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Diffstat (limited to 'target/linux/layerscape/patches-5.4/701-net-0367-net-mscc-ocelot-Workaround-to-allow-traffic-to-CPU-i.patch')
-rw-r--r--target/linux/layerscape/patches-5.4/701-net-0367-net-mscc-ocelot-Workaround-to-allow-traffic-to-CPU-i.patch149
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diff --git a/target/linux/layerscape/patches-5.4/701-net-0367-net-mscc-ocelot-Workaround-to-allow-traffic-to-CPU-i.patch b/target/linux/layerscape/patches-5.4/701-net-0367-net-mscc-ocelot-Workaround-to-allow-traffic-to-CPU-i.patch
deleted file mode 100644
index 8d10202ac9..0000000000
--- a/target/linux/layerscape/patches-5.4/701-net-0367-net-mscc-ocelot-Workaround-to-allow-traffic-to-CPU-i.patch
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,149 +0,0 @@
-From 937bf9496489cb4b491e75fe4436348bf3454dcd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
-From: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
-Date: Sat, 21 Dec 2019 23:19:20 +0200
-Subject: [PATCH] net: mscc: ocelot: Workaround to allow traffic to CPU in
- standalone mode
-
-The Ocelot switches have what is, in my opinion, a design flaw: their
-DSA header is in front of the Ethernet header, which means that they
-subvert the DSA master's RX filter, which for all practical purposes,
-either needs to be in promiscuous mode, or the OCELOT_TAG_PREFIX_LONG
-needs to be used for extraction, which makes the switch add a fake DMAC
-of ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff so that the DSA master accepts the frame.
-
-The issue with this design, of course, is that the CPU will be spammed
-with frames that it doesn't want to respond to, and there isn't any
-hardware offload in place by default to drop them.
-
-What is being done in the VSC7514 Ocelot driver is a process of
-selective whitelisting. The "MAC address" of each Ocelot switch net
-device, with all VLANs installed on that port, is being added as a FDB
-entry towards PGID_CPU.
-
-Some background first: Port Group IDs (PGIDs) are masks of destination
-ports. The switch performs 3 lookups in the PGID table for each frame,
-and forwards the frame to the ports that are present in the logical AND
-of all 3 PGIDs (for the most part, see below).
-
-The first PGID lookup is for the destination masks and the PGID table is
-indexed by the DEST_IDX field from the MAC table (FDB).
-The PGID can be an unicast set: PGIDs 0-11 are the per-port PGIDs, and
-by convention PGID i has only BIT(i) set, aka only this port is set in
-the destination mask.
-Or the PGID can be a multicast set: PGIDs 12-63 can (again, still by
-convention) hold a richer destination mask comprised of multiple ports.
-
-[ Ignoring the second PGID lookup, for aggregation, since it doesn't
- interfere. ]
-
-The third PGID lookup is for source masks: PGID entries 80-91 answer the
-question: is port i allowed to forward traffic to port j? If yes, then
-BIT(j) of PGID 80+i will be found set.
-
-What is interesting about the CPU port in this whole story is that, in
-the way the driver sets up the PGIDs, its bit isn't set in any source
-mask PGID of any other port (therefore, the third lookup would always
-decide to exclude the CPU port from this list). So frames are never
-_forwarded_ to the CPU.
-
-There is a loophole in this PGID mechanism which is described in the
-VSC7514 manual:
-
- If an entry is found in the MAC table entry of ENTRY_TYPE 0 or 1
- and the CPU port is set in the PGID pointed to by the MAC table
- entry, CPU extraction queue PGID.DST_PGID is added to the CPUQ.
-
-In other words, the CPU port is special, and frames are "copied" to the
-CPU, disregarding the source masks (third PGID lookup), if BIT(cpu) is
-found to be set in the destination masks (first PGID lookup).
-
-Now back to the story: what is PGID_CPU? It is a multicast set
-containing only BIT(cpu). I don't know why it was chosen to be a
-multicast PGID (59) and not simply the unicast one of this port, but it
-doesn't matter.
-
-The point is that frames that match the FDB will go to PGID_CPU by
-virtue of the DEST_IDX from the respective MAC table entry, and frames
-that don't will go to PGID_UC or PGID_MC, by virtue of the FLD_UNICAST,
-FLD_BROADCAST etc settings for flooding. And that is where the
-distinction is made: flooded frames will be subject to the third PGID
-lookup, while frames that are whitelisted to the PGID_CPU by the MAC
-table aren't.
-
-So we can use this mechanism to simulate an RX filter, given that we are
-subverting the DSA master's implicit one, as mentioned in the first
-paragraph. But this has some limitations:
-
-- In Ocelot each net device has its own MAC address. When simulating
- this with MAC table entries, it will practically result in having N
- MAC addresses for each of the N front-panel ports (because FDB entries
- are not per source port). A bit strange, I think.
-
-- In DSA we don't have the infrastructure in place to support this
- whitelisting mechanism. Calling .port_fdb_add on the CPU port for each
- slave net device dev_addr isn't, in itself, hard. The problem is with
- the VLANs that this port is part of. We would need to keep a duplicate
- list of the VLANs from the bridge, plus the ones added from 8021q, for
- each port. And we would need reference counting on each MAC address,
- such that when a front-panel port changes its MAC address and we need
- to delete the old FDB entry, we don't actually delete it if the other
- front-panel ports are still using it. Not to mention that this FDB
- entry would have to be added on the whole net of upstream DSA switches.
-
-So... it's complicated. What this patch does is to simply allow frames
-to be flooded to the CPU, which is anyway what the Ocelot driver is
-doing after removing the bridge from the net devices, see this snippet
-from ocelot_bridge_stp_state_set:
-
- /* Apply FWD mask. The loop is needed to add/remove the current port as
- * a source for the other ports.
- */
- for (p = 0; p < ocelot->num_phys_ports; p++) {
- if (p == ocelot->cpu || (ocelot->bridge_fwd_mask & BIT(p))) {
- (...)
- } else {
- /* Only the CPU port, this is compatible with link
- * aggregation.
- */
- ocelot_write_rix(ocelot,
- BIT(ocelot->cpu),
- ANA_PGID_PGID, PGID_SRC + p);
- }
-
-Otherwise said, the ocelot driver itself is already not self-coherent,
-since immediately after probe time, and immediately after removal from a
-bridge, it behaves in different ways, although the front panel ports are
-standalone in both cases.
-
-While standalone traffic _does_ work for the Felix DSA wrapper after
-enslaving and removing the ports from a bridge, this patch makes
-standalone traffic work at probe time too, with the caveat that even
-irrelevant frames will get processed by software, making it more
-susceptible to denial of service.
-
-Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
----
- drivers/net/ethernet/mscc/ocelot.c | 12 ++++++++++++
- 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+)
-
---- a/drivers/net/ethernet/mscc/ocelot.c
-+++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/mscc/ocelot.c
-@@ -2291,6 +2291,18 @@ void ocelot_set_cpu_port(struct ocelot *
- enum ocelot_tag_prefix injection,
- enum ocelot_tag_prefix extraction)
- {
-+ int port;
-+
-+ for (port = 0; port < ocelot->num_phys_ports; port++) {
-+ /* Disable old CPU port and enable new one */
-+ ocelot_rmw_rix(ocelot, 0, BIT(ocelot->cpu),
-+ ANA_PGID_PGID, PGID_SRC + port);
-+ if (port == cpu)
-+ continue;
-+ ocelot_rmw_rix(ocelot, BIT(cpu), BIT(cpu),
-+ ANA_PGID_PGID, PGID_SRC + port);
-+ }
-+
- /* Configure and enable the CPU port. */
- ocelot_write_rix(ocelot, 0, ANA_PGID_PGID, cpu);
- ocelot_write_rix(ocelot, BIT(cpu), ANA_PGID_PGID, PGID_CPU);