On Mon, 21 Aug 2017 17:15:42 +0800, Yang, Yi wrote: > The issue is it is used union in > > struct nsh_hdr { > ovs_be16 ver_flags_ttl_len; > uint8_t md_type; > uint8_t next_proto; > ovs_16aligned_be32 path_hdr; > union { > struct nsh_md1_ctx md1; > struct nsh_md2_tlv md2; > }; > };
This should work (modulo the non-kernel type names, of course). Did you mean to put [] after md2? > in Linux kernel build, it complained it, I changed it to What was the error message? > struct nsh_hdr { > ovs_be16 ver_flags_ttl_len; > uint8_t md_type; > uint8_t next_proto; > ovs_16aligned_be32 path_hdr; > union { > struct nsh_md1_ctx md1; > struct nsh_md2_tlv md2[0]; > }; > }; I wouldn't use this. First, zero length array is a GCC extension. It would indeed be better not to use that in uAPI. Second, I wouldn't even use a flexible array member here, see my reply to Jan for the reasons. Note that I commented on struct nsh_md2_tlv having __u8[] as the last member which IMHO makes good sense. I'm not entirely sure what C99 says about flexible array member being part of a struct inside union inside a struct, though. GCC seems to cope with that just fine but AFAIK it has some extension over the C standard wrt. flexible array members. > I don't know how we can support this, is it a must-have thing? What would happen if you get a GSO packet? Ports of an ovs bridge claim GSO support, thus they may get a GSO packet. You have to handle it one way or the other: either software segment the packet before pushing the header, or implement proper GSO support for NSH. > But struct nsh_hdr had different struct from struct ovs_key_nsh, we > have no way to make them completely same, do you mean we should use the > same name if they are same fields and represent the same thing? Yes. Thanks, Jiri