> It fails to decode the frames, obviously. But so does any other EtherType.
> Florian was hinting > (https://lwn.net/ml/netdev/b52f4cdf-edcf-0757-1d6e-d4a831ec7...@gmail.com/) > at the recent pull requests submitted to tcpdump and libpcap that make > it possible to decode based on the string in > /sys/class/net/${master}/dsa/tagging. I admit I haven't actually > tested or studied those closely yet (there are more important things > to focus on ATM), but since my driver returns "8021q" in sysfs and > yours returns "edsa", I would presume tcpdump could use that > information. No it does not. It is a valid EtherType, that is what is used to trigger the decoding, it takes no notice of what is in /sys/class/net/${master}/dsa/tagging, nor the extra meta-data added to the pcap file. There is no need. you can identify it is a Marvell EDSA header from the EtherType. In fact, this tcpdump code for decoding EDSA pre-dated Florians patches by a few years. You only need the code which Florian added when you cannot identify the header directly from the packet. And that is true for most of the tagging protocols. But EDSA you can. > Anyway, since you obviously know more on this topic than I do, > please make me understand what are the real problems in spoofing the > Ethertype as a Marvell one. Despite there being an EDSA EtherType in the frame, what follows is not an ESDA header. It is like having the IPv4 EtherType but what following is not an IP header. Broken. Andrew