Good day. Tue, Mar 13, 2007 at 08:50:29AM +0300, Eygene Ryabinkin wrote:
> Sure. And that is why all switches that can bear the IP on their > interfaces have distinct MACs for each interface or/and the only > one interface can have the IP. And that is why I am going to > add the paragraph to the if_bridge(4) describing the current situation > and giving advice on the setting IP for the bridge members and the > bridge itself. Will provide the patch in a day or two. OK, the patch to the if_bridge.4 is attached. It is rather lengthy, but I don't know how to make it clear with less amount of words. Comments are welcome. -- Eygene
--- if_bridge.4.orig Sun Mar 4 15:37:22 2007 +++ if_bridge.4 Sat Mar 17 22:18:52 2007 @@ -219,9 +219,67 @@ so all packets are passed to the filter for processing. .Pp -Note that packets to and from the bridging host will be seen by the -filter on the interface with the appropriate address configured as well -as on the interface on which the packet arrives or departs. +The packets originating from the bridging host will be seen by +the filter on the interface that is looked up in the routing +table according to the packet destination address (not the MAC +address). +.Pp +The packets destined to the bridging host will be seen by the filter +on the interface with the MAC address equal to the packet's destination +MAC. Be prepated to the situation when some of the bridge members are sharing +the same MAC address (for example the +.Xr if_vlan 4 +interfaces: they are currenly sharing the +MAC address of the parent physical interface). It is not possible +to distinguish between these interfaces using their MAC address, +excluding the case when the packet's destination MAC address is +equal to the MAC address of the interface on which the packet was +entered to the system. In this case the filter will see the incoming +packet on this interface. In all other cases the interface seen +by the packet filter is almost randomly chosen from the list of +bridge members with the same MAC address. +.Pp +The previous paragraph is best illustrated with the following +pictures. Let the MAC address of the incoming packet's destination will be +.Nm nn:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn , +the interface on which packet entered the system is +.Nm vlanX +with the MAC address +.Nm xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx +and the bridge has more than one interface that are sharing the +same MAC address +.Nm yy:yy:yy:yy:yy:yy ; +we will call them +.Nm vlanY1 , +.Nm vlanY2 , +etc. Then if MAC address +.Nm nn:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn +is equal to the +.Nm xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx +then the filter will see the packet on the interface +.Nm vlanX +no matter if there are some other bridge members carrying the same +MAC address. But if the MAC address +.Nm nn:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn +is equal to the +.Nm yy:yy:yy:yy:yy:yy +then the interface that will be seen by the filter is some of the +.Nm vlanYn , +but it is not possible to know the name of the actual interface +without the knowledge of the system state and the +.Nm if_bridge +implementation details. +.Pp +This problem arises for any bridge members that are sharing the same +MAC address, not only to the +.Xr if_vlan 4 +ones: they we taken just as the example of such situation. So if one wants +the filter the locally destined packets based on their interface name, +he should be aware of this implication. Such situation will appear on the +filtering bridges that are doing IP-forwarding; in this case it is better +to assign the IP address only to the +.Nm if_bridge +interface and not to the bridge members. But your mileage may vary. .Sh EXAMPLES The following when placed in the file .Pa /etc/rc.conf
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