Merge branch 'tag_8021q-for-ocelot-switches'
Vladimir Oltean says: ==================== tag_8021q for Ocelot switches The Felix switch inside LS1028A has an issue. It has a 2.5G CPU port, and the external ports, in the majority of use cases, run at 1G. This means that, when the CPU injects traffic into the switch, it is very easy to run into congestion. This is not to say that it is impossible to enter congestion even with all ports running at the same speed, just that the default configuration is already very prone to that by design. Normally, the way to deal with that is using Ethernet flow control (PAUSE frames). However, this functionality is not working today with the ENETC - Felix switch pair. The hardware issue is undergoing documentation right now as an erratum within NXP, but several customers have been requesting a reasonable workaround for it. In truth, the LS1028A has 2 internal port pairs. The lack of flow control is an issue only when NPI mode (Node Processor Interface, aka the mode where the "CPU port module", which carries DSA-style tagged packets, is connected to a regular Ethernet port) is used, and NPI mode is supported by Felix on a single port. In past BSPs, we have had setups where both internal port pairs were enabled. We were advertising the following setup: "data port" "control port" (2.5G) (1G) eno2 eno3 ^ ^ | | | regular | DSA-tagged | frames | frames | | v v swp4 swp5 This works but is highly unpractical, due to NXP shifting the task of designing a functional system (choosing which port to use, depending on type of traffic required) up to the end user. The swpN interfaces would have to be bridged with swp4, in order for the eno2 "data port" to have access to the outside network. And the swpN interfaces would still be capable of IP networking. So running a DHCP client would give us two IP interfaces from the same subnet, one assigned to eno2, and the other to swpN (0, 1, 2, 3). Also, the dual port design doesn't scale. When attaching another DSA switch to a Felix port, the end result is that the "data port" cannot carry any meaningful data to the external world, since it lacks the DSA tags required to traverse the sja1105 switches below. All that traffic needs to go through the "control port". So in newer BSPs there was a desire to simplify that setup, and only have one internal port pair: eno2 eno3 ^ | | DSA-tagged x disabled | frames | v swp4 swp5 However, this setup only exacerbates the issue of not having flow control on the NPI port, since that is the only port now. Also, there are use cases that still require the "data port", such as IEEE 802.1CB (TSN stream identification doesn't work over an NPI port), source MAC address learning over NPI, etc. Again, there is a desire to keep the simplicity of the single internal port setup, while regaining the benefits of having a dedicated data port as well. And this series attempts to deliver just that. So the NPI functionality is disabled conditionally. Its purpose was: - To ensure individually addressable ports on TX. This can be replaced by using some designated VLAN tags which are pushed by the DSA tagger code, then removed by the switch (so they are invisible to the outside world and to the user). - To ensure source port identification on RX. Again, this can be replaced by using some designated VLAN tags to encapsulate all RX traffic (each VLAN uniquely identifies a source port). The DSA tagger determines which port it was based on the VLAN number, then removes that header. - To deliver PTP timestamps. This cannot be obtained through VLAN headers, so we need to take a step back and see how else we can do that. The Microchip Ocelot-1 (VSC7514 MIPS) driver performs manual injection/extraction from the CPU port module using register-based MMIO, and not over Ethernet. We will need to do the same from DSA, which makes this tagger a sort of hybrid between DSA and pure switchdev. ==================== Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210129010009.3959398-1-olteanv@gmail.com Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
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