On 1/11/2022 10:43, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
On Tue, 11 Jan 2022 10:33:39 -0600 Limonciello, Mario wrote:
If you end up having only your pass through MAC used for Windows and
UEFI your hoteling system might not work properly if your corporation
also supports employees to use Linux and this feature was removed from
the kernel.
Right, I think the utility of the feature is clear now. Let me clarify
what I was after -
Thanks, I was looped into this thread late so I didn't have any context.
You prompted me to look at this patch series on patchwork.
We talked about this when the initial patch series was developed and the
intention was to align what Windows does. That means that all dongles
or docks with the appropriate effuse blown take the same pass through
address.
Anything else and you lose the element of predictability and all those
use cases I mentioned stop working.
I was wondering which component is responsible for
the address inheritance in Windows or UEFI.
The Realtek driver for Windows and the Realtek DXE for UEFI.
Is it also hardcoded into
the realtek driver or is there a way to export the ACPI information to
the network management component?
On Windows there is no indication outside of the driver that this
feature has been used. It's "invisible" to the user.
Also knowing how those OSes handle the new docks which don't have
unique device IDs would obviously be great..
I'm sorry, can you give me some more context on this? What unique
device IDs?