On 26.01.2020 16:59, Andrew Lunn wrote:
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On Sun, Jan 26, 2020 at 02:22:13PM +0100, Horatiu Vultur wrote:
The 01/25/2020 17:35, Andrew Lunn wrote:
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>
> > SWITCHDEV_OBJ_ID_RING_TEST_MRP: This is used when to start/stop sending
> > MRP_Test frames on the mrp ring ports. This is called only on nodes that
have
> > the role Media Redundancy Manager.
>
> How do you handle the 'headless chicken' scenario? User space tells
> the port to start sending MRP_Test frames. It then dies. The hardware
> continues sending these messages, and the neighbours thinks everything
> is O.K, but in reality the state machine is dead, and when the ring
> breaks, the daemon is not there to fix it?
I agree, we need to find a solution to this issue.
> And it is not just the daemon that could die. The kernel could opps or
> deadlock, etc.
>
> For a robust design, it seems like SWITCHDEV_OBJ_ID_RING_TEST_MRP
> should mean: start sending MRP_Test frames for the next X seconds, and
> then stop. And the request is repeated every X-1 seconds.
Sounds like a good idea to me.
I totally missed this case, I will update this as you suggest.
What does your hardware actually provide?
Given the design of the protocol, if the hardware decides the OS etc
is dead, it should stop sending MRP_TEST frames and unblock the ports.
If then becomes a 'dumb switch', and for a short time there will be a
broadcast storm. Hopefully one of the other nodes will then take over
the role and block a port.
As far as I know, the only feature HW has to prevent this is a
watch-dog timer. Which will reset the entire system (not a bad idea if
the kernel has dead-locked).
/Allan