action to distribute traffic using the half of the VI's RSS indirection
table.
The value specified should either be the start of the VI's RSS slice
(available at dev.<ifname>.<inst>.rss_base since r339700) or the
midpoint (rss_base + rss_size/2). The traffic that hits the filter will
use the first or second half of the indirection table respectively.
The indirection table can be populated in different ways to achieve
different kinds of traffic/load distributions. For example, r339749
allows a netmap interface to have half the rx queues in the first half
of the table and the rest in the other.
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
to the type of rate limiter being configured. For example, the class
WRR scheduler doesn't need any kbps limits (it just needs the weights
for each class), the channel scheduler doesn't need anything except the
aggregate kbps to limit the channel to, and so on.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
- Restore local change to include <net/bpf.h> inside pcap.h.
This fixes ports build problems.
- Update local copy of dlt.h with new DLT types.
- Revert no longer needed <net/bpf.h> includes which were added
as part of r334277.
Suggested by: antoine@, delphij@, np@
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
COP allows fine-grained control on whether to offload a TCP connection
using t4_tom, and what settings to apply to a connection selected for
offload. t4_tom must still be loaded and IFCAP_TOE must still be
enabled for full TCP offload to take place on an interface. The
difference is that IFCAP_TOE used to be the only knob and would enable
TOE for all new connections on the inteface, but now the driver will
also consult the COP, if any, before offloading to the hardware TOE.
A policy is a plain text file with any number of rules, one per line.
Each rule has a "match" part consisting of a socket-type (L = listen,
A = active open, P = passive open, D = don't care) and a pcap-filter(7)
expression, and a "settings" part that specifies whether to offload the
connection or not and the parameters to use if so. The general format
of a rule is: [socket-type] expr => settings
Example. See cxgbetool(8) for more information.
[L] ip && port http => offload
[L] port 443 => !offload
[L] port ssh => offload
[P] src net 192.168/16 && dst port ssh => offload !nagle !timestamp cong newreno
[P] dst port ssh => offload !nagle ecn cong tahoe
[P] dst port http => offload
[A] dst port 443 => offload tls
[A] dst net 192.168/16 => offload !timestamp cong highspeed
The driver processes the rules for each new listen, active open, or
passive open and stops at the first match. There is an implicit rule at
the end of every policy that prohibits offload when no rule in the
policy matches:
[D] all => !offload
This is a reworked and expanded version of a patch submitted by
Krishnamraju Eraparaju @ Chelsio.
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
debug (cudbg) code, hooked up to the main driver via an ioctl.
The ioctl can be used to collect the chip's internal state in a
compressed dump file. These dumps can be decoded with the "view"
component of cudbg.
Obtained from: Chelsio Communications
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Move cxgbetool from tools/tools to usr.sbin. Compile and install it on
platforms where cxgbe(4) is built by default. Knobs (WITH_CXGBETOOL and
WITHOUT_CXGBETOOL) have been added so that the user can override the
default setting.
Reviewed by: ngie@, gnn@, bdrewery@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9854