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diff --git a/Documentation/networking/dsa/dsa.rst b/Documentation/networking/dsa/dsa.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a94ddf833 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/networking/dsa/dsa.rst @@ -0,0 +1,1129 @@ +============ +Architecture +============ + +This document describes the **Distributed Switch Architecture (DSA)** subsystem +design principles, limitations, interactions with other subsystems, and how to +develop drivers for this subsystem as well as a TODO for developers interested +in joining the effort. + +Design principles +================= + +The Distributed Switch Architecture subsystem was primarily designed to +support Marvell Ethernet switches (MV88E6xxx, a.k.a. Link Street product +line) using Linux, but has since evolved to support other vendors as well. + +The original philosophy behind this design was to be able to use unmodified +Linux tools such as bridge, iproute2, ifconfig to work transparently whether +they configured/queried a switch port network device or a regular network +device. + +An Ethernet switch typically comprises multiple front-panel ports and one +or more CPU or management ports. The DSA subsystem currently relies on the +presence of a management port connected to an Ethernet controller capable of +receiving Ethernet frames from the switch. This is a very common setup for all +kinds of Ethernet switches found in Small Home and Office products: routers, +gateways, or even top-of-rack switches. This host Ethernet controller will +be later referred to as "master" and "cpu" in DSA terminology and code. + +The D in DSA stands for Distributed, because the subsystem has been designed +with the ability to configure and manage cascaded switches on top of each other +using upstream and downstream Ethernet links between switches. These specific +ports are referred to as "dsa" ports in DSA terminology and code. A collection +of multiple switches connected to each other is called a "switch tree". + +For each front-panel port, DSA creates specialized network devices which are +used as controlling and data-flowing endpoints for use by the Linux networking +stack. These specialized network interfaces are referred to as "slave" network +interfaces in DSA terminology and code. + +The ideal case for using DSA is when an Ethernet switch supports a "switch tag" +which is a hardware feature making the switch insert a specific tag for each +Ethernet frame it receives to/from specific ports to help the management +interface figure out: + +- what port is this frame coming from +- what was the reason why this frame got forwarded +- how to send CPU originated traffic to specific ports + +The subsystem does support switches not capable of inserting/stripping tags, but +the features might be slightly limited in that case (traffic separation relies +on Port-based VLAN IDs). + +Note that DSA does not currently create network interfaces for the "cpu" and +"dsa" ports because: + +- the "cpu" port is the Ethernet switch facing side of the management + controller, and as such, would create a duplication of feature, since you + would get two interfaces for the same conduit: master netdev, and "cpu" netdev + +- the "dsa" port(s) are just conduits between two or more switches, and as such + cannot really be used as proper network interfaces either, only the + downstream, or the top-most upstream interface makes sense with that model + +Switch tagging protocols +------------------------ + +DSA supports many vendor-specific tagging protocols, one software-defined +tagging protocol, and a tag-less mode as well (``DSA_TAG_PROTO_NONE``). + +The exact format of the tag protocol is vendor specific, but in general, they +all contain something which: + +- identifies which port the Ethernet frame came from/should be sent to +- provides a reason why this frame was forwarded to the management interface + +All tagging protocols are in ``net/dsa/tag_*.c`` files and implement the +methods of the ``struct dsa_device_ops`` structure, which are detailed below. + +Tagging protocols generally fall in one of three categories: + +1. The switch-specific frame header is located before the Ethernet header, + shifting to the right (from the perspective of the DSA master's frame + parser) the MAC DA, MAC SA, EtherType and the entire L2 payload. +2. The switch-specific frame header is located before the EtherType, keeping + the MAC DA and MAC SA in place from the DSA master's perspective, but + shifting the 'real' EtherType and L2 payload to the right. +3. The switch-specific frame header is located at the tail of the packet, + keeping all frame headers in place and not altering the view of the packet + that the DSA master's frame parser has. + +A tagging protocol may tag all packets with switch tags of the same length, or +the tag length might vary (for example packets with PTP timestamps might +require an extended switch tag, or there might be one tag length on TX and a +different one on RX). Either way, the tagging protocol driver must populate the +``struct dsa_device_ops::needed_headroom`` and/or ``struct dsa_device_ops::needed_tailroom`` +with the length in octets of the longest switch frame header/trailer. The DSA +framework will automatically adjust the MTU of the master interface to +accommodate for this extra size in order for DSA user ports to support the +standard MTU (L2 payload length) of 1500 octets. The ``needed_headroom`` and +``needed_tailroom`` properties are also used to request from the network stack, +on a best-effort basis, the allocation of packets with enough extra space such +that the act of pushing the switch tag on transmission of a packet does not +cause it to reallocate due to lack of memory. + +Even though applications are not expected to parse DSA-specific frame headers, +the format on the wire of the tagging protocol represents an Application Binary +Interface exposed by the kernel towards user space, for decoders such as +``libpcap``. The tagging protocol driver must populate the ``proto`` member of +``struct dsa_device_ops`` with a value that uniquely describes the +characteristics of the interaction required between the switch hardware and the +data path driver: the offset of each bit field within the frame header and any +stateful processing required to deal with the frames (as may be required for +PTP timestamping). + +From the perspective of the network stack, all switches within the same DSA +switch tree use the same tagging protocol. In case of a packet transiting a +fabric with more than one switch, the switch-specific frame header is inserted +by the first switch in the fabric that the packet was received on. This header +typically contains information regarding its type (whether it is a control +frame that must be trapped to the CPU, or a data frame to be forwarded). +Control frames should be decapsulated only by the software data path, whereas +data frames might also be autonomously forwarded towards other user ports of +other switches from the same fabric, and in this case, the outermost switch +ports must decapsulate the packet. + +Note that in certain cases, it might be the case that the tagging format used +by a leaf switch (not connected directly to the CPU) is not the same as what +the network stack sees. This can be seen with Marvell switch trees, where the +CPU port can be configured to use either the DSA or the Ethertype DSA (EDSA) +format, but the DSA links are configured to use the shorter (without Ethertype) +DSA frame header, in order to reduce the autonomous packet forwarding overhead. +It still remains the case that, if the DSA switch tree is configured for the +EDSA tagging protocol, the operating system sees EDSA-tagged packets from the +leaf switches that tagged them with the shorter DSA header. This can be done +because the Marvell switch connected directly to the CPU is configured to +perform tag translation between DSA and EDSA (which is simply the operation of +adding or removing the ``ETH_P_EDSA`` EtherType and some padding octets). + +It is possible to construct cascaded setups of DSA switches even if their +tagging protocols are not compatible with one another. In this case, there are +no DSA links in this fabric, and each switch constitutes a disjoint DSA switch +tree. The DSA links are viewed as simply a pair of a DSA master (the out-facing +port of the upstream DSA switch) and a CPU port (the in-facing port of the +downstream DSA switch). + +The tagging protocol of the attached DSA switch tree can be viewed through the +``dsa/tagging`` sysfs attribute of the DSA master:: + + cat /sys/class/net/eth0/dsa/tagging + +If the hardware and driver are capable, the tagging protocol of the DSA switch +tree can be changed at runtime. This is done by writing the new tagging +protocol name to the same sysfs device attribute as above (the DSA master and +all attached switch ports must be down while doing this). + +It is desirable that all tagging protocols are testable with the ``dsa_loop`` +mockup driver, which can be attached to any network interface. The goal is that +any network interface should be capable of transmitting the same packet in the +same way, and the tagger should decode the same received packet in the same way +regardless of the driver used for the switch control path, and the driver used +for the DSA master. + +The transmission of a packet goes through the tagger's ``xmit`` function. +The passed ``struct sk_buff *skb`` has ``skb->data`` pointing at +``skb_mac_header(skb)``, i.e. at the destination MAC address, and the passed +``struct net_device *dev`` represents the virtual DSA user network interface +whose hardware counterpart the packet must be steered to (i.e. ``swp0``). +The job of this method is to prepare the skb in a way that the switch will +understand what egress port the packet is for (and not deliver it towards other +ports). Typically this is fulfilled by pushing a frame header. Checking for +insufficient size in the skb headroom or tailroom is unnecessary provided that +the ``needed_headroom`` and ``needed_tailroom`` properties were filled out +properly, because DSA ensures there is enough space before calling this method. + +The reception of a packet goes through the tagger's ``rcv`` function. The +passed ``struct sk_buff *skb`` has ``skb->data`` pointing at +``skb_mac_header(skb) + ETH_ALEN`` octets, i.e. to where the first octet after +the EtherType would have been, were this frame not tagged. The role of this +method is to consume the frame header, adjust ``skb->data`` to really point at +the first octet after the EtherType, and to change ``skb->dev`` to point to the +virtual DSA user network interface corresponding to the physical front-facing +switch port that the packet was received on. + +Since tagging protocols in category 1 and 2 break software (and most often also +hardware) packet dissection on the DSA master, features such as RPS (Receive +Packet Steering) on the DSA master would be broken. The DSA framework deals +with this by hooking into the flow dissector and shifting the offset at which +the IP header is to be found in the tagged frame as seen by the DSA master. +This behavior is automatic based on the ``overhead`` value of the tagging +protocol. If not all packets are of equal size, the tagger can implement the +``flow_dissect`` method of the ``struct dsa_device_ops`` and override this +default behavior by specifying the correct offset incurred by each individual +RX packet. Tail taggers do not cause issues to the flow dissector. + +Checksum offload should work with category 1 and 2 taggers when the DSA master +driver declares NETIF_F_HW_CSUM in vlan_features and looks at csum_start and +csum_offset. For those cases, DSA will shift the checksum start and offset by +the tag size. If the DSA master driver still uses the legacy NETIF_F_IP_CSUM +or NETIF_F_IPV6_CSUM in vlan_features, the offload might only work if the +offload hardware already expects that specific tag (perhaps due to matching +vendors). DSA slaves inherit those flags from the master port, and it is up to +the driver to correctly fall back to software checksum when the IP header is not +where the hardware expects. If that check is ineffective, the packets might go +to the network without a proper checksum (the checksum field will have the +pseudo IP header sum). For category 3, when the offload hardware does not +already expect the switch tag in use, the checksum must be calculated before any +tag is inserted (i.e. inside the tagger). Otherwise, the DSA master would +include the tail tag in the (software or hardware) checksum calculation. Then, +when the tag gets stripped by the switch during transmission, it will leave an +incorrect IP checksum in place. + +Due to various reasons (most common being category 1 taggers being associated +with DSA-unaware masters, mangling what the master perceives as MAC DA), the +tagging protocol may require the DSA master to operate in promiscuous mode, to +receive all frames regardless of the value of the MAC DA. This can be done by +setting the ``promisc_on_master`` property of the ``struct dsa_device_ops``. +Note that this assumes a DSA-unaware master driver, which is the norm. + +Master network devices +---------------------- + +Master network devices are regular, unmodified Linux network device drivers for +the CPU/management Ethernet interface. Such a driver might occasionally need to +know whether DSA is enabled (e.g.: to enable/disable specific offload features), +but the DSA subsystem has been proven to work with industry standard drivers: +``e1000e,`` ``mv643xx_eth`` etc. without having to introduce modifications to these +drivers. Such network devices are also often referred to as conduit network +devices since they act as a pipe between the host processor and the hardware +Ethernet switch. + +Networking stack hooks +---------------------- + +When a master netdev is used with DSA, a small hook is placed in the +networking stack is in order to have the DSA subsystem process the Ethernet +switch specific tagging protocol. DSA accomplishes this by registering a +specific (and fake) Ethernet type (later becoming ``skb->protocol``) with the +networking stack, this is also known as a ``ptype`` or ``packet_type``. A typical +Ethernet Frame receive sequence looks like this: + +Master network device (e.g.: e1000e): + +1. Receive interrupt fires: + + - receive function is invoked + - basic packet processing is done: getting length, status etc. + - packet is prepared to be processed by the Ethernet layer by calling + ``eth_type_trans`` + +2. net/ethernet/eth.c:: + + eth_type_trans(skb, dev) + if (dev->dsa_ptr != NULL) + -> skb->protocol = ETH_P_XDSA + +3. drivers/net/ethernet/\*:: + + netif_receive_skb(skb) + -> iterate over registered packet_type + -> invoke handler for ETH_P_XDSA, calls dsa_switch_rcv() + +4. net/dsa/dsa.c:: + + -> dsa_switch_rcv() + -> invoke switch tag specific protocol handler in 'net/dsa/tag_*.c' + +5. net/dsa/tag_*.c: + + - inspect and strip switch tag protocol to determine originating port + - locate per-port network device + - invoke ``eth_type_trans()`` with the DSA slave network device + - invoked ``netif_receive_skb()`` + +Past this point, the DSA slave network devices get delivered regular Ethernet +frames that can be processed by the networking stack. + +Slave network devices +--------------------- + +Slave network devices created by DSA are stacked on top of their master network +device, each of these network interfaces will be responsible for being a +controlling and data-flowing end-point for each front-panel port of the switch. +These interfaces are specialized in order to: + +- insert/remove the switch tag protocol (if it exists) when sending traffic + to/from specific switch ports +- query the switch for ethtool operations: statistics, link state, + Wake-on-LAN, register dumps... +- manage external/internal PHY: link, auto-negotiation, etc. + +These slave network devices have custom net_device_ops and ethtool_ops function +pointers which allow DSA to introduce a level of layering between the networking +stack/ethtool and the switch driver implementation. + +Upon frame transmission from these slave network devices, DSA will look up which +switch tagging protocol is currently registered with these network devices and +invoke a specific transmit routine which takes care of adding the relevant +switch tag in the Ethernet frames. + +These frames are then queued for transmission using the master network device +``ndo_start_xmit()`` function. Since they contain the appropriate switch tag, the +Ethernet switch will be able to process these incoming frames from the +management interface and deliver them to the physical switch port. + +When using multiple CPU ports, it is possible to stack a LAG (bonding/team) +device between the DSA slave devices and the physical DSA masters. The LAG +device is thus also a DSA master, but the LAG slave devices continue to be DSA +masters as well (just with no user port assigned to them; this is needed for +recovery in case the LAG DSA master disappears). Thus, the data path of the LAG +DSA master is used asymmetrically. On RX, the ``ETH_P_XDSA`` handler, which +calls ``dsa_switch_rcv()``, is invoked early (on the physical DSA master; +LAG slave). Therefore, the RX data path of the LAG DSA master is not used. +On the other hand, TX takes place linearly: ``dsa_slave_xmit`` calls +``dsa_enqueue_skb``, which calls ``dev_queue_xmit`` towards the LAG DSA master. +The latter calls ``dev_queue_xmit`` towards one physical DSA master or the +other, and in both cases, the packet exits the system through a hardware path +towards the switch. + +Graphical representation +------------------------ + +Summarized, this is basically how DSA looks like from a network device +perspective:: + + Unaware application + opens and binds socket + | ^ + | | + +-----------v--|--------------------+ + |+------+ +------+ +------+ +------+| + || swp0 | | swp1 | | swp2 | | swp3 || + |+------+-+------+-+------+-+------+| + | DSA switch driver | + +-----------------------------------+ + | ^ + Tag added by | | Tag consumed by + switch driver | | switch driver + v | + +-----------------------------------+ + | Unmodified host interface driver | Software + --------+-----------------------------------+------------ + | Host interface (eth0) | Hardware + +-----------------------------------+ + | ^ + Tag consumed by | | Tag added by + switch hardware | | switch hardware + v | + +-----------------------------------+ + | Switch | + |+------+ +------+ +------+ +------+| + || swp0 | | swp1 | | swp2 | | swp3 || + ++------+-+------+-+------+-+------++ + +Slave MDIO bus +-------------- + +In order to be able to read to/from a switch PHY built into it, DSA creates a +slave MDIO bus which allows a specific switch driver to divert and intercept +MDIO reads/writes towards specific PHY addresses. In most MDIO-connected +switches, these functions would utilize direct or indirect PHY addressing mode +to return standard MII registers from the switch builtin PHYs, allowing the PHY +library and/or to return link status, link partner pages, auto-negotiation +results, etc. + +For Ethernet switches which have both external and internal MDIO buses, the +slave MII bus can be utilized to mux/demux MDIO reads and writes towards either +internal or external MDIO devices this switch might be connected to: internal +PHYs, external PHYs, or even external switches. + +Data structures +--------------- + +DSA data structures are defined in ``include/net/dsa.h`` as well as +``net/dsa/dsa_priv.h``: + +- ``dsa_chip_data``: platform data configuration for a given switch device, + this structure describes a switch device's parent device, its address, as + well as various properties of its ports: names/labels, and finally a routing + table indication (when cascading switches) + +- ``dsa_platform_data``: platform device configuration data which can reference + a collection of dsa_chip_data structures if multiple switches are cascaded, + the master network device this switch tree is attached to needs to be + referenced + +- ``dsa_switch_tree``: structure assigned to the master network device under + ``dsa_ptr``, this structure references a dsa_platform_data structure as well as + the tagging protocol supported by the switch tree, and which receive/transmit + function hooks should be invoked, information about the directly attached + switch is also provided: CPU port. Finally, a collection of dsa_switch are + referenced to address individual switches in the tree. + +- ``dsa_switch``: structure describing a switch device in the tree, referencing + a ``dsa_switch_tree`` as a backpointer, slave network devices, master network + device, and a reference to the backing``dsa_switch_ops`` + +- ``dsa_switch_ops``: structure referencing function pointers, see below for a + full description. + +Design limitations +================== + +Lack of CPU/DSA network devices +------------------------------- + +DSA does not currently create slave network devices for the CPU or DSA ports, as +described before. This might be an issue in the following cases: + +- inability to fetch switch CPU port statistics counters using ethtool, which + can make it harder to debug MDIO switch connected using xMII interfaces + +- inability to configure the CPU port link parameters based on the Ethernet + controller capabilities attached to it: http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/509806/ + +- inability to configure specific VLAN IDs / trunking VLANs between switches + when using a cascaded setup + +Common pitfalls using DSA setups +-------------------------------- + +Once a master network device is configured to use DSA (dev->dsa_ptr becomes +non-NULL), and the switch behind it expects a tagging protocol, this network +interface can only exclusively be used as a conduit interface. Sending packets +directly through this interface (e.g.: opening a socket using this interface) +will not make us go through the switch tagging protocol transmit function, so +the Ethernet switch on the other end, expecting a tag will typically drop this +frame. + +Interactions with other subsystems +================================== + +DSA currently leverages the following subsystems: + +- MDIO/PHY library: ``drivers/net/phy/phy.c``, ``mdio_bus.c`` +- Switchdev:``net/switchdev/*`` +- Device Tree for various of_* functions +- Devlink: ``net/core/devlink.c`` + +MDIO/PHY library +---------------- + +Slave network devices exposed by DSA may or may not be interfacing with PHY +devices (``struct phy_device`` as defined in ``include/linux/phy.h)``, but the DSA +subsystem deals with all possible combinations: + +- internal PHY devices, built into the Ethernet switch hardware +- external PHY devices, connected via an internal or external MDIO bus +- internal PHY devices, connected via an internal MDIO bus +- special, non-autonegotiated or non MDIO-managed PHY devices: SFPs, MoCA; a.k.a + fixed PHYs + +The PHY configuration is done by the ``dsa_slave_phy_setup()`` function and the +logic basically looks like this: + +- if Device Tree is used, the PHY device is looked up using the standard + "phy-handle" property, if found, this PHY device is created and registered + using ``of_phy_connect()`` + +- if Device Tree is used and the PHY device is "fixed", that is, conforms to + the definition of a non-MDIO managed PHY as defined in + ``Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/fixed-link.txt``, the PHY is registered + and connected transparently using the special fixed MDIO bus driver + +- finally, if the PHY is built into the switch, as is very common with + standalone switch packages, the PHY is probed using the slave MII bus created + by DSA + + +SWITCHDEV +--------- + +DSA directly utilizes SWITCHDEV when interfacing with the bridge layer, and +more specifically with its VLAN filtering portion when configuring VLANs on top +of per-port slave network devices. As of today, the only SWITCHDEV objects +supported by DSA are the FDB and VLAN objects. + +Devlink +------- + +DSA registers one devlink device per physical switch in the fabric. +For each devlink device, every physical port (i.e. user ports, CPU ports, DSA +links or unused ports) is exposed as a devlink port. + +DSA drivers can make use of the following devlink features: + +- Regions: debugging feature which allows user space to dump driver-defined + areas of hardware information in a low-level, binary format. Both global + regions as well as per-port regions are supported. It is possible to export + devlink regions even for pieces of data that are already exposed in some way + to the standard iproute2 user space programs (ip-link, bridge), like address + tables and VLAN tables. For example, this might be useful if the tables + contain additional hardware-specific details which are not visible through + the iproute2 abstraction, or it might be useful to inspect these tables on + the non-user ports too, which are invisible to iproute2 because no network + interface is registered for them. +- Params: a feature which enables user to configure certain low-level tunable + knobs pertaining to the device. Drivers may implement applicable generic + devlink params, or may add new device-specific devlink params. +- Resources: a monitoring feature which enables users to see the degree of + utilization of certain hardware tables in the device, such as FDB, VLAN, etc. +- Shared buffers: a QoS feature for adjusting and partitioning memory and frame + reservations per port and per traffic class, in the ingress and egress + directions, such that low-priority bulk traffic does not impede the + processing of high-priority critical traffic. + +For more details, consult ``Documentation/networking/devlink/``. + +Device Tree +----------- + +DSA features a standardized binding which is documented in +``Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/dsa/dsa.txt``. PHY/MDIO library helper +functions such as ``of_get_phy_mode()``, ``of_phy_connect()`` are also used to query +per-port PHY specific details: interface connection, MDIO bus location, etc. + +Driver development +================== + +DSA switch drivers need to implement a ``dsa_switch_ops`` structure which will +contain the various members described below. + +Probing, registration and device lifetime +----------------------------------------- + +DSA switches are regular ``device`` structures on buses (be they platform, SPI, +I2C, MDIO or otherwise). The DSA framework is not involved in their probing +with the device core. + +Switch registration from the perspective of a driver means passing a valid +``struct dsa_switch`` pointer to ``dsa_register_switch()``, usually from the +switch driver's probing function. The following members must be valid in the +provided structure: + +- ``ds->dev``: will be used to parse the switch's OF node or platform data. + +- ``ds->num_ports``: will be used to create the port list for this switch, and + to validate the port indices provided in the OF node. + +- ``ds->ops``: a pointer to the ``dsa_switch_ops`` structure holding the DSA + method implementations. + +- ``ds->priv``: backpointer to a driver-private data structure which can be + retrieved in all further DSA method callbacks. + +In addition, the following flags in the ``dsa_switch`` structure may optionally +be configured to obtain driver-specific behavior from the DSA core. Their +behavior when set is documented through comments in ``include/net/dsa.h``. + +- ``ds->vlan_filtering_is_global`` + +- ``ds->needs_standalone_vlan_filtering`` + +- ``ds->configure_vlan_while_not_filtering`` + +- ``ds->untag_bridge_pvid`` + +- ``ds->assisted_learning_on_cpu_port`` + +- ``ds->mtu_enforcement_ingress`` + +- ``ds->fdb_isolation`` + +Internally, DSA keeps an array of switch trees (group of switches) global to +the kernel, and attaches a ``dsa_switch`` structure to a tree on registration. +The tree ID to which the switch is attached is determined by the first u32 +number of the ``dsa,member`` property of the switch's OF node (0 if missing). +The switch ID within the tree is determined by the second u32 number of the +same OF property (0 if missing). Registering multiple switches with the same +switch ID and tree ID is illegal and will cause an error. Using platform data, +a single switch and a single switch tree is permitted. + +In case of a tree with multiple switches, probing takes place asymmetrically. +The first N-1 callers of ``dsa_register_switch()`` only add their ports to the +port list of the tree (``dst->ports``), each port having a backpointer to its +associated switch (``dp->ds``). Then, these switches exit their +``dsa_register_switch()`` call early, because ``dsa_tree_setup_routing_table()`` +has determined that the tree is not yet complete (not all ports referenced by +DSA links are present in the tree's port list). The tree becomes complete when +the last switch calls ``dsa_register_switch()``, and this triggers the effective +continuation of initialization (including the call to ``ds->ops->setup()``) for +all switches within that tree, all as part of the calling context of the last +switch's probe function. + +The opposite of registration takes place when calling ``dsa_unregister_switch()``, +which removes a switch's ports from the port list of the tree. The entire tree +is torn down when the first switch unregisters. + +It is mandatory for DSA switch drivers to implement the ``shutdown()`` callback +of their respective bus, and call ``dsa_switch_shutdown()`` from it (a minimal +version of the full teardown performed by ``dsa_unregister_switch()``). +The reason is that DSA keeps a reference on the master net device, and if the +driver for the master device decides to unbind on shutdown, DSA's reference +will block that operation from finalizing. + +Either ``dsa_switch_shutdown()`` or ``dsa_unregister_switch()`` must be called, +but not both, and the device driver model permits the bus' ``remove()`` method +to be called even if ``shutdown()`` was already called. Therefore, drivers are +expected to implement a mutual exclusion method between ``remove()`` and +``shutdown()`` by setting their drvdata to NULL after any of these has run, and +checking whether the drvdata is NULL before proceeding to take any action. + +After ``dsa_switch_shutdown()`` or ``dsa_unregister_switch()`` was called, no +further callbacks via the provided ``dsa_switch_ops`` may take place, and the +driver may free the data structures associated with the ``dsa_switch``. + +Switch configuration +-------------------- + +- ``get_tag_protocol``: this is to indicate what kind of tagging protocol is + supported, should be a valid value from the ``dsa_tag_protocol`` enum. + The returned information does not have to be static; the driver is passed the + CPU port number, as well as the tagging protocol of a possibly stacked + upstream switch, in case there are hardware limitations in terms of supported + tag formats. + +- ``change_tag_protocol``: when the default tagging protocol has compatibility + problems with the master or other issues, the driver may support changing it + at runtime, either through a device tree property or through sysfs. In that + case, further calls to ``get_tag_protocol`` should report the protocol in + current use. + +- ``setup``: setup function for the switch, this function is responsible for setting + up the ``dsa_switch_ops`` private structure with all it needs: register maps, + interrupts, mutexes, locks, etc. This function is also expected to properly + configure the switch to separate all network interfaces from each other, that + is, they should be isolated by the switch hardware itself, typically by creating + a Port-based VLAN ID for each port and allowing only the CPU port and the + specific port to be in the forwarding vector. Ports that are unused by the + platform should be disabled. Past this function, the switch is expected to be + fully configured and ready to serve any kind of request. It is recommended + to issue a software reset of the switch during this setup function in order to + avoid relying on what a previous software agent such as a bootloader/firmware + may have previously configured. The method responsible for undoing any + applicable allocations or operations done here is ``teardown``. + +- ``port_setup`` and ``port_teardown``: methods for initialization and + destruction of per-port data structures. It is mandatory for some operations + such as registering and unregistering devlink port regions to be done from + these methods, otherwise they are optional. A port will be torn down only if + it has been previously set up. It is possible for a port to be set up during + probing only to be torn down immediately afterwards, for example in case its + PHY cannot be found. In this case, probing of the DSA switch continues + without that particular port. + +- ``port_change_master``: method through which the affinity (association used + for traffic termination purposes) between a user port and a CPU port can be + changed. By default all user ports from a tree are assigned to the first + available CPU port that makes sense for them (most of the times this means + the user ports of a tree are all assigned to the same CPU port, except for H + topologies as described in commit 2c0b03258b8b). The ``port`` argument + represents the index of the user port, and the ``master`` argument represents + the new DSA master ``net_device``. The CPU port associated with the new + master can be retrieved by looking at ``struct dsa_port *cpu_dp = + master->dsa_ptr``. Additionally, the master can also be a LAG device where + all the slave devices are physical DSA masters. LAG DSA masters also have a + valid ``master->dsa_ptr`` pointer, however this is not unique, but rather a + duplicate of the first physical DSA master's (LAG slave) ``dsa_ptr``. In case + of a LAG DSA master, a further call to ``port_lag_join`` will be emitted + separately for the physical CPU ports associated with the physical DSA + masters, requesting them to create a hardware LAG associated with the LAG + interface. + +PHY devices and link management +------------------------------- + +- ``get_phy_flags``: Some switches are interfaced to various kinds of Ethernet PHYs, + if the PHY library PHY driver needs to know about information it cannot obtain + on its own (e.g.: coming from switch memory mapped registers), this function + should return a 32-bit bitmask of "flags" that is private between the switch + driver and the Ethernet PHY driver in ``drivers/net/phy/\*``. + +- ``phy_read``: Function invoked by the DSA slave MDIO bus when attempting to read + the switch port MDIO registers. If unavailable, return 0xffff for each read. + For builtin switch Ethernet PHYs, this function should allow reading the link + status, auto-negotiation results, link partner pages, etc. + +- ``phy_write``: Function invoked by the DSA slave MDIO bus when attempting to write + to the switch port MDIO registers. If unavailable return a negative error + code. + +- ``adjust_link``: Function invoked by the PHY library when a slave network device + is attached to a PHY device. This function is responsible for appropriately + configuring the switch port link parameters: speed, duplex, pause based on + what the ``phy_device`` is providing. + +- ``fixed_link_update``: Function invoked by the PHY library, and specifically by + the fixed PHY driver asking the switch driver for link parameters that could + not be auto-negotiated, or obtained by reading the PHY registers through MDIO. + This is particularly useful for specific kinds of hardware such as QSGMII, + MoCA or other kinds of non-MDIO managed PHYs where out of band link + information is obtained + +Ethtool operations +------------------ + +- ``get_strings``: ethtool function used to query the driver's strings, will + typically return statistics strings, private flags strings, etc. + +- ``get_ethtool_stats``: ethtool function used to query per-port statistics and + return their values. DSA overlays slave network devices general statistics: + RX/TX counters from the network device, with switch driver specific statistics + per port + +- ``get_sset_count``: ethtool function used to query the number of statistics items + +- ``get_wol``: ethtool function used to obtain Wake-on-LAN settings per-port, this + function may for certain implementations also query the master network device + Wake-on-LAN settings if this interface needs to participate in Wake-on-LAN + +- ``set_wol``: ethtool function used to configure Wake-on-LAN settings per-port, + direct counterpart to set_wol with similar restrictions + +- ``set_eee``: ethtool function which is used to configure a switch port EEE (Green + Ethernet) settings, can optionally invoke the PHY library to enable EEE at the + PHY level if relevant. This function should enable EEE at the switch port MAC + controller and data-processing logic + +- ``get_eee``: ethtool function which is used to query a switch port EEE settings, + this function should return the EEE state of the switch port MAC controller + and data-processing logic as well as query the PHY for its currently configured + EEE settings + +- ``get_eeprom_len``: ethtool function returning for a given switch the EEPROM + length/size in bytes + +- ``get_eeprom``: ethtool function returning for a given switch the EEPROM contents + +- ``set_eeprom``: ethtool function writing specified data to a given switch EEPROM + +- ``get_regs_len``: ethtool function returning the register length for a given + switch + +- ``get_regs``: ethtool function returning the Ethernet switch internal register + contents. This function might require user-land code in ethtool to + pretty-print register values and registers + +Power management +---------------- + +- ``suspend``: function invoked by the DSA platform device when the system goes to + suspend, should quiesce all Ethernet switch activities, but keep ports + participating in Wake-on-LAN active as well as additional wake-up logic if + supported + +- ``resume``: function invoked by the DSA platform device when the system resumes, + should resume all Ethernet switch activities and re-configure the switch to be + in a fully active state + +- ``port_enable``: function invoked by the DSA slave network device ndo_open + function when a port is administratively brought up, this function should + fully enable a given switch port. DSA takes care of marking the port with + ``BR_STATE_BLOCKING`` if the port is a bridge member, or ``BR_STATE_FORWARDING`` if it + was not, and propagating these changes down to the hardware + +- ``port_disable``: function invoked by the DSA slave network device ndo_close + function when a port is administratively brought down, this function should + fully disable a given switch port. DSA takes care of marking the port with + ``BR_STATE_DISABLED`` and propagating changes to the hardware if this port is + disabled while being a bridge member + +Address databases +----------------- + +Switching hardware is expected to have a table for FDB entries, however not all +of them are active at the same time. An address database is the subset (partition) +of FDB entries that is active (can be matched by address learning on RX, or FDB +lookup on TX) depending on the state of the port. An address database may +occasionally be called "FID" (Filtering ID) in this document, although the +underlying implementation may choose whatever is available to the hardware. + +For example, all ports that belong to a VLAN-unaware bridge (which is +*currently* VLAN-unaware) are expected to learn source addresses in the +database associated by the driver with that bridge (and not with other +VLAN-unaware bridges). During forwarding and FDB lookup, a packet received on a +VLAN-unaware bridge port should be able to find a VLAN-unaware FDB entry having +the same MAC DA as the packet, which is present on another port member of the +same bridge. At the same time, the FDB lookup process must be able to not find +an FDB entry having the same MAC DA as the packet, if that entry points towards +a port which is a member of a different VLAN-unaware bridge (and is therefore +associated with a different address database). + +Similarly, each VLAN of each offloaded VLAN-aware bridge should have an +associated address database, which is shared by all ports which are members of +that VLAN, but not shared by ports belonging to different bridges that are +members of the same VID. + +In this context, a VLAN-unaware database means that all packets are expected to +match on it irrespective of VLAN ID (only MAC address lookup), whereas a +VLAN-aware database means that packets are supposed to match based on the VLAN +ID from the classified 802.1Q header (or the pvid if untagged). + +At the bridge layer, VLAN-unaware FDB entries have the special VID value of 0, +whereas VLAN-aware FDB entries have non-zero VID values. Note that a +VLAN-unaware bridge may have VLAN-aware (non-zero VID) FDB entries, and a +VLAN-aware bridge may have VLAN-unaware FDB entries. As in hardware, the +software bridge keeps separate address databases, and offloads to hardware the +FDB entries belonging to these databases, through switchdev, asynchronously +relative to the moment when the databases become active or inactive. + +When a user port operates in standalone mode, its driver should configure it to +use a separate database called a port private database. This is different from +the databases described above, and should impede operation as standalone port +(packet in, packet out to the CPU port) as little as possible. For example, +on ingress, it should not attempt to learn the MAC SA of ingress traffic, since +learning is a bridging layer service and this is a standalone port, therefore +it would consume useless space. With no address learning, the port private +database should be empty in a naive implementation, and in this case, all +received packets should be trivially flooded to the CPU port. + +DSA (cascade) and CPU ports are also called "shared" ports because they service +multiple address databases, and the database that a packet should be associated +to is usually embedded in the DSA tag. This means that the CPU port may +simultaneously transport packets coming from a standalone port (which were +classified by hardware in one address database), and from a bridge port (which +were classified to a different address database). + +Switch drivers which satisfy certain criteria are able to optimize the naive +configuration by removing the CPU port from the flooding domain of the switch, +and just program the hardware with FDB entries pointing towards the CPU port +for which it is known that software is interested in those MAC addresses. +Packets which do not match a known FDB entry will not be delivered to the CPU, +which will save CPU cycles required for creating an skb just to drop it. + +DSA is able to perform host address filtering for the following kinds of +addresses: + +- Primary unicast MAC addresses of ports (``dev->dev_addr``). These are + associated with the port private database of the respective user port, + and the driver is notified to install them through ``port_fdb_add`` towards + the CPU port. + +- Secondary unicast and multicast MAC addresses of ports (addresses added + through ``dev_uc_add()`` and ``dev_mc_add()``). These are also associated + with the port private database of the respective user port. + +- Local/permanent bridge FDB entries (``BR_FDB_LOCAL``). These are the MAC + addresses of the bridge ports, for which packets must be terminated locally + and not forwarded. They are associated with the address database for that + bridge. + +- Static bridge FDB entries installed towards foreign (non-DSA) interfaces + present in the same bridge as some DSA switch ports. These are also + associated with the address database for that bridge. + +- Dynamically learned FDB entries on foreign interfaces present in the same + bridge as some DSA switch ports, only if ``ds->assisted_learning_on_cpu_port`` + is set to true by the driver. These are associated with the address database + for that bridge. + +For various operations detailed below, DSA provides a ``dsa_db`` structure +which can be of the following types: + +- ``DSA_DB_PORT``: the FDB (or MDB) entry to be installed or deleted belongs to + the port private database of user port ``db->dp``. +- ``DSA_DB_BRIDGE``: the entry belongs to one of the address databases of bridge + ``db->bridge``. Separation between the VLAN-unaware database and the per-VID + databases of this bridge is expected to be done by the driver. +- ``DSA_DB_LAG``: the entry belongs to the address database of LAG ``db->lag``. + Note: ``DSA_DB_LAG`` is currently unused and may be removed in the future. + +The drivers which act upon the ``dsa_db`` argument in ``port_fdb_add``, +``port_mdb_add`` etc should declare ``ds->fdb_isolation`` as true. + +DSA associates each offloaded bridge and each offloaded LAG with a one-based ID +(``struct dsa_bridge :: num``, ``struct dsa_lag :: id``) for the purposes of +refcounting addresses on shared ports. Drivers may piggyback on DSA's numbering +scheme (the ID is readable through ``db->bridge.num`` and ``db->lag.id`` or may +implement their own. + +Only the drivers which declare support for FDB isolation are notified of FDB +entries on the CPU port belonging to ``DSA_DB_PORT`` databases. +For compatibility/legacy reasons, ``DSA_DB_BRIDGE`` addresses are notified to +drivers even if they do not support FDB isolation. However, ``db->bridge.num`` +and ``db->lag.id`` are always set to 0 in that case (to denote the lack of +isolation, for refcounting purposes). + +Note that it is not mandatory for a switch driver to implement physically +separate address databases for each standalone user port. Since FDB entries in +the port private databases will always point to the CPU port, there is no risk +for incorrect forwarding decisions. In this case, all standalone ports may +share the same database, but the reference counting of host-filtered addresses +(not deleting the FDB entry for a port's MAC address if it's still in use by +another port) becomes the responsibility of the driver, because DSA is unaware +that the port databases are in fact shared. This can be achieved by calling +``dsa_fdb_present_in_other_db()`` and ``dsa_mdb_present_in_other_db()``. +The down side is that the RX filtering lists of each user port are in fact +shared, which means that user port A may accept a packet with a MAC DA it +shouldn't have, only because that MAC address was in the RX filtering list of +user port B. These packets will still be dropped in software, however. + +Bridge layer +------------ + +Offloading the bridge forwarding plane is optional and handled by the methods +below. They may be absent, return -EOPNOTSUPP, or ``ds->max_num_bridges`` may +be non-zero and exceeded, and in this case, joining a bridge port is still +possible, but the packet forwarding will take place in software, and the ports +under a software bridge must remain configured in the same way as for +standalone operation, i.e. have all bridging service functions (address +learning etc) disabled, and send all received packets to the CPU port only. + +Concretely, a port starts offloading the forwarding plane of a bridge once it +returns success to the ``port_bridge_join`` method, and stops doing so after +``port_bridge_leave`` has been called. Offloading the bridge means autonomously +learning FDB entries in accordance with the software bridge port's state, and +autonomously forwarding (or flooding) received packets without CPU intervention. +This is optional even when offloading a bridge port. Tagging protocol drivers +are expected to call ``dsa_default_offload_fwd_mark(skb)`` for packets which +have already been autonomously forwarded in the forwarding domain of the +ingress switch port. DSA, through ``dsa_port_devlink_setup()``, considers all +switch ports part of the same tree ID to be part of the same bridge forwarding +domain (capable of autonomous forwarding to each other). + +Offloading the TX forwarding process of a bridge is a distinct concept from +simply offloading its forwarding plane, and refers to the ability of certain +driver and tag protocol combinations to transmit a single skb coming from the +bridge device's transmit function to potentially multiple egress ports (and +thereby avoid its cloning in software). + +Packets for which the bridge requests this behavior are called data plane +packets and have ``skb->offload_fwd_mark`` set to true in the tag protocol +driver's ``xmit`` function. Data plane packets are subject to FDB lookup, +hardware learning on the CPU port, and do not override the port STP state. +Additionally, replication of data plane packets (multicast, flooding) is +handled in hardware and the bridge driver will transmit a single skb for each +packet that may or may not need replication. + +When the TX forwarding offload is enabled, the tag protocol driver is +responsible to inject packets into the data plane of the hardware towards the +correct bridging domain (FID) that the port is a part of. The port may be +VLAN-unaware, and in this case the FID must be equal to the FID used by the +driver for its VLAN-unaware address database associated with that bridge. +Alternatively, the bridge may be VLAN-aware, and in that case, it is guaranteed +that the packet is also VLAN-tagged with the VLAN ID that the bridge processed +this packet in. It is the responsibility of the hardware to untag the VID on +the egress-untagged ports, or keep the tag on the egress-tagged ones. + +- ``port_bridge_join``: bridge layer function invoked when a given switch port is + added to a bridge, this function should do what's necessary at the switch + level to permit the joining port to be added to the relevant logical + domain for it to ingress/egress traffic with other members of the bridge. + By setting the ``tx_fwd_offload`` argument to true, the TX forwarding process + of this bridge is also offloaded. + +- ``port_bridge_leave``: bridge layer function invoked when a given switch port is + removed from a bridge, this function should do what's necessary at the + switch level to deny the leaving port from ingress/egress traffic from the + remaining bridge members. + +- ``port_stp_state_set``: bridge layer function invoked when a given switch port STP + state is computed by the bridge layer and should be propagated to switch + hardware to forward/block/learn traffic. + +- ``port_bridge_flags``: bridge layer function invoked when a port must + configure its settings for e.g. flooding of unknown traffic or source address + learning. The switch driver is responsible for initial setup of the + standalone ports with address learning disabled and egress flooding of all + types of traffic, then the DSA core notifies of any change to the bridge port + flags when the port joins and leaves a bridge. DSA does not currently manage + the bridge port flags for the CPU port. The assumption is that address + learning should be statically enabled (if supported by the hardware) on the + CPU port, and flooding towards the CPU port should also be enabled, due to a + lack of an explicit address filtering mechanism in the DSA core. + +- ``port_fast_age``: bridge layer function invoked when flushing the + dynamically learned FDB entries on the port is necessary. This is called when + transitioning from an STP state where learning should take place to an STP + state where it shouldn't, or when leaving a bridge, or when address learning + is turned off via ``port_bridge_flags``. + +Bridge VLAN filtering +--------------------- + +- ``port_vlan_filtering``: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge gets + configured for turning on or off VLAN filtering. If nothing specific needs to + be done at the hardware level, this callback does not need to be implemented. + When VLAN filtering is turned on, the hardware must be programmed with + rejecting 802.1Q frames which have VLAN IDs outside of the programmed allowed + VLAN ID map/rules. If there is no PVID programmed into the switch port, + untagged frames must be rejected as well. When turned off the switch must + accept any 802.1Q frames irrespective of their VLAN ID, and untagged frames are + allowed. + +- ``port_vlan_add``: bridge layer function invoked when a VLAN is configured + (tagged or untagged) for the given switch port. The CPU port becomes a member + of a VLAN only if a foreign bridge port is also a member of it (and + forwarding needs to take place in software), or the VLAN is installed to the + VLAN group of the bridge device itself, for termination purposes + (``bridge vlan add dev br0 vid 100 self``). VLANs on shared ports are + reference counted and removed when there is no user left. Drivers do not need + to manually install a VLAN on the CPU port. + +- ``port_vlan_del``: bridge layer function invoked when a VLAN is removed from the + given switch port + +- ``port_fdb_add``: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge wants to install a + Forwarding Database entry, the switch hardware should be programmed with the + specified address in the specified VLAN Id in the forwarding database + associated with this VLAN ID. + +- ``port_fdb_del``: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge wants to remove a + Forwarding Database entry, the switch hardware should be programmed to delete + the specified MAC address from the specified VLAN ID if it was mapped into + this port forwarding database + +- ``port_fdb_dump``: bridge bypass function invoked by ``ndo_fdb_dump`` on the + physical DSA port interfaces. Since DSA does not attempt to keep in sync its + hardware FDB entries with the software bridge, this method is implemented as + a means to view the entries visible on user ports in the hardware database. + The entries reported by this function have the ``self`` flag in the output of + the ``bridge fdb show`` command. + +- ``port_mdb_add``: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge wants to install + a multicast database entry. The switch hardware should be programmed with the + specified address in the specified VLAN ID in the forwarding database + associated with this VLAN ID. + +- ``port_mdb_del``: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge wants to remove a + multicast database entry, the switch hardware should be programmed to delete + the specified MAC address from the specified VLAN ID if it was mapped into + this port forwarding database. + +Link aggregation +---------------- + +Link aggregation is implemented in the Linux networking stack by the bonding +and team drivers, which are modeled as virtual, stackable network interfaces. +DSA is capable of offloading a link aggregation group (LAG) to hardware that +supports the feature, and supports bridging between physical ports and LAGs, +as well as between LAGs. A bonding/team interface which holds multiple physical +ports constitutes a logical port, although DSA has no explicit concept of a +logical port at the moment. Due to this, events where a LAG joins/leaves a +bridge are treated as if all individual physical ports that are members of that +LAG join/leave the bridge. Switchdev port attributes (VLAN filtering, STP +state, etc) and objects (VLANs, MDB entries) offloaded to a LAG as bridge port +are treated similarly: DSA offloads the same switchdev object / port attribute +on all members of the LAG. Static bridge FDB entries on a LAG are not yet +supported, since the DSA driver API does not have the concept of a logical port +ID. + +- ``port_lag_join``: function invoked when a given switch port is added to a + LAG. The driver may return ``-EOPNOTSUPP``, and in this case, DSA will fall + back to a software implementation where all traffic from this port is sent to + the CPU. +- ``port_lag_leave``: function invoked when a given switch port leaves a LAG + and returns to operation as a standalone port. +- ``port_lag_change``: function invoked when the link state of any member of + the LAG changes, and the hashing function needs rebalancing to only make use + of the subset of physical LAG member ports that are up. + +Drivers that benefit from having an ID associated with each offloaded LAG +can optionally populate ``ds->num_lag_ids`` from the ``dsa_switch_ops::setup`` +method. The LAG ID associated with a bonding/team interface can then be +retrieved by a DSA switch driver using the ``dsa_lag_id`` function. + +IEC 62439-2 (MRP) +----------------- + +The Media Redundancy Protocol is a topology management protocol optimized for +fast fault recovery time for ring networks, which has some components +implemented as a function of the bridge driver. MRP uses management PDUs +(Test, Topology, LinkDown/Up, Option) sent at a multicast destination MAC +address range of 01:15:4e:00:00:0x and with an EtherType of 0x88e3. +Depending on the node's role in the ring (MRM: Media Redundancy Manager, +MRC: Media Redundancy Client, MRA: Media Redundancy Automanager), certain MRP +PDUs might need to be terminated locally and others might need to be forwarded. +An MRM might also benefit from offloading to hardware the creation and +transmission of certain MRP PDUs (Test). + +Normally an MRP instance can be created on top of any network interface, +however in the case of a device with an offloaded data path such as DSA, it is +necessary for the hardware, even if it is not MRP-aware, to be able to extract +the MRP PDUs from the fabric before the driver can proceed with the software +implementation. DSA today has no driver which is MRP-aware, therefore it only +listens for the bare minimum switchdev objects required for the software assist +to work properly. The operations are detailed below. + +- ``port_mrp_add`` and ``port_mrp_del``: notifies driver when an MRP instance + with a certain ring ID, priority, primary port and secondary port is + created/deleted. +- ``port_mrp_add_ring_role`` and ``port_mrp_del_ring_role``: function invoked + when an MRP instance changes ring roles between MRM or MRC. This affects + which MRP PDUs should be trapped to software and which should be autonomously + forwarded. + +IEC 62439-3 (HSR/PRP) +--------------------- + +The Parallel Redundancy Protocol (PRP) is a network redundancy protocol which +works by duplicating and sequence numbering packets through two independent L2 +networks (which are unaware of the PRP tail tags carried in the packets), and +eliminating the duplicates at the receiver. The High-availability Seamless +Redundancy (HSR) protocol is similar in concept, except all nodes that carry +the redundant traffic are aware of the fact that it is HSR-tagged (because HSR +uses a header with an EtherType of 0x892f) and are physically connected in a +ring topology. Both HSR and PRP use supervision frames for monitoring the +health of the network and for discovery of other nodes. + +In Linux, both HSR and PRP are implemented in the hsr driver, which +instantiates a virtual, stackable network interface with two member ports. +The driver only implements the basic roles of DANH (Doubly Attached Node +implementing HSR) and DANP (Doubly Attached Node implementing PRP); the roles +of RedBox and QuadBox are not implemented (therefore, bridging a hsr network +interface with a physical switch port does not produce the expected result). + +A driver which is able of offloading certain functions of a DANP or DANH should +declare the corresponding netdev features as indicated by the documentation at +``Documentation/networking/netdev-features.rst``. Additionally, the following +methods must be implemented: + +- ``port_hsr_join``: function invoked when a given switch port is added to a + DANP/DANH. The driver may return ``-EOPNOTSUPP`` and in this case, DSA will + fall back to a software implementation where all traffic from this port is + sent to the CPU. +- ``port_hsr_leave``: function invoked when a given switch port leaves a + DANP/DANH and returns to normal operation as a standalone port. + +TODO +==== + +Making SWITCHDEV and DSA converge towards an unified codebase +------------------------------------------------------------- + +SWITCHDEV properly takes care of abstracting the networking stack with offload +capable hardware, but does not enforce a strict switch device driver model. On +the other DSA enforces a fairly strict device driver model, and deals with most +of the switch specific. At some point we should envision a merger between these +two subsystems and get the best of both worlds. |