On Fri, 15 Apr 2016, Eric Dumazet wrote: > > TBF is probably a bad example because it started life as a classless > > qdisc. There was only one built-in fifo queue that was shaped. Then > > someone made it classful and changed this behavior. To me it sounds > > reasonable to have the default behavior restored. At minimal > > consistency. > > > Then you need to save the initial qdisc (bfifo for TBF) in a special > place, to make sure the delete operation is guaranteed to succeed. > > Or fail the delete if the bfifo can not be allocated. > > I can tell that determinism if far more interesting than usability for > some users occasionally playing with tc.
BTW, I've started to actually work on fixing this, and I've noticed that TBF behavior actually violates what's stated in pfifo_fast manpage: ========== Whenever an interface is created, the pfifo_fast qdisc is automatically used as a queue. If another qdisc is attached, it preempts the default pfifo_fast, which automatically returns to function when an existing qdisc is detached. In this sense this qdisc is magic, and unlike other qdiscs. ========== -- Jiri Kosina SUSE Labs