| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| .. include:: <isonum.txt> |
| |
| =============================================== |
| Ethernet switch device driver model (switchdev) |
| =============================================== |
| |
| Copyright |copy| 2014 Jiri Pirko <jiri@resnulli.us> |
| |
| Copyright |copy| 2014-2015 Scott Feldman <sfeldma@gmail.com> |
| |
| |
| The Ethernet switch device driver model (switchdev) is an in-kernel driver |
| model for switch devices which offload the forwarding (data) plane from the |
| kernel. |
| |
| Figure 1 is a block diagram showing the components of the switchdev model for |
| an example setup using a data-center-class switch ASIC chip. Other setups |
| with SR-IOV or soft switches, such as OVS, are possible. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| |
| User-space tools |
| |
| user space | |
| +-------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| kernel | Netlink |
| | |
| +--------------+-------------------------------+ |
| | Network stack | |
| | (Linux) | |
| | | |
| +----------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| sw1p2 sw1p4 sw1p6 |
| sw1p1 + sw1p3 + sw1p5 + eth1 |
| + | + | + | + |
| | | | | | | | |
| +--+----+----+----+----+----+---+ +-----+-----+ |
| | Switch driver | | mgmt | |
| | (this document) | | driver | |
| | | | | |
| +--------------+----------------+ +-----------+ |
| | |
| kernel | HW bus (eg PCI) |
| +-------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| hardware | |
| +--------------+----------------+ |
| | Switch device (sw1) | |
| | +----+ +--------+ |
| | | v offloaded data path | mgmt port |
| | | | | |
| +--|----|----+----+----+----+---+ |
| | | | | | | |
| + + + + + + |
| p1 p2 p3 p4 p5 p6 |
| |
| front-panel ports |
| |
| |
| Fig 1. |
| |
| |
| Include Files |
| ------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| #include <linux/netdevice.h> |
| #include <net/switchdev.h> |
| |
| |
| Configuration |
| ------------- |
| |
| Use "depends NET_SWITCHDEV" in driver's Kconfig to ensure switchdev model |
| support is built for driver. |
| |
| |
| Switch Ports |
| ------------ |
| |
| On switchdev driver initialization, the driver will allocate and register a |
| struct net_device (using register_netdev()) for each enumerated physical switch |
| port, called the port netdev. A port netdev is the software representation of |
| the physical port and provides a conduit for control traffic to/from the |
| controller (the kernel) and the network, as well as an anchor point for higher |
| level constructs such as bridges, bonds, VLANs, tunnels, and L3 routers. Using |
| standard netdev tools (iproute2, ethtool, etc), the port netdev can also |
| provide to the user access to the physical properties of the switch port such |
| as PHY link state and I/O statistics. |
| |
| There is (currently) no higher-level kernel object for the switch beyond the |
| port netdevs. All of the switchdev driver ops are netdev ops or switchdev ops. |
| |
| A switch management port is outside the scope of the switchdev driver model. |
| Typically, the management port is not participating in offloaded data plane and |
| is loaded with a different driver, such as a NIC driver, on the management port |
| device. |
| |
| Switch ID |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The switchdev driver must implement the net_device operation |
| ndo_get_port_parent_id for each port netdev, returning the same physical ID for |
| each port of a switch. The ID must be unique between switches on the same |
| system. The ID does not need to be unique between switches on different |
| systems. |
| |
| The switch ID is used to locate ports on a switch and to know if aggregated |
| ports belong to the same switch. |
| |
| Port Netdev Naming |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Udev rules should be used for port netdev naming, using some unique attribute |
| of the port as a key, for example the port MAC address or the port PHYS name. |
| Hard-coding of kernel netdev names within the driver is discouraged; let the |
| kernel pick the default netdev name, and let udev set the final name based on a |
| port attribute. |
| |
| Using port PHYS name (ndo_get_phys_port_name) for the key is particularly |
| useful for dynamically-named ports where the device names its ports based on |
| external configuration. For example, if a physical 40G port is split logically |
| into 4 10G ports, resulting in 4 port netdevs, the device can give a unique |
| name for each port using port PHYS name. The udev rule would be:: |
| |
| SUBSYSTEM=="net", ACTION=="add", ATTR{phys_switch_id}=="<phys_switch_id>", \ |
| ATTR{phys_port_name}!="", NAME="swX$attr{phys_port_name}" |
| |
| Suggested naming convention is "swXpYsZ", where X is the switch name or ID, Y |
| is the port name or ID, and Z is the sub-port name or ID. For example, sw1p1s0 |
| would be sub-port 0 on port 1 on switch 1. |
| |
| Port Features |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| NETIF_F_NETNS_LOCAL |
| |
| If the switchdev driver (and device) only supports offloading of the default |
| network namespace (netns), the driver should set this feature flag to prevent |
| the port netdev from being moved out of the default netns. A netns-aware |
| driver/device would not set this flag and be responsible for partitioning |
| hardware to preserve netns containment. This means hardware cannot forward |
| traffic from a port in one namespace to another port in another namespace. |
| |
| Port Topology |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The port netdevs representing the physical switch ports can be organized into |
| higher-level switching constructs. The default construct is a standalone |
| router port, used to offload L3 forwarding. Two or more ports can be bonded |
| together to form a LAG. Two or more ports (or LAGs) can be bridged to bridge |
| L2 networks. VLANs can be applied to sub-divide L2 networks. L2-over-L3 |
| tunnels can be built on ports. These constructs are built using standard Linux |
| tools such as the bridge driver, the bonding/team drivers, and netlink-based |
| tools such as iproute2. |
| |
| The switchdev driver can know a particular port's position in the topology by |
| monitoring NETDEV_CHANGEUPPER notifications. For example, a port moved into a |
| bond will see it's upper master change. If that bond is moved into a bridge, |
| the bond's upper master will change. And so on. The driver will track such |
| movements to know what position a port is in in the overall topology by |
| registering for netdevice events and acting on NETDEV_CHANGEUPPER. |
| |
| L2 Forwarding Offload |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The idea is to offload the L2 data forwarding (switching) path from the kernel |
| to the switchdev device by mirroring bridge FDB entries down to the device. An |
| FDB entry is the {port, MAC, VLAN} tuple forwarding destination. |
| |
| To offloading L2 bridging, the switchdev driver/device should support: |
| |
| - Static FDB entries installed on a bridge port |
| - Notification of learned/forgotten src mac/vlans from device |
| - STP state changes on the port |
| - VLAN flooding of multicast/broadcast and unknown unicast packets |
| |
| Static FDB Entries |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| A driver which implements the ``ndo_fdb_add``, ``ndo_fdb_del`` and |
| ``ndo_fdb_dump`` operations is able to support the command below, which adds a |
| static bridge FDB entry:: |
| |
| bridge fdb add dev DEV ADDRESS [vlan VID] [self] static |
| |
| (the "static" keyword is non-optional: if not specified, the entry defaults to |
| being "local", which means that it should not be forwarded) |
| |
| The "self" keyword (optional because it is implicit) has the role of |
| instructing the kernel to fulfill the operation through the ``ndo_fdb_add`` |
| implementation of the ``DEV`` device itself. If ``DEV`` is a bridge port, this |
| will bypass the bridge and therefore leave the software database out of sync |
| with the hardware one. |
| |
| To avoid this, the "master" keyword can be used:: |
| |
| bridge fdb add dev DEV ADDRESS [vlan VID] master static |
| |
| The above command instructs the kernel to search for a master interface of |
| ``DEV`` and fulfill the operation through the ``ndo_fdb_add`` method of that. |
| This time, the bridge generates a ``SWITCHDEV_FDB_ADD_TO_DEVICE`` notification |
| which the port driver can handle and use it to program its hardware table. This |
| way, the software and the hardware database will both contain this static FDB |
| entry. |
| |
| Note: for new switchdev drivers that offload the Linux bridge, implementing the |
| ``ndo_fdb_add`` and ``ndo_fdb_del`` bridge bypass methods is strongly |
| discouraged: all static FDB entries should be added on a bridge port using the |
| "master" flag. The ``ndo_fdb_dump`` is an exception and can be implemented to |
| visualize the hardware tables, if the device does not have an interrupt for |
| notifying the operating system of newly learned/forgotten dynamic FDB |
| addresses. In that case, the hardware FDB might end up having entries that the |
| software FDB does not, and implementing ``ndo_fdb_dump`` is the only way to see |
| them. |
| |
| Note: by default, the bridge does not filter on VLAN and only bridges untagged |
| traffic. To enable VLAN support, turn on VLAN filtering:: |
| |
| echo 1 >/sys/class/net/<bridge>/bridge/vlan_filtering |
| |
| Notification of Learned/Forgotten Source MAC/VLANs |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The switch device will learn/forget source MAC address/VLAN on ingress packets |
| and notify the switch driver of the mac/vlan/port tuples. The switch driver, |
| in turn, will notify the bridge driver using the switchdev notifier call:: |
| |
| err = call_switchdev_notifiers(val, dev, info, extack); |
| |
| Where val is SWITCHDEV_FDB_ADD when learning and SWITCHDEV_FDB_DEL when |
| forgetting, and info points to a struct switchdev_notifier_fdb_info. On |
| SWITCHDEV_FDB_ADD, the bridge driver will install the FDB entry into the |
| bridge's FDB and mark the entry as NTF_EXT_LEARNED. The iproute2 bridge |
| command will label these entries "offload":: |
| |
| $ bridge fdb |
| 52:54:00:12:35:01 dev sw1p1 master br0 permanent |
| 00:02:00:00:02:00 dev sw1p1 master br0 offload |
| 00:02:00:00:02:00 dev sw1p1 self |
| 52:54:00:12:35:02 dev sw1p2 master br0 permanent |
| 00:02:00:00:03:00 dev sw1p2 master br0 offload |
| 00:02:00:00:03:00 dev sw1p2 self |
| 33:33:00:00:00:01 dev eth0 self permanent |
| 01:00:5e:00:00:01 dev eth0 self permanent |
| 33:33:ff:00:00:00 dev eth0 self permanent |
| 01:80:c2:00:00:0e dev eth0 self permanent |
| 33:33:00:00:00:01 dev br0 self permanent |
| 01:00:5e:00:00:01 dev br0 self permanent |
| 33:33:ff:12:35:01 dev br0 self permanent |
| |
| Learning on the port should be disabled on the bridge using the bridge command:: |
| |
| bridge link set dev DEV learning off |
| |
| Learning on the device port should be enabled, as well as learning_sync:: |
| |
| bridge link set dev DEV learning on self |
| bridge link set dev DEV learning_sync on self |
| |
| Learning_sync attribute enables syncing of the learned/forgotten FDB entry to |
| the bridge's FDB. It's possible, but not optimal, to enable learning on the |
| device port and on the bridge port, and disable learning_sync. |
| |
| To support learning, the driver implements switchdev op |
| switchdev_port_attr_set for SWITCHDEV_ATTR_PORT_ID_{PRE}_BRIDGE_FLAGS. |
| |
| FDB Ageing |
| ^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The bridge will skip ageing FDB entries marked with NTF_EXT_LEARNED and it is |
| the responsibility of the port driver/device to age out these entries. If the |
| port device supports ageing, when the FDB entry expires, it will notify the |
| driver which in turn will notify the bridge with SWITCHDEV_FDB_DEL. If the |
| device does not support ageing, the driver can simulate ageing using a |
| garbage collection timer to monitor FDB entries. Expired entries will be |
| notified to the bridge using SWITCHDEV_FDB_DEL. See rocker driver for |
| example of driver running ageing timer. |
| |
| To keep an NTF_EXT_LEARNED entry "alive", the driver should refresh the FDB |
| entry by calling call_switchdev_notifiers(SWITCHDEV_FDB_ADD, ...). The |
| notification will reset the FDB entry's last-used time to now. The driver |
| should rate limit refresh notifications, for example, no more than once a |
| second. (The last-used time is visible using the bridge -s fdb option). |
| |
| STP State Change on Port |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Internally or with a third-party STP protocol implementation (e.g. mstpd), the |
| bridge driver maintains the STP state for ports, and will notify the switch |
| driver of STP state change on a port using the switchdev op |
| switchdev_attr_port_set for SWITCHDEV_ATTR_PORT_ID_STP_UPDATE. |
| |
| State is one of BR_STATE_*. The switch driver can use STP state updates to |
| update ingress packet filter list for the port. For example, if port is |
| DISABLED, no packets should pass, but if port moves to BLOCKED, then STP BPDUs |
| and other IEEE 01:80:c2:xx:xx:xx link-local multicast packets can pass. |
| |
| Note that STP BDPUs are untagged and STP state applies to all VLANs on the port |
| so packet filters should be applied consistently across untagged and tagged |
| VLANs on the port. |
| |
| Flooding L2 domain |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| For a given L2 VLAN domain, the switch device should flood multicast/broadcast |
| and unknown unicast packets to all ports in domain, if allowed by port's |
| current STP state. The switch driver, knowing which ports are within which |
| vlan L2 domain, can program the switch device for flooding. The packet may |
| be sent to the port netdev for processing by the bridge driver. The |
| bridge should not reflood the packet to the same ports the device flooded, |
| otherwise there will be duplicate packets on the wire. |
| |
| To avoid duplicate packets, the switch driver should mark a packet as already |
| forwarded by setting the skb->offload_fwd_mark bit. The bridge driver will mark |
| the skb using the ingress bridge port's mark and prevent it from being forwarded |
| through any bridge port with the same mark. |
| |
| It is possible for the switch device to not handle flooding and push the |
| packets up to the bridge driver for flooding. This is not ideal as the number |
| of ports scale in the L2 domain as the device is much more efficient at |
| flooding packets that software. |
| |
| If supported by the device, flood control can be offloaded to it, preventing |
| certain netdevs from flooding unicast traffic for which there is no FDB entry. |
| |
| IGMP Snooping |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| In order to support IGMP snooping, the port netdevs should trap to the bridge |
| driver all IGMP join and leave messages. |
| The bridge multicast module will notify port netdevs on every multicast group |
| changed whether it is static configured or dynamically joined/leave. |
| The hardware implementation should be forwarding all registered multicast |
| traffic groups only to the configured ports. |
| |
| L3 Routing Offload |
| ------------------ |
| |
| Offloading L3 routing requires that device be programmed with FIB entries from |
| the kernel, with the device doing the FIB lookup and forwarding. The device |
| does a longest prefix match (LPM) on FIB entries matching route prefix and |
| forwards the packet to the matching FIB entry's nexthop(s) egress ports. |
| |
| To program the device, the driver has to register a FIB notifier handler |
| using register_fib_notifier. The following events are available: |
| |
| =================== =================================================== |
| FIB_EVENT_ENTRY_ADD used for both adding a new FIB entry to the device, |
| or modifying an existing entry on the device. |
| FIB_EVENT_ENTRY_DEL used for removing a FIB entry |
| FIB_EVENT_RULE_ADD, |
| FIB_EVENT_RULE_DEL used to propagate FIB rule changes |
| =================== =================================================== |
| |
| FIB_EVENT_ENTRY_ADD and FIB_EVENT_ENTRY_DEL events pass:: |
| |
| struct fib_entry_notifier_info { |
| struct fib_notifier_info info; /* must be first */ |
| u32 dst; |
| int dst_len; |
| struct fib_info *fi; |
| u8 tos; |
| u8 type; |
| u32 tb_id; |
| u32 nlflags; |
| }; |
| |
| to add/modify/delete IPv4 dst/dest_len prefix on table tb_id. The ``*fi`` |
| structure holds details on the route and route's nexthops. ``*dev`` is one |
| of the port netdevs mentioned in the route's next hop list. |
| |
| Routes offloaded to the device are labeled with "offload" in the ip route |
| listing:: |
| |
| $ ip route show |
| default via 192.168.0.2 dev eth0 |
| 11.0.0.0/30 dev sw1p1 proto kernel scope link src 11.0.0.2 offload |
| 11.0.0.4/30 via 11.0.0.1 dev sw1p1 proto zebra metric 20 offload |
| 11.0.0.8/30 dev sw1p2 proto kernel scope link src 11.0.0.10 offload |
| 11.0.0.12/30 via 11.0.0.9 dev sw1p2 proto zebra metric 20 offload |
| 12.0.0.2 proto zebra metric 30 offload |
| nexthop via 11.0.0.1 dev sw1p1 weight 1 |
| nexthop via 11.0.0.9 dev sw1p2 weight 1 |
| 12.0.0.3 via 11.0.0.1 dev sw1p1 proto zebra metric 20 offload |
| 12.0.0.4 via 11.0.0.9 dev sw1p2 proto zebra metric 20 offload |
| 192.168.0.0/24 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.0.15 |
| |
| The "offload" flag is set in case at least one device offloads the FIB entry. |
| |
| XXX: add/mod/del IPv6 FIB API |
| |
| Nexthop Resolution |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The FIB entry's nexthop list contains the nexthop tuple (gateway, dev), but for |
| the switch device to forward the packet with the correct dst mac address, the |
| nexthop gateways must be resolved to the neighbor's mac address. Neighbor mac |
| address discovery comes via the ARP (or ND) process and is available via the |
| arp_tbl neighbor table. To resolve the routes nexthop gateways, the driver |
| should trigger the kernel's neighbor resolution process. See the rocker |
| driver's rocker_port_ipv4_resolve() for an example. |
| |
| The driver can monitor for updates to arp_tbl using the netevent notifier |
| NETEVENT_NEIGH_UPDATE. The device can be programmed with resolved nexthops |
| for the routes as arp_tbl updates. The driver implements ndo_neigh_destroy |
| to know when arp_tbl neighbor entries are purged from the port. |
| |
| Device driver expected behavior |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| Below is a set of defined behavior that switchdev enabled network devices must |
| adhere to. |
| |
| Configuration-less state |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Upon driver bring up, the network devices must be fully operational, and the |
| backing driver must configure the network device such that it is possible to |
| send and receive traffic to this network device and it is properly separated |
| from other network devices/ports (e.g.: as is frequent with a switch ASIC). How |
| this is achieved is heavily hardware dependent, but a simple solution can be to |
| use per-port VLAN identifiers unless a better mechanism is available |
| (proprietary metadata for each network port for instance). |
| |
| The network device must be capable of running a full IP protocol stack |
| including multicast, DHCP, IPv4/6, etc. If necessary, it should program the |
| appropriate filters for VLAN, multicast, unicast etc. The underlying device |
| driver must effectively be configured in a similar fashion to what it would do |
| when IGMP snooping is enabled for IP multicast over these switchdev network |
| devices and unsolicited multicast must be filtered as early as possible in |
| the hardware. |
| |
| When configuring VLANs on top of the network device, all VLANs must be working, |
| irrespective of the state of other network devices (e.g.: other ports being part |
| of a VLAN-aware bridge doing ingress VID checking). See below for details. |
| |
| If the device implements e.g.: VLAN filtering, putting the interface in |
| promiscuous mode should allow the reception of all VLAN tags (including those |
| not present in the filter(s)). |
| |
| Bridged switch ports |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| When a switchdev enabled network device is added as a bridge member, it should |
| not disrupt any functionality of non-bridged network devices and they |
| should continue to behave as normal network devices. Depending on the bridge |
| configuration knobs below, the expected behavior is documented. |
| |
| Bridge VLAN filtering |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The Linux bridge allows the configuration of a VLAN filtering mode (statically, |
| at device creation time, and dynamically, during run time) which must be |
| observed by the underlying switchdev network device/hardware: |
| |
| - with VLAN filtering turned off: the bridge is strictly VLAN unaware and its |
| data path will process all Ethernet frames as if they are VLAN-untagged. |
| The bridge VLAN database can still be modified, but the modifications should |
| have no effect while VLAN filtering is turned off. Frames ingressing the |
| device with a VID that is not programmed into the bridge/switch's VLAN table |
| must be forwarded and may be processed using a VLAN device (see below). |
| |
| - with VLAN filtering turned on: the bridge is VLAN-aware and frames ingressing |
| the device with a VID that is not programmed into the bridges/switch's VLAN |
| table must be dropped (strict VID checking). |
| |
| When there is a VLAN device (e.g: sw0p1.100) configured on top of a switchdev |
| network device which is a bridge port member, the behavior of the software |
| network stack must be preserved, or the configuration must be refused if that |
| is not possible. |
| |
| - with VLAN filtering turned off, the bridge will process all ingress traffic |
| for the port, except for the traffic tagged with a VLAN ID destined for a |
| VLAN upper. The VLAN upper interface (which consumes the VLAN tag) can even |
| be added to a second bridge, which includes other switch ports or software |
| interfaces. Some approaches to ensure that the forwarding domain for traffic |
| belonging to the VLAN upper interfaces are managed properly: |
| |
| * If forwarding destinations can be managed per VLAN, the hardware could be |
| configured to map all traffic, except the packets tagged with a VID |
| belonging to a VLAN upper interface, to an internal VID corresponding to |
| untagged packets. This internal VID spans all ports of the VLAN-unaware |
| bridge. The VID corresponding to the VLAN upper interface spans the |
| physical port of that VLAN interface, as well as the other ports that |
| might be bridged with it. |
| * Treat bridge ports with VLAN upper interfaces as standalone, and let |
| forwarding be handled in the software data path. |
| |
| - with VLAN filtering turned on, these VLAN devices can be created as long as |
| the bridge does not have an existing VLAN entry with the same VID on any |
| bridge port. These VLAN devices cannot be enslaved into the bridge since they |
| duplicate functionality/use case with the bridge's VLAN data path processing. |
| |
| Non-bridged network ports of the same switch fabric must not be disturbed in any |
| way by the enabling of VLAN filtering on the bridge device(s). If the VLAN |
| filtering setting is global to the entire chip, then the standalone ports |
| should indicate to the network stack that VLAN filtering is required by setting |
| 'rx-vlan-filter: on [fixed]' in the ethtool features. |
| |
| Because VLAN filtering can be turned on/off at runtime, the switchdev driver |
| must be able to reconfigure the underlying hardware on the fly to honor the |
| toggling of that option and behave appropriately. If that is not possible, the |
| switchdev driver can also refuse to support dynamic toggling of the VLAN |
| filtering knob at runtime and require a destruction of the bridge device(s) and |
| creation of new bridge device(s) with a different VLAN filtering value to |
| ensure VLAN awareness is pushed down to the hardware. |
| |
| Even when VLAN filtering in the bridge is turned off, the underlying switch |
| hardware and driver may still configure itself in a VLAN-aware mode provided |
| that the behavior described above is observed. |
| |
| The VLAN protocol of the bridge plays a role in deciding whether a packet is |
| treated as tagged or not: a bridge using the 802.1ad protocol must treat both |
| VLAN-untagged packets, as well as packets tagged with 802.1Q headers, as |
| untagged. |
| |
| The 802.1p (VID 0) tagged packets must be treated in the same way by the device |
| as untagged packets, since the bridge device does not allow the manipulation of |
| VID 0 in its database. |
| |
| When the bridge has VLAN filtering enabled and a PVID is not configured on the |
| ingress port, untagged and 802.1p tagged packets must be dropped. When the bridge |
| has VLAN filtering enabled and a PVID exists on the ingress port, untagged and |
| priority-tagged packets must be accepted and forwarded according to the |
| bridge's port membership of the PVID VLAN. When the bridge has VLAN filtering |
| disabled, the presence/lack of a PVID should not influence the packet |
| forwarding decision. |
| |
| Bridge IGMP snooping |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The Linux bridge allows the configuration of IGMP snooping (statically, at |
| interface creation time, or dynamically, during runtime) which must be observed |
| by the underlying switchdev network device/hardware in the following way: |
| |
| - when IGMP snooping is turned off, multicast traffic must be flooded to all |
| ports within the same bridge that have mcast_flood=true. The CPU/management |
| port should ideally not be flooded (unless the ingress interface has |
| IFF_ALLMULTI or IFF_PROMISC) and continue to learn multicast traffic through |
| the network stack notifications. If the hardware is not capable of doing that |
| then the CPU/management port must also be flooded and multicast filtering |
| happens in software. |
| |
| - when IGMP snooping is turned on, multicast traffic must selectively flow |
| to the appropriate network ports (including CPU/management port). Flooding of |
| unknown multicast should be only towards the ports connected to a multicast |
| router (the local device may also act as a multicast router). |
| |
| The switch must adhere to RFC 4541 and flood multicast traffic accordingly |
| since that is what the Linux bridge implementation does. |
| |
| Because IGMP snooping can be turned on/off at runtime, the switchdev driver |
| must be able to reconfigure the underlying hardware on the fly to honor the |
| toggling of that option and behave appropriately. |
| |
| A switchdev driver can also refuse to support dynamic toggling of the multicast |
| snooping knob at runtime and require the destruction of the bridge device(s) |
| and creation of a new bridge device(s) with a different multicast snooping |
| value. |