On 12.11.20 14:49, Vladimir Oltean wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 11, 2020 at 03:14:26PM +0100, Alexandra Winter wrote:
>> On 11.11.20 11:36, Vladimir Oltean wrote:
>>> Hi Alexandra,
>>>
>>> On Wed, Nov 11, 2020 at 11:13:03AM +0100, Alexandra Winter wrote:
>>>> On 08.11.20 18:23, Vladimir Oltean wrote:
>>>>> On Sun, Nov 08, 2020 at 10:09:25PM +0800, DENG Qingfang wrote:
>>>>>> Can it be turned off for switches that support SA learning from CPU?
>>>>>
>>>>> Is there a good reason I would add another property per switch and not
>>>>> just do it unconditionally?
>>>>>
>>>> I have a similar concern for a future patch, where I want to turn on or 
>>>> off, whether the
>>>> device driver listens to SWITCHDEV_{FDB,DEL}_ADD_TO_DEVICE for a certain 
>>>> interface.
>>>> (Options will be: static MACs only, learning in the device or learning in 
>>>> bridge and notifications to device)
>>>> What about 'bridge link set dev $netdev learning_sync on self' 
>>>> respectively the corresponding netlink message?
>>>
>>> My understanding is that "learning_sync" is for pushing learnt addresses
>>> from device to bridge, not from bridge to device.
>>>
>> uh, sorry copy-paste error. I meant:
>> 'bridge link set dev $netdev learning on self'
> 
> Even with "learning" instead of "learning_sync", I don't understand what
> the "self" modifier would mean and how it would help, sorry.
> 
With the self modifier, the command is not executed by the linux bridge but 
instead sent to the device driver of the
respective bridgeport. So AFAIU 'learning on self' would mean, that instead of 
only the bridge doing the learning on this
bridgeport, the device itself should do the learning. Which sounds to me like a 
good fit for SA learning from CPU.

It seems that the self modifier is not used on hardware switches today, but 
rather on virtualized network cards, where
it is e.g. used ot turn VEPA mode on or off per virtual interface. In 
drivers/s390/net/qeth we use 'learning_sync on self',
to control whether a virtualized interface should synchronize the card's fdb 
with an attached linux bridge.

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