On Sat, Sep 2, 2017 at 6:37 PM, Tom Herbert <t...@herbertland.com> wrote: > On Sat, Sep 2, 2017 at 6:32 PM, Hannes Frederic Sowa > <han...@stressinduktion.org> wrote: >> Hi Saeed, >> >> On Sun, Sep 3, 2017, at 01:01, Saeed Mahameed wrote: >>> On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 6:51 AM, Hannes Frederic Sowa >>> <han...@stressinduktion.org> wrote: >>> > Saeed Mahameed <sae...@mellanox.com> writes: >>> > >>> >> The first patch from Gal and Ariel provides the mlx5 driver support for >>> >> ConnectX capability to perform IP version identification and matching in >>> >> order to distinguish between IPv4 and IPv6 without the need to specify >>> >> the >>> >> encapsulation type, thus perform RSS in MPLS automatically without >>> >> specifying MPLS ethertyoe. This patch will also serve for inner GRE >>> >> IPv4/6 >>> >> classification for inner GRE RSS. >>> > >>> > I don't think this is legal at all or did I misunderstood something? >>> > >>> > <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3032#section-2.2> >>> >>> It seems you misunderstood the cover letter. The HW will still >>> identify MPLS (IPv4/IPv6) packets using a new bit we specify in the HW >>> steering rules rather than adding new specific rules with {MPLS >>> ethertype} X {IPv4,IPv6} to classify MPLS IPv{4,6} traffic, Same >>> functionality a better and general way to approach it. >>> Bottom line the hardware is capable of processing MPLS headers and >>> perform RSS on the inner packet (IPv4/6) without the need of the >>> driver to provide precise steering MPLS rules. >> >> Sorry, I think I am still confused. >> >> I just want to make sure that you don't use the first nibble after the >> mpls bottom of stack label in any way as an indicator if that is an IPv4 >> or IPv6 packet by default. It can be anything. The forward equivalence >> class tells the stack which protocol you see. >> >> If you match on the first nibble behind the MPLS bottom of stack label >> the '4' or '6' respectively could be part of a MAC address with its >> first nibble being 4 or 6, because the particular pseudowire is EoMPLS >> and uses no control world. >> >> I wanted to mention it, because with addition of e.g. VPLS this could >> cause problems down the road and should at least be controllable? It is >> probably better to use Entropy Labels in future. >> > Or just use IPv6 with flow label for RSS (or MPLS/UDP, GRE/UDP if you > prefer) then all this protocol specific DPI for RSS just goes away ;-)
Hi Tom, How does MPLS/UDP or GRE/UDP RSS works without protocol specific DPI ? unlike vxlan those protocols are not over UDP and you can't just play with the outer header udp src port, or do you ? Can you elaborate ? Thanks, Saeed. > > Tom > >> Thanks, >> Hannes