On Fri, Aug 12, 2022 at 02:29:48PM +0200, netdev@kapio-technology.com wrote:
On 2022-08-11 13:28, Ido Schimmel wrote:
I'm talking about roaming, not forwarding. Let's say you have a locked entry with MAC X pointing to port Y. Now you get a packet with SMAC X from port Z which is unlocked. Will the FDB entry roam to port Z? I think it should, but at least in current implementation it seems that the "locked" flag will not be reset and having locked entries pointing to an unlocked port looks like a bug.
In general I have been thinking that the said setup is a network configuration error as I was arguing in an earlier conversation with Vladimir. In this setup we must remember that SMAC X becomes DMAC X in the return traffic on the open port. But the question arises to me why MAC X would be behind the locked port without getting authed while being behind an open port too? In a real life setup, I don't think you would want random hosts behind a locked port in the MAB case, but only the hosts you will let through. Other hosts should be regarded as intruders.
If we are talking about a station move, then the locked entry will age out and MAC X will function normally on the open port after the timeout, which was a case that was taken up in earlier discussions.
But I will anyhow do some testing with this 'edge case' (of being behind both a locked and an unlocked port) if I may call it so, and see to that the offloaded and non-offloaded cases correspond to each other, and will work satisfactory.
It would be best to implement these as additional test cases in the current selftest. Then you can easily test with both veth pairs and loopbacks and see that the hardware and software data paths behave the same.
I think it will be good to have a flag to enable the mac-auth/MAB feature, and I suggest just calling the flag 'mab', as it is short.
Fine by me, but I'm not sure everyone agrees.
Otherwise I don't see any major issues with the whole feature as it is.
Will review and test the next version.
Thanks