b0a49787b4
This old script relied on deprecated stuff, and especially make. It also applied some scary 666 permissions on files under /dev/vfio. Its deprecation had been notified in a previous release, remove it. Signed-off-by: David Marchand <david.marchand@redhat.com> Acked-by: Bruce Richardson <bruce.richardson@intel.com> Acked-by: Thomas Monjalon <thomas@monjalon.net> Acked-by: Ferruh Yigit <ferruh.yigit@intel.com> Acked-by: Maxime Coquelin <maxime.coquelin@redhat.com>
313 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
313 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
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Copyright(c) 2019 Intel Corporation
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Intel(R) FPGA LTE FEC Poll Mode Driver
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======================================
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The BBDEV FPGA LTE FEC poll mode driver (PMD) supports an FPGA implementation of a VRAN
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Turbo Encode / Decode LTE wireless acceleration function, using Intel's PCI-e and FPGA
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based Vista Creek device.
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Features
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--------
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FPGA LTE FEC PMD supports the following features:
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- Turbo Encode in the DL with total throughput of 4.5 Gbits/s
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- Turbo Decode in the UL with total throughput of 1.5 Gbits/s assuming 8 decoder iterations
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- 8 VFs per PF (physical device)
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- Maximum of 32 UL queues per VF
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- Maximum of 32 DL queues per VF
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- PCIe Gen-3 x8 Interface
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- MSI-X
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- SR-IOV
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FPGA LTE FEC PMD supports the following BBDEV capabilities:
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* For the turbo encode operation:
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- ``RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_CRC_24B_ATTACH`` : set to attach CRC24B to CB(s)
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- ``RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_RATE_MATCH`` : if set then do not do Rate Match bypass
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- ``RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_ENC_INTERRUPTS`` : set for encoder dequeue interrupts
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* For the turbo decode operation:
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- ``RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_CRC_TYPE_24B`` : check CRC24B from CB(s)
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- ``RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_SUBBLOCK_DEINTERLEAVE`` : perform subblock de-interleave
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- ``RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_DEC_INTERRUPTS`` : set for decoder dequeue interrupts
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- ``RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_NEG_LLR_1_BIT_IN`` : set if negative LLR encoder i/p is supported
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- ``RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_DEC_TB_CRC_24B_KEEP`` : keep CRC24B bits appended while decoding
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Limitations
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-----------
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FPGA LTE FEC does not support the following:
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- Scatter-Gather function
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Installation
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--------------
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Section 3 of the DPDK manual provides instructions on installing and compiling DPDK.
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DPDK requires hugepages to be configured as detailed in section 2 of the DPDK manual.
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The bbdev test application has been tested with a configuration 40 x 1GB hugepages. The
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hugepage configuration of a server may be examined using:
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.. code-block:: console
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grep Huge* /proc/meminfo
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Initialization
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--------------
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When the device first powers up, its PCI Physical Functions (PF) can be listed through this command:
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.. code-block:: console
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sudo lspci -vd1172:5052
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The physical and virtual functions are compatible with Linux UIO drivers:
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``vfio`` and ``igb_uio``. However, in order to work the FPGA LTE FEC device firstly needs
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to be bound to one of these linux drivers through DPDK.
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Bind PF UIO driver(s)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Install the DPDK igb_uio driver, bind it with the PF PCI device ID and use
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``lspci`` to confirm the PF device is under use by ``igb_uio`` DPDK UIO driver.
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The igb_uio driver may be bound to the PF PCI device using one of two methods:
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1. PCI functions (physical or virtual, depending on the use case) can be bound to
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the UIO driver by repeating this command for every function.
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.. code-block:: console
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insmod igb_uio.ko
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echo "1172 5052" > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/igb_uio/new_id
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lspci -vd1172:
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2. Another way to bind PF with DPDK UIO driver is by using the ``dpdk-devbind.py`` tool
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.. code-block:: console
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cd <dpdk-top-level-directory>
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./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -b igb_uio 0000:06:00.0
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where the PCI device ID (example: 0000:06:00.0) is obtained using lspci -vd1172:
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In the same way the FPGA LTE FEC PF can be bound with vfio, but vfio driver does not
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support SR-IOV configuration right out of the box, so it will need to be patched.
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Enable Virtual Functions
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Now, it should be visible in the printouts that PCI PF is under igb_uio control
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"``Kernel driver in use: igb_uio``"
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To show the number of available VFs on the device, read ``sriov_totalvfs`` file..
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.. code-block:: console
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cat /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:<b>\:<d>.<f>/sriov_totalvfs
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where 0000\:<b>\:<d>.<f> is the PCI device ID
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To enable VFs via igb_uio, echo the number of virtual functions intended to
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enable to ``max_vfs`` file..
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.. code-block:: console
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echo <num-of-vfs> > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:<b>\:<d>.<f>/max_vfs
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Afterwards, all VFs must be bound to appropriate UIO drivers as required, same
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way it was done with the physical function previously.
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Enabling SR-IOV via vfio driver is pretty much the same, except that the file
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name is different:
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.. code-block:: console
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echo <num-of-vfs> > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:<b>\:<d>.<f>/sriov_numvfs
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Configure the VFs through PF
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The PCI virtual functions must be configured before working or getting assigned
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to VMs/Containers. The configuration involves allocating the number of hardware
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queues, priorities, load balance, bandwidth and other settings necessary for the
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device to perform FEC functions.
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This configuration needs to be executed at least once after reboot or PCI FLR and can
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be achieved by using the function ``rte_fpga_lte_fec_configure()``, which sets up the
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parameters defined in ``rte_fpga_lte_fec_conf`` structure:
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.. code-block:: c
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struct rte_fpga_lte_fec_conf {
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bool pf_mode_en;
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uint8_t vf_ul_queues_number[FPGA_LTE_FEC_NUM_VFS];
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uint8_t vf_dl_queues_number[FPGA_LTE_FEC_NUM_VFS];
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uint8_t ul_bandwidth;
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uint8_t dl_bandwidth;
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uint8_t ul_load_balance;
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uint8_t dl_load_balance;
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uint16_t flr_time_out;
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};
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- ``pf_mode_en``: identifies whether only PF is to be used, or the VFs. PF and
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VFs are mutually exclusive and cannot run simultaneously.
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Set to 1 for PF mode enabled.
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If PF mode is enabled all queues available in the device are assigned
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exclusively to PF and 0 queues given to VFs.
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- ``vf_*l_queues_number``: defines the hardware queue mapping for every VF.
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- ``*l_bandwidth``: in case of congestion on PCIe interface. The device
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allocates different bandwidth to UL and DL. The weight is configured by this
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setting. The unit of weight is 3 code blocks. For example, if the code block
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cbps (code block per second) ratio between UL and DL is 12:1, then the
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configuration value should be set to 36:3. The schedule algorithm is based
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on code block regardless the length of each block.
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- ``*l_load_balance``: hardware queues are load-balanced in a round-robin
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fashion. Queues get filled first-in first-out until they reach a pre-defined
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watermark level, if exceeded, they won't get assigned new code blocks..
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This watermark is defined by this setting.
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If all hardware queues exceeds the watermark, no code blocks will be
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streamed in from UL/DL code block FIFO.
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- ``flr_time_out``: specifies how many 16.384us to be FLR time out. The
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time_out = flr_time_out x 16.384us. For instance, if you want to set 10ms for
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the FLR time out then set this setting to 0x262=610.
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An example configuration code calling the function ``rte_fpga_lte_fec_configure()`` is shown
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below:
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.. code-block:: c
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struct rte_fpga_lte_fec_conf conf;
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unsigned int i;
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memset(&conf, 0, sizeof(struct rte_fpga_lte_fec_conf));
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conf.pf_mode_en = 1;
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for (i = 0; i < FPGA_LTE_FEC_NUM_VFS; ++i) {
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conf.vf_ul_queues_number[i] = 4;
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conf.vf_dl_queues_number[i] = 4;
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}
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conf.ul_bandwidth = 12;
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conf.dl_bandwidth = 5;
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conf.dl_load_balance = 64;
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conf.ul_load_balance = 64;
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/* setup FPGA PF */
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ret = rte_fpga_lte_fec_configure(info->dev_name, &conf);
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TEST_ASSERT_SUCCESS(ret,
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"Failed to configure 4G FPGA PF for bbdev %s",
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info->dev_name);
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Test Application
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----------------
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BBDEV provides a test application, ``test-bbdev.py`` and range of test data for testing
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the functionality of FPGA LTE FEC turbo encode and turbo decode, depending on the device's
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capabilities. The test application is located under app->test-bbdev folder and has the
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following options:
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.. code-block:: console
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"-p", "--testapp-path": specifies path to the bbdev test app.
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"-e", "--eal-params" : EAL arguments which are passed to the test app.
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"-t", "--timeout" : Timeout in seconds (default=300).
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"-c", "--test-cases" : Defines test cases to run. Run all if not specified.
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"-v", "--test-vector" : Test vector path (default=dpdk_path+/app/test-bbdev/test_vectors/bbdev_null.data).
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"-n", "--num-ops" : Number of operations to process on device (default=32).
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"-b", "--burst-size" : Operations enqueue/dequeue burst size (default=32).
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"-l", "--num-lcores" : Number of lcores to run (default=16).
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"-i", "--init-device" : Initialise PF device with default values.
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To execute the test application tool using simple turbo decode or turbo encode data,
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type one of the following:
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.. code-block:: console
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./test-bbdev.py -c validation -n 64 -b 8 -v ./turbo_dec_default.data
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./test-bbdev.py -c validation -n 64 -b 8 -v ./turbo_enc_default.data
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The test application ``test-bbdev.py``, supports the ability to configure the PF device with
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a default set of values, if the "-i" or "- -init-device" option is included. The default values
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are defined in test_bbdev_perf.c as:
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- VF_UL_QUEUE_VALUE 4
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- VF_DL_QUEUE_VALUE 4
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- UL_BANDWIDTH 3
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- DL_BANDWIDTH 3
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- UL_LOAD_BALANCE 128
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- DL_LOAD_BALANCE 128
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- FLR_TIMEOUT 610
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Test Vectors
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In addition to the simple turbo decoder and turbo encoder tests, bbdev also provides
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a range of additional tests under the test_vectors folder, which may be useful. The results
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of these tests will depend on the FPGA LTE FEC capabilities:
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* turbo decoder tests:
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- ``turbo_dec_c1_k6144_r0_e10376_crc24b_sbd_negllr_high_snr.data``
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- ``turbo_dec_c1_k6144_r0_e10376_crc24b_sbd_negllr_low_snr.data``
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- ``turbo_dec_c1_k6144_r0_e34560_negllr.data``
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- ``turbo_dec_c1_k6144_r0_e34560_sbd_negllr.data``
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- ``turbo_dec_c2_k3136_r0_e4920_sbd_negllr_crc24b.data``
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- ``turbo_dec_c2_k3136_r0_e4920_sbd_negllr.data``
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* turbo encoder tests:
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- ``turbo_enc_c1_k40_r0_e1190_rm.data``
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- ``turbo_enc_c1_k40_r0_e1194_rm.data``
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- ``turbo_enc_c1_k40_r0_e1196_rm.data``
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- ``turbo_enc_c1_k40_r0_e272_rm.data``
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- ``turbo_enc_c1_k6144_r0_e18444.data``
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- ``turbo_enc_c1_k6144_r0_e32256_crc24b_rm.data``
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- ``turbo_enc_c2_k5952_r0_e17868_crc24b.data``
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- ``turbo_enc_c3_k4800_r2_e14412_crc24b.data``
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- ``turbo_enc_c4_k4800_r2_e14412_crc24b.data``
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Alternate Baseband Device configuration tool
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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On top of the embedded configuration feature supported in test-bbdev using "- -init-device"
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option, there is also a tool available to perform that device configuration using a companion
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application.
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The ``pf_bb_config`` application notably enables then to run bbdev-test from the VF
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and not only limited to the PF as captured above.
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See for more details: https://github.com/intel/pf-bb-config
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Specifically for the BBDEV FPGA LTE FEC PMD, the command below can be used:
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.. code-block:: console
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./pf_bb_config FPGA_LTE -c fpga_lte/fpga_lte_config_vf.cfg
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./test-bbdev.py -e="-c 0xff0 -a${VF_PCI_ADDR}" -c validation -n 64 -b 32 -l 1 -v ./turbo_dec_default.data
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