Andrew Lunn writes:
> So the ports look like normal ports, and you configure then using the
> normal mechanisms.
>
> DSA does not use vlans. It uses an additional protocol header which
> the switch supports, to allow the CPU to direct packets out a specific
> port. Similarly, packets coming to th
On Sat, May 30, 2015 at 02:09:55PM +0200, Bjørn Mork wrote:
> Andrew Lunn writes:
>
> > Some boards have two CPU interfaces connected to the switch, e.g. WiFi
> > access points, with 1 port labeled WAN, 4 ports labeled lan1-lan4, and
> > two port connected to the SoC.
> >
> > This patch extends D
2015-05-30 15:09 GMT+03:00 Bjørn Mork :
> Andrew Lunn writes:
>
>> Some boards have two CPU interfaces connected to the switch, e.g. WiFi
>> access points, with 1 port labeled WAN, 4 ports labeled lan1-lan4, and
>> two port connected to the SoC.
>>
>> This patch extends DSA to allows both CPU port
Andrew Lunn writes:
> Some boards have two CPU interfaces connected to the switch, e.g. WiFi
> access points, with 1 port labeled WAN, 4 ports labeled lan1-lan4, and
> two port connected to the SoC.
>
> This patch extends DSA to allows both CPU ports to be used. The "cpu"
> node in the DSA tree c
Some boards have two CPU interfaces connected to the switch, e.g. WiFi
access points, with 1 port labeled WAN, 4 ports labeled lan1-lan4, and
two port connected to the SoC.
This patch extends DSA to allows both CPU ports to be used. The "cpu"
node in the DSA tree can now have a phandle to the host