2a440d6ab3
Structure rte_cryptodev_sym_session is moved to internal headers which are not visible to applications. The only field which should be used by app is opaque_data. This field can now be accessed via set/get APIs added in this patch. Subsequent changes in app and lib are made to compile the code. Signed-off-by: Akhil Goyal <gakhil@marvell.com> Signed-off-by: Fan Zhang <roy.fan.zhang@intel.com> Acked-by: Kai Ji <kai.ji@intel.com> Tested-by: Gagandeep Singh <g.singh@nxp.com> Tested-by: David Coyle <david.coyle@intel.com> Tested-by: Kevin O'Sullivan <kevin.osullivan@intel.com>
1216 lines
49 KiB
ReStructuredText
1216 lines
49 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
|
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Copyright(c) 2016-2020 Intel Corporation.
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||
|
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Cryptography Device Library
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||
===========================
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The cryptodev library provides a Crypto device framework for management and
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||
provisioning of hardware and software Crypto poll mode drivers, defining generic
|
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APIs which support a number of different Crypto operations. The framework
|
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currently only supports cipher, authentication, chained cipher/authentication
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and AEAD symmetric and asymmetric Crypto operations.
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||
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||
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Design Principles
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-----------------
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The cryptodev library follows the same basic principles as those used in DPDK's
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Ethernet Device framework. The Crypto framework provides a generic Crypto device
|
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framework which supports both physical (hardware) and virtual (software) Crypto
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||
devices as well as a generic Crypto API which allows Crypto devices to be
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managed and configured and supports Crypto operations to be provisioned on
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Crypto poll mode driver.
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||
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Device Management
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-----------------
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Device Creation
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Physical Crypto devices are discovered during the PCI probe/enumeration of the
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EAL function which is executed at DPDK initialization, based on
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their PCI device identifier, each unique PCI BDF (bus/bridge, device,
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function). Specific physical Crypto devices, like other physical devices in DPDK
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can be listed using the EAL command line options.
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Virtual devices can be created by two mechanisms, either using the EAL command
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line options or from within the application using an EAL API directly.
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From the command line using the --vdev EAL option
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.. code-block:: console
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--vdev 'crypto_aesni_mb0,max_nb_queue_pairs=2,socket_id=0'
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.. Note::
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* If DPDK application requires multiple software crypto PMD devices then required
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number of ``--vdev`` with appropriate libraries are to be added.
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* An Application with crypto PMD instances sharing the same library requires unique ID.
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Example: ``--vdev 'crypto_aesni_mb0' --vdev 'crypto_aesni_mb1'``
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Or using the rte_vdev_init API within the application code.
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.. code-block:: c
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rte_vdev_init("crypto_aesni_mb",
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"max_nb_queue_pairs=2,socket_id=0")
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All virtual Crypto devices support the following initialization parameters:
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* ``max_nb_queue_pairs`` - maximum number of queue pairs supported by the device.
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* ``socket_id`` - socket on which to allocate the device resources on.
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Device Identification
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Each device, whether virtual or physical is uniquely designated by two
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identifiers:
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- A unique device index used to designate the Crypto device in all functions
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exported by the cryptodev API.
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- A device name used to designate the Crypto device in console messages, for
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administration or debugging purposes. For ease of use, the port name includes
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the port index.
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Device Configuration
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The configuration of each Crypto device includes the following operations:
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- Allocation of resources, including hardware resources if a physical device.
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- Resetting the device into a well-known default state.
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- Initialization of statistics counters.
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The rte_cryptodev_configure API is used to configure a Crypto device.
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.. code-block:: c
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int rte_cryptodev_configure(uint8_t dev_id,
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struct rte_cryptodev_config *config)
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The ``rte_cryptodev_config`` structure is used to pass the configuration
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parameters for socket selection and number of queue pairs.
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.. code-block:: c
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struct rte_cryptodev_config {
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int socket_id;
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/**< Socket to allocate resources on */
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uint16_t nb_queue_pairs;
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/**< Number of queue pairs to configure on device */
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};
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||
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Configuration of Queue Pairs
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Each Crypto devices queue pair is individually configured through the
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``rte_cryptodev_queue_pair_setup`` API.
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Each queue pairs resources may be allocated on a specified socket.
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.. code-block:: c
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int rte_cryptodev_queue_pair_setup(uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t queue_pair_id,
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const struct rte_cryptodev_qp_conf *qp_conf,
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int socket_id)
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struct rte_cryptodev_qp_conf {
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uint32_t nb_descriptors; /**< Number of descriptors per queue pair */
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struct rte_mempool *mp_session;
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/**< The mempool for creating session in sessionless mode */
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};
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The field ``mp_session`` is used for creating temporary session to process
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the crypto operations in the session-less mode.
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They can be the same other different mempools. Please note not all Cryptodev
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PMDs supports session-less mode.
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||
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||
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Logical Cores, Memory and Queues Pair Relationships
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The Crypto device Library as the Poll Mode Driver library support NUMA for when
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a processor’s logical cores and interfaces utilize its local memory. Therefore
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Crypto operations, and in the case of symmetric Crypto operations, the session
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and the mbuf being operated on, should be allocated from memory pools created
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in the local memory. The buffers should, if possible, remain on the local
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processor to obtain the best performance results and buffer descriptors should
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be populated with mbufs allocated from a mempool allocated from local memory.
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The run-to-completion model also performs better, especially in the case of
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virtual Crypto devices, if the Crypto operation and session and data buffer is
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in local memory instead of a remote processor's memory. This is also true for
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the pipe-line model provided all logical cores used are located on the same
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processor.
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Multiple logical cores should never share the same queue pair for enqueuing
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operations or dequeuing operations on the same Crypto device since this would
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require global locks and hinder performance. It is however possible to use a
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different logical core to dequeue an operation on a queue pair from the logical
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core which it was enqueued on. This means that a crypto burst enqueue/dequeue
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APIs are a logical place to transition from one logical core to another in a
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packet processing pipeline.
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Device Features and Capabilities
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---------------------------------
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Crypto devices define their functionality through two mechanisms, global device
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features and algorithm capabilities. Global devices features identify device
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wide level features which are applicable to the whole device such as
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the device having hardware acceleration or supporting symmetric and/or asymmetric
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Crypto operations.
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The capabilities mechanism defines the individual algorithms/functions which
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the device supports, such as a specific symmetric Crypto cipher,
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authentication operation or Authenticated Encryption with Associated Data
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(AEAD) operation.
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Device Features
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Currently the following Crypto device features are defined:
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* Symmetric Crypto operations
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* Asymmetric Crypto operations
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* Chaining of symmetric Crypto operations
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* SSE accelerated SIMD vector operations
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* AVX accelerated SIMD vector operations
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* AVX2 accelerated SIMD vector operations
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* AESNI accelerated instructions
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* Hardware off-load processing
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Device Operation Capabilities
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Crypto capabilities which identify particular algorithm which the Crypto PMD
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supports are defined by the operation type, the operation transform, the
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transform identifier and then the particulars of the transform. For the full
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scope of the Crypto capability see the definition of the structure in the
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*DPDK API Reference*.
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.. code-block:: c
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struct rte_cryptodev_capabilities;
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Each Crypto poll mode driver defines its own private array of capabilities
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for the operations it supports. Below is an example of the capabilities for a
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PMD which supports the authentication algorithm SHA1_HMAC and the cipher
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algorithm AES_CBC.
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.. code-block:: c
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static const struct rte_cryptodev_capabilities pmd_capabilities[] = {
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{ /* SHA1 HMAC */
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.op = RTE_CRYPTO_OP_TYPE_SYMMETRIC,
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.sym = {
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.xform_type = RTE_CRYPTO_SYM_XFORM_AUTH,
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.auth = {
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.algo = RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA1_HMAC,
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.block_size = 64,
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.key_size = {
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.min = 64,
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.max = 64,
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.increment = 0
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},
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.digest_size = {
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.min = 12,
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.max = 12,
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.increment = 0
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},
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.aad_size = { 0 },
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.iv_size = { 0 }
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}
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}
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},
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{ /* AES CBC */
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.op = RTE_CRYPTO_OP_TYPE_SYMMETRIC,
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.sym = {
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.xform_type = RTE_CRYPTO_SYM_XFORM_CIPHER,
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.cipher = {
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.algo = RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES_CBC,
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.block_size = 16,
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.key_size = {
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.min = 16,
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.max = 32,
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.increment = 8
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},
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.iv_size = {
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.min = 16,
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.max = 16,
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.increment = 0
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}
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}
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}
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}
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}
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Capabilities Discovery
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Discovering the features and capabilities of a Crypto device poll mode driver
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is achieved through the ``rte_cryptodev_info_get`` function.
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.. code-block:: c
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||
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void rte_cryptodev_info_get(uint8_t dev_id,
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struct rte_cryptodev_info *dev_info);
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This allows the user to query a specific Crypto PMD and get all the device
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features and capabilities. The ``rte_cryptodev_info`` structure contains all the
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||
relevant information for the device.
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||
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.. code-block:: c
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||
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struct rte_cryptodev_info {
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const char *driver_name;
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uint8_t driver_id;
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struct rte_device *device;
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||
uint64_t feature_flags;
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const struct rte_cryptodev_capabilities *capabilities;
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||
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unsigned max_nb_queue_pairs;
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||
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||
struct {
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||
unsigned max_nb_sessions;
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||
} sym;
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||
};
|
||
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||
|
||
Operation Processing
|
||
--------------------
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||
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||
Scheduling of Crypto operations on DPDK's application data path is
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||
performed using a burst oriented asynchronous API set. A queue pair on a Crypto
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device accepts a burst of Crypto operations using enqueue burst API. On physical
|
||
Crypto devices the enqueue burst API will place the operations to be processed
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||
on the devices hardware input queue, for virtual devices the processing of the
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||
Crypto operations is usually completed during the enqueue call to the Crypto
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||
device. The dequeue burst API will retrieve any processed operations available
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||
from the queue pair on the Crypto device, from physical devices this is usually
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||
directly from the devices processed queue, and for virtual device's from a
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``rte_ring`` where processed operations are placed after being processed on the
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enqueue call.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Private data
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~
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||
For session-based operations, the set and get API provides a mechanism for an
|
||
application to store and retrieve the private user data information stored along
|
||
with the crypto session.
|
||
|
||
For example, suppose an application is submitting a crypto operation with a session
|
||
associated and wants to indicate private user data information which is required to be
|
||
used after completion of the crypto operation. In this case, the application can use
|
||
the set API to set the user data and retrieve it using get API.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
int rte_cryptodev_sym_session_set_user_data(
|
||
struct rte_cryptodev_sym_session *sess, void *data, uint16_t size);
|
||
|
||
void * rte_cryptodev_sym_session_get_user_data(
|
||
struct rte_cryptodev_sym_session *sess);
|
||
|
||
Please note the ``size`` passed to set API cannot be bigger than the predefined
|
||
``user_data_sz`` when creating the session header mempool, otherwise the
|
||
function will return error. Also when ``user_data_sz`` was defined as ``0`` when
|
||
creating the session header mempool, the get API will always return ``NULL``.
|
||
|
||
For session-less mode, the private user data information can be placed along with the
|
||
``struct rte_crypto_op``. The ``rte_crypto_op::private_data_offset`` indicates the
|
||
start of private data information. The offset is counted from the start of the
|
||
rte_crypto_op including other crypto information such as the IVs (since there can
|
||
be an IV also for authentication).
|
||
|
||
User callback APIs
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
The add APIs configures a user callback function to be called for each burst of crypto
|
||
ops received/sent on a given crypto device queue pair. The return value is a pointer
|
||
that can be used later to remove the callback using remove API. Application is expected
|
||
to register a callback function of type ``rte_cryptodev_callback_fn``. Multiple callback
|
||
functions can be added for a given queue pair. API does not restrict on maximum number of
|
||
callbacks.
|
||
|
||
Callbacks registered by application would not survive ``rte_cryptodev_configure`` as it
|
||
reinitializes the callback list. It is user responsibility to remove all installed
|
||
callbacks before calling ``rte_cryptodev_configure`` to avoid possible memory leakage.
|
||
|
||
So, the application is expected to add user callback after ``rte_cryptodev_configure``.
|
||
The callbacks can also be added at the runtime. These callbacks get executed when
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_enqueue_burst``/``rte_cryptodev_dequeue_burst`` is called.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
struct rte_cryptodev_cb *
|
||
rte_cryptodev_add_enq_callback(uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id,
|
||
rte_cryptodev_callback_fn cb_fn,
|
||
void *cb_arg);
|
||
|
||
struct rte_cryptodev_cb *
|
||
rte_cryptodev_add_deq_callback(uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id,
|
||
rte_cryptodev_callback_fn cb_fn,
|
||
void *cb_arg);
|
||
|
||
uint16_t (* rte_cryptodev_callback_fn)(uint16_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id,
|
||
struct rte_crypto_op **ops,
|
||
uint16_t nb_ops, void *user_param);
|
||
|
||
The remove API removes a callback function added by
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_add_enq_callback``/``rte_cryptodev_add_deq_callback``.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
int rte_cryptodev_remove_enq_callback(uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id,
|
||
struct rte_cryptodev_cb *cb);
|
||
|
||
int rte_cryptodev_remove_deq_callback(uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id,
|
||
struct rte_cryptodev_cb *cb);
|
||
|
||
|
||
Enqueue / Dequeue Burst APIs
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
The burst enqueue API uses a Crypto device identifier and a queue pair
|
||
identifier to specify the Crypto device queue pair to schedule the processing on.
|
||
The ``nb_ops`` parameter is the number of operations to process which are
|
||
supplied in the ``ops`` array of ``rte_crypto_op`` structures.
|
||
The enqueue function returns the number of operations it actually enqueued for
|
||
processing, a return value equal to ``nb_ops`` means that all packets have been
|
||
enqueued.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
uint16_t rte_cryptodev_enqueue_burst(uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id,
|
||
struct rte_crypto_op **ops, uint16_t nb_ops)
|
||
|
||
The dequeue API uses the same format as the enqueue API of processed but
|
||
the ``nb_ops`` and ``ops`` parameters are now used to specify the max processed
|
||
operations the user wishes to retrieve and the location in which to store them.
|
||
The API call returns the actual number of processed operations returned, this
|
||
can never be larger than ``nb_ops``.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
uint16_t rte_cryptodev_dequeue_burst(uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id,
|
||
struct rte_crypto_op **ops, uint16_t nb_ops)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Operation Representation
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
An Crypto operation is represented by an rte_crypto_op structure, which is a
|
||
generic metadata container for all necessary information required for the
|
||
Crypto operation to be processed on a particular Crypto device poll mode driver.
|
||
|
||
.. figure:: img/crypto_op.*
|
||
|
||
The operation structure includes the operation type, the operation status
|
||
and the session type (session-based/less), a reference to the operation
|
||
specific data, which can vary in size and content depending on the operation
|
||
being provisioned. It also contains the source mempool for the operation,
|
||
if it allocated from a mempool.
|
||
|
||
If Crypto operations are allocated from a Crypto operation mempool, see next
|
||
section, there is also the ability to allocate private memory with the
|
||
operation for applications purposes.
|
||
|
||
Application software is responsible for specifying all the operation specific
|
||
fields in the ``rte_crypto_op`` structure which are then used by the Crypto PMD
|
||
to process the requested operation.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Operation Management and Allocation
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
The cryptodev library provides an API set for managing Crypto operations which
|
||
utilize the Mempool Library to allocate operation buffers. Therefore, it ensures
|
||
that the crypto operation is interleaved optimally across the channels and
|
||
ranks for optimal processing.
|
||
A ``rte_crypto_op`` contains a field indicating the pool that it originated from.
|
||
When calling ``rte_crypto_op_free(op)``, the operation returns to its original pool.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
extern struct rte_mempool *
|
||
rte_crypto_op_pool_create(const char *name, enum rte_crypto_op_type type,
|
||
unsigned nb_elts, unsigned cache_size, uint16_t priv_size,
|
||
int socket_id);
|
||
|
||
During pool creation ``rte_crypto_op_init()`` is called as a constructor to
|
||
initialize each Crypto operation which subsequently calls
|
||
``__rte_crypto_op_reset()`` to configure any operation type specific fields based
|
||
on the type parameter.
|
||
|
||
|
||
``rte_crypto_op_alloc()`` and ``rte_crypto_op_bulk_alloc()`` are used to allocate
|
||
Crypto operations of a specific type from a given Crypto operation mempool.
|
||
``__rte_crypto_op_reset()`` is called on each operation before being returned to
|
||
allocate to a user so the operation is always in a good known state before use
|
||
by the application.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
struct rte_crypto_op *rte_crypto_op_alloc(struct rte_mempool *mempool,
|
||
enum rte_crypto_op_type type)
|
||
|
||
unsigned rte_crypto_op_bulk_alloc(struct rte_mempool *mempool,
|
||
enum rte_crypto_op_type type,
|
||
struct rte_crypto_op **ops, uint16_t nb_ops)
|
||
|
||
``rte_crypto_op_free()`` is called by the application to return an operation to
|
||
its allocating pool.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
void rte_crypto_op_free(struct rte_crypto_op *op)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Symmetric Cryptography Support
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
The cryptodev library currently provides support for the following symmetric
|
||
Crypto operations; cipher, authentication, including chaining of these
|
||
operations, as well as also supporting AEAD operations.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Session and Session Management
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
Sessions are used in symmetric cryptographic processing to store the immutable
|
||
data defined in a cryptographic transform which is used in the operation
|
||
processing of a packet flow. Sessions are used to manage information such as
|
||
expand cipher keys and HMAC IPADs and OPADs, which need to be calculated for a
|
||
particular Crypto operation, but are immutable on a packet to packet basis for
|
||
a flow. Crypto sessions cache this immutable data in a optimal way for the
|
||
underlying PMD and this allows further acceleration of the offload of
|
||
Crypto workloads.
|
||
|
||
.. figure:: img/cryptodev_sym_sess.*
|
||
|
||
The Crypto device framework provides APIs to create session mempool and allocate
|
||
and initialize sessions for crypto devices, where sessions are mempool objects.
|
||
The application has to use ``rte_cryptodev_sym_session_pool_create()`` to
|
||
create the session header mempool that creates a mempool with proper element
|
||
size automatically and stores necessary information for safely accessing the
|
||
session in the mempool's private data field.
|
||
|
||
To create a mempool for storing session private data, the application has two
|
||
options. The first is to create another mempool with elt size equal to or
|
||
bigger than the maximum session private data size of all crypto devices that
|
||
will share the same session header. The creation of the mempool shall use the
|
||
traditional ``rte_mempool_create()`` with the correct ``elt_size``. The other
|
||
option is to change the ``elt_size`` parameter in
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_sym_session_pool_create()`` to the correct value. The first
|
||
option is more complex to implement but may result in better memory usage as
|
||
a session header normally takes smaller memory footprint as the session private
|
||
data.
|
||
|
||
Once the session mempools have been created, ``rte_cryptodev_sym_session_create()``
|
||
is used to allocate an uninitialized session from the given mempool.
|
||
The session then must be initialized using ``rte_cryptodev_sym_session_init()``
|
||
for each of the required crypto devices. A symmetric transform chain
|
||
is used to specify the operation and its parameters. See the section below for
|
||
details on transforms.
|
||
|
||
When a session is no longer used, user must call ``rte_cryptodev_sym_session_clear()``
|
||
for each of the crypto devices that are using the session, to free all driver
|
||
private session data. Once this is done, session should be freed using
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_sym_session_free`` which returns them to their mempool.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Transforms and Transform Chaining
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
Symmetric Crypto transforms (``rte_crypto_sym_xform``) are the mechanism used
|
||
to specify the details of the Crypto operation. For chaining of symmetric
|
||
operations such as cipher encrypt and authentication generate, the next pointer
|
||
allows transform to be chained together. Crypto devices which support chaining
|
||
must publish the chaining of symmetric Crypto operations feature flag. Allocation of the
|
||
xform structure is in the application domain. To allow future API extensions in a
|
||
backwardly compatible manner, e.g. addition of a new parameter, the application should
|
||
zero the full xform struct before populating it.
|
||
|
||
Currently there are three transforms types cipher, authentication and AEAD.
|
||
Also it is important to note that the order in which the
|
||
transforms are passed indicates the order of the chaining.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
struct rte_crypto_sym_xform {
|
||
struct rte_crypto_sym_xform *next;
|
||
/**< next xform in chain */
|
||
enum rte_crypto_sym_xform_type type;
|
||
/**< xform type */
|
||
union {
|
||
struct rte_crypto_auth_xform auth;
|
||
/**< Authentication / hash xform */
|
||
struct rte_crypto_cipher_xform cipher;
|
||
/**< Cipher xform */
|
||
struct rte_crypto_aead_xform aead;
|
||
/**< AEAD xform */
|
||
};
|
||
};
|
||
|
||
The API does not place a limit on the number of transforms that can be chained
|
||
together but this will be limited by the underlying Crypto device poll mode
|
||
driver which is processing the operation.
|
||
|
||
.. figure:: img/crypto_xform_chain.*
|
||
|
||
|
||
Symmetric Operations
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
The symmetric Crypto operation structure contains all the mutable data relating
|
||
to performing symmetric cryptographic processing on a referenced mbuf data
|
||
buffer. It is used for either cipher, authentication, AEAD and chained
|
||
operations.
|
||
|
||
As a minimum the symmetric operation must have a source data buffer (``m_src``),
|
||
a valid session (or transform chain if in session-less mode) and the minimum
|
||
authentication/ cipher/ AEAD parameters required depending on the type of operation
|
||
specified in the session or the transform
|
||
chain.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
struct rte_crypto_sym_op {
|
||
struct rte_mbuf *m_src;
|
||
struct rte_mbuf *m_dst;
|
||
|
||
union {
|
||
void *session;
|
||
/**< Handle for the initialised session context */
|
||
struct rte_crypto_sym_xform *xform;
|
||
/**< Session-less API Crypto operation parameters */
|
||
};
|
||
|
||
union {
|
||
struct {
|
||
struct {
|
||
uint32_t offset;
|
||
uint32_t length;
|
||
} data; /**< Data offsets and length for AEAD */
|
||
|
||
struct {
|
||
uint8_t *data;
|
||
rte_iova_t phys_addr;
|
||
} digest; /**< Digest parameters */
|
||
|
||
struct {
|
||
uint8_t *data;
|
||
rte_iova_t phys_addr;
|
||
} aad;
|
||
/**< Additional authentication parameters */
|
||
} aead;
|
||
|
||
struct {
|
||
struct {
|
||
struct {
|
||
uint32_t offset;
|
||
uint32_t length;
|
||
} data; /**< Data offsets and length for ciphering */
|
||
} cipher;
|
||
|
||
struct {
|
||
struct {
|
||
uint32_t offset;
|
||
uint32_t length;
|
||
} data;
|
||
/**< Data offsets and length for authentication */
|
||
|
||
struct {
|
||
uint8_t *data;
|
||
rte_iova_t phys_addr;
|
||
} digest; /**< Digest parameters */
|
||
} auth;
|
||
};
|
||
};
|
||
};
|
||
|
||
Synchronous mode
|
||
----------------
|
||
|
||
Some cryptodevs support synchronous mode alongside with a standard asynchronous
|
||
mode. In that case operations are performed directly when calling
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_sym_cpu_crypto_process`` method instead of enqueuing and
|
||
dequeuing an operation before. This mode of operation allows cryptodevs which
|
||
utilize CPU cryptographic acceleration to have significant performance boost
|
||
comparing to standard asynchronous approach. Cryptodevs supporting synchronous
|
||
mode have ``RTE_CRYPTODEV_FF_SYM_CPU_CRYPTO`` feature flag set.
|
||
|
||
To perform a synchronous operation a call to
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_sym_cpu_crypto_process`` has to be made with vectorized
|
||
operation descriptor (``struct rte_crypto_sym_vec``) containing:
|
||
|
||
- ``num`` - number of operations to perform,
|
||
- pointer to an array of size ``num`` containing a scatter-gather list
|
||
descriptors of performed operations (``struct rte_crypto_sgl``). Each instance
|
||
of ``struct rte_crypto_sgl`` consists of a number of segments and a pointer to
|
||
an array of segment descriptors ``struct rte_crypto_vec``;
|
||
- pointers to arrays of size ``num`` containing IV, AAD and digest information
|
||
in the ``cpu_crypto`` sub-structure,
|
||
- pointer to an array of size ``num`` where status information will be stored
|
||
for each operation.
|
||
|
||
Function returns a number of successfully completed operations and sets
|
||
appropriate status number for each operation in the status array provided as
|
||
a call argument. Status different than zero must be treated as error.
|
||
|
||
For more details, e.g. how to convert an mbuf to an SGL, please refer to an
|
||
example usage in the IPsec library implementation.
|
||
|
||
Cryptodev Raw Data-path APIs
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
The Crypto Raw data-path APIs are a set of APIs designed to enable external
|
||
libraries/applications to leverage the cryptographic processing provided by
|
||
DPDK crypto PMDs through the cryptodev API but in a manner that is not
|
||
dependent on native DPDK data structures (eg. rte_mbuf, rte_crypto_op, ... etc)
|
||
in their data-path implementation.
|
||
|
||
The raw data-path APIs have the following advantages:
|
||
|
||
- External data structure friendly design. The new APIs uses the operation
|
||
descriptor ``struct rte_crypto_sym_vec`` that supports raw data pointer and
|
||
IOVA addresses as input. Moreover, the APIs does not require the user to
|
||
allocate the descriptor from mempool, nor requiring mbufs to describe input
|
||
data's virtual and IOVA addresses. All these features made the translation
|
||
from user's own data structure into the descriptor easier and more efficient.
|
||
|
||
- Flexible enqueue and dequeue operation. The raw data-path APIs gives the
|
||
user more control to the enqueue and dequeue operations, including the
|
||
capability of precious enqueue/dequeue count, abandoning enqueue or dequeue
|
||
at any time, and operation status translation and set on the fly.
|
||
|
||
Cryptodev PMDs which support the raw data-path APIs will have
|
||
``RTE_CRYPTODEV_FF_SYM_RAW_DP`` feature flag presented. To use this feature,
|
||
the user shall create a local ``struct rte_crypto_raw_dp_ctx`` buffer and
|
||
extend to at least the length returned by ``rte_cryptodev_get_raw_dp_ctx_size``
|
||
function call. The created buffer is then initialized using
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_configure_raw_dp_ctx`` function with the ``is_update``
|
||
parameter as 0. The library and the crypto device driver will then set the
|
||
buffer and attach either the cryptodev sym session, the rte_security session,
|
||
or the cryptodev xform for session-less operation into the ctx buffer, and
|
||
set the corresponding enqueue and dequeue function handlers based on the
|
||
algorithm information stored in the session or xform. When the ``is_update``
|
||
parameter passed into ``rte_cryptodev_configure_raw_dp_ctx`` is 1, the driver
|
||
will not initialize the buffer but only update the session or xform and
|
||
the function handlers accordingly.
|
||
|
||
After the ``struct rte_crypto_raw_dp_ctx`` buffer is initialized, it is now
|
||
ready for enqueue and dequeue operation. There are two different enqueue
|
||
functions: ``rte_cryptodev_raw_enqueue`` to enqueue single raw data
|
||
operation, and ``rte_cryptodev_raw_enqueue_burst`` to enqueue a descriptor
|
||
with multiple operations. In case of the application uses similar approach to
|
||
``struct rte_crypto_sym_vec`` to manage its data burst but with different
|
||
data structure, using the ``rte_cryptodev_raw_enqueue_burst`` function may be
|
||
less efficient as this is a situation where the application has to loop over
|
||
all crypto operations to assemble the ``struct rte_crypto_sym_vec`` descriptor
|
||
from its own data structure, and then the driver will loop over them again to
|
||
translate every operation in the descriptor to the driver's specific queue data.
|
||
The ``rte_cryptodev_raw_enqueue`` should be used to save one loop for each data
|
||
burst instead.
|
||
|
||
The ``rte_cryptodev_raw_enqueue`` and ``rte_cryptodev_raw_enqueue_burst``
|
||
functions will return or set the enqueue status. ``rte_cryptodev_raw_enqueue``
|
||
will return the status directly, ``rte_cryptodev_raw_enqueue_burst`` will
|
||
return the number of operations enqueued or stored (explained as follows) and
|
||
set the ``enqueue_status`` buffer provided by the user. The possible
|
||
enqueue status values are:
|
||
|
||
- ``1``: the operation(s) is/are enqueued successfully.
|
||
- ``0``: the operation(s) is/are cached successfully in the crypto device queue
|
||
but is not actually enqueued. The user shall call
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_raw_enqueue_done`` function after the expected operations
|
||
are stored. The crypto device will then start enqueuing all of them at
|
||
once.
|
||
- The negative integer: error occurred during enqueue.
|
||
|
||
Calling ``rte_cryptodev_configure_raw_dp_ctx`` with the parameter ``is_update``
|
||
set as 0 twice without the enqueue function returning or setting enqueue status
|
||
to 1 or ``rte_cryptodev_raw_enqueue_done`` function being called in between will
|
||
invalidate any operation stored in the device queue but not enqueued. This
|
||
feature is useful when the user wants to abandon partially enqueued operations
|
||
for a failed enqueue burst operation and try enqueuing in a whole later.
|
||
|
||
Similar as enqueue, there are two dequeue functions:
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_raw_dequeue`` for dequeuing single operation, and
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_raw_dequeue_burst`` for dequeuing a burst of operations (e.g.
|
||
all operations in a ``struct rte_crypto_sym_vec`` descriptor). The
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_raw_dequeue_burst`` function allows the user to provide callback
|
||
functions to retrieve dequeue count from the enqueued user data and write the
|
||
expected status value to the user data on the fly. The dequeue functions also
|
||
set the dequeue status:
|
||
|
||
- ``1``: the operation(s) is/are dequeued successfully.
|
||
- ``0``: the operation(s) is/are completed but is not actually dequeued (hence
|
||
still kept in the device queue). The user shall call the
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_raw_dequeue_done`` function after the expected number of
|
||
operations (e.g. all operations in a descriptor) are dequeued. The crypto
|
||
device driver will then free them from the queue at once.
|
||
- The negative integer: error occurred during dequeue.
|
||
|
||
Calling ``rte_cryptodev_configure_raw_dp_ctx`` with the parameter ``is_update``
|
||
set as 0 twice without the dequeue functions execution changed dequeue_status
|
||
to 1 or ``rte_cryptodev_raw_dequeue_done`` function being called in between will
|
||
revert the crypto device queue's dequeue effort to the moment when the
|
||
``struct rte_crypto_raw_dp_ctx`` buffer is initialized. This feature is useful
|
||
when the user wants to abandon partially dequeued data and try dequeuing again
|
||
later in a whole.
|
||
|
||
There are a few limitations to the raw data path APIs:
|
||
|
||
* Only support in-place operations.
|
||
* APIs are NOT thread-safe.
|
||
* CANNOT mix the raw data-path API's enqueue with rte_cryptodev_enqueue_burst,
|
||
or vice versa.
|
||
|
||
See *DPDK API Reference* for details on each API definitions.
|
||
|
||
Sample code
|
||
-----------
|
||
|
||
There are various sample applications that show how to use the cryptodev library,
|
||
such as the L2fwd with Crypto sample application (L2fwd-crypto) and
|
||
the IPsec Security Gateway application (ipsec-secgw).
|
||
|
||
While these applications demonstrate how an application can be created to perform
|
||
generic crypto operation, the required complexity hides the basic steps of
|
||
how to use the cryptodev APIs.
|
||
|
||
The following sample code shows the basic steps to encrypt several buffers
|
||
with AES-CBC (although performing other crypto operations is similar),
|
||
using one of the crypto PMDs available in DPDK.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
/*
|
||
* Simple example to encrypt several buffers with AES-CBC using
|
||
* the Cryptodev APIs.
|
||
*/
|
||
|
||
#define MAX_SESSIONS 1024
|
||
#define NUM_MBUFS 1024
|
||
#define POOL_CACHE_SIZE 128
|
||
#define BURST_SIZE 32
|
||
#define BUFFER_SIZE 1024
|
||
#define AES_CBC_IV_LENGTH 16
|
||
#define AES_CBC_KEY_LENGTH 16
|
||
#define IV_OFFSET (sizeof(struct rte_crypto_op) + \
|
||
sizeof(struct rte_crypto_sym_op))
|
||
|
||
struct rte_mempool *mbuf_pool, *crypto_op_pool;
|
||
struct rte_mempool *session_pool, *session_priv_pool;
|
||
unsigned int session_size;
|
||
int ret;
|
||
|
||
/* Initialize EAL. */
|
||
ret = rte_eal_init(argc, argv);
|
||
if (ret < 0)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Invalid EAL arguments\n");
|
||
|
||
uint8_t socket_id = rte_socket_id();
|
||
|
||
/* Create the mbuf pool. */
|
||
mbuf_pool = rte_pktmbuf_pool_create("mbuf_pool",
|
||
NUM_MBUFS,
|
||
POOL_CACHE_SIZE,
|
||
0,
|
||
RTE_MBUF_DEFAULT_BUF_SIZE,
|
||
socket_id);
|
||
if (mbuf_pool == NULL)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Cannot create mbuf pool\n");
|
||
|
||
/*
|
||
* The IV is always placed after the crypto operation,
|
||
* so some private data is required to be reserved.
|
||
*/
|
||
unsigned int crypto_op_private_data = AES_CBC_IV_LENGTH;
|
||
|
||
/* Create crypto operation pool. */
|
||
crypto_op_pool = rte_crypto_op_pool_create("crypto_op_pool",
|
||
RTE_CRYPTO_OP_TYPE_SYMMETRIC,
|
||
NUM_MBUFS,
|
||
POOL_CACHE_SIZE,
|
||
crypto_op_private_data,
|
||
socket_id);
|
||
if (crypto_op_pool == NULL)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Cannot create crypto op pool\n");
|
||
|
||
/* Create the virtual crypto device. */
|
||
char args[128];
|
||
const char *crypto_name = "crypto_aesni_mb0";
|
||
snprintf(args, sizeof(args), "socket_id=%d", socket_id);
|
||
ret = rte_vdev_init(crypto_name, args);
|
||
if (ret != 0)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Cannot create virtual device");
|
||
|
||
uint8_t cdev_id = rte_cryptodev_get_dev_id(crypto_name);
|
||
|
||
/* Get private session data size. */
|
||
session_size = rte_cryptodev_sym_get_private_session_size(cdev_id);
|
||
|
||
#ifdef USE_TWO_MEMPOOLS
|
||
/* Create session mempool for the session header. */
|
||
session_pool = rte_cryptodev_sym_session_pool_create("session_pool",
|
||
MAX_SESSIONS,
|
||
0,
|
||
POOL_CACHE_SIZE,
|
||
0,
|
||
socket_id);
|
||
|
||
/*
|
||
* Create session private data mempool for the
|
||
* private session data for the crypto device.
|
||
*/
|
||
session_priv_pool = rte_mempool_create("session_pool",
|
||
MAX_SESSIONS,
|
||
session_size,
|
||
POOL_CACHE_SIZE,
|
||
0, NULL, NULL, NULL,
|
||
NULL, socket_id,
|
||
0);
|
||
|
||
#else
|
||
/* Use of the same mempool for session header and private data */
|
||
session_pool = rte_cryptodev_sym_session_pool_create("session_pool",
|
||
MAX_SESSIONS * 2,
|
||
session_size,
|
||
POOL_CACHE_SIZE,
|
||
0,
|
||
socket_id);
|
||
|
||
session_priv_pool = session_pool;
|
||
|
||
#endif
|
||
|
||
/* Configure the crypto device. */
|
||
struct rte_cryptodev_config conf = {
|
||
.nb_queue_pairs = 1,
|
||
.socket_id = socket_id
|
||
};
|
||
|
||
struct rte_cryptodev_qp_conf qp_conf = {
|
||
.nb_descriptors = 2048,
|
||
.mp_session = session_pool,
|
||
.mp_session_private = session_priv_pool
|
||
};
|
||
|
||
if (rte_cryptodev_configure(cdev_id, &conf) < 0)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Failed to configure cryptodev %u", cdev_id);
|
||
|
||
if (rte_cryptodev_queue_pair_setup(cdev_id, 0, &qp_conf, socket_id) < 0)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Failed to setup queue pair\n");
|
||
|
||
if (rte_cryptodev_start(cdev_id) < 0)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Failed to start device\n");
|
||
|
||
/* Create the crypto transform. */
|
||
uint8_t cipher_key[16] = {0};
|
||
struct rte_crypto_sym_xform cipher_xform = {
|
||
.next = NULL,
|
||
.type = RTE_CRYPTO_SYM_XFORM_CIPHER,
|
||
.cipher = {
|
||
.op = RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_OP_ENCRYPT,
|
||
.algo = RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES_CBC,
|
||
.key = {
|
||
.data = cipher_key,
|
||
.length = AES_CBC_KEY_LENGTH
|
||
},
|
||
.iv = {
|
||
.offset = IV_OFFSET,
|
||
.length = AES_CBC_IV_LENGTH
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
};
|
||
|
||
/* Create crypto session and initialize it for the crypto device. */
|
||
struct rte_cryptodev_sym_session *session;
|
||
session = rte_cryptodev_sym_session_create(cdev_id, &cipher_xform,
|
||
session_pool);
|
||
if (session == NULL)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Session could not be created\n");
|
||
|
||
/* Get a burst of crypto operations. */
|
||
struct rte_crypto_op *crypto_ops[BURST_SIZE];
|
||
if (rte_crypto_op_bulk_alloc(crypto_op_pool,
|
||
RTE_CRYPTO_OP_TYPE_SYMMETRIC,
|
||
crypto_ops, BURST_SIZE) == 0)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Not enough crypto operations available\n");
|
||
|
||
/* Get a burst of mbufs. */
|
||
struct rte_mbuf *mbufs[BURST_SIZE];
|
||
if (rte_pktmbuf_alloc_bulk(mbuf_pool, mbufs, BURST_SIZE) < 0)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Not enough mbufs available");
|
||
|
||
/* Initialize the mbufs and append them to the crypto operations. */
|
||
unsigned int i;
|
||
for (i = 0; i < BURST_SIZE; i++) {
|
||
if (rte_pktmbuf_append(mbufs[i], BUFFER_SIZE) == NULL)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Not enough room in the mbuf\n");
|
||
crypto_ops[i]->sym->m_src = mbufs[i];
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
/* Set up the crypto operations. */
|
||
for (i = 0; i < BURST_SIZE; i++) {
|
||
struct rte_crypto_op *op = crypto_ops[i];
|
||
/* Modify bytes of the IV at the end of the crypto operation */
|
||
uint8_t *iv_ptr = rte_crypto_op_ctod_offset(op, uint8_t *,
|
||
IV_OFFSET);
|
||
|
||
generate_random_bytes(iv_ptr, AES_CBC_IV_LENGTH);
|
||
|
||
op->sym->cipher.data.offset = 0;
|
||
op->sym->cipher.data.length = BUFFER_SIZE;
|
||
|
||
/* Attach the crypto session to the operation */
|
||
rte_crypto_op_attach_sym_session(op, session);
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
/* Enqueue the crypto operations in the crypto device. */
|
||
uint16_t num_enqueued_ops = rte_cryptodev_enqueue_burst(cdev_id, 0,
|
||
crypto_ops, BURST_SIZE);
|
||
|
||
/*
|
||
* Dequeue the crypto operations until all the operations
|
||
* are processed in the crypto device.
|
||
*/
|
||
uint16_t num_dequeued_ops, total_num_dequeued_ops = 0;
|
||
do {
|
||
struct rte_crypto_op *dequeued_ops[BURST_SIZE];
|
||
num_dequeued_ops = rte_cryptodev_dequeue_burst(cdev_id, 0,
|
||
dequeued_ops, BURST_SIZE);
|
||
total_num_dequeued_ops += num_dequeued_ops;
|
||
|
||
/* Check if operation was processed successfully */
|
||
for (i = 0; i < num_dequeued_ops; i++) {
|
||
if (dequeued_ops[i]->status != RTE_CRYPTO_OP_STATUS_SUCCESS)
|
||
rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE,
|
||
"Some operations were not processed correctly");
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
rte_mempool_put_bulk(crypto_op_pool, (void **)dequeued_ops,
|
||
num_dequeued_ops);
|
||
} while (total_num_dequeued_ops < num_enqueued_ops);
|
||
|
||
Asymmetric Cryptography
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
|
||
The cryptodev library currently provides support for the following asymmetric
|
||
Crypto operations; RSA, Modular exponentiation and inversion, Diffie-Hellman and
|
||
Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman public and/or private key generation and shared
|
||
secret compute, DSA Signature generation and verification.
|
||
|
||
Session and Session Management
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
Sessions are used in asymmetric cryptographic processing to store the immutable
|
||
data defined in asymmetric cryptographic transform which is further used in the
|
||
operation processing. Sessions typically stores information, such as, public
|
||
and private key information or domain params or prime modulus data i.e. immutable
|
||
across data sets. Crypto sessions cache this immutable data in a optimal way for the
|
||
underlying PMD and this allows further acceleration of the offload of Crypto workloads.
|
||
|
||
Like symmetric, the Crypto device framework provides APIs to allocate and initialize
|
||
asymmetric sessions for crypto devices, where sessions are mempool objects.
|
||
It is the application's responsibility to create and manage the session mempools.
|
||
Application using both symmetric and asymmetric sessions should allocate and maintain
|
||
different sessions pools for each type.
|
||
|
||
An application can use ``rte_cryptodev_asym_session_pool_create()`` to create a mempool
|
||
with a specified number of elements. The element size will allow for the session header,
|
||
and the max private session size.
|
||
The max private session size is chosen based on available crypto devices,
|
||
the biggest private session size is used. This means any of those devices can be used,
|
||
and the mempool element will have available space for its private session data.
|
||
|
||
Once the session mempools have been created, ``rte_cryptodev_asym_session_create()``
|
||
is used to allocate and initialize an asymmetric session from the given mempool.
|
||
An asymmetric transform chain is used to specify the operation and its parameters.
|
||
See the section below for details on transforms.
|
||
|
||
When a session is no longer used, user must call ``rte_cryptodev_asym_session_clear()``
|
||
for each of the crypto devices that are using the session, to free all driver
|
||
private asymmetric session data. Once this is done, session should be freed using
|
||
``rte_cryptodev_asym_session_free()`` which returns them to their mempool.
|
||
|
||
Asymmetric Sessionless Support
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
Asymmetric crypto framework supports session-less operations as well.
|
||
|
||
Fields that should be set by user are:
|
||
|
||
Member xform of struct rte_crypto_asym_op should point to the user created rte_crypto_asym_xform.
|
||
Note that rte_crypto_asym_xform should be immutable for the lifetime of associated crypto_op.
|
||
|
||
Member sess_type of rte_crypto_op should also be set to RTE_CRYPTO_OP_SESSIONLESS.
|
||
|
||
Transforms and Transform Chaining
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
Asymmetric Crypto transforms (``rte_crypto_asym_xform``) are the mechanism used
|
||
to specify the details of the asymmetric Crypto operation. Next pointer within
|
||
xform allows transform to be chained together. Also it is important to note that
|
||
the order in which the transforms are passed indicates the order of the chaining. Allocation
|
||
of the xform structure is in the application domain. To allow future API extensions in a
|
||
backwardly compatible manner, e.g. addition of a new parameter, the application should
|
||
zero the full xform struct before populating it.
|
||
|
||
Not all asymmetric crypto xforms are supported for chaining. Currently supported
|
||
asymmetric crypto chaining is Diffie-Hellman private key generation followed by
|
||
public generation. Also, currently API does not support chaining of symmetric and
|
||
asymmetric crypto xforms.
|
||
|
||
Each xform defines specific asymmetric crypto algo. Currently supported are:
|
||
* RSA
|
||
* Modular operations (Exponentiation and Inverse)
|
||
* Diffie-Hellman
|
||
* DSA
|
||
* Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman
|
||
* None - special case where PMD may support a passthrough mode. More for diagnostic purpose
|
||
|
||
See *DPDK API Reference* for details on each rte_crypto_xxx_xform struct
|
||
|
||
Asymmetric Operations
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
The asymmetric Crypto operation structure contains all the mutable data relating
|
||
to asymmetric cryptographic processing on an input data buffer. It uses either
|
||
RSA, Modular, Diffie-Hellman or DSA operations depending upon session it is attached
|
||
to.
|
||
|
||
Every operation must carry a valid session handle which further carries information
|
||
on xform or xform-chain to be performed on op. Every xform type defines its own set
|
||
of operational params in their respective rte_crypto_xxx_op_param struct. Depending
|
||
on xform information within session, PMD picks up and process respective op_param
|
||
struct.
|
||
Unlike symmetric, asymmetric operations do not use mbufs for input/output.
|
||
They operate on data buffer of type ``rte_crypto_param``.
|
||
|
||
See *DPDK API Reference* for details on each rte_crypto_xxx_op_param struct
|
||
|
||
Private user data
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
Similar to symmetric above, asymmetric also has a set and get API that provides a
|
||
mechanism for an application to store and retrieve the private user data information
|
||
stored along with the crypto session.
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: c
|
||
|
||
int rte_cryptodev_asym_session_set_user_data(void *sess,
|
||
void *data, uint16_t size);
|
||
|
||
void * rte_cryptodev_asym_session_get_user_data(void *sess);
|
||
|
||
Please note the ``size`` passed to set API cannot be bigger than the predefined
|
||
``user_data_sz`` when creating the session mempool, otherwise the function will
|
||
return an error. Also when ``user_data_sz`` was defined as ``0`` when
|
||
creating the session mempool, the get API will always return ``NULL``.
|
||
|
||
Asymmetric crypto Sample code
|
||
-----------------------------
|
||
|
||
There's a unit test application test_cryptodev_asym.c inside unit test framework that
|
||
show how to setup and process asymmetric operations using cryptodev library.
|
||
|
||
The following code samples are taken from the test application mentioned above,
|
||
and show basic steps to compute modular exponentiation using an openssl PMD
|
||
available in DPDK (performing other crypto operations is similar except change
|
||
to respective op and xform setup).
|
||
|
||
.. note::
|
||
The following code snippets are taken from multiple functions, so variable
|
||
names may differ slightly between sections.
|
||
|
||
Configure the virtual device, queue pairs, crypto op pool and session mempool.
|
||
|
||
.. literalinclude:: ../../../app/test/test_cryptodev_asym.c
|
||
:language: c
|
||
:start-after: Device, op pool and session configuration for asymmetric crypto. 8<
|
||
:end-before: >8 End of device, op pool and session configuration for asymmetric crypto section.
|
||
:dedent: 1
|
||
|
||
Create MODEX data vectors.
|
||
|
||
.. literalinclude:: ../../../app/test/test_cryptodev_mod_test_vectors.h
|
||
:language: c
|
||
:start-after: MODEX data. 8<
|
||
:end-before: >8 End of MODEX data.
|
||
|
||
Setup crypto xform to do modular exponentiation using data vectors.
|
||
|
||
.. literalinclude:: ../../../app/test/test_cryptodev_mod_test_vectors.h
|
||
:language: c
|
||
:start-after: MODEX vector. 8<
|
||
:end-before: >8 End of MODEX vector.
|
||
|
||
Generate crypto op, create and attach a session, then process packets.
|
||
|
||
.. literalinclude:: ../../../app/test/test_cryptodev_asym.c
|
||
:language: c
|
||
:start-after: Create op, create session, and process packets. 8<
|
||
:end-before: >8 End of create op, create session, and process packets section.
|
||
:dedent: 1
|
||
|
||
.. note::
|
||
The ``rte_cryptodev_asym_session`` struct is hidden from the application.
|
||
The ``sess`` pointer used above is a void pointer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Asymmetric Crypto Device API
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
The cryptodev Library API is described in the
|
||
`DPDK API Reference <https://doc.dpdk.org/api/>`_
|
||
|
||
|
||
Device Statistics
|
||
-----------------
|
||
|
||
The Cryptodev library has support for displaying Crypto device information
|
||
through the Telemetry interface. Telemetry commands that can be used
|
||
are shown below.
|
||
|
||
#. Get the list of available Crypto devices by ID::
|
||
|
||
--> /cryptodev/list
|
||
{"/cryptodev/list": [0, 1, 2, 3]}
|
||
|
||
#. Get general information from a Crypto device::
|
||
|
||
--> /cryptodev/info,0
|
||
{"/cryptodev/info": {"device_name": "0000:1c:01.0_qat_sym",
|
||
"max_nb_queue_pairs": 2}}
|
||
|
||
#. Get the statistics for a particular Crypto device::
|
||
|
||
--> /cryptodev/stats,0
|
||
{"/cryptodev/stats": {"enqueued_count": 0, "dequeued_count": 0,
|
||
"enqueue_err_count": 0, "dequeue_err_count": 0}}
|
||
|
||
#. Get the capabilities of a particular Crypto device::
|
||
|
||
--> /cryptodev/caps,0
|
||
{"/cryptodev/caps": {"crypto_caps": [<array of serialized bytes of
|
||
capabilities>], "crypto_caps_n": <number of capabilities>}}
|
||
|
||
For more information on how to use the Telemetry interface, see
|
||
the :doc:`../howto/telemetry`.
|