On Wed, Dec 06, 2017 at 02:33:07AM +0000, tristram...@microchip.com wrote: > I found the latest net-next kernel calls dsa_slave_port_obj_del() multiple > times, > one for each port, with host port as the parameter.
Hi Tristram SWITCHDEV_OBJ_ID_HOST_MDB is used, when there is a join/leave on the bridge interface. It happens for each interface in the bridge, and it means, packets which match the group that ingress on that interface should be forwarded to the CPU. > As the base driver cannot find an entry with that host port, it returns an > error > and so users will see a lot of failures from the DSA switch. You have a few options: 1) Just forward all multicast traffic to the cpu, and ignore SWITCHDEV_OBJ_ID_HOST_MDB. 2) Implement SWITCHDEV_OBJ_ID_HOST_MDB so you setup your tables to just forward the requested multicast to the cpu. 3) You can also forward a bit too much, e.g. if you cannot set filters per ingress port, just send all the traffic for the group from any port. The bridge will discard whatever it does not need. > Is this a new behavior and the driver needs to handle that? In previous > versions > I do not think I saw that. SWITCHDEV_OBJ_ID_HOST_MDB is new. However, dsa_slave_port_obj_del() can be called for all sorts of objects, and you should only be reacting on those your support. So adding a new object should not of changed anything. > Typical operation is a PC connected to a port in a switch wants to send > multicast > packets. It broadcasts an IGMP membership join message. Function > dsa_slave_port_obj_add is called to setup an entry in the lookup table. When > IGMP membership leave message is received dsa_slave_port_obj_del will be > called after a delay. But then it is called for each port with host port as > the > parameter. Correct. switchdev is a generic API. It also needs to work for Top of Rack switches, which generally have a match/action architecture. I can imagine that this match/action happens per port, so we need to call switchdev per port. However, switches supported by DSA tend to have central management of all ports, so one call would be sufficient. With a DSA driver, you just need to expect redundant calls, and do the right thing. Andrew