From: Vladimir Oltean Date: Wed, 23 Sep 2020 21:40:37 +0000 (-0700) Subject: net: dsa: untag the bridge pvid from rx skbs X-Git-Tag: v5.15~2655^2~157^2~1 X-Git-Url: http://review.tizen.org/git/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=412a1526d067e355b101e84344d998c3753fe258;p=platform%2Fkernel%2Flinux-starfive.git net: dsa: untag the bridge pvid from rx skbs Currently the bridge untags VLANs present in its VLAN groups in __allowed_ingress() only when VLAN filtering is enabled. But when a skb is seen on the RX path as tagged with the bridge's pvid, and that bridge has vlan_filtering=0, and there isn't any 8021q upper with that VLAN either, then we have a problem. The bridge will not untag it (since it is supposed to remain VLAN-unaware), and pvid-tagged communication will be broken. There are 2 situations where we can end up like that: 1. When installing a pvid in egress-tagged mode, like this: ip link add dev br0 type bridge vlan_filtering 0 ip link set swp0 master br0 bridge vlan del dev swp0 vid 1 bridge vlan add dev swp0 vid 1 pvid This happens because DSA configures the VLAN membership of the CPU port using the same flags as swp0 (in this case "pvid and not untagged"), in an attempt to copy the frame as-is from ingress to the CPU. However, in this case, the packet may arrive untagged on ingress, it will be pvid-tagged by the ingress port, and will be sent as egress-tagged towards the CPU. Otherwise stated, the CPU will see a VLAN tag where there was none to speak of on ingress. When vlan_filtering is 1, this is not a problem, as stated in the first paragraph, because __allowed_ingress() will pop it. But currently, when vlan_filtering is 0 and we have such a VLAN configuration, we need an 8021q upper (br0.1) to be able to ping over that VLAN, which is not symmetrical with the vlan_filtering=1 case, and therefore, confusing for users. Basically what DSA attempts to do is simply an approximation: try to copy the skb with (or without) the same VLAN all the way up to the CPU. But DSA drivers treat CPU port VLAN membership in various ways (which is a good segue into situation 2). And some of those drivers simply tell the CPU port to copy the frame unmodified, which is the golden standard when it comes to VLAN processing (therefore, any driver which can configure the hardware to do that, should do that, and discard the VLAN flags requested by DSA on the CPU port). 2. Some DSA drivers always configure the CPU port as egress-tagged, in an attempt to recover the classified VLAN from the skb. These drivers cannot work at all with untagged traffic when bridged in vlan_filtering=0 mode. And they can't go for the easy "just keep the pvid as egress-untagged towards the CPU" route, because each front port can have its own pvid, and that might require conflicting VLAN membership settings on the CPU port (swp1 is pvid for VID 1 and egress-tagged for VID 2; swp2 is egress-taggeed for VID 1 and pvid for VID 2; with this simplistic approach, the CPU port, which is really a separate hardware entity and has its own VLAN membership settings, would end up being egress-untagged in both VID 1 and VID 2, therefore losing the VLAN tags of ingress traffic). So the only thing we can do is to create a helper function for resolving the problematic case (that is, a function which untags the bridge pvid when that is in vlan_filtering=0 mode), which taggers in need should call. It isn't called from the generic DSA receive path because there are drivers that fall neither in the first nor second category. Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean Signed-off-by: Florian Fainelli Signed-off-by: David S. Miller --- diff --git a/net/dsa/dsa_priv.h b/net/dsa/dsa_priv.h index 2da656d..0348dbab 100644 --- a/net/dsa/dsa_priv.h +++ b/net/dsa/dsa_priv.h @@ -7,6 +7,7 @@ #ifndef __DSA_PRIV_H #define __DSA_PRIV_H +#include #include #include #include @@ -194,6 +195,71 @@ dsa_slave_to_master(const struct net_device *dev) return dp->cpu_dp->master; } +/* If under a bridge with vlan_filtering=0, make sure to send pvid-tagged + * frames as untagged, since the bridge will not untag them. + */ +static inline struct sk_buff *dsa_untag_bridge_pvid(struct sk_buff *skb) +{ + struct dsa_port *dp = dsa_slave_to_port(skb->dev); + struct vlan_ethhdr *hdr = vlan_eth_hdr(skb); + struct net_device *br = dp->bridge_dev; + struct net_device *dev = skb->dev; + struct net_device *upper_dev; + struct list_head *iter; + u16 vid, pvid, proto; + int err; + + if (!br || br_vlan_enabled(br)) + return skb; + + err = br_vlan_get_proto(br, &proto); + if (err) + return skb; + + /* Move VLAN tag from data to hwaccel */ + if (!skb_vlan_tag_present(skb) && hdr->h_vlan_proto == htons(proto)) { + skb = skb_vlan_untag(skb); + if (!skb) + return NULL; + } + + if (!skb_vlan_tag_present(skb)) + return skb; + + vid = skb_vlan_tag_get_id(skb); + + /* We already run under an RCU read-side critical section since + * we are called from netif_receive_skb_list_internal(). + */ + err = br_vlan_get_pvid_rcu(dev, &pvid); + if (err) + return skb; + + if (vid != pvid) + return skb; + + /* The sad part about attempting to untag from DSA is that we + * don't know, unless we check, if the skb will end up in + * the bridge's data path - br_allowed_ingress() - or not. + * For example, there might be an 8021q upper for the + * default_pvid of the bridge, which will steal VLAN-tagged traffic + * from the bridge's data path. This is a configuration that DSA + * supports because vlan_filtering is 0. In that case, we should + * definitely keep the tag, to make sure it keeps working. + */ + netdev_for_each_upper_dev_rcu(dev, upper_dev, iter) { + if (!is_vlan_dev(upper_dev)) + continue; + + if (vid == vlan_dev_vlan_id(upper_dev)) + return skb; + } + + __vlan_hwaccel_clear_tag(skb); + + return skb; +} + /* switch.c */ int dsa_switch_register_notifier(struct dsa_switch *ds); void dsa_switch_unregister_notifier(struct dsa_switch *ds);