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author | Jesse Gross <jesse@nicira.com> | 2010-10-20 17:56:06 +0400 |
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committer | David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> | 2010-10-21 12:26:53 +0400 |
commit | 3701e51382a026cba10c60b03efabe534fba4ca4 (patch) | |
tree | 9f205d8ad0edf65b4405d9b60cb65f3cd8e44ae4 /Documentation/email-clients.txt | |
parent | 65ac6a5fa658b90f1be700c55e7cd72e4611015d (diff) | |
download | linux-3701e51382a026cba10c60b03efabe534fba4ca4.tar.xz |
vlan: Centralize handling of hardware acceleration.
Currently each driver that is capable of vlan hardware acceleration
must be aware of the vlan groups that are configured and then pass
the stripped tag to a specialized receive function. This is
different from other types of hardware offload in that it places a
significant amount of knowledge in the driver itself rather keeping
it in the networking core.
This makes vlan offloading function more similarly to other forms
of offloading (such as checksum offloading or TSO) by doing the
following:
* On receive, stripped vlans are passed directly to the network
core, without attempting to check for vlan groups or reconstructing
the header if no group
* vlans are made less special by folding the logic into the main
receive routines
* On transmit, the device layer will add the vlan header in software
if the hardware doesn't support it, instead of spreading that logic
out in upper layers, such as bonding.
There are a number of advantages to this:
* Fixes all bugs with drivers incorrectly dropping vlan headers at once.
* Avoids having to disable VLAN acceleration when in promiscuous mode
(good for bridging since it always puts devices in promiscuous mode).
* Keeps VLAN tag separate until given to ultimate consumer, which
avoids needing to do header reconstruction as in tg3 unless absolutely
necessary.
* Consolidates common code in core networking.
Signed-off-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@nicira.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/email-clients.txt')
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