etherswitchcfg
—
configure a built-in Ethernet switch
etherswitchcfg |
[-f control file ]
info |
etherswitchcfg |
[-f control file ] config
command parameter |
etherswitchcfg |
[-f control file ] phy
phy.register[=value] |
etherswitchcfg |
[-f control file ] port%d
[flags] command parameter |
etherswitchcfg |
[-f control file ] reg
register[=value] |
etherswitchcfg |
[-f control file ]
vlangroup%d command
parameter |
The etherswitchcfg
utility is used to configure an
Ethernet switch built into the system. etherswitchcfg
accepts a number of options:
-f
control file
- Specifies the
etherswitch(4)
control file that represents the switch to be configured. It defaults to
/dev/etherswitch0.
-m
- When reporting port information, also list available media options for
that port.
-v
- Produce more verbose output. Without this flag, lines that represent
inactive or empty configuration options are omitted.
The config command provides access to global switch configuration parameters. It
support the following commands:
vlan_mode
mode
- Sets the switch VLAN mode (depends on the hardware).
The phy command provides access to the registers of the PHYs attached to or
integrated into the switch controller. PHY registers are specified as
phy.register, where phy is usually the port number, and
register is the register number. Both can be provided as
decimal, octal or hexadecimal numbers in any of the formats understood by
strtol(3).
To set the register value, use the form instance.register=value.
The port command selects one of the ports of the switch. It supports the
following commands:
pvid
number
- Sets the default port VID that is used to process incoming frames that are
not tagged.
media
mediaspec
- Specifies the physical media configuration to be configured for a
port.
mediaopt
mediaoption
- Specifies a list of media options for a port. See
ifconfig(8)
for details on
media
and
mediaopt
.
led
number style
- Sets the display style for a given LED. Available styles are:
default
(usually flash on activity),
on
, off
, and
blink
. Not all switches will support all
styles.
And the following flags (please note that not all flags are
supported by all switch drivers):
addtag
- Add VLAN tag to each packet sent by the port.
-addtag
- Disable the add VLAN tag option.
striptag
- Strip the VLAN tags from the packets sent by the port.
-striptag
- Disable the strip VLAN tag option.
firstlock
- This options makes the switch port lock on the first MAC address it sees.
After that, usually you need to reset the switch to learn different MAC
addresses.
-firstlock
- Disable the first lock option. Note that sometimes you need to reset the
switch to really disable this option.
droptagged
- Drop packets with a VLAN tag.
-droptagged
- Disable the drop tagged packets option.
dropuntagged
- Drop packets without a VLAN tag.
-dropuntagged
- Disable the drop untagged packets option.
doubletag
- Enable QinQ for the port.
-doubletag
- Disable QinQ for the port.
ingress
- Enable the ingress filter on the port.
-ingress
- Disable the ingress filter.
The reg command provides access to the registers of the switch controller.
The vlangroup command selects one of the VLAN groups for configuration. It
supports the following commands:
vlan
VID
- Sets the VLAN ID (802.1q VID) for this VLAN group. Frames transmitted on
tagged member ports of this group will be tagged with this VID. Incoming
frames carrying this tag will be forwarded according to the configuration
of this VLAN group.
members
port,...
- Configures which ports are to be a member of this VLAN group. The port
numbers are given as a comma-separated list. Each port can optionally be
followed by “t” to indicate that frames on this port are
tagged.
- /dev/etherswitch?
- Control file for the Ethernet switch driver.
Configure VLAN group 1 with a VID of 2 and make ports 0 and 5 its members while
excluding all other ports. Port 5 will send and receive tagged frames while
port 0 will be untagged. Incoming untagged frames on port 0 are assigned to
vlangroup1.
# etherswitchcfg vlangroup1 vlan 2
members 0,5t port0 pvid 2
etherswitchcfg
first appeared in
FreeBSD 10.0.