On 6/1/07, Jay Vosburgh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Laurent Chavey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>On 5/31/07, Laurent Chavey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> if a host configured with 802.3ad bond mode is connected to a switch
>> that does not support 802.3ad,  then an aggregator is selected as the
>> active aggregator (first link that has carrier in the slave list).
>> This is perfectly fine, since it lets at least one of the link become active.
>> (this was the behavior prior to 2.6.18)
>>
>> In 2.6.18 and above, a new check for the partner mac address was added
>> before an aggregator's carrier is set on. If a host is  configured as
>> previously
>> described,  then no links will become active.
>>
>> is that the intended behavior ?

        Prior to the change in question, the carrier state of the master
device was always on, regardless of the state of the slaves (so even if
things didn't work, bonding would claim to be up).

looking at the code, this will only work if there is an actual active
aggregator. If that is not the case, and as you mention there could
be an active aggregator before completing all LACP pahses (on all the slaves)
then we would need to add a check (not for the mac) but for the churned state.
(I added a churned state machine that could be use there, I did not submit
the patch yet)


        My concern specifically was more with failures in negotiation
with 802.3ad capable peers, not for interoperability with non-802.3ad
devices (since bonding can always be run in a non-802.3ad mode).
agree. This re-inforces that we should use the churned state


        This behavior (don't pass traffic if no 802.3ad setup occurs)
also parallels the behavior of the Cisco switches I use to test bonding
(they will not pass traffic across ports of a lacp channel-group if the
802.3ad negotation does not occur), so it seemed appropriate.
yop, but the switch has to be configured with LACP support.

        I'm checking the standard to see what it says, but I'm also
curious if this has some real-world impact, or is just something you
happened across?
this is the case when a switch is not configured with LACP support, and
a host is attached to it. this is something that happens in a pre release
environment where a host is tested  (using a switch that has no LACP support).
The host is then moved to its "real" rack (where the switch has LACP). The host
is not re-configured between the 2 steps (bonding is always enabled with
802.3ad mode)


        -J

---
        -Jay Vosburgh, IBM Linux Technology Center, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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