Currently, the interfaces of the Mellanox Spectrum Switch QSFP ports
are all labeled eth*. Their order doesn't match the faceplate and is
different for each model.
They could be named during boot, but this isn't sufficient because they
support port splitting. After such ports are split, their port naming
begins again with eth*, and the same is true after they are unsplit again.
A hotplug script is used here that reads from the sysfs file
phys_port_name, which contains p1, p2, p3, ... for unsplit ports
and p1s0, p1s1, p1s2 for split ports.
Signed-off-by: Til Kaiser <mail@tk154.de>
Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/17251
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
Use the kernel's built-in formula for computing this value.
The value applied by OpenWRT's sysctl configuration file does not scale
with the available memory, under-using hardware capabilities.
Also, that formula also influences net.netfilter.nf_conntrack_buckets,
which should improve conntrack performance in average (fewer connections
per hashtable bucket).
Backport upstream commit for its effect on the number of connections per
hashtable bucket.
Apply a hack patch to set the RAM size divisor to a more reasonable value (2048,
down from 16384) for our use case, a typical router handling several thousands
of connections.
Signed-off-by: Vincent Pelletier <plr.vincent@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rui Salvaterra <rsalvaterra@gmail.com>
The link equalizer sch_teql.ko of package kmod-sched relies on a hotplug
script historically included in iproute2's tc package. In previous
discussion [1], consensus was the hotplug script is best located together
with the module in kmod-sched, but this change was deferred at the time.
Relocate the hotplug script now. This change also simplifies adding a tc
variant for minimal size with reduced functionality.
[1] https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/1627#issuecomment-447923636
Signed-off-by: Tony Ambardar <itugrok@yahoo.com>
After kernel 4.9 has been removed, this removes all (now obsolete)
kernel version switches that deal with versions before 4.14.
Package kmod-crypto-iv is empty now and thus removed entirely.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This adds support for BBR (Bottleneck Bandwidth and RTT) TCP
congestion control. Applications (e.g. webservers, VPN client/server)
which initiate connections from router side can benefit from this.
This provide an easier way for users to use BBR by selecting /
installing kmod-tcp-bbr instead of altering kernel config and
compiling firmware by themselves.
Signed-off-by: Keith Wong <keithwky@gmail.com>