Alex,

That was my first thought too, but STP is disabled.

On 10/11/06, Alex Zeffertt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Alexander Indenbaum wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I'm playing with dual-port NIC driver level link failover:
> > * Driver exposes single network interface to the OS and operates both
> > ports in active-passive failover mode.
> > * Upon Link down event on active port, driver switches active and
> > passive ports transparently for the OS.
> >
> > I'm testing the driver using Linux bridge module: "failover" dual-port
> > NIC connected with two cables back-to-back to eth0 and eth1 which are
> > part of br0 bridge.
> >
> > I simulate link fail with following scenario:
> > * At t0 both eth0 and eth1 port links are UP, traffic is accepted by
> > eth0 and forwarded to br0
> > * At t1 I manually unplug eth0 cable, causing link to go down.
> > "Failover" driver switches the traffic immediately from eth0 to eth1,
> > while using the same MAC address.
> > * From t1 till t1+12 secs packets are accepted by eth1 but dropped by
> > bridge and not forwarded to br0.
> > * At t1+12 secs bridge starts forwarding packets from eth1 to br0
> >
> > Hmm... I would expect that eth0 link down event would flush from
> > bridge's table any MAC address associated with the port and that the
> > bridge would start forwarding packets from eth1 to br0 immediately.
> >
> > Why does it take ~12 secs for bridge to learn that MAC address moved
> > from eth0 to eth1 in the described scenario?
> >
>
> It may be spanning tree, rather than MAC address learning that takes
> so long.  Bridges spend a while just listening before forwarding, to
> avoid becoming part of a bridging loop.
>
> Experiment with:
>
>    brctl showstp br0
>    brctl stp br0 off
>    brctl setfd br0 1
>
> Alex
>
>


-- 
Alexander Indenbaum
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