From: Andrew Lunn <andrew@xxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 16 Mar 2018 01:29:35 +0100
On Thu, Mar 15, 2018 at 03:15:50PM -0500, Grygorii Strashko wrote:
In VLAN_AWARE mode CPSW can insert VLAN header encapsulation word on Host
port 0 egress (RX) before the packet data if RX_VLAN_ENCAP bit is set in
CPSW_CONTROL register. VLAN header encapsulation word has following format:
HDR_PKT_Priority bits 29-31 - Header Packet VLAN prio (Highest prio: 7)
HDR_PKT_CFI bits 28 - Header Packet VLAN CFI bit.
HDR_PKT_Vid bits 27-16 - Header Packet VLAN ID
PKT_Type bits 8-9 - Packet Type. Indicates whether the packet is
VLAN-tagged, priority-tagged, or non-tagged.
00: VLAN-tagged packet
01: Reserved
10: Priority-tagged packet
11: Non-tagged packet
This feature can be used to implement TX VLAN offload in case of
VLAN-tagged packets and to insert VLAN tag in case Non-tagged packet was
received on port with PVID set. As per documentation, CPSW never modifies
packet data on Host egress (RX) and as result, without this feature
enabled, Host port will not be able to receive properly packets which
entered switch non-tagged through external Port with PVID set (when
non-tagged packet forwarded from external Port with PVID set to another
external Port - packet will be VLAN tagged properly).
So, i think it is time to discuss the future of this driver. It should
really be replaced by a switchdev/DSA driver. There are plenty of
carrots for a new driver: Better statistics, working ethtool support
for all the PHYs, better user experience, etc. But maybe now it is
time for the stick. Should we Maintainers decide that no new features
should be added to the existing drivers, just bug fixes?
Andrew, I totally share your concerns.
However, I think the reality is that at best we can strongly urge
people to do such a large amount of work such as writing a new
switchdev/DSA driver for this cpsw hardware.
We can't really compel them.
And a stick could have the opposite of it's intended effect. If still
nobody wants to do the switchdev/DSA driver, then this existing one
rots and even worse we can end up with an out-of-tree version of this
driver that has the changes (such as this one) that people want.
I'd like to see the switchdev/DSA driver for cpsw as much as you do,
but I am not convinced that rejecting patches like this one will
necessarily make that happen.