freebsd-skq/sys/dev/netmap/if_lem_netmap.h

312 lines
8.9 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
/*
* Copyright (C) 2011-2014 Matteo Landi, Luigi Rizzo. All rights reserved.
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
*
* 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.
*/
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
/*
* $FreeBSD$
*
* netmap support for: lem
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
*
* For details on netmap support please see ixgbe_netmap.h
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
*/
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
#include <net/netmap.h>
#include <sys/selinfo.h>
#include <vm/vm.h>
#include <vm/pmap.h> /* vtophys ? */
#include <dev/netmap/netmap_kern.h>
/*
* Register/unregister. We are already under netmap lock.
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
*/
static int
lem_netmap_reg(struct netmap_adapter *na, int onoff)
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
{
struct ifnet *ifp = na->ifp;
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
struct adapter *adapter = ifp->if_softc;
EM_CORE_LOCK(adapter);
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
lem_disable_intr(adapter);
/* Tell the stack that the interface is no longer active */
ifp->if_drv_flags &= ~(IFF_DRV_RUNNING | IFF_DRV_OACTIVE);
#ifndef EM_LEGACY_IRQ // XXX do we need this ?
taskqueue_block(adapter->tq);
taskqueue_drain(adapter->tq, &adapter->rxtx_task);
taskqueue_drain(adapter->tq, &adapter->link_task);
#endif /* !EM_LEGCY_IRQ */
/* enable or disable flags and callbacks in na and ifp */
if (onoff) {
nm_set_native_flags(na);
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
} else {
nm_clear_native_flags(na);
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
}
lem_init_locked(adapter); /* also enable intr */
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
#ifndef EM_LEGACY_IRQ
taskqueue_unblock(adapter->tq); // XXX do we need this ?
#endif /* !EM_LEGCY_IRQ */
EM_CORE_UNLOCK(adapter);
return (ifp->if_drv_flags & IFF_DRV_RUNNING ? 0 : 1);
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
}
/*
* Reconcile kernel and user view of the transmit ring.
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
*/
static int
lem_netmap_txsync(struct netmap_adapter *na, u_int ring_nr, int flags)
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
{
struct ifnet *ifp = na->ifp;
struct netmap_kring *kring = &na->tx_rings[ring_nr];
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
struct netmap_ring *ring = kring->ring;
u_int nm_i; /* index into the netmap ring */
u_int nic_i; /* index into the NIC ring */
u_int const lim = kring->nkr_num_slots - 1;
u_int const head = kring->rhead;
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
/* generate an interrupt approximately every half ring */
u_int report_frequency = kring->nkr_num_slots >> 1;
/* device-specific */
struct adapter *adapter = ifp->if_softc;
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
bus_dmamap_sync(adapter->txdma.dma_tag, adapter->txdma.dma_map,
BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD);
/*
* First part: process new packets to send.
*/
nm_i = kring->nr_hwcur;
if (nm_i != head) { /* we have new packets to send */
nic_i = netmap_idx_k2n(kring, nm_i);
while (nm_i != head) {
struct netmap_slot *slot = &ring->slot[nm_i];
u_int len = slot->len;
uint64_t paddr;
void *addr = PNMB(slot, &paddr);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
/* device-specific */
struct e1000_tx_desc *curr = &adapter->tx_desc_base[nic_i];
struct em_buffer *txbuf = &adapter->tx_buffer_area[nic_i];
int flags = (slot->flags & NS_REPORT ||
nic_i == 0 || nic_i == report_frequency) ?
E1000_TXD_CMD_RS : 0;
NM_CHECK_ADDR_LEN(addr, len);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
if (slot->flags & NS_BUF_CHANGED) {
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
/* buffer has changed, reload map */
curr->buffer_addr = htole64(paddr);
netmap_reload_map(adapter->txtag, txbuf->map, addr);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
}
slot->flags &= ~(NS_REPORT | NS_BUF_CHANGED);
/* Fill the slot in the NIC ring. */
curr->upper.data = 0;
curr->lower.data = htole32(adapter->txd_cmd | len |
(E1000_TXD_CMD_EOP | flags) );
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
bus_dmamap_sync(adapter->txtag, txbuf->map,
BUS_DMASYNC_PREWRITE);
nm_i = nm_next(nm_i, lim);
nic_i = nm_next(nic_i, lim);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
}
kring->nr_hwcur = head;
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
/* synchronize the NIC ring */
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
bus_dmamap_sync(adapter->txdma.dma_tag, adapter->txdma.dma_map,
BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD | BUS_DMASYNC_PREWRITE);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
/* (re)start the tx unit up to slot nic_i (excluded) */
E1000_WRITE_REG(&adapter->hw, E1000_TDT(0), nic_i);
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
}
/*
* Second part: reclaim buffers for completed transmissions.
*/
if (ticks != kring->last_reclaim || flags & NAF_FORCE_RECLAIM || nm_kr_txempty(kring)) {
kring->last_reclaim = ticks;
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
/* record completed transmissions using TDH */
nic_i = E1000_READ_REG(&adapter->hw, E1000_TDH(0));
if (nic_i >= kring->nkr_num_slots) { /* XXX can it happen ? */
D("TDH wrap %d", nic_i);
nic_i -= kring->nkr_num_slots;
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
}
adapter->next_tx_to_clean = nic_i;
kring->nr_hwtail = nm_prev(netmap_idx_n2k(kring, nic_i), lim);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
}
nm_txsync_finalize(kring);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
return 0;
}
/*
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
* Reconcile kernel and user view of the receive ring.
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
*/
static int
lem_netmap_rxsync(struct netmap_adapter *na, u_int ring_nr, int flags)
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
{
struct ifnet *ifp = na->ifp;
struct netmap_kring *kring = &na->rx_rings[ring_nr];
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
struct netmap_ring *ring = kring->ring;
u_int nm_i; /* index into the netmap ring */
u_int nic_i; /* index into the NIC ring */
u_int n;
u_int const lim = kring->nkr_num_slots - 1;
u_int const head = nm_rxsync_prologue(kring);
int force_update = (flags & NAF_FORCE_READ) || kring->nr_kflags & NKR_PENDINTR;
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
/* device-specific */
struct adapter *adapter = ifp->if_softc;
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
if (head > lim)
return netmap_ring_reinit(kring);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
/* XXX check sync modes */
bus_dmamap_sync(adapter->rxdma.dma_tag, adapter->rxdma.dma_map,
BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD | BUS_DMASYNC_POSTWRITE);
/*
* First part: import newly received packets.
*/
if (netmap_no_pendintr || force_update) {
uint16_t slot_flags = kring->nkr_slot_flags;
nic_i = adapter->next_rx_desc_to_check;
nm_i = netmap_idx_n2k(kring, nic_i);
for (n = 0; ; n++) {
struct e1000_rx_desc *curr = &adapter->rx_desc_base[nic_i];
uint32_t staterr = le32toh(curr->status);
int len;
if ((staterr & E1000_RXD_STAT_DD) == 0)
break;
len = le16toh(curr->length) - 4; // CRC
if (len < 0) {
D("bogus pkt size %d nic idx %d", len, nic_i);
len = 0;
}
ring->slot[nm_i].len = len;
ring->slot[nm_i].flags = slot_flags;
bus_dmamap_sync(adapter->rxtag,
adapter->rx_buffer_area[nic_i].map,
BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD);
nm_i = nm_next(nm_i, lim);
nic_i = nm_next(nic_i, lim);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
}
if (n) { /* update the state variables */
ND("%d new packets at nic %d nm %d tail %d",
n,
adapter->next_rx_desc_to_check,
netmap_idx_n2k(kring, adapter->next_rx_desc_to_check),
kring->nr_hwtail);
adapter->next_rx_desc_to_check = nic_i;
// ifp->if_ipackets += n;
kring->nr_hwtail = nm_i;
}
kring->nr_kflags &= ~NKR_PENDINTR;
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
}
/*
* Second part: skip past packets that userspace has released.
*/
nm_i = kring->nr_hwcur;
if (nm_i != head) {
nic_i = netmap_idx_k2n(kring, nm_i);
for (n = 0; nm_i != head; n++) {
struct netmap_slot *slot = &ring->slot[nm_i];
uint64_t paddr;
void *addr = PNMB(slot, &paddr);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
struct e1000_rx_desc *curr = &adapter->rx_desc_base[nic_i];
struct em_buffer *rxbuf = &adapter->rx_buffer_area[nic_i];
if (addr == netmap_buffer_base) /* bad buf */
goto ring_reset;
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
if (slot->flags & NS_BUF_CHANGED) {
/* buffer has changed, reload map */
curr->buffer_addr = htole64(paddr);
netmap_reload_map(adapter->rxtag, rxbuf->map, addr);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
slot->flags &= ~NS_BUF_CHANGED;
}
curr->status = 0;
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
bus_dmamap_sync(adapter->rxtag, rxbuf->map,
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD);
nm_i = nm_next(nm_i, lim);
nic_i = nm_next(nic_i, lim);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
}
kring->nr_hwcur = head;
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
bus_dmamap_sync(adapter->rxdma.dma_tag, adapter->rxdma.dma_map,
1. Fix the handling of link reset while in netmap more. A link reset now is completely transparent for the netmap client: even if the NIC resets its own ring (e.g. restarting from 0), the client will not see any change in the current rx/tx positions, because the driver will keep track of the offset between the two. 2. make the device-specific code more uniform across different drivers There were some inconsistencies in the implementation of the netmap support routines, now drivers have been aligned to a common code structure. 3. import netmap support for ixgbe . This is implemented as a very small patch for ixgbe.c (233 lines, 11 chunks, mostly comments: in total the patch has only 54 lines of new code) , as most of the code is in an external file sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h , following some initial comments from Jack Vogel about making changes less intrusive. (Note, i have emailed Jack multiple times asking if he had comments on this structure of the code; i got no reply so i assume he is fine with it). Support for other drivers (em, lem, re, igb) will come later. "ixgbe" is now the reference driver for netmap support. Both the external file (sys/dev/netmap/ixgbe_netmap.h) and the device-specific patches (in sys/dev/ixgbe/ixgbe.c) are heavily commented and should serve as a reference for other device drivers. Tested on i386 and amd64 with the pkt-gen program in tools/tools/netmap, the sender does 14.88 Mpps at 1050 Mhz and 14.2 Mpps at 900 MHz on an i7-860 with 4 cores and 82599 card. Haven't tried yet more aggressive optimizations such as adding 'prefetch' instructions in the time-critical parts of the code.
2011-12-05 12:06:53 +00:00
BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD | BUS_DMASYNC_PREWRITE);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
/*
* IMPORTANT: we must leave one free slot in the ring,
* so move nic_i back by one unit
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
*/
nic_i = nm_prev(nic_i, lim);
E1000_WRITE_REG(&adapter->hw, E1000_RDT(0), nic_i);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
}
/* tell userspace that there might be new packets */
nm_rxsync_finalize(kring);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
return 0;
ring_reset:
return netmap_ring_reinit(kring);
Bring in support for netmap, a framework for very efficient packet I/O from userspace, capable of line rate at 10G, see http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ At this time I am bringing in only the generic code (sys/dev/netmap/ plus two headers under sys/net/), and some sample applications in tools/tools/netmap. There is also a manpage in share/man/man4 [1] In order to make use of the framework you need to build a kernel with "device netmap", and patch individual drivers with the code that you can find in sys/dev/netmap/head.diff The file will go away as the relevant pieces are committed to the various device drivers, which should happen in a few days after talking to the driver maintainers. Netmap support is available at the moment for Intel 10G and 1G cards (ixgbe, em/lem/igb), and for the Realtek 1G card ("re"). I have partial patches for "bge" and am starting to work on "cxgbe". Hopefully changes are trivial enough so interested third parties can submit their patches. Interested people can contact me for advice on how to add netmap support to specific devices. CREDITS: Netmap has been developed by Luigi Rizzo and other collaborators at the Universita` di Pisa, and supported by EU project CHANGE (http://www.change-project.eu/) The code is distributed under a BSD Copyright. [1] In my opinion is a bad idea to have all manpage in one directory. We should place kernel documentation in the same dir that contains the code, which would make it much simpler to keep doc and code in sync, reduce the clutter in share/man/ and incidentally is the policy used for all of userspace code. Makefiles and doc tools can be trivially adjusted to find the manpages in the relevant subdirs.
2011-11-17 12:17:39 +00:00
}
static void
lem_netmap_attach(struct adapter *adapter)
{
struct netmap_adapter na;
bzero(&na, sizeof(na));
na.ifp = adapter->ifp;
na.na_flags = NAF_BDG_MAYSLEEP;
na.num_tx_desc = adapter->num_tx_desc;
na.num_rx_desc = adapter->num_rx_desc;
na.nm_txsync = lem_netmap_txsync;
na.nm_rxsync = lem_netmap_rxsync;
na.nm_register = lem_netmap_reg;
na.num_tx_rings = na.num_rx_rings = 1;
netmap_attach(&na);
}
/* end of file */