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3 Commits
Author | SHA1 | Message | Date | |
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Jacob Keller
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109aba47ca |
ice: introduce ice_vf_lib.c, ice_vf_lib.h, and ice_vf_lib_private.h
Introduce the ice_vf_lib.c file along with the ice_vf_lib.h and ice_vf_lib_private.h header files. These files will house the generic VF structures and access functions. Move struct ice_vf and its dependent definitions into this new header file. The ice_vf_lib.c is compiled conditionally on CONFIG_PCI_IOV. Some of its functionality is required by all driver files. However, some of its functionality will only be required by other files also conditionally compiled based on CONFIG_PCI_IOV. Declaring these functions used only in CONFIG_PCI_IOV files in ice_vf_lib.h is verbose. This is because we must provide a fallback implementation for each function in this header since it is included in files which may not be compiled with CONFIG_PCI_IOV. Instead, introduce a new ice_vf_lib_private.h header which verifies that CONFIG_PCI_IOV is enabled. This header is intended to be directly included in .c files which are CONFIG_PCI_IOV only. Add a #error indication that will complain if the file ever gets included by another C file on a kernel with CONFIG_PCI_IOV disabled. Add a comment indicating the nature of the file and why it is useful. This makes it so that we can easily define functions exposed from ice_vf_lib.c into other virtualization files without needing to add fallback implementations for every single function. This begins the path to separate out generic code which will be reused by other virtualization implementations from ice_sriov.h and ice_sriov.c Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.e.keller@intel.com> Tested-by: Konrad Jankowski <konrad0.jankowski@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Nguyen <anthony.l.nguyen@intel.com> |
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Qi Zhang
|
d6218317e2 |
ice: Check FDIR program status for AVF
Enable returning FDIR completion status by checking the ctrl_vsi Rx queue descriptor value. To enable returning FDIR completion status from ctrl_vsi Rx queue, COMP_Queue and COMP_Report of FDIR filter programming descriptor needs to be properly configured. After program request sent to ctrl_vsi Tx queue, ctrl_vsi Rx queue interrupt will be triggered and completion status will be returned. Driver will first issue request in ice_vc_fdir_add_fltr(), then pass FDIR context to the background task in interrupt service routine ice_vc_fdir_irq_handler() and finally deal with them in ice_flush_fdir_ctx(). ice_flush_fdir_ctx() will check the descriptor's value, fdir context, and then send back virtual channel message to VF by calling ice_vc_add_fdir_fltr_post(). An additional timer will be setup in case of hardware interrupt timeout. Signed-off-by: Yahui Cao <yahui.cao@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jesse Brandeburg <jesse.brandeburg@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Qi Zhang <qi.z.zhang@intel.com> Tested-by: Chen Bo <BoX.C.Chen@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Nguyen <anthony.l.nguyen@intel.com> |
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Qi Zhang
|
1f7ea1cd6a |
ice: Enable FDIR Configure for AVF
The virtual channel is going to be extended to support FDIR and RSS configure from AVF. New data structures and OP codes will be added, the patch enable the FDIR part. To support above advanced AVF feature, we need to figure out what kind of data structure should be passed from VF to PF to describe an FDIR rule or RSS config rule. The common part of the requirement is we need a data structure to represent the input set selection of a rule's hash key. An input set selection is a group of fields be selected from one or more network protocol layers that could be identified as a specific flow. For example, select dst IP address from an IPv4 header combined with dst port from the TCP header as the input set for an IPv4/TCP flow. The patch adds a new data structure virtchnl_proto_hdrs to abstract a network protocol headers group which is composed of layers of network protocol header(virtchnl_proto_hdr). A protocol header contains a 32 bits mask (field_selector) to describe which fields are selected as input sets, as well as a header type (enum virtchnl_proto_hdr_type). Each bit is mapped to a field in enum virtchnl_proto_hdr_field guided by its header type. +------------+-----------+------------------------------+ | | Proto Hdr | Header Type A | | | +------------------------------+ | | | BIT 31 | ... | BIT 1 | BIT 0 | | |-----------+------------------------------+ |Proto Hdrs | Proto Hdr | Header Type B | | | +------------------------------+ | | | BIT 31 | ... | BIT 1 | BIT 0 | | |-----------+------------------------------+ | | Proto Hdr | Header Type C | | | +------------------------------+ | | | BIT 31 | ... | BIT 1 | BIT 0 | | |-----------+------------------------------+ | | .... | +-------------------------------------------------------+ All fields in enum virtchnl_proto_hdr_fields are grouped with header type and the value of the first field of a header type is always 32 aligned. enum proto_hdr_type { header_type_A = 0; header_type_B = 1; .... } enum proto_hdr_field { /* header type A */ header_A_field_0 = 0, header_A_field_1 = 1, header_A_field_2 = 2, header_A_field_3 = 3, /* header type B */ header_B_field_0 = 32, // = header_type_B << 5 header_B_field_0 = 33, header_B_field_0 = 34 header_B_field_0 = 35, .... }; So we have: proto_hdr_type = proto_hdr_field / 32 bit offset = proto_hdr_field % 32 To simply the protocol header's operations, couple help macros are added. For example, to select src IP and dst port as input set for an IPv4/UDP flow. we have: struct virtchnl_proto_hdr hdr[2]; VIRTCHNL_SET_PROTO_HDR_TYPE(&hdr[0], IPV4) VIRTCHNL_ADD_PROTO_HDR_FIELD(&hdr[0], IPV4, SRC) VIRTCHNL_SET_PROTO_HDR_TYPE(&hdr[1], UDP) VIRTCHNL_ADD_PROTO_HDR_FIELD(&hdr[1], UDP, DST) The byte array is used to store the protocol header of a training package. The byte array must be network order. The patch added virtual channel support for iAVF FDIR add/validate/delete filter. iAVF FDIR is Flow Director for Intel Adaptive Virtual Function which can direct Ethernet packets to the queues of the Network Interface Card. Add/delete command is adding or deleting one rule for each virtual channel message, while validate command is just verifying if this rule is valid without any other operations. To add or delete one rule, driver needs to config TCAM and Profile, build training packets which contains the input set value, and send the training packets through FDIR Tx queue. In addition, driver needs to manage the software context to avoid adding duplicated rules, deleting non-existent rule, input set conflicts and other invalid cases. NOTE: Supported pattern/actions and their parse functions are not be included in this patch, they will be added in a separate one. Signed-off-by: Jeff Guo <jia.guo@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Yahui Cao <yahui.cao@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Simei Su <simei.su@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Beilei Xing <beilei.xing@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Qi Zhang <qi.z.zhang@intel.com> Tested-by: Chen Bo <BoX.C.Chen@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Nguyen <anthony.l.nguyen@intel.com> |