EXPORT_SYMBOL(__alloc_skb);
/**
- * build_skb - build a network buffer
+ * __build_skb - build a network buffer
* @data: data buffer provided by caller
- * @frag_size: size of fragment, or 0 if head was kmalloced
+ * @frag_size: size of data, or 0 if head was kmalloced
*
* Allocate a new &sk_buff. Caller provides space holding head and
* skb_shared_info. @data must have been allocated by kmalloc() only if
- * @frag_size is 0, otherwise data should come from the page allocator.
+ * @frag_size is 0, otherwise data should come from the page allocator
+ * or vmalloc()
* The return is the new skb buffer.
* On a failure the return is %NULL, and @data is not freed.
* Notes :
* before giving packet to stack.
* RX rings only contains data buffers, not full skbs.
*/
-struct sk_buff *build_skb(void *data, unsigned int frag_size)
+struct sk_buff *__build_skb(void *data, unsigned int frag_size)
{
struct skb_shared_info *shinfo;
struct sk_buff *skb;
memset(skb, 0, offsetof(struct sk_buff, tail));
skb->truesize = SKB_TRUESIZE(size);
- if (frag_size) {
- skb->head_frag = 1;
- if (virt_to_head_page(data)->pfmemalloc)
- skb->pfmemalloc = 1;
- }
atomic_set(&skb->users, 1);
skb->head = data;
skb->data = data;
return skb;
}
+
+/* build_skb() is wrapper over __build_skb(), that specifically
+ * takes care of skb->head and skb->pfmemalloc
+ * This means that if @frag_size is not zero, then @data must be backed
+ * by a page fragment, not kmalloc() or vmalloc()
+ */
+struct sk_buff *build_skb(void *data, unsigned int frag_size)
+{
+ struct sk_buff *skb = __build_skb(data, frag_size);
+
+ if (skb && frag_size) {
+ skb->head_frag = 1;
+ if (virt_to_head_page(data)->pfmemalloc)
+ skb->pfmemalloc = 1;
+ }
+ return skb;
+}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(build_skb);
struct netdev_alloc_cache {