freebsd-dev/sys/dev/cxgbe/t4_netmap.c

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cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
/*-
* Copyright (c) 2014 Chelsio Communications, Inc.
* All rights reserved.
* Written by: Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org>
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include "opt_inet.h"
#include "opt_inet6.h"
#ifdef DEV_NETMAP
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/eventhandler.h>
#include <sys/lock.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/mbuf.h>
#include <sys/selinfo.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/sockio.h>
#include <machine/bus.h>
#include <net/ethernet.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <net/if_media.h>
#include <net/if_var.h>
#include <net/if_clone.h>
#include <net/if_types.h>
#include <net/netmap.h>
#include <dev/netmap/netmap_kern.h>
#include "common/common.h"
#include "common/t4_regs.h"
#include "common/t4_regs_values.h"
extern int fl_pad; /* XXXNM */
extern int spg_len; /* XXXNM */
extern int fl_pktshift; /* XXXNM */
SYSCTL_NODE(_hw, OID_AUTO, cxgbe, CTLFLAG_RD, 0, "cxgbe netmap parameters");
/*
* 0 = normal netmap rx
* 1 = black hole
* 2 = supermassive black hole (buffer packing enabled)
*/
int black_hole = 0;
SYSCTL_INT(_hw_cxgbe, OID_AUTO, nm_black_hole, CTLFLAG_RDTUN, &black_hole, 0,
"Sink incoming packets.");
int rx_ndesc = 256;
SYSCTL_INT(_hw_cxgbe, OID_AUTO, nm_rx_ndesc, CTLFLAG_RWTUN,
&rx_ndesc, 0, "# of rx descriptors after which the hw cidx is updated.");
int holdoff_tmr_idx = 2;
SYSCTL_INT(_hw_cxgbe, OID_AUTO, nm_holdoff_tmr_idx, CTLFLAG_RWTUN,
&holdoff_tmr_idx, 0, "Holdoff timer index for netmap rx queues.");
/*
* Congestion drops.
* -1: no congestion feedback (not recommended).
* 0: backpressure the channel instead of dropping packets right away.
* 1: no backpressure, drop packets for the congested queue immediately.
*/
static int nm_cong_drop = 1;
TUNABLE_INT("hw.cxgbe.nm_cong_drop", &nm_cong_drop);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
/* netmap ifnet routines */
static void cxgbe_nm_init(void *);
static int cxgbe_nm_ioctl(struct ifnet *, unsigned long, caddr_t);
static int cxgbe_nm_transmit(struct ifnet *, struct mbuf *);
static void cxgbe_nm_qflush(struct ifnet *);
static int cxgbe_nm_init_synchronized(struct port_info *);
static int cxgbe_nm_uninit_synchronized(struct port_info *);
static void
cxgbe_nm_init(void *arg)
{
struct port_info *pi = arg;
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
if (begin_synchronized_op(sc, pi, SLEEP_OK | INTR_OK, "t4nminit") != 0)
return;
cxgbe_nm_init_synchronized(pi);
end_synchronized_op(sc, 0);
return;
}
static int
cxgbe_nm_init_synchronized(struct port_info *pi)
{
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
struct ifnet *ifp = pi->nm_ifp;
int rc = 0;
ASSERT_SYNCHRONIZED_OP(sc);
if (ifp->if_drv_flags & IFF_DRV_RUNNING)
return (0); /* already running */
if (!(sc->flags & FULL_INIT_DONE) &&
((rc = adapter_full_init(sc)) != 0))
return (rc); /* error message displayed already */
if (!(pi->flags & PORT_INIT_DONE) &&
((rc = port_full_init(pi)) != 0))
return (rc); /* error message displayed already */
rc = update_mac_settings(ifp, XGMAC_ALL);
if (rc)
return (rc); /* error message displayed already */
ifp->if_drv_flags |= IFF_DRV_RUNNING;
return (rc);
}
static int
cxgbe_nm_uninit_synchronized(struct port_info *pi)
{
#ifdef INVARIANTS
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
#endif
struct ifnet *ifp = pi->nm_ifp;
ASSERT_SYNCHRONIZED_OP(sc);
ifp->if_drv_flags &= ~IFF_DRV_RUNNING;
return (0);
}
static int
cxgbe_nm_ioctl(struct ifnet *ifp, unsigned long cmd, caddr_t data)
{
int rc = 0, mtu, flags;
struct port_info *pi = ifp->if_softc;
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
struct ifreq *ifr = (struct ifreq *)data;
uint32_t mask;
MPASS(pi->nm_ifp == ifp);
switch (cmd) {
case SIOCSIFMTU:
mtu = ifr->ifr_mtu;
if ((mtu < ETHERMIN) || (mtu > ETHERMTU_JUMBO))
return (EINVAL);
rc = begin_synchronized_op(sc, pi, SLEEP_OK | INTR_OK, "t4nmtu");
if (rc)
return (rc);
ifp->if_mtu = mtu;
if (ifp->if_drv_flags & IFF_DRV_RUNNING)
rc = update_mac_settings(ifp, XGMAC_MTU);
end_synchronized_op(sc, 0);
break;
case SIOCSIFFLAGS:
rc = begin_synchronized_op(sc, pi, SLEEP_OK | INTR_OK, "t4nflg");
if (rc)
return (rc);
if (ifp->if_flags & IFF_UP) {
if (ifp->if_drv_flags & IFF_DRV_RUNNING) {
flags = pi->nmif_flags;
if ((ifp->if_flags ^ flags) &
(IFF_PROMISC | IFF_ALLMULTI)) {
rc = update_mac_settings(ifp,
XGMAC_PROMISC | XGMAC_ALLMULTI);
}
} else
rc = cxgbe_nm_init_synchronized(pi);
pi->nmif_flags = ifp->if_flags;
} else if (ifp->if_drv_flags & IFF_DRV_RUNNING)
rc = cxgbe_nm_uninit_synchronized(pi);
end_synchronized_op(sc, 0);
break;
case SIOCADDMULTI:
case SIOCDELMULTI: /* these two are called with a mutex held :-( */
rc = begin_synchronized_op(sc, pi, HOLD_LOCK, "t4nmulti");
if (rc)
return (rc);
if (ifp->if_drv_flags & IFF_DRV_RUNNING)
rc = update_mac_settings(ifp, XGMAC_MCADDRS);
end_synchronized_op(sc, LOCK_HELD);
break;
case SIOCSIFCAP:
mask = ifr->ifr_reqcap ^ ifp->if_capenable;
if (mask & IFCAP_TXCSUM) {
ifp->if_capenable ^= IFCAP_TXCSUM;
ifp->if_hwassist ^= (CSUM_TCP | CSUM_UDP | CSUM_IP);
}
if (mask & IFCAP_TXCSUM_IPV6) {
ifp->if_capenable ^= IFCAP_TXCSUM_IPV6;
ifp->if_hwassist ^= (CSUM_UDP_IPV6 | CSUM_TCP_IPV6);
}
if (mask & IFCAP_RXCSUM)
ifp->if_capenable ^= IFCAP_RXCSUM;
if (mask & IFCAP_RXCSUM_IPV6)
ifp->if_capenable ^= IFCAP_RXCSUM_IPV6;
break;
case SIOCSIFMEDIA:
case SIOCGIFMEDIA:
ifmedia_ioctl(ifp, ifr, &pi->nm_media, cmd);
break;
default:
rc = ether_ioctl(ifp, cmd, data);
}
return (rc);
}
static int
cxgbe_nm_transmit(struct ifnet *ifp, struct mbuf *m)
{
m_freem(m);
return (0);
}
static void
cxgbe_nm_qflush(struct ifnet *ifp)
{
return;
}
static int
alloc_nm_rxq_hwq(struct port_info *pi, struct sge_nm_rxq *nm_rxq, int cong)
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
{
int rc, cntxt_id, i;
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
__be32 v;
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
struct netmap_adapter *na = NA(pi->nm_ifp);
struct fw_iq_cmd c;
MPASS(na != NULL);
MPASS(nm_rxq->iq_desc != NULL);
MPASS(nm_rxq->fl_desc != NULL);
bzero(nm_rxq->iq_desc, pi->qsize_rxq * IQ_ESIZE);
bzero(nm_rxq->fl_desc, na->num_rx_desc * EQ_ESIZE + spg_len);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
bzero(&c, sizeof(c));
c.op_to_vfn = htobe32(V_FW_CMD_OP(FW_IQ_CMD) | F_FW_CMD_REQUEST |
F_FW_CMD_WRITE | F_FW_CMD_EXEC | V_FW_IQ_CMD_PFN(sc->pf) |
V_FW_IQ_CMD_VFN(0));
c.alloc_to_len16 = htobe32(F_FW_IQ_CMD_ALLOC | F_FW_IQ_CMD_IQSTART |
FW_LEN16(c));
if (pi->flags & INTR_NM_RXQ) {
KASSERT(nm_rxq->intr_idx < sc->intr_count,
("%s: invalid direct intr_idx %d", __func__,
nm_rxq->intr_idx));
v = V_FW_IQ_CMD_IQANDSTINDEX(nm_rxq->intr_idx);
} else {
CXGBE_UNIMPLEMENTED(__func__); /* XXXNM: needs review */
v = V_FW_IQ_CMD_IQANDSTINDEX(nm_rxq->intr_idx) |
F_FW_IQ_CMD_IQANDST;
}
c.type_to_iqandstindex = htobe32(v |
V_FW_IQ_CMD_TYPE(FW_IQ_TYPE_FL_INT_CAP) |
V_FW_IQ_CMD_VIID(pi->nm_viid) |
V_FW_IQ_CMD_IQANUD(X_UPDATEDELIVERY_INTERRUPT));
c.iqdroprss_to_iqesize = htobe16(V_FW_IQ_CMD_IQPCIECH(pi->tx_chan) |
F_FW_IQ_CMD_IQGTSMODE |
V_FW_IQ_CMD_IQINTCNTTHRESH(0) |
V_FW_IQ_CMD_IQESIZE(ilog2(IQ_ESIZE) - 4));
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
c.iqsize = htobe16(pi->qsize_rxq);
c.iqaddr = htobe64(nm_rxq->iq_ba);
if (cong >= 0) {
c.iqns_to_fl0congen = htobe32(F_FW_IQ_CMD_IQFLINTCONGEN |
V_FW_IQ_CMD_FL0CNGCHMAP(cong) | F_FW_IQ_CMD_FL0CONGCIF |
F_FW_IQ_CMD_FL0CONGEN);
}
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
c.iqns_to_fl0congen |=
htobe32(V_FW_IQ_CMD_FL0HOSTFCMODE(X_HOSTFCMODE_NONE) |
F_FW_IQ_CMD_FL0FETCHRO | F_FW_IQ_CMD_FL0DATARO |
(fl_pad ? F_FW_IQ_CMD_FL0PADEN : 0) |
(black_hole == 2 ? F_FW_IQ_CMD_FL0PACKEN : 0));
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
c.fl0dcaen_to_fl0cidxfthresh =
htobe16(V_FW_IQ_CMD_FL0FBMIN(X_FETCHBURSTMIN_128B) |
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
V_FW_IQ_CMD_FL0FBMAX(X_FETCHBURSTMAX_512B));
c.fl0size = htobe16(na->num_rx_desc / 8 + spg_len / EQ_ESIZE);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
c.fl0addr = htobe64(nm_rxq->fl_ba);
rc = -t4_wr_mbox(sc, sc->mbox, &c, sizeof(c), &c);
if (rc != 0) {
device_printf(sc->dev,
"failed to create netmap ingress queue: %d\n", rc);
return (rc);
}
nm_rxq->iq_cidx = 0;
MPASS(nm_rxq->iq_sidx == pi->qsize_rxq - spg_len / IQ_ESIZE);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
nm_rxq->iq_gen = F_RSPD_GEN;
nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id = be16toh(c.iqid);
nm_rxq->iq_abs_id = be16toh(c.physiqid);
cntxt_id = nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id - sc->sge.iq_start;
if (cntxt_id >= sc->sge.niq) {
panic ("%s: nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id (%d) more than the max (%d)",
__func__, cntxt_id, sc->sge.niq - 1);
}
sc->sge.iqmap[cntxt_id] = (void *)nm_rxq;
nm_rxq->fl_cntxt_id = be16toh(c.fl0id);
nm_rxq->fl_pidx = nm_rxq->fl_cidx = 0;
MPASS(nm_rxq->fl_sidx == na->num_rx_desc);
cntxt_id = nm_rxq->fl_cntxt_id - sc->sge.eq_start;
if (cntxt_id >= sc->sge.neq) {
panic("%s: nm_rxq->fl_cntxt_id (%d) more than the max (%d)",
__func__, cntxt_id, sc->sge.neq - 1);
}
sc->sge.eqmap[cntxt_id] = (void *)nm_rxq;
nm_rxq->fl_db_val = F_DBPRIO | V_QID(nm_rxq->fl_cntxt_id) | V_PIDX(0);
if (is_t5(sc))
nm_rxq->fl_db_val |= F_DBTYPE;
if (is_t5(sc) && cong >= 0) {
uint32_t param, val;
param = V_FW_PARAMS_MNEM(FW_PARAMS_MNEM_DMAQ) |
V_FW_PARAMS_PARAM_X(FW_PARAMS_PARAM_DMAQ_CONM_CTXT) |
V_FW_PARAMS_PARAM_YZ(nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id);
param = V_FW_PARAMS_MNEM(FW_PARAMS_MNEM_DMAQ) |
V_FW_PARAMS_PARAM_X(FW_PARAMS_PARAM_DMAQ_CONM_CTXT) |
V_FW_PARAMS_PARAM_YZ(nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id);
if (cong == 0)
val = 1 << 19;
else {
val = 2 << 19;
for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
if (cong & (1 << i))
val |= 1 << (i << 2);
}
}
rc = -t4_set_params(sc, sc->mbox, sc->pf, 0, 1, &param, &val);
if (rc != 0) {
/* report error but carry on */
device_printf(sc->dev,
"failed to set congestion manager context for "
"ingress queue %d: %d\n", nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id, rc);
}
}
t4_write_reg(sc, MYPF_REG(A_SGE_PF_GTS),
V_INGRESSQID(nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id) |
V_SEINTARM(V_QINTR_TIMER_IDX(holdoff_tmr_idx)));
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
return (rc);
}
static int
free_nm_rxq_hwq(struct port_info *pi, struct sge_nm_rxq *nm_rxq)
{
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
int rc;
rc = -t4_iq_free(sc, sc->mbox, sc->pf, 0, FW_IQ_TYPE_FL_INT_CAP,
nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id, nm_rxq->fl_cntxt_id, 0xffff);
if (rc != 0)
device_printf(sc->dev, "%s: failed for iq %d, fl %d: %d\n",
__func__, nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id, nm_rxq->fl_cntxt_id, rc);
return (rc);
}
static int
alloc_nm_txq_hwq(struct port_info *pi, struct sge_nm_txq *nm_txq)
{
int rc, cntxt_id;
size_t len;
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
struct netmap_adapter *na = NA(pi->nm_ifp);
struct fw_eq_eth_cmd c;
MPASS(na != NULL);
MPASS(nm_txq->desc != NULL);
len = na->num_tx_desc * EQ_ESIZE + spg_len;
bzero(nm_txq->desc, len);
bzero(&c, sizeof(c));
c.op_to_vfn = htobe32(V_FW_CMD_OP(FW_EQ_ETH_CMD) | F_FW_CMD_REQUEST |
F_FW_CMD_WRITE | F_FW_CMD_EXEC | V_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_PFN(sc->pf) |
V_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_VFN(0));
c.alloc_to_len16 = htobe32(F_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_ALLOC |
F_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_EQSTART | FW_LEN16(c));
c.autoequiqe_to_viid = htobe32(F_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_AUTOEQUIQE |
F_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_AUTOEQUEQE | V_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_VIID(pi->nm_viid));
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
c.fetchszm_to_iqid =
htobe32(V_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_HOSTFCMODE(X_HOSTFCMODE_NONE) |
V_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_PCIECHN(pi->tx_chan) | F_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_FETCHRO |
V_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_IQID(sc->sge.nm_rxq[nm_txq->iqidx].iq_cntxt_id));
c.dcaen_to_eqsize = htobe32(V_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_FBMIN(X_FETCHBURSTMIN_64B) |
V_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_FBMAX(X_FETCHBURSTMAX_512B) |
V_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_EQSIZE(len / EQ_ESIZE));
c.eqaddr = htobe64(nm_txq->ba);
rc = -t4_wr_mbox(sc, sc->mbox, &c, sizeof(c), &c);
if (rc != 0) {
device_printf(pi->dev,
"failed to create netmap egress queue: %d\n", rc);
return (rc);
}
nm_txq->cntxt_id = G_FW_EQ_ETH_CMD_EQID(be32toh(c.eqid_pkd));
cntxt_id = nm_txq->cntxt_id - sc->sge.eq_start;
if (cntxt_id >= sc->sge.neq)
panic("%s: nm_txq->cntxt_id (%d) more than the max (%d)", __func__,
cntxt_id, sc->sge.neq - 1);
sc->sge.eqmap[cntxt_id] = (void *)nm_txq;
nm_txq->pidx = nm_txq->cidx = 0;
MPASS(nm_txq->sidx == na->num_tx_desc);
2014-09-09 18:36:00 +00:00
nm_txq->equiqidx = nm_txq->equeqidx = nm_txq->dbidx = 0;
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
nm_txq->doorbells = sc->doorbells;
if (isset(&nm_txq->doorbells, DOORBELL_UDB) ||
isset(&nm_txq->doorbells, DOORBELL_UDBWC) ||
isset(&nm_txq->doorbells, DOORBELL_WCWR)) {
uint32_t s_qpp = sc->sge.eq_s_qpp;
uint32_t mask = (1 << s_qpp) - 1;
volatile uint8_t *udb;
udb = sc->udbs_base + UDBS_DB_OFFSET;
udb += (nm_txq->cntxt_id >> s_qpp) << PAGE_SHIFT;
nm_txq->udb_qid = nm_txq->cntxt_id & mask;
if (nm_txq->udb_qid >= PAGE_SIZE / UDBS_SEG_SIZE)
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
clrbit(&nm_txq->doorbells, DOORBELL_WCWR);
else {
udb += nm_txq->udb_qid << UDBS_SEG_SHIFT;
nm_txq->udb_qid = 0;
}
nm_txq->udb = (volatile void *)udb;
}
return (rc);
}
static int
free_nm_txq_hwq(struct port_info *pi, struct sge_nm_txq *nm_txq)
{
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
int rc;
rc = -t4_eth_eq_free(sc, sc->mbox, sc->pf, 0, nm_txq->cntxt_id);
if (rc != 0)
device_printf(sc->dev, "%s: failed for eq %d: %d\n", __func__,
nm_txq->cntxt_id, rc);
return (rc);
}
static int
cxgbe_netmap_on(struct adapter *sc, struct port_info *pi, struct ifnet *ifp,
struct netmap_adapter *na)
{
struct netmap_slot *slot;
struct sge_nm_rxq *nm_rxq;
struct sge_nm_txq *nm_txq;
int rc, i, j, hwidx;
struct hw_buf_info *hwb;
uint16_t *rss;
ASSERT_SYNCHRONIZED_OP(sc);
if ((pi->flags & PORT_INIT_DONE) == 0 ||
(ifp->if_drv_flags & IFF_DRV_RUNNING) == 0)
return (EAGAIN);
hwb = &sc->sge.hw_buf_info[0];
for (i = 0; i < SGE_FLBUF_SIZES; i++, hwb++) {
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
if (hwb->size == NETMAP_BUF_SIZE(na))
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
break;
}
if (i >= SGE_FLBUF_SIZES) {
if_printf(ifp, "no hwidx for netmap buffer size %d.\n",
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
NETMAP_BUF_SIZE(na));
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
return (ENXIO);
}
hwidx = i;
/* Must set caps before calling netmap_reset */
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
nm_set_native_flags(na);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
for_each_nm_rxq(pi, i, nm_rxq) {
alloc_nm_rxq_hwq(pi, nm_rxq, tnl_cong(pi, nm_cong_drop));
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
nm_rxq->fl_hwidx = hwidx;
slot = netmap_reset(na, NR_RX, i, 0);
MPASS(slot != NULL); /* XXXNM: error check, not assert */
/* We deal with 8 bufs at a time */
MPASS((na->num_rx_desc & 7) == 0);
MPASS(na->num_rx_desc == nm_rxq->fl_sidx);
for (j = 0; j < nm_rxq->fl_sidx; j++) {
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
uint64_t ba;
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
PNMB(na, &slot[j], &ba);
MPASS(ba != 0);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
nm_rxq->fl_desc[j] = htobe64(ba | hwidx);
}
j = nm_rxq->fl_pidx = nm_rxq->fl_sidx - 8;
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
MPASS((j & 7) == 0);
j /= 8; /* driver pidx to hardware pidx */
wmb();
t4_write_reg(sc, MYPF_REG(A_SGE_PF_KDOORBELL),
nm_rxq->fl_db_val | V_PIDX(j));
}
for_each_nm_txq(pi, i, nm_txq) {
alloc_nm_txq_hwq(pi, nm_txq);
slot = netmap_reset(na, NR_TX, i, 0);
MPASS(slot != NULL); /* XXXNM: error check, not assert */
}
rss = malloc(pi->nm_rss_size * sizeof (*rss), M_CXGBE, M_ZERO |
M_WAITOK);
for (i = 0; i < pi->nm_rss_size;) {
for_each_nm_rxq(pi, j, nm_rxq) {
rss[i++] = nm_rxq->iq_abs_id;
if (i == pi->nm_rss_size)
break;
}
}
rc = -t4_config_rss_range(sc, sc->mbox, pi->nm_viid, 0, pi->nm_rss_size,
rss, pi->nm_rss_size);
if (rc != 0)
if_printf(ifp, "netmap rss_config failed: %d\n", rc);
free(rss, M_CXGBE);
rc = -t4_enable_vi(sc, sc->mbox, pi->nm_viid, true, true);
if (rc != 0)
if_printf(ifp, "netmap enable_vi failed: %d\n", rc);
return (rc);
}
static int
cxgbe_netmap_off(struct adapter *sc, struct port_info *pi, struct ifnet *ifp,
struct netmap_adapter *na)
{
int rc, i;
struct sge_nm_txq *nm_txq;
struct sge_nm_rxq *nm_rxq;
ASSERT_SYNCHRONIZED_OP(sc);
rc = -t4_enable_vi(sc, sc->mbox, pi->nm_viid, false, false);
if (rc != 0)
if_printf(ifp, "netmap disable_vi failed: %d\n", rc);
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
nm_clear_native_flags(na);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
for_each_nm_txq(pi, i, nm_txq) {
struct sge_qstat *spg = (void *)&nm_txq->desc[nm_txq->sidx];
/* Wait for hw pidx to catch up ... */
while (be16toh(nm_txq->pidx) != spg->pidx)
pause("nmpidx", 1);
/* ... and then for the cidx. */
while (spg->pidx != spg->cidx)
pause("nmcidx", 1);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
free_nm_txq_hwq(pi, nm_txq);
}
for_each_nm_rxq(pi, i, nm_rxq) {
free_nm_rxq_hwq(pi, nm_rxq);
}
return (rc);
}
static int
cxgbe_netmap_reg(struct netmap_adapter *na, int on)
{
struct ifnet *ifp = na->ifp;
struct port_info *pi = ifp->if_softc;
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
int rc;
rc = begin_synchronized_op(sc, pi, SLEEP_OK | INTR_OK, "t4nmreg");
if (rc != 0)
return (rc);
if (on)
rc = cxgbe_netmap_on(sc, pi, ifp, na);
else
rc = cxgbe_netmap_off(sc, pi, ifp, na);
end_synchronized_op(sc, 0);
return (rc);
}
/* How many packets can a single type1 WR carry in n descriptors */
static inline int
ndesc_to_npkt(const int n)
{
MPASS(n > 0 && n <= SGE_MAX_WR_NDESC);
return (n * 2 - 1);
}
#define MAX_NPKT_IN_TYPE1_WR (ndesc_to_npkt(SGE_MAX_WR_NDESC))
/* Space (in descriptors) needed for a type1 WR that carries n packets */
static inline int
npkt_to_ndesc(const int n)
{
MPASS(n > 0 && n <= MAX_NPKT_IN_TYPE1_WR);
return ((n + 2) / 2);
}
/* Space (in 16B units) needed for a type1 WR that carries n packets */
static inline int
npkt_to_len16(const int n)
{
MPASS(n > 0 && n <= MAX_NPKT_IN_TYPE1_WR);
return (n * 2 + 1);
}
#define NMIDXDIFF(q, idx) IDXDIFF((q)->pidx, (q)->idx, (q)->sidx)
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
static void
ring_nm_txq_db(struct adapter *sc, struct sge_nm_txq *nm_txq)
{
int n;
u_int db = nm_txq->doorbells;
MPASS(nm_txq->pidx != nm_txq->dbidx);
n = NMIDXDIFF(nm_txq, dbidx);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
if (n > 1)
clrbit(&db, DOORBELL_WCWR);
wmb();
switch (ffs(db) - 1) {
case DOORBELL_UDB:
*nm_txq->udb = htole32(V_QID(nm_txq->udb_qid) | V_PIDX(n));
break;
case DOORBELL_WCWR: {
volatile uint64_t *dst, *src;
/*
* Queues whose 128B doorbell segment fits in the page do not
* use relative qid (udb_qid is always 0). Only queues with
* doorbell segments can do WCWR.
*/
KASSERT(nm_txq->udb_qid == 0 && n == 1,
("%s: inappropriate doorbell (0x%x, %d, %d) for nm_txq %p",
__func__, nm_txq->doorbells, n, nm_txq->pidx, nm_txq));
dst = (volatile void *)((uintptr_t)nm_txq->udb +
UDBS_WR_OFFSET - UDBS_DB_OFFSET);
src = (void *)&nm_txq->desc[nm_txq->dbidx];
while (src != (void *)&nm_txq->desc[nm_txq->dbidx + 1])
*dst++ = *src++;
wmb();
break;
}
case DOORBELL_UDBWC:
*nm_txq->udb = htole32(V_QID(nm_txq->udb_qid) | V_PIDX(n));
wmb();
break;
case DOORBELL_KDB:
t4_write_reg(sc, MYPF_REG(A_SGE_PF_KDOORBELL),
V_QID(nm_txq->cntxt_id) | V_PIDX(n));
break;
}
nm_txq->dbidx = nm_txq->pidx;
}
int lazy_tx_credit_flush = 1;
/*
* Write work requests to send 'npkt' frames and ring the doorbell to send them
* on their way. No need to check for wraparound.
*/
static void
cxgbe_nm_tx(struct adapter *sc, struct sge_nm_txq *nm_txq,
struct netmap_kring *kring, int npkt, int npkt_remaining, int txcsum)
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
{
struct netmap_ring *ring = kring->ring;
struct netmap_slot *slot;
const u_int lim = kring->nkr_num_slots - 1;
struct fw_eth_tx_pkts_wr *wr = (void *)&nm_txq->desc[nm_txq->pidx];
uint16_t len;
uint64_t ba;
struct cpl_tx_pkt_core *cpl;
struct ulptx_sgl *usgl;
int i, n;
while (npkt) {
n = min(npkt, MAX_NPKT_IN_TYPE1_WR);
len = 0;
wr = (void *)&nm_txq->desc[nm_txq->pidx];
wr->op_pkd = htobe32(V_FW_WR_OP(FW_ETH_TX_PKTS_WR));
wr->equiq_to_len16 = htobe32(V_FW_WR_LEN16(npkt_to_len16(n)));
wr->npkt = n;
wr->r3 = 0;
wr->type = 1;
cpl = (void *)(wr + 1);
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
slot = &ring->slot[kring->nr_hwcur];
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
PNMB(kring->na, slot, &ba);
MPASS(ba != 0);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
cpl->ctrl0 = nm_txq->cpl_ctrl0;
cpl->pack = 0;
cpl->len = htobe16(slot->len);
/*
* netmap(4) says "netmap does not use features such as
* checksum offloading, TCP segmentation offloading,
* encryption, VLAN encapsulation/decapsulation, etc."
*
* So the ncxl interfaces have tx hardware checksumming
* disabled by default. But you can override netmap by
* enabling IFCAP_TXCSUM on the interface manully.
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
*/
cpl->ctrl1 = txcsum ? 0 :
htobe64(F_TXPKT_IPCSUM_DIS | F_TXPKT_L4CSUM_DIS);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
usgl = (void *)(cpl + 1);
usgl->cmd_nsge = htobe32(V_ULPTX_CMD(ULP_TX_SC_DSGL) |
V_ULPTX_NSGE(1));
usgl->len0 = htobe32(slot->len);
usgl->addr0 = htobe64(ba);
slot->flags &= ~(NS_REPORT | NS_BUF_CHANGED);
cpl = (void *)(usgl + 1);
MPASS(slot->len + len <= UINT16_MAX);
len += slot->len;
kring->nr_hwcur = nm_next(kring->nr_hwcur, lim);
}
wr->plen = htobe16(len);
npkt -= n;
nm_txq->pidx += npkt_to_ndesc(n);
MPASS(nm_txq->pidx <= nm_txq->sidx);
if (__predict_false(nm_txq->pidx == nm_txq->sidx)) {
/*
* This routine doesn't know how to write WRs that wrap
* around. Make sure it wasn't asked to.
*/
MPASS(npkt == 0);
nm_txq->pidx = 0;
}
if (npkt == 0 && npkt_remaining == 0) {
/* All done. */
if (lazy_tx_credit_flush == 0) {
wr->equiq_to_len16 |= htobe32(F_FW_WR_EQUEQ |
F_FW_WR_EQUIQ);
nm_txq->equeqidx = nm_txq->pidx;
nm_txq->equiqidx = nm_txq->pidx;
}
ring_nm_txq_db(sc, nm_txq);
return;
}
if (NMIDXDIFF(nm_txq, equiqidx) >= nm_txq->sidx / 2) {
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
wr->equiq_to_len16 |= htobe32(F_FW_WR_EQUEQ |
F_FW_WR_EQUIQ);
nm_txq->equeqidx = nm_txq->pidx;
nm_txq->equiqidx = nm_txq->pidx;
} else if (NMIDXDIFF(nm_txq, equeqidx) >= 64) {
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
wr->equiq_to_len16 |= htobe32(F_FW_WR_EQUEQ);
nm_txq->equeqidx = nm_txq->pidx;
}
if (NMIDXDIFF(nm_txq, dbidx) >= 2 * SGE_MAX_WR_NDESC)
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
ring_nm_txq_db(sc, nm_txq);
}
/* Will get called again. */
MPASS(npkt_remaining);
}
/* How many contiguous free descriptors starting at pidx */
static inline int
contiguous_ndesc_available(struct sge_nm_txq *nm_txq)
{
if (nm_txq->cidx > nm_txq->pidx)
return (nm_txq->cidx - nm_txq->pidx - 1);
else if (nm_txq->cidx > 0)
return (nm_txq->sidx - nm_txq->pidx);
else
return (nm_txq->sidx - nm_txq->pidx - 1);
}
static int
reclaim_nm_tx_desc(struct sge_nm_txq *nm_txq)
{
struct sge_qstat *spg = (void *)&nm_txq->desc[nm_txq->sidx];
uint16_t hw_cidx = spg->cidx; /* snapshot */
struct fw_eth_tx_pkts_wr *wr;
int n = 0;
hw_cidx = be16toh(hw_cidx);
while (nm_txq->cidx != hw_cidx) {
wr = (void *)&nm_txq->desc[nm_txq->cidx];
MPASS(wr->op_pkd == htobe32(V_FW_WR_OP(FW_ETH_TX_PKTS_WR)));
MPASS(wr->type == 1);
MPASS(wr->npkt > 0 && wr->npkt <= MAX_NPKT_IN_TYPE1_WR);
n += wr->npkt;
nm_txq->cidx += npkt_to_ndesc(wr->npkt);
/*
* We never sent a WR that wrapped around so the credits coming
* back, WR by WR, should never cause the cidx to wrap around
* either.
*/
MPASS(nm_txq->cidx <= nm_txq->sidx);
if (__predict_false(nm_txq->cidx == nm_txq->sidx))
nm_txq->cidx = 0;
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
}
return (n);
}
static int
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
cxgbe_netmap_txsync(struct netmap_kring *kring, int flags)
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
{
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
struct netmap_adapter *na = kring->na;
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
struct ifnet *ifp = na->ifp;
struct port_info *pi = ifp->if_softc;
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
struct sge_nm_txq *nm_txq = &sc->sge.nm_txq[pi->first_nm_txq + kring->ring_id];
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
const u_int head = kring->rhead;
u_int reclaimed = 0;
int n, d, npkt_remaining, ndesc_remaining, txcsum;
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
/*
* Tx was at kring->nr_hwcur last time around and now we need to advance
* to kring->rhead. Note that the driver's pidx moves independent of
* netmap's kring->nr_hwcur (pidx counts descriptors and the relation
* between descriptors and frames isn't 1:1).
*/
npkt_remaining = head >= kring->nr_hwcur ? head - kring->nr_hwcur :
kring->nkr_num_slots - kring->nr_hwcur + head;
txcsum = ifp->if_capenable & (IFCAP_TXCSUM | IFCAP_TXCSUM_IPV6);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
while (npkt_remaining) {
reclaimed += reclaim_nm_tx_desc(nm_txq);
ndesc_remaining = contiguous_ndesc_available(nm_txq);
/* Can't run out of descriptors with packets still remaining */
MPASS(ndesc_remaining > 0);
/* # of desc needed to tx all remaining packets */
d = (npkt_remaining / MAX_NPKT_IN_TYPE1_WR) * SGE_MAX_WR_NDESC;
if (npkt_remaining % MAX_NPKT_IN_TYPE1_WR)
d += npkt_to_ndesc(npkt_remaining % MAX_NPKT_IN_TYPE1_WR);
if (d <= ndesc_remaining)
n = npkt_remaining;
else {
/* Can't send all, calculate how many can be sent */
n = (ndesc_remaining / SGE_MAX_WR_NDESC) *
MAX_NPKT_IN_TYPE1_WR;
if (ndesc_remaining % SGE_MAX_WR_NDESC)
n += ndesc_to_npkt(ndesc_remaining % SGE_MAX_WR_NDESC);
}
/* Send n packets and update nm_txq->pidx and kring->nr_hwcur */
npkt_remaining -= n;
cxgbe_nm_tx(sc, nm_txq, kring, n, npkt_remaining, txcsum);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
}
MPASS(npkt_remaining == 0);
MPASS(kring->nr_hwcur == head);
MPASS(nm_txq->dbidx == nm_txq->pidx);
/*
* Second part: reclaim buffers for completed transmissions.
*/
if (reclaimed || flags & NAF_FORCE_RECLAIM || nm_kr_txempty(kring)) {
reclaimed += reclaim_nm_tx_desc(nm_txq);
kring->nr_hwtail += reclaimed;
if (kring->nr_hwtail >= kring->nkr_num_slots)
kring->nr_hwtail -= kring->nkr_num_slots;
}
nm_txsync_finalize(kring);
return (0);
}
static int
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
cxgbe_netmap_rxsync(struct netmap_kring *kring, int flags)
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
{
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
struct netmap_adapter *na = kring->na;
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
struct netmap_ring *ring = kring->ring;
struct ifnet *ifp = na->ifp;
struct port_info *pi = ifp->if_softc;
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
struct sge_nm_rxq *nm_rxq = &sc->sge.nm_rxq[pi->first_nm_rxq + kring->ring_id];
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
u_int const head = nm_rxsync_prologue(kring);
u_int n;
int force_update = (flags & NAF_FORCE_READ) || kring->nr_kflags & NKR_PENDINTR;
if (black_hole)
return (0); /* No updates ever. */
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
if (netmap_no_pendintr || force_update) {
kring->nr_hwtail = atomic_load_acq_32(&nm_rxq->fl_cidx);
kring->nr_kflags &= ~NKR_PENDINTR;
}
/* Userspace done with buffers from kring->nr_hwcur to head */
n = head >= kring->nr_hwcur ? head - kring->nr_hwcur :
kring->nkr_num_slots - kring->nr_hwcur + head;
n &= ~7U;
if (n > 0) {
u_int fl_pidx = nm_rxq->fl_pidx;
struct netmap_slot *slot = &ring->slot[fl_pidx];
uint64_t ba;
int i, dbinc = 0, hwidx = nm_rxq->fl_hwidx;
/*
* We always deal with 8 buffers at a time. We must have
* stopped at an 8B boundary (fl_pidx) last time around and we
* must have a multiple of 8B buffers to give to the freelist.
*/
MPASS((fl_pidx & 7) == 0);
MPASS((n & 7) == 0);
IDXINCR(kring->nr_hwcur, n, kring->nkr_num_slots);
IDXINCR(nm_rxq->fl_pidx, n, nm_rxq->fl_sidx);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
while (n > 0) {
for (i = 0; i < 8; i++, fl_pidx++, slot++) {
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate. Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h). In detail: 1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode. 2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial 3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical. 4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully. 5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps). A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts. Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features. This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline. A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella. MFC after: 3 days.
2014-08-16 15:00:01 +00:00
PNMB(na, slot, &ba);
MPASS(ba != 0);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
nm_rxq->fl_desc[fl_pidx] = htobe64(ba | hwidx);
slot->flags &= ~NS_BUF_CHANGED;
MPASS(fl_pidx <= nm_rxq->fl_sidx);
}
n -= 8;
if (fl_pidx == nm_rxq->fl_sidx) {
fl_pidx = 0;
slot = &ring->slot[0];
}
if (++dbinc == 8 && n >= 32) {
wmb();
t4_write_reg(sc, MYPF_REG(A_SGE_PF_KDOORBELL),
nm_rxq->fl_db_val | V_PIDX(dbinc));
dbinc = 0;
}
}
MPASS(nm_rxq->fl_pidx == fl_pidx);
if (dbinc > 0) {
wmb();
t4_write_reg(sc, MYPF_REG(A_SGE_PF_KDOORBELL),
nm_rxq->fl_db_val | V_PIDX(dbinc));
}
}
nm_rxsync_finalize(kring);
return (0);
}
/*
* Create an ifnet solely for netmap use and register it with the kernel.
*/
int
create_netmap_ifnet(struct port_info *pi)
{
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
struct netmap_adapter na;
struct ifnet *ifp;
device_t dev = pi->dev;
uint8_t mac[ETHER_ADDR_LEN];
int rc;
if (pi->nnmtxq <= 0 || pi->nnmrxq <= 0)
return (0);
MPASS(pi->nm_ifp == NULL);
/*
* Allocate a virtual interface exclusively for netmap use. Give it the
* MAC address normally reserved for use by a TOE interface. (The TOE
* driver on FreeBSD doesn't use it).
*/
rc = t4_alloc_vi_func(sc, sc->mbox, pi->tx_chan, sc->pf, 0, 1, &mac[0],
&pi->nm_rss_size, FW_VI_FUNC_OFLD, 0);
if (rc < 0) {
device_printf(dev, "unable to allocate netmap virtual "
"interface for port %d: %d\n", pi->port_id, -rc);
return (-rc);
}
pi->nm_viid = rc;
pi->nm_xact_addr_filt = -1;
ifp = if_alloc(IFT_ETHER);
if (ifp == NULL) {
device_printf(dev, "Cannot allocate netmap ifnet\n");
return (ENOMEM);
}
pi->nm_ifp = ifp;
ifp->if_softc = pi;
if_initname(ifp, is_t4(pi->adapter) ? "ncxgbe" : "ncxl",
device_get_unit(dev));
ifp->if_flags = IFF_BROADCAST | IFF_SIMPLEX | IFF_MULTICAST;
ifp->if_init = cxgbe_nm_init;
ifp->if_ioctl = cxgbe_nm_ioctl;
ifp->if_transmit = cxgbe_nm_transmit;
ifp->if_qflush = cxgbe_nm_qflush;
/*
* netmap(4) says "netmap does not use features such as checksum
* offloading, TCP segmentation offloading, encryption, VLAN
* encapsulation/decapsulation, etc."
*
* By default we comply with the statement above. But we do declare the
* ifnet capable of L3/L4 checksumming so that a user can override
* netmap and have the hardware do the L3/L4 checksums.
*/
ifp->if_capabilities = IFCAP_HWCSUM | IFCAP_JUMBO_MTU |
IFCAP_HWCSUM_IPV6;
ifp->if_capenable = 0;
ifp->if_hwassist = 0;
/* nm_media has already been setup by the caller */
ether_ifattach(ifp, mac);
/*
* Register with netmap in the kernel.
*/
bzero(&na, sizeof(na));
na.ifp = pi->nm_ifp;
na.na_flags = NAF_BDG_MAYSLEEP;
/* Netmap doesn't know about the space reserved for the status page. */
na.num_tx_desc = pi->qsize_txq - spg_len / EQ_ESIZE;
/*
* The freelist's cidx/pidx drives netmap's rx cidx/pidx. So
* num_rx_desc is based on the number of buffers that can be held in the
* freelist, and not the number of entries in the iq. (These two are
* not exactly the same due to the space taken up by the status page).
*/
na.num_rx_desc = (pi->qsize_rxq / 8) * 8;
na.nm_txsync = cxgbe_netmap_txsync;
na.nm_rxsync = cxgbe_netmap_rxsync;
na.nm_register = cxgbe_netmap_reg;
na.num_tx_rings = pi->nnmtxq;
na.num_rx_rings = pi->nnmrxq;
netmap_attach(&na); /* This adds IFCAP_NETMAP to if_capabilities */
return (0);
}
int
destroy_netmap_ifnet(struct port_info *pi)
{
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
if (pi->nm_ifp == NULL)
return (0);
netmap_detach(pi->nm_ifp);
ifmedia_removeall(&pi->nm_media);
ether_ifdetach(pi->nm_ifp);
if_free(pi->nm_ifp);
t4_free_vi(sc, sc->mbox, sc->pf, 0, pi->nm_viid);
return (0);
}
static void
handle_nm_fw6_msg(struct adapter *sc, struct ifnet *ifp,
const struct cpl_fw6_msg *cpl)
{
const struct cpl_sge_egr_update *egr;
uint32_t oq;
struct sge_nm_txq *nm_txq;
if (cpl->type != FW_TYPE_RSSCPL && cpl->type != FW6_TYPE_RSSCPL)
panic("%s: FW_TYPE 0x%x on nm_rxq.", __func__, cpl->type);
/* data[0] is RSS header */
egr = (const void *)&cpl->data[1];
oq = be32toh(egr->opcode_qid);
MPASS(G_CPL_OPCODE(oq) == CPL_SGE_EGR_UPDATE);
nm_txq = (void *)sc->sge.eqmap[G_EGR_QID(oq) - sc->sge.eq_start];
netmap_tx_irq(ifp, nm_txq->nid);
}
void
t4_nm_intr(void *arg)
{
struct sge_nm_rxq *nm_rxq = arg;
struct port_info *pi = nm_rxq->pi;
struct adapter *sc = pi->adapter;
struct ifnet *ifp = pi->nm_ifp;
struct netmap_adapter *na = NA(ifp);
struct netmap_kring *kring = &na->rx_rings[nm_rxq->nid];
struct netmap_ring *ring = kring->ring;
struct iq_desc *d = &nm_rxq->iq_desc[nm_rxq->iq_cidx];
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
uint32_t lq;
u_int n = 0, work = 0;
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
uint8_t opcode;
uint32_t fl_cidx = atomic_load_acq_32(&nm_rxq->fl_cidx);
u_int fl_credits = fl_cidx & 7;
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
while ((d->rsp.u.type_gen & F_RSPD_GEN) == nm_rxq->iq_gen) {
rmb();
lq = be32toh(d->rsp.pldbuflen_qid);
opcode = d->rss.opcode;
switch (G_RSPD_TYPE(d->rsp.u.type_gen)) {
case X_RSPD_TYPE_FLBUF:
if (black_hole != 2) {
/* No buffer packing so new buf every time */
MPASS(lq & F_RSPD_NEWBUF);
}
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
/* fall through */
case X_RSPD_TYPE_CPL:
MPASS(opcode < NUM_CPL_CMDS);
switch (opcode) {
case CPL_FW4_MSG:
case CPL_FW6_MSG:
handle_nm_fw6_msg(sc, ifp,
(const void *)&d->cpl[0]);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
break;
case CPL_RX_PKT:
ring->slot[fl_cidx].len = G_RSPD_LEN(lq) - fl_pktshift;
ring->slot[fl_cidx].flags = kring->nkr_slot_flags;
fl_cidx += (lq & F_RSPD_NEWBUF) ? 1 : 0;
fl_credits += (lq & F_RSPD_NEWBUF) ? 1 : 0;
if (__predict_false(fl_cidx == nm_rxq->fl_sidx))
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
fl_cidx = 0;
break;
default:
panic("%s: unexpected opcode 0x%x on nm_rxq %p",
__func__, opcode, nm_rxq);
}
break;
case X_RSPD_TYPE_INTR:
/* Not equipped to handle forwarded interrupts. */
panic("%s: netmap queue received interrupt for iq %u\n",
__func__, lq);
default:
panic("%s: illegal response type %d on nm_rxq %p",
__func__, G_RSPD_TYPE(d->rsp.u.type_gen), nm_rxq);
}
d++;
if (__predict_false(++nm_rxq->iq_cidx == nm_rxq->iq_sidx)) {
nm_rxq->iq_cidx = 0;
d = &nm_rxq->iq_desc[0];
nm_rxq->iq_gen ^= F_RSPD_GEN;
}
if (__predict_false(++n == rx_ndesc)) {
atomic_store_rel_32(&nm_rxq->fl_cidx, fl_cidx);
if (black_hole && fl_credits >= 8) {
fl_credits /= 8;
IDXINCR(nm_rxq->fl_pidx, fl_credits * 8,
nm_rxq->fl_sidx);
t4_write_reg(sc, MYPF_REG(A_SGE_PF_KDOORBELL),
nm_rxq->fl_db_val | V_PIDX(fl_credits));
fl_credits = fl_cidx & 7;
} else if (!black_hole) {
netmap_rx_irq(ifp, nm_rxq->nid, &work);
MPASS(work != 0);
}
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
t4_write_reg(sc, MYPF_REG(A_SGE_PF_GTS),
V_CIDXINC(n) | V_INGRESSQID(nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id) |
V_SEINTARM(V_QINTR_TIMER_IDX(X_TIMERREG_UPDATE_CIDX)));
n = 0;
}
}
atomic_store_rel_32(&nm_rxq->fl_cidx, fl_cidx);
if (black_hole) {
fl_credits /= 8;
IDXINCR(nm_rxq->fl_pidx, fl_credits * 8, nm_rxq->fl_sidx);
t4_write_reg(sc, MYPF_REG(A_SGE_PF_KDOORBELL),
nm_rxq->fl_db_val | V_PIDX(fl_credits));
} else
netmap_rx_irq(ifp, nm_rxq->nid, &work);
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
t4_write_reg(sc, MYPF_REG(A_SGE_PF_GTS), V_CIDXINC(n) |
V_INGRESSQID((u32)nm_rxq->iq_cntxt_id) |
V_SEINTARM(V_QINTR_TIMER_IDX(holdoff_tmr_idx)));
cxgbe(4): netmap support for Terminator 5 (T5) based 10G/40G cards. Netmap gets its own hardware-assisted virtual interface and won't take over or disrupt the "normal" interface in any way. You can use both simultaneously. For kernels with DEV_NETMAP, cxgbe(4) carves out an ncxl<N> interface (note the 'n' prefix) in the hardware to accompany each cxl<N> interface. These two ifnet's per port share the same wire but really are separate interfaces in the hardware and software. Each gets its own L2 MAC addresses (unicast and multicast), MTU, checksum caps, etc. You should run netmap on the 'n' interfaces only, that's what they are for. With this, pkt-gen is able to transmit > 45Mpps out of a single 40G port of a T580 card. 2 port tx is at ~56Mpps total (28M + 28M) as of now. Single port receive is at 33Mpps but this is very much a work in progress. I expect it to be closer to 40Mpps once done. In any case the current effort can already saturate multiple 10G ports of a T5 card at the smallest legal packet size. T4 gear is totally untested. trantor:~# ./pkt-gen -i ncxl0 -f tx -D 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef 881.952141 main [1621] interface is ncxl0 881.952250 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.0.0.1:0 to 10.0.0.1:0 881.952253 extract_ip_range [275] range is 10.1.0.1:0 to 10.1.0.1:0 881.962540 main [1804] mapped 334980KB at 0x801dff000 Sending on netmap:ncxl0: 4 queues, 1 threads and 1 cpus. 10.0.0.1 -> 10.1.0.1 (00:00:00:00:00:00 -> 00:07:43:ab:cd:ef) 881.962562 main [1882] Sending 512 packets every 0.000000000 s 881.962563 main [1884] Wait 2 secs for phy reset 884.088516 main [1886] Ready... 884.088535 nm_open [457] overriding ifname ncxl0 ringid 0x0 flags 0x1 884.088607 sender_body [996] start 884.093246 sender_body [1064] drop copy 885.090435 main_thread [1418] 45206353 pps (45289533 pkts in 1001840 usec) 886.091600 main_thread [1418] 45322792 pps (45375593 pkts in 1001165 usec) 887.092435 main_thread [1418] 45313992 pps (45351784 pkts in 1000834 usec) 888.094434 main_thread [1418] 45315765 pps (45406397 pkts in 1002000 usec) 889.095434 main_thread [1418] 45333218 pps (45378551 pkts in 1001000 usec) 890.097434 main_thread [1418] 45315247 pps (45405877 pkts in 1002000 usec) 891.099434 main_thread [1418] 45326515 pps (45417168 pkts in 1002000 usec) 892.101434 main_thread [1418] 45333039 pps (45423705 pkts in 1002000 usec) 893.103434 main_thread [1418] 45324105 pps (45414708 pkts in 1001999 usec) 894.105434 main_thread [1418] 45318042 pps (45408723 pkts in 1002001 usec) 895.106434 main_thread [1418] 45332430 pps (45377762 pkts in 1001000 usec) 896.107434 main_thread [1418] 45338072 pps (45383410 pkts in 1001000 usec) ... Relnotes: Yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications.
2014-05-27 18:18:41 +00:00
}
#endif