On 19/02/14 17:02, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote:
On Wed, Feb 19, 2014 at 6:35 AM, Zoltan Kiss <zoltan.k...@citrix.com> wrote:
On 19/02/14 09:52, Ian Campbell wrote:
Can't we arrange things in the Xen hotplug scripts such that if the
root_block stuff isn't available/doesn't work we fallback to the
existing fe:ff:ff:ff:ff usage?

That would avoid concerns about forward/backwards compat I think. It
wouldn't solve the issue you are targeting on old systems, but it also
doesn't regress them any further.

I agree, I think this problem could be better handled from userspace: if it
can set root_block then change the default MAC to a random one, if it can't,
then stay with the default one. Or if someone doesn't care about STP but DAD
is still important, userspace can have a force_random_mac option somewhere
to change to a random MAC regardless of root_block presence.

Folks, what if I repurpose my patch to use the IFF_BRIDGE_NON_ROOT (or
relabel to IFF_ROOT_BLOCK_DEF) flag for a default driver preference
upon initialization so that root block will be used once the device
gets added to a bridge. The purpose would be to avoid drivers from
using the high MAC address hack, streamline to use a random MAC
address thereby avoiding the possible duplicate address situation for
IPv6. In the STP use case for these interfaces we'd just require
userspace to unset the root block. I'd consider the STP use case the
most odd of all. The caveat to this approach is 3.8 would be needed
(or its the root block patches cherry picked) for base kernels older
than 3.8.

How about this: netback sets the root_block flag and a random MAC by default. So the default behaviour won't change, DAD will be happy, and userspace don't have to do anything unless it's using netback for STP root bridge (I don't think there are too many toolstacks doing that), in which case it has to remove the root_block flag instead of setting a random MAC.

Zoli

Reply via email to