freebsd-dev/sys/dev/netmap/netmap_mem2.h
Luigi Rizzo 844a6f0c53 Various fixes for ptnet/ptnetmap (passthrough of netmap ports). In detail:
- use PCI_VENDOR and PCI_DEVICE ids from a publicly allocated range
  (thanks to RedHat)
- export memory pool information through PCI registers
- improve mechanism for configuring passthrough on different hypervisors
Code is from Vincenzo Maffione as a follow up to his GSOC work.
2016-10-27 09:46:22 +00:00

184 lines
7.5 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (C) 2012-2014 Matteo Landi
* Copyright (C) 2012-2016 Luigi Rizzo
* Copyright (C) 2012-2016 Giuseppe Lettieri
* All rights reserved.
*
* 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.
*/
/*
* $FreeBSD$
*
* (New) memory allocator for netmap
*/
/*
* This allocator creates three memory pools:
* nm_if_pool for the struct netmap_if
* nm_ring_pool for the struct netmap_ring
* nm_buf_pool for the packet buffers.
*
* that contain netmap objects. Each pool is made of a number of clusters,
* multiple of a page size, each containing an integer number of objects.
* The clusters are contiguous in user space but not in the kernel.
* Only nm_buf_pool needs to be dma-able,
* but for convenience use the same type of allocator for all.
*
* Once mapped, the three pools are exported to userspace
* as a contiguous block, starting from nm_if_pool. Each
* cluster (and pool) is an integral number of pages.
* [ . . . ][ . . . . . .][ . . . . . . . . . .]
* nm_if nm_ring nm_buf
*
* The userspace areas contain offsets of the objects in userspace.
* When (at init time) we write these offsets, we find out the index
* of the object, and from there locate the offset from the beginning
* of the region.
*
* The invididual allocators manage a pool of memory for objects of
* the same size.
* The pool is split into smaller clusters, whose size is a
* multiple of the page size. The cluster size is chosen
* to minimize the waste for a given max cluster size
* (we do it by brute force, as we have relatively few objects
* per cluster).
*
* Objects are aligned to the cache line (64 bytes) rounding up object
* sizes when needed. A bitmap contains the state of each object.
* Allocation scans the bitmap; this is done only on attach, so we are not
* too worried about performance
*
* For each allocator we can define (thorugh sysctl) the size and
* number of each object. Memory is allocated at the first use of a
* netmap file descriptor, and can be freed when all such descriptors
* have been released (including unmapping the memory).
* If memory is scarce, the system tries to get as much as possible
* and the sysctl values reflect the actual allocation.
* Together with desired values, the sysctl export also absolute
* min and maximum values that cannot be overridden.
*
* struct netmap_if:
* variable size, max 16 bytes per ring pair plus some fixed amount.
* 1024 bytes should be large enough in practice.
*
* In the worst case we have one netmap_if per ring in the system.
*
* struct netmap_ring
* variable size, 8 byte per slot plus some fixed amount.
* Rings can be large (e.g. 4k slots, or >32Kbytes).
* We default to 36 KB (9 pages), and a few hundred rings.
*
* struct netmap_buffer
* The more the better, both because fast interfaces tend to have
* many slots, and because we may want to use buffers to store
* packets in userspace avoiding copies.
* Must contain a full frame (eg 1518, or more for vlans, jumbo
* frames etc.) plus be nicely aligned, plus some NICs restrict
* the size to multiple of 1K or so. Default to 2K
*/
#ifndef _NET_NETMAP_MEM2_H_
#define _NET_NETMAP_MEM2_H_
/* We implement two kinds of netmap_mem_d structures:
*
* - global: used by hardware NICS;
*
* - private: used by VALE ports.
*
* In both cases, the netmap_mem_d structure has the same lifetime as the
* netmap_adapter of the corresponding NIC or port. It is the responsibility of
* the client code to delete the private allocator when the associated
* netmap_adapter is freed (this is implemented by the NAF_MEM_OWNER flag in
* netmap.c). The 'refcount' field counts the number of active users of the
* structure. The global allocator uses this information to prevent/allow
* reconfiguration. The private allocators release all their memory when there
* are no active users. By 'active user' we mean an existing netmap_priv
* structure holding a reference to the allocator.
*/
extern struct netmap_mem_d nm_mem;
int netmap_mem_get_lut(struct netmap_mem_d *, struct netmap_lut *);
vm_paddr_t netmap_mem_ofstophys(struct netmap_mem_d *, vm_ooffset_t);
#ifdef _WIN32
PMDL win32_build_user_vm_map(struct netmap_mem_d* nmd);
#endif
int netmap_mem_finalize(struct netmap_mem_d *, struct netmap_adapter *);
int netmap_mem_init(void);
void netmap_mem_fini(void);
struct netmap_if * netmap_mem_if_new(struct netmap_adapter *);
void netmap_mem_if_delete(struct netmap_adapter *, struct netmap_if *);
int netmap_mem_rings_create(struct netmap_adapter *);
void netmap_mem_rings_delete(struct netmap_adapter *);
void netmap_mem_deref(struct netmap_mem_d *, struct netmap_adapter *);
int netmap_mem2_get_pool_info(struct netmap_mem_d *, u_int, u_int *, u_int *);
int netmap_mem_get_info(struct netmap_mem_d *, u_int *size, u_int *memflags, uint16_t *id);
ssize_t netmap_mem_if_offset(struct netmap_mem_d *, const void *vaddr);
struct netmap_mem_d* netmap_mem_private_new(const char *name,
u_int txr, u_int txd, u_int rxr, u_int rxd, u_int extra_bufs, u_int npipes,
int* error);
void netmap_mem_delete(struct netmap_mem_d *);
//#define NM_DEBUG_MEM_PUTGET 1
#ifdef NM_DEBUG_MEM_PUTGET
#define netmap_mem_get(nmd) \
do { \
__netmap_mem_get(nmd, __FUNCTION__, __LINE__); \
} while (0)
#define netmap_mem_put(nmd) \
do { \
__netmap_mem_put(nmd, __FUNCTION__, __LINE__); \
} while (0)
void __netmap_mem_get(struct netmap_mem_d *, const char *, int);
void __netmap_mem_put(struct netmap_mem_d *, const char *, int);
#else /* !NM_DEBUG_MEM_PUTGET */
void netmap_mem_get(struct netmap_mem_d *);
void netmap_mem_put(struct netmap_mem_d *);
#endif /* !NM_DEBUG_PUTGET */
#ifdef WITH_PTNETMAP_GUEST
struct netmap_mem_d* netmap_mem_pt_guest_new(struct ifnet *,
unsigned int nifp_offset,
unsigned int memid);
struct ptnetmap_memdev;
struct netmap_mem_d* netmap_mem_pt_guest_attach(struct ptnetmap_memdev *, uint16_t);
int netmap_mem_pt_guest_ifp_del(struct netmap_mem_d *, struct ifnet *);
#endif /* WITH_PTNETMAP_GUEST */
int netmap_mem_pools_info_get(struct nmreq *, struct netmap_adapter *);
#define NETMAP_MEM_PRIVATE 0x2 /* allocator uses private address space */
#define NETMAP_MEM_IO 0x4 /* the underlying memory is mmapped I/O */
uint32_t netmap_extra_alloc(struct netmap_adapter *, uint32_t *, uint32_t n);
#endif