On 6/1/2021 3:10 PM, Ilya Maximets wrote:
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On 6/1/21 1:14 PM, Ivan Malov wrote:
By its very name, action PORT_ID means that packets hit an ethdev with the
given DPDK port ID. At least the current comments don't state the opposite.
That said, since port representors had been adopted, applications like OvS
have been misusing the action. They misread its purpose as sending packets
to the opposite end of the "wire" plugged to the given ethdev, for example,
redirecting packets to the VF itself rather than to its representor ethdev.
Another example: OvS relies on this action with the admin PF's ethdev port
ID specified in it in order to send offloaded packets to the physical port.

Since there might be applications which use this action in its valid sense,
one can't just change the documentation to greenlight the opposite meaning.
This patch adds an explicit bit to the action configuration which will let
applications, depending on their needs, leverage the two meanings properly.
Applications like OvS, as well as PMDs, will have to be corrected when the
patch has been applied. But the improved clarity of the action is worth it.

The proposed change is not the only option. One could avoid changes in OvS
and PMDs if the new configuration field had the opposite meaning, with the
action itself meaning delivery to the represented port and not to DPDK one.
Alternatively, one could define a brand new action with the said behaviour.

It doesn't make any sense to attach the VF itself to OVS, but only its representor.

For the PF, when in switchdev mode, it is the "uplink representor", so it is also a representor.

That said, OVS does not care of the type of the port. It doesn't matter if it's an "upstream" or not, or if it's a representor or not.


We had already very similar discussions regarding the understanding of what
the representor really is from the DPDK API's point of view, and the last
time, IIUC, it was concluded by a tech. board that representor should be
a "ghost of a VF", i.e. DPDK APIs should apply configuration by default to
VF and not to the representor device:
   
https://patches.dpdk.org/project/dpdk/cover/20191029185051.32203-1-tho...@monjalon.net/#104376
This wasn't enforced though, IIUC, for existing code and semantics is still 
mixed.
I am not sure how this is related.

I still think that configuration should be applied to VF, and the same applies
to rte_flow API.  IMHO, average application should not care if device is
a VF itself or its representor.  Everything should work exactly the same.
I think this matches with the original idea/design of the switchdev 
functionality
in the linux kernel and also matches with how the average user thinks about
representor devices.
Right. This is the way representors work. It is fully aligned with configuration of OVS-kernel.

If some specific use-case requires to distinguish VF from the representor,
there should probably be a separate special API/flag for that.

Best regards, Ilya Maximets.

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