Today, all logs whose level is lower than INFO are dropped at
compile-time. This prevents from enabling debug logs at runtime using
--log-level=8.
The rationale was to remove debug logs from the data path at
compile-time, avoiding a test at run-time.
This patch changes the behavior of RTE_LOG() to avoid the compile-time
optimization, and introduces the RTE_LOG_DP() macro that has the same
behavior than the previous RTE_LOG(), for the rare cases where debug
logs are in the data path.
So it is now possible to enable debug logs at run-time by just
specifying --log-level=8. Some drivers still have special compile-time
options to enable more debug log. Maintainers may consider to
remove/reduce them.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Matz <olivier.matz@6wind.com>
Perform allocation and free()ing of ring and information structures
for the TX, RX, and completion rings. The previous patches had
so far provided top level stubs and generic ring support, while this
patch does the real allocation and freeing of the memory specific to
each different type of generic ring.
For example bnxt_init_tx_ring_struct() or bnxt_init_rx_ring_struct() is
now allocating memory based on the socked_id being provided.
bnxt_tx_queue_setup_op() or bnxt_rx_queue_setup_op() have gone through
some reformatting to perform a graceful cleanup in case memory
allocation fails.
Signed-off-by: Ajit Khaparde <ajit.khaparde@broadcom.com>
Signed-off-by: Stephen Hurd <stephen.hurd@broadcom.com>
Reviewed-by: David Christensen <david.christensen@broadcom.com>
Initial implementation of tx_pkt_burst for transmit.
bnxt_xmit_pkts() is the top level function that is called during Tx.
bnxt_handle_tx_cp() is used to check and process the Tx completions
generated for the Tx Buffer Descriptors sent by the hardware.
This patch also adds code to allocate rings in the hardware.
For each Tx queue allocated in the PMD driver, a corresponding ring
in hardware will be created. Every time a Tx request is initiated
via the bnxt_xmit_pkts() call, a Buffer Descriptor is created and
is sent to the hardware via the associated Tx ring.
On completing the Tx operation, the hardware will generates the status
in the form of a completion. This completion is processed by the
bnxt_handle_tx_cp() function.
Functions like bnxt_init_tx_ring_struct() and bnxt_init_one_tx_ring()
are used to initialize various members of the structure before
starting Tx operations.
Signed-off-by: Ajit Khaparde <ajit.khaparde@broadcom.com>
Signed-off-by: Stephen Hurd <stephen.hurd@broadcom.com>
Reviewed-by: David Christensen <david.christensen@broadcom.com>