Re: [PATCH net-next 0/7] ynl: add ignore-index flag for indexed-array
From: Jakub Kicinski
Date: Thu Oct 23 2025 - 20:03:44 EST
On Thu, 23 Oct 2025 18:37:09 +0000 Asbjørn Sloth Tønnesen wrote:
> > C code already does this, right? We just collect the attributes
> > completely ignoring the index.
>
> In the userspace C code, for sub-type nest the index is preserved
> in struct member idx, and elided for other sub-types.
I see it now, I guess I added it for get but forgot to obey it
for put :(
> > So why do we need to extend the spec.
>
> For me it's mostly the naming "indexed-array". Earlier it was
> "array-nest", then we renamed it to "indexed-array" because
> it doesn't always contain nests. I think it's counter-intuitive
> to elide the index by default, for something called "indexed-array".
> The majority of the families using it don't care about the index.
>
> What if we called it "ordered-array", and then always counted from 1
> (for families that cares) when packing in user-space code?
>
> > Have you found any case where the index matters and can be
> > non-contiguous (other than the known TC kerfuffle).
>
> IFLA_OFFLOAD_XSTATS_HW_S_INFO could be re-defined as a nest,
> IFLA_OFFLOAD_XSTATS_L3_STATS is the only index atm.
Isn't that pretty much always true? If the index is significant
the whole thing could be redefined as a nest, with names provided
in the spec?
> IFLA_INET_CONF / IFLA_INET6_CONF is on input, but those are
> also special by having different types depending on direction.
>
> I found a bunch of other ones, using a static index, but they
> can also be defined as a multi-attr wrapped in an additional
> outer nest, like IFLA_VF_VLAN_LIST already is.
Multi-attr with an outer nest should at least solve your wg problem
I guess? If all the attrs have type of 0 we can make it a multi-attr.
> > FWIW another concept is what TypeValue does.
> > "Inject" the index into the child nest as an extra member.
> > Most flexible but also prolly a PITA for user space to init those
> > for requests.
>
> Same as is done in the userspace C code for indexed-arrays with
> sub-type nest. For most families it doesn't matter if the C code
> inits the index or not.