Tue, May 22, 2018 at 06:52:21PM CEST, m...@redhat.com wrote:
>On Tue, May 22, 2018 at 05:45:01PM +0200, Jiri Pirko wrote:
>> Tue, May 22, 2018 at 05:32:30PM CEST, m...@redhat.com wrote:
>> >On Tue, May 22, 2018 at 05:13:43PM +0200, Jiri Pirko wrote:
>> >> Tue, May 22, 2018 at 03:39:33PM CEST, m...@redhat.com wrote:
>> >> >On Tue, May 22, 2018 at 03:26:26PM +0200, Jiri Pirko wrote:
>> >> >> Tue, May 22, 2018 at 03:17:37PM CEST, m...@redhat.com wrote:
>> >> >> >On Tue, May 22, 2018 at 03:14:22PM +0200, Jiri Pirko wrote:
>> >> >> >> Tue, May 22, 2018 at 03:12:40PM CEST, m...@redhat.com wrote:
>> >> >> >> >On Tue, May 22, 2018 at 11:08:53AM +0200, Jiri Pirko wrote:
>> >> >> >> >> Tue, May 22, 2018 at 11:06:37AM CEST, j...@resnulli.us wrote:
>> >> >> >> >> >Tue, May 22, 2018 at 04:06:18AM CEST, 
>> >> >> >> >> >sridhar.samudr...@intel.com wrote:
>> >> >> >> >> >>Use the registration/notification framework supported by the 
>> >> >> >> >> >>generic
>> >> >> >> >> >>failover infrastructure.
>> >> >> >> >> >>
>> >> >> >> >> >>Signed-off-by: Sridhar Samudrala <sridhar.samudr...@intel.com>
>> >> >> >> >> >
>> >> >> >> >> >In previous patchset versions, the common code did
>> >> >> >> >> >netdev_rx_handler_register() and netdev_upper_dev_link() etc
>> >> >> >> >> >(netvsc_vf_join()). Now, this is still done in netvsc. Why?
>> >> >> >> >> >
>> >> >> >> >> >This should be part of the common "failover" code.
>> >> >> >> >> >
>> >> >> >> >> 
>> >> >> >> >> Also note that in the current patchset you use IFF_FAILOVER flag 
>> >> >> >> >> for
>> >> >> >> >> master, yet for the slave you use IFF_SLAVE. That is wrong.
>> >> >> >> >> IFF_FAILOVER_SLAVE should be used.
>> >> >> >> >
>> >> >> >> >Or drop IFF_FAILOVER_SLAVE and set both IFF_FAILOVER and IFF_SLAVE?
>> >> >> >> 
>> >> >> >> No. IFF_SLAVE is for bonding.
>> >> >> >
>> >> >> >What breaks if we reuse it for failover?
>> >> >> 
>> >> >> This is exposed to userspace. IFF_SLAVE is expected for bonding slaves.
>> >> >> And failover slave is not a bonding slave.
>> >> >
>> >> >That does not really answer the question.  I'd claim it's sufficiently
>> >> >like a bond slave for IFF_SLAVE to make sense.
>> >> >
>> >> >In fact you will find that netvsc already sets IFF_SLAVE, and so
>> >> 
>> >> netvsc does the whole failover thing in a wrong way. This patchset is
>> >> trying to fix it.
>> >
>> >Maybe, but we don't need gratuitous changes either, especially if they
>> >break userspace.
>> 
>> What do you mean by the "break"? It was a mistake to reuse IFF_SLAVE at
>> the first place, lets fix it. If some userspace depends on that flag, it
>> is broken anyway.
>> 
>> 
>> >
>> >> >does e.g. the eql driver.
>> >> >
>> >> >The advantage of using IFF_SLAVE is that userspace knows to skip it.  If
>> >> 
>> >> The userspace should know how to skip other types of slaves - team,
>> >> bridge, ovs, etc.
>> >> The "master link" should be the one to look at.
>> >> 
>> >
>> >How should existing userspace know which ones to skip and which one is
>> >the master?  Right now userspace seems to assume whatever does not have
>> >IFF_SLAVE should be looked at. Are you saying that's not the right thing
>> 
>> Why do you say so? What do you mean by "looked at"? Certainly not.
>> IFLA_MASTER is the attribute that should be looked at, nothing else.
>> 
>> 
>> >to do and userspace should be fixed? What should userspace do in
>> >your opinion that will be forward compatible with future kernels?
>> >
>> >> 
>> >> >we don't set IFF_SLAVE existing userspace tries to use the lowerdev.
>> >> 
>> >> Each master type has a IFF_ master flag and IFF_ slave flag.
>> >
>> >Could you give some examples please?
>> 
>> enum netdev_priv_flags {
>>         IFF_EBRIDGE                     = 1<<1,
>>         IFF_BRIDGE_PORT                 = 1<<9,
>>         IFF_OPENVSWITCH                 = 1<<20,
>>         IFF_OVS_DATAPATH                = 1<<10,
>>      IFF_L3MDEV_MASTER               = 1<<18,
>>         IFF_L3MDEV_SLAVE                = 1<<21,
>>         IFF_TEAM                        = 1<<22,
>>         IFF_TEAM_PORT                   = 1<<13,
>> };
>
>That's not in uapi, is it?  the comment above that says:

Correct.


>
>These flags are invisible to userspace
>
>
>
>> 
>> >
>> >> In private
>> >> flag. I don't see no reason to break this pattern here.
>> >
>> >Other masters are setup from userspace, this one is set up automatically
>> >by kernel. So the bar is higher, we need an interface that existing
>> >userspace knows about.  We can't just say "oh if userspace set this up
>> >it should know to skip lowerdevs".
>> >
>> >Otherwise multiple interfaces with same mac tend to confuse userspace.
>> 
>> No difference, really.
>> Regardless who does the setup, and independent userspace deamon should
>> react accordingly.
>
>If the deamon does the setup itself, it's reasonable to require that it
>learns about new flags each time we add a new driver.  If it doesn't,
>then I think it's less reasonable.

No need. The "IFLA_MASTER" attr is always there to be looked at. That is
enough.

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