Fri, Jun 29, 2018 at 12:25:53AM CEST, xiyou.wangc...@gmail.com wrote: >On Thu, Jun 28, 2018 at 6:10 AM Jiri Pirko <j...@resnulli.us> wrote: >> Add a template of type flower allowing to insert rules matching on last >> 2 bytes of destination mac address: >> # tc chaintemplate add dev dummy0 ingress proto ip flower dst_mac >> 00:00:00:00:00:00/00:00:00:00:FF:FF >> >> The template is now showed in the list: >> # tc chaintemplate show dev dummy0 ingress >> chaintemplate flower chain 0 >> dst_mac 00:00:00:00:00:00/00:00:00:00:ff:ff >> eth_type ipv4 >> >> Add another template, this time for chain number 22: >> # tc chaintemplate add dev dummy0 ingress proto ip chain 22 flower dst_ip >> 0.0.0.0/16 >> # tc chaintemplate show dev dummy0 ingress >> chaintemplate flower chain 0 >> dst_mac 00:00:00:00:00:00/00:00:00:00:ff:ff >> eth_type ipv4 >> chaintemplate flower chain 22 >> eth_type ipv4 >> dst_ip 0.0.0.0/16 > >So, if I want to check the template of a chain, I have to use >'tc chaintemplate... chain X'. > >If I want to check the filters in a chain, I have to use >'tc filter show .... chain X'. > >If you introduce 'tc chain', it would just need one command: >`tc chain show ... X` which could list its template first and >followed by filters in this chain, something like: > ># tc chain show dev eth0 chain X >template: # could be none >.... >filter1 >... >filter2 >... > >Isn't it more elegant?
Well, that is just another iproute2 command. It would use the same kernel uapi. Filters+templates. Sure, why not. Can be easily introduced. Let's do it in a follow-up iproute2 patch.