On Fri, Oct 21, 2022 at 08:47:42AM +0200, netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > On 2022-10-21 00:57, Vladimir Oltean wrote: > > On Thu, Oct 20, 2022 at 10:20:50PM +0200, netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > wrote: > > > In general locked ports block traffic from a host based on if there > > > is a > > > FDB entry or not. In the non-offloaded case, there is only CPU > > > assisted > > > learning, so the normal learning mechanism has to be disabled as any > > > learned entry will open the port for the learned MAC,vlan. > > > > Does it have to be that way? Why can't BR_LEARNING on a BR_PORT_LOCKED > > cause the learned FDB entries to have BR_FDB_LOCKED, and everything > > would be ok in that case (the port will not be opened for the learned > > MAC/VLAN)? > > I suppose you are right that basing it solely on BR_FDB_LOCKED is possible. > > The question is then maybe if the common case where you don't need learned > entries for the scheme to work, e.g. with EAPOL link local packets, requires > less CPU load to work and is cleaner than if using BR_FDB_LOCKED entries? I suppose the real question is what does the bridge currently do with BR_LEARNING + BR_PORT_LOCKED, and if that is sane and useful in any case? It isn't a configuration that's rejected, for sure. The configuration could be rejected via a bug fix patch, then in net-next it could be made to learn these addresses with the BR_FDB_LOCKED flag. To your question regarding the common case (no MAB): that can be supported just fine when BR_LEARNING is off and BR_PORT_LOCKED is on, no? No BR_FDB_LOCKED entries will be learned.