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Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -07001Distributed Switch Architecture
2===============================
3
4Introduction
5============
6
7This document describes the Distributed Switch Architecture (DSA) subsystem
8design principles, limitations, interactions with other subsystems, and how to
9develop drivers for this subsystem as well as a TODO for developers interested
10in joining the effort.
11
12Design principles
13=================
14
15The Distributed Switch Architecture is a subsystem which was primarily designed
16to support Marvell Ethernet switches (MV88E6xxx, a.k.a Linkstreet product line)
17using Linux, but has since evolved to support other vendors as well.
18
19The original philosophy behind this design was to be able to use unmodified
20Linux tools such as bridge, iproute2, ifconfig to work transparently whether
21they configured/queried a switch port network device or a regular network
22device.
23
24An Ethernet switch is typically comprised of multiple front-panel ports, and one
25or more CPU or management port. The DSA subsystem currently relies on the
26presence of a management port connected to an Ethernet controller capable of
27receiving Ethernet frames from the switch. This is a very common setup for all
28kinds of Ethernet switches found in Small Home and Office products: routers,
29gateways, or even top-of-the rack switches. This host Ethernet controller will
30be later referred to as "master" and "cpu" in DSA terminology and code.
31
32The D in DSA stands for Distributed, because the subsystem has been designed
33with the ability to configure and manage cascaded switches on top of each other
34using upstream and downstream Ethernet links between switches. These specific
35ports are referred to as "dsa" ports in DSA terminology and code. A collection
36of multiple switches connected to each other is called a "switch tree".
37
38For each front-panel port, DSA will create specialized network devices which are
39used as controlling and data-flowing endpoints for use by the Linux networking
40stack. These specialized network interfaces are referred to as "slave" network
41interfaces in DSA terminology and code.
42
43The ideal case for using DSA is when an Ethernet switch supports a "switch tag"
44which is a hardware feature making the switch insert a specific tag for each
45Ethernet frames it received to/from specific ports to help the management
46interface figure out:
47
48- what port is this frame coming from
49- what was the reason why this frame got forwarded
50- how to send CPU originated traffic to specific ports
51
52The subsystem does support switches not capable of inserting/stripping tags, but
53the features might be slightly limited in that case (traffic separation relies
54on Port-based VLAN IDs).
55
56Note that DSA does not currently create network interfaces for the "cpu" and
57"dsa" ports because:
58
59- the "cpu" port is the Ethernet switch facing side of the management
60 controller, and as such, would create a duplication of feature, since you
61 would get two interfaces for the same conduit: master netdev, and "cpu" netdev
62
63- the "dsa" port(s) are just conduits between two or more switches, and as such
64 cannot really be used as proper network interfaces either, only the
65 downstream, or the top-most upstream interface makes sense with that model
66
67Switch tagging protocols
68------------------------
69
Fabian Mewes8e0140a2016-11-04 13:16:14 +010070DSA currently supports 5 different tagging protocols, and a tag-less mode as
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -070071well. The different protocols are implemented in:
72
73net/dsa/tag_trailer.c: Marvell's 4 trailer tag mode (legacy)
74net/dsa/tag_dsa.c: Marvell's original DSA tag
75net/dsa/tag_edsa.c: Marvell's enhanced DSA tag
76net/dsa/tag_brcm.c: Broadcom's 4 bytes tag
Fabian Mewes8e0140a2016-11-04 13:16:14 +010077net/dsa/tag_qca.c: Qualcomm's 2 bytes tag
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -070078
79The exact format of the tag protocol is vendor specific, but in general, they
80all contain something which:
81
82- identifies which port the Ethernet frame came from/should be sent to
83- provides a reason why this frame was forwarded to the management interface
84
85Master network devices
86----------------------
87
88Master network devices are regular, unmodified Linux network device drivers for
89the CPU/management Ethernet interface. Such a driver might occasionally need to
90know whether DSA is enabled (e.g.: to enable/disable specific offload features),
91but the DSA subsystem has been proven to work with industry standard drivers:
92e1000e, mv643xx_eth etc. without having to introduce modifications to these
93drivers. Such network devices are also often referred to as conduit network
94devices since they act as a pipe between the host processor and the hardware
95Ethernet switch.
96
97Networking stack hooks
98----------------------
99
100When a master netdev is used with DSA, a small hook is placed in in the
101networking stack is in order to have the DSA subsystem process the Ethernet
102switch specific tagging protocol. DSA accomplishes this by registering a
103specific (and fake) Ethernet type (later becoming skb->protocol) with the
104networking stack, this is also known as a ptype or packet_type. A typical
105Ethernet Frame receive sequence looks like this:
106
107Master network device (e.g.: e1000e):
108
109Receive interrupt fires:
110- receive function is invoked
111- basic packet processing is done: getting length, status etc.
112- packet is prepared to be processed by the Ethernet layer by calling
113 eth_type_trans
114
115net/ethernet/eth.c:
116
117eth_type_trans(skb, dev)
118 if (dev->dsa_ptr != NULL)
119 -> skb->protocol = ETH_P_XDSA
120
121drivers/net/ethernet/*:
122
123netif_receive_skb(skb)
124 -> iterate over registered packet_type
125 -> invoke handler for ETH_P_XDSA, calls dsa_switch_rcv()
126
127net/dsa/dsa.c:
128 -> dsa_switch_rcv()
129 -> invoke switch tag specific protocol handler in
130 net/dsa/tag_*.c
131
132net/dsa/tag_*.c:
133 -> inspect and strip switch tag protocol to determine originating port
134 -> locate per-port network device
135 -> invoke eth_type_trans() with the DSA slave network device
136 -> invoked netif_receive_skb()
137
138Past this point, the DSA slave network devices get delivered regular Ethernet
139frames that can be processed by the networking stack.
140
141Slave network devices
142---------------------
143
144Slave network devices created by DSA are stacked on top of their master network
145device, each of these network interfaces will be responsible for being a
146controlling and data-flowing end-point for each front-panel port of the switch.
147These interfaces are specialized in order to:
148
149- insert/remove the switch tag protocol (if it exists) when sending traffic
150 to/from specific switch ports
151- query the switch for ethtool operations: statistics, link state,
152 Wake-on-LAN, register dumps...
153- external/internal PHY management: link, auto-negotiation etc.
154
155These slave network devices have custom net_device_ops and ethtool_ops function
156pointers which allow DSA to introduce a level of layering between the networking
157stack/ethtool, and the switch driver implementation.
158
159Upon frame transmission from these slave network devices, DSA will look up which
160switch tagging protocol is currently registered with these network devices, and
161invoke a specific transmit routine which takes care of adding the relevant
162switch tag in the Ethernet frames.
163
164These frames are then queued for transmission using the master network device
165ndo_start_xmit() function, since they contain the appropriate switch tag, the
166Ethernet switch will be able to process these incoming frames from the
167management interface and delivers these frames to the physical switch port.
168
169Graphical representation
170------------------------
171
172Summarized, this is basically how DSA looks like from a network device
173perspective:
174
175
176 |---------------------------
177 | CPU network device (eth0)|
178 ----------------------------
179 | <tag added by switch |
180 | |
181 | |
182 | tag added by CPU> |
183 |--------------------------------------------|
184 | Switch driver |
185 |--------------------------------------------|
186 || || ||
187 |-------| |-------| |-------|
188 | sw0p0 | | sw0p1 | | sw0p2 |
189 |-------| |-------| |-------|
190
191Slave MDIO bus
192--------------
193
194In order to be able to read to/from a switch PHY built into it, DSA creates a
195slave MDIO bus which allows a specific switch driver to divert and intercept
196MDIO reads/writes towards specific PHY addresses. In most MDIO-connected
197switches, these functions would utilize direct or indirect PHY addressing mode
198to return standard MII registers from the switch builtin PHYs, allowing the PHY
199library and/or to return link status, link partner pages, auto-negotiation
200results etc..
201
202For Ethernet switches which have both external and internal MDIO busses, the
203slave MII bus can be utilized to mux/demux MDIO reads and writes towards either
204internal or external MDIO devices this switch might be connected to: internal
205PHYs, external PHYs, or even external switches.
206
207Data structures
208---------------
209
210DSA data structures are defined in include/net/dsa.h as well as
211net/dsa/dsa_priv.h.
212
213dsa_chip_data: platform data configuration for a given switch device, this
214structure describes a switch device's parent device, its address, as well as
215various properties of its ports: names/labels, and finally a routing table
216indication (when cascading switches)
217
218dsa_platform_data: platform device configuration data which can reference a
219collection of dsa_chip_data structure if multiples switches are cascaded, the
220master network device this switch tree is attached to needs to be referenced
221
222dsa_switch_tree: structure assigned to the master network device under
223"dsa_ptr", this structure references a dsa_platform_data structure as well as
224the tagging protocol supported by the switch tree, and which receive/transmit
225function hooks should be invoked, information about the directly attached switch
226is also provided: CPU port. Finally, a collection of dsa_switch are referenced
227to address individual switches in the tree.
228
229dsa_switch: structure describing a switch device in the tree, referencing a
230dsa_switch_tree as a backpointer, slave network devices, master network device,
Vivien Didelot9d490b42016-08-23 12:38:56 -0400231and a reference to the backing dsa_switch_ops
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700232
Vivien Didelot9d490b42016-08-23 12:38:56 -0400233dsa_switch_ops: structure referencing function pointers, see below for a full
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700234description.
235
236Design limitations
237==================
238
239DSA is a platform device driver
240-------------------------------
241
242DSA is implemented as a DSA platform device driver which is convenient because
243it will register the entire DSA switch tree attached to a master network device
244in one-shot, facilitating the device creation and simplifying the device driver
245model a bit, this comes however with a number of limitations:
246
247- building DSA and its switch drivers as modules is currently not working
248- the device driver parenting does not necessarily reflect the original
249 bus/device the switch can be created from
250- supporting non-MDIO and non-MMIO (platform) switches is not possible
251
252Limits on the number of devices and ports
253-----------------------------------------
254
255DSA currently limits the number of maximum switches within a tree to 4
256(DSA_MAX_SWITCHES), and the number of ports per switch to 12 (DSA_MAX_PORTS).
257These limits could be extended to support larger configurations would this need
258arise.
259
260Lack of CPU/DSA network devices
261-------------------------------
262
263DSA does not currently create slave network devices for the CPU or DSA ports, as
264described before. This might be an issue in the following cases:
265
266- inability to fetch switch CPU port statistics counters using ethtool, which
267 can make it harder to debug MDIO switch connected using xMII interfaces
268
269- inability to configure the CPU port link parameters based on the Ethernet
270 controller capabilities attached to it: http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/509806/
271
272- inability to configure specific VLAN IDs / trunking VLANs between switches
273 when using a cascaded setup
274
275Common pitfalls using DSA setups
276--------------------------------
277
278Once a master network device is configured to use DSA (dev->dsa_ptr becomes
279non-NULL), and the switch behind it expects a tagging protocol, this network
280interface can only exclusively be used as a conduit interface. Sending packets
281directly through this interface (e.g.: opening a socket using this interface)
282will not make us go through the switch tagging protocol transmit function, so
283the Ethernet switch on the other end, expecting a tag will typically drop this
284frame.
285
286Slave network devices check that the master network device is UP before allowing
287you to administratively bring UP these slave network devices. A common
288configuration mistake is forgetting to bring UP the master network device first.
289
290Interactions with other subsystems
291==================================
292
293DSA currently leverages the following subsystems:
294
295- MDIO/PHY library: drivers/net/phy/phy.c, mdio_bus.c
296- Switchdev: net/switchdev/*
297- Device Tree for various of_* functions
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700298
299MDIO/PHY library
300----------------
301
302Slave network devices exposed by DSA may or may not be interfacing with PHY
303devices (struct phy_device as defined in include/linux/phy.h), but the DSA
304subsystem deals with all possible combinations:
305
306- internal PHY devices, built into the Ethernet switch hardware
307- external PHY devices, connected via an internal or external MDIO bus
308- internal PHY devices, connected via an internal MDIO bus
309- special, non-autonegotiated or non MDIO-managed PHY devices: SFPs, MoCA; a.k.a
310 fixed PHYs
311
312The PHY configuration is done by the dsa_slave_phy_setup() function and the
313logic basically looks like this:
314
315- if Device Tree is used, the PHY device is looked up using the standard
316 "phy-handle" property, if found, this PHY device is created and registered
317 using of_phy_connect()
318
319- if Device Tree is used, and the PHY device is "fixed", that is, conforms to
320 the definition of a non-MDIO managed PHY as defined in
321 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/fixed-link.txt, the PHY is registered
322 and connected transparently using the special fixed MDIO bus driver
323
324- finally, if the PHY is built into the switch, as is very common with
325 standalone switch packages, the PHY is probed using the slave MII bus created
326 by DSA
327
328
329SWITCHDEV
330---------
331
332DSA directly utilizes SWITCHDEV when interfacing with the bridge layer, and
333more specifically with its VLAN filtering portion when configuring VLANs on top
334of per-port slave network devices. Since DSA primarily deals with
335MDIO-connected switches, although not exclusively, SWITCHDEV's
336prepare/abort/commit phases are often simplified into a prepare phase which
Masanari Iidabf917952016-04-09 00:00:25 +0900337checks whether the operation is supported by the DSA switch driver, and a commit
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700338phase which applies the changes.
339
340As of today, the only SWITCHDEV objects supported by DSA are the FDB and VLAN
341objects.
342
343Device Tree
344-----------
345
346DSA features a standardized binding which is documented in
347Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/dsa/dsa.txt. PHY/MDIO library helper
348functions such as of_get_phy_mode(), of_phy_connect() are also used to query
349per-port PHY specific details: interface connection, MDIO bus location etc..
350
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700351Driver development
352==================
353
Vivien Didelot9d490b42016-08-23 12:38:56 -0400354DSA switch drivers need to implement a dsa_switch_ops structure which will
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700355contain the various members described below.
356
Vivien Didelot9d490b42016-08-23 12:38:56 -0400357register_switch_driver() registers this dsa_switch_ops in its internal list
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700358of drivers to probe for. unregister_switch_driver() does the exact opposite.
359
360Unless requested differently by setting the priv_size member accordingly, DSA
361does not allocate any driver private context space.
362
363Switch configuration
364--------------------
365
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700366- tag_protocol: this is to indicate what kind of tagging protocol is supported,
367 should be a valid value from the dsa_tag_protocol enum
368
369- probe: probe routine which will be invoked by the DSA platform device upon
370 registration to test for the presence/absence of a switch device. For MDIO
371 devices, it is recommended to issue a read towards internal registers using
372 the switch pseudo-PHY and return whether this is a supported device. For other
373 buses, return a non-NULL string
374
375- setup: setup function for the switch, this function is responsible for setting
Vivien Didelot9d490b42016-08-23 12:38:56 -0400376 up the dsa_switch_ops private structure with all it needs: register maps,
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700377 interrupts, mutexes, locks etc.. This function is also expected to properly
378 configure the switch to separate all network interfaces from each other, that
379 is, they should be isolated by the switch hardware itself, typically by creating
380 a Port-based VLAN ID for each port and allowing only the CPU port and the
381 specific port to be in the forwarding vector. Ports that are unused by the
382 platform should be disabled. Past this function, the switch is expected to be
383 fully configured and ready to serve any kind of request. It is recommended
384 to issue a software reset of the switch during this setup function in order to
385 avoid relying on what a previous software agent such as a bootloader/firmware
386 may have previously configured.
387
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700388PHY devices and link management
389-------------------------------
390
391- get_phy_flags: Some switches are interfaced to various kinds of Ethernet PHYs,
392 if the PHY library PHY driver needs to know about information it cannot obtain
393 on its own (e.g.: coming from switch memory mapped registers), this function
394 should return a 32-bits bitmask of "flags", that is private between the switch
395 driver and the Ethernet PHY driver in drivers/net/phy/*.
396
397- phy_read: Function invoked by the DSA slave MDIO bus when attempting to read
398 the switch port MDIO registers. If unavailable, return 0xffff for each read.
399 For builtin switch Ethernet PHYs, this function should allow reading the link
400 status, auto-negotiation results, link partner pages etc..
401
402- phy_write: Function invoked by the DSA slave MDIO bus when attempting to write
403 to the switch port MDIO registers. If unavailable return a negative error
404 code.
405
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700406- adjust_link: Function invoked by the PHY library when a slave network device
407 is attached to a PHY device. This function is responsible for appropriately
408 configuring the switch port link parameters: speed, duplex, pause based on
409 what the phy_device is providing.
410
411- fixed_link_update: Function invoked by the PHY library, and specifically by
412 the fixed PHY driver asking the switch driver for link parameters that could
413 not be auto-negotiated, or obtained by reading the PHY registers through MDIO.
414 This is particularly useful for specific kinds of hardware such as QSGMII,
415 MoCA or other kinds of non-MDIO managed PHYs where out of band link
416 information is obtained
417
418Ethtool operations
419------------------
420
421- get_strings: ethtool function used to query the driver's strings, will
422 typically return statistics strings, private flags strings etc.
423
424- get_ethtool_stats: ethtool function used to query per-port statistics and
425 return their values. DSA overlays slave network devices general statistics:
426 RX/TX counters from the network device, with switch driver specific statistics
427 per port
428
429- get_sset_count: ethtool function used to query the number of statistics items
430
431- get_wol: ethtool function used to obtain Wake-on-LAN settings per-port, this
432 function may, for certain implementations also query the master network device
433 Wake-on-LAN settings if this interface needs to participate in Wake-on-LAN
434
435- set_wol: ethtool function used to configure Wake-on-LAN settings per-port,
436 direct counterpart to set_wol with similar restrictions
437
438- set_eee: ethtool function which is used to configure a switch port EEE (Green
439 Ethernet) settings, can optionally invoke the PHY library to enable EEE at the
440 PHY level if relevant. This function should enable EEE at the switch port MAC
441 controller and data-processing logic
442
443- get_eee: ethtool function which is used to query a switch port EEE settings,
444 this function should return the EEE state of the switch port MAC controller
445 and data-processing logic as well as query the PHY for its currently configured
446 EEE settings
447
448- get_eeprom_len: ethtool function returning for a given switch the EEPROM
449 length/size in bytes
450
451- get_eeprom: ethtool function returning for a given switch the EEPROM contents
452
453- set_eeprom: ethtool function writing specified data to a given switch EEPROM
454
455- get_regs_len: ethtool function returning the register length for a given
456 switch
457
458- get_regs: ethtool function returning the Ethernet switch internal register
459 contents. This function might require user-land code in ethtool to
460 pretty-print register values and registers
461
462Power management
463----------------
464
465- suspend: function invoked by the DSA platform device when the system goes to
466 suspend, should quiesce all Ethernet switch activities, but keep ports
467 participating in Wake-on-LAN active as well as additional wake-up logic if
468 supported
469
470- resume: function invoked by the DSA platform device when the system resumes,
471 should resume all Ethernet switch activities and re-configure the switch to be
472 in a fully active state
473
474- port_enable: function invoked by the DSA slave network device ndo_open
475 function when a port is administratively brought up, this function should be
476 fully enabling a given switch port. DSA takes care of marking the port with
477 BR_STATE_BLOCKING if the port is a bridge member, or BR_STATE_FORWARDING if it
478 was not, and propagating these changes down to the hardware
479
480- port_disable: function invoked by the DSA slave network device ndo_close
481 function when a port is administratively brought down, this function should be
482 fully disabling a given switch port. DSA takes care of marking the port with
483 BR_STATE_DISABLED and propagating changes to the hardware if this port is
484 disabled while being a bridge member
485
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700486Bridge layer
487------------
488
Vivien Didelot71327a42016-03-13 16:21:32 -0400489- port_bridge_join: bridge layer function invoked when a given switch port is
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700490 added to a bridge, this function should be doing the necessary at the switch
491 level to permit the joining port from being added to the relevant logical
Vivien Didelota6692752016-02-12 12:09:39 -0500492 domain for it to ingress/egress traffic with other members of the bridge.
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700493
Vivien Didelot71327a42016-03-13 16:21:32 -0400494- port_bridge_leave: bridge layer function invoked when a given switch port is
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700495 removed from a bridge, this function should be doing the necessary at the
496 switch level to deny the leaving port from ingress/egress traffic from the
497 remaining bridge members. When the port leaves the bridge, it should be aged
498 out at the switch hardware for the switch to (re) learn MAC addresses behind
Vivien Didelota6692752016-02-12 12:09:39 -0500499 this port.
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700500
Vivien Didelot43c44a92016-04-06 11:55:03 -0400501- port_stp_state_set: bridge layer function invoked when a given switch port STP
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700502 state is computed by the bridge layer and should be propagated to switch
503 hardware to forward/block/learn traffic. The switch driver is responsible for
504 computing a STP state change based on current and asked parameters and perform
505 the relevant ageing based on the intersection results
506
507Bridge VLAN filtering
508---------------------
509
Florian Fainellif05e2db2016-05-24 21:26:41 -0700510- port_vlan_filtering: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge gets
511 configured for turning on or off VLAN filtering. If nothing specific needs to
512 be done at the hardware level, this callback does not need to be implemented.
513 When VLAN filtering is turned on, the hardware must be programmed with
514 rejecting 802.1Q frames which have VLAN IDs outside of the programmed allowed
515 VLAN ID map/rules. If there is no PVID programmed into the switch port,
516 untagged frames must be rejected as well. When turned off the switch must
517 accept any 802.1Q frames irrespective of their VLAN ID, and untagged frames are
518 allowed.
519
Vivien Didelotf4539392016-04-06 11:06:20 -0400520- port_vlan_prepare: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge prepares the
521 configuration of a VLAN on the given port. If the operation is not supported
522 by the hardware, this function should return -EOPNOTSUPP to inform the bridge
523 code to fallback to a software implementation. No hardware setup must be done
524 in this function. See port_vlan_add for this and details.
525
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700526- port_vlan_add: bridge layer function invoked when a VLAN is configured
527 (tagged or untagged) for the given switch port
528
529- port_vlan_del: bridge layer function invoked when a VLAN is removed from the
530 given switch port
531
Vivien Didelot65aebfc2016-02-23 12:13:54 -0500532- port_vlan_dump: bridge layer function invoked with a switchdev callback
533 function that the driver has to call for each VLAN the given port is a member
534 of. A switchdev object is used to carry the VID and bridge flags.
535
Vivien Didelotf4539392016-04-06 11:06:20 -0400536- port_fdb_prepare: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge prepares the
537 installation of a Forwarding Database entry. If the operation is not
538 supported, this function should return -EOPNOTSUPP to inform the bridge code
539 to fallback to a software implementation. No hardware setup must be done in
540 this function. See port_fdb_add for this and details.
541
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700542- port_fdb_add: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge wants to install a
543 Forwarding Database entry, the switch hardware should be programmed with the
544 specified address in the specified VLAN Id in the forwarding database
545 associated with this VLAN ID
546
547Note: VLAN ID 0 corresponds to the port private database, which, in the context
548of DSA, would be the its port-based VLAN, used by the associated bridge device.
549
550- port_fdb_del: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge wants to remove a
551 Forwarding Database entry, the switch hardware should be programmed to delete
552 the specified MAC address from the specified VLAN ID if it was mapped into
553 this port forwarding database
554
Vivien Didelotf4539392016-04-06 11:06:20 -0400555- port_fdb_dump: bridge layer function invoked with a switchdev callback
556 function that the driver has to call for each MAC address known to be behind
557 the given port. A switchdev object is used to carry the VID and FDB info.
558
Vivien Didelot8df30252016-08-31 11:50:03 -0400559- port_mdb_prepare: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge prepares the
560 installation of a multicast database entry. If the operation is not supported,
561 this function should return -EOPNOTSUPP to inform the bridge code to fallback
562 to a software implementation. No hardware setup must be done in this function.
563 See port_fdb_add for this and details.
564
565- port_mdb_add: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge wants to install
566 a multicast database entry, the switch hardware should be programmed with the
567 specified address in the specified VLAN ID in the forwarding database
568 associated with this VLAN ID.
569
570Note: VLAN ID 0 corresponds to the port private database, which, in the context
571of DSA, would be the its port-based VLAN, used by the associated bridge device.
572
573- port_mdb_del: bridge layer function invoked when the bridge wants to remove a
574 multicast database entry, the switch hardware should be programmed to delete
575 the specified MAC address from the specified VLAN ID if it was mapped into
576 this port forwarding database.
577
578- port_mdb_dump: bridge layer function invoked with a switchdev callback
579 function that the driver has to call for each MAC address known to be behind
580 the given port. A switchdev object is used to carry the VID and MDB info.
581
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700582TODO
583====
584
Florian Fainelli77760e92015-08-25 15:33:13 -0700585Making SWITCHDEV and DSA converge towards an unified codebase
586-------------------------------------------------------------
587
588SWITCHDEV properly takes care of abstracting the networking stack with offload
589capable hardware, but does not enforce a strict switch device driver model. On
590the other DSA enforces a fairly strict device driver model, and deals with most
591of the switch specific. At some point we should envision a merger between these
592two subsystems and get the best of both worlds.
593
594Other hanging fruits
595--------------------
596
597- making the number of ports fully dynamic and not dependent on DSA_MAX_PORTS
598- allowing more than one CPU/management interface:
599 http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.network/365657
600- porting more drivers from other vendors:
601 http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.network/365510