forked from Minki/linux
47d75f7822
Similar to the port-based default priority, IEEE 802.1Q-2018 allows the Application Priority Table to define QoS classes (0 to 7) per IP DSCP value (0 to 63). In the absence of an app table entry for a packet with DSCP value X, QoS classification for that packet falls back to other methods (VLAN PCP or port-based default). The presence of an app table for DSCP value X with priority Y makes the hardware classify the packet to QoS class Y. As opposed to the default-prio where DSA exposes only a "set" in dsa_switch_ops (because the port-based default is the fallback, it always exists, either implicitly or explicitly), for DSCP priorities we expose an "add" and a "del". The addition of a DSCP entry means trusting that DSCP priority, the deletion means ignoring it. Drivers that already trust (at least some) DSCP values can describe their configuration in dsa_switch_ops :: port_get_dscp_prio(), which is called for each DSCP value from 0 to 63. Again, there can be more than one dcbnl app table entry for the same DSCP value, DSA chooses the one with the largest configured priority. Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> |
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.. | ||
dsa2.c | ||
dsa_priv.h | ||
dsa.c | ||
Kconfig | ||
Makefile | ||
master.c | ||
port.c | ||
slave.c | ||
switch.c | ||
tag_8021q.c | ||
tag_ar9331.c | ||
tag_brcm.c | ||
tag_dsa.c | ||
tag_gswip.c | ||
tag_hellcreek.c | ||
tag_ksz.c | ||
tag_lan9303.c | ||
tag_mtk.c | ||
tag_ocelot_8021q.c | ||
tag_ocelot.c | ||
tag_qca.c | ||
tag_rtl4_a.c | ||
tag_rtl8_4.c | ||
tag_sja1105.c | ||
tag_trailer.c | ||
tag_xrs700x.c |