* hardware time stamp transformed into duration
433	 * since arbitrary point in time
434	 */
435	ktime_t	hwtstamp;
436};
437
438Time stamps for outgoing packets are to be generated as follows:
439- In hard_start_xmit(), check if (skb_shinfo(skb)->tx_flags & SKBTX_HW_TSTAMP)
440  is set no-zero. If yes, then the driver is expected to do hardware time
441  stamping.
442- If this is possible for the skb and requested, then declare
443  that the driver is doing the time stamping by setting the flag
444  SKBTX_IN_PROGRESS in skb_shinfo(skb)->tx_flags , e.g. with
445
446      skb_shinfo(skb)->tx_flags |= SKBTX_IN_PROGRESS;
447
448  You might want to keep a pointer to the associated skb for the next step
449  and not free the skb. A driver not supporting hardware time stamping doesn't
450  do that. A driver must never touch sk_buff::tstamp! It is used to store
451  software generated time stamps by the network subsystem.
452- Driver should call skb_tx_timestamp() as close to passing sk_buff to hardware
453  as possible. skb_tx_timestamp() provides a software time stamp if requested
454  and hardware timestamping is not possible (SKBTX_IN_PROGRESS not set).
455- As soon as the driver has sent the packet and/or obtained a
456  hardware time stamp for it, it passes the time stamp back by
457  calling skb_hwtstamp_tx() with the original skb, the raw
458  hardware time stamp. skb_hwtstamp_tx() clones the original skb and
459  adds the timestamps, therefore the original skb has to be freed now.
460  If obtaining the hardware time stamp somehow fails, then the driver
461  should not fall back to software time stamping. The rationale is that
462  this would occur at a later time in the processing pipeline than other
463  software time stamping and therefore could lead to unexpected deltas
464  between time stamps.
465