Yoshiki Komachi wrote: > This series adds a new bpf helper for doing FDB lookup in the kernel > tables from XDP programs. This helps users to accelerate Linux bridge > with XDP. > > In the past, XDP generally required users to reimplement their own > networking functionalities with specific manners of BPF programming > by themselves, hindering its potential uses. IMO, bpf helpers to > access networking stacks in kernel help to mitigate the programming > costs because users reuse mature Linux networking feature more easily. > > The previous commit 87f5fc7e48dd ("bpf: Provide helper to do forwarding > lookups in kernel FIB table") have already added a bpf helper for access > FIB in the kernel tables from XDP programs. As a next step, this series > introduces the API for FDB lookup. In the future, other bpf helpers for > learning and VLAN filtering will also be required in order to realize > fast XDP-based bridge although these are not included in this series. Just to clarify for myself. I expect that with just the helpers here we should only expect static configurations to work, e.g. any learning and/or aging is not likely to work if we do redirects in the XDP path. Then next to get a learning/filtering/aging we would need to have a set of bridge helpers to get that functionality as well? I believe I'm just repeating what you are saying above, but wanted to check. Then my next question is can we see some performance numbers? These things are always trade-off between performance and ease of use, but would be good to know roughly what we are looking at vs a native XDP bridge functionality. Do you have a use case for a static bridge setup? Nothing wrong to stage things IMO if the 'real' use case needs learning and filtering. I guess to get STP working you would minimally need learning and aging? Thanks, John