[dpdk-dev] [PATCH] doc: remove redundant Intel referances-FreeBSD GSG

Siobhan Butler siobhan.a.butler at intel.com
Wed Dec 3 01:28:20 CET 2014


Updated the FreeBSD GSG to remove redundant Intel referances.

Signed-off-by: Siobhan Butler <siobhan.a.butler at intel.com>
---
 doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/build_dpdk.rst        | 117 ++++++++++++++++-----------
 doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/build_sample_apps.rst |  54 +++++++------
 doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/intro.rst             |  44 +++++-----
 doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/sys_reqs.rst          |  45 ++++++-----
 4 files changed, 143 insertions(+), 117 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/build_dpdk.rst b/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/build_dpdk.rst
index 9b78840..dec3eea 100644
--- a/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/build_dpdk.rst
+++ b/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/build_dpdk.rst
@@ -28,13 +28,13 @@
     (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
     OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
 
-Compiling the Intel® DPDK Target from Source
-============================================
+Compiling the DPDK Target from Source
+=====================================
 
-Install the Intel® DPDK and Browse Sources
-------------------------------------------
+Install the DPDK and Browse Sources
+-----------------------------------
 
-First, uncompress the archive and move to the Intel® DPDK source directory:
+First, uncompress the archive and move to the DPDK source directory:
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
@@ -43,20 +43,20 @@ First, uncompress the archive and move to the Intel® DPDK source directory:
     user at host:~/DPDK # ls
     app/ config/ examples/ lib/ LICENSE.GPL LICENSE.LGPL Makefile mk/ scripts/ tools/
 
-The Intel® DPDK is composed of several directories:
+The DPDK is composed of several directories:
 
-*   lib: Source code of Intel® DPDK libraries
+*   lib: Source code of DPDK libraries
 
-*   app: Source code of Intel® DPDK applications (automatic tests)
+*   app: Source code of DPDK applications (automatic tests)
 
-*   examples: Source code of Intel® DPDK applications
+*   examples: Source code of DPDK applications
 
 *   config, tools, scripts, mk: Framework-related makefiles, scripts and configuration
 
-Installation of the Intel® DPDK Target Environments
----------------------------------------------------
+Installation of the DPDK Target Environments
+--------------------------------------------
 
-The format of an Intel® DPDK target is:
+The format of a DPDK target is:
 
 ARCH-MACHINE-EXECENV-TOOLCHAIN
 
@@ -70,7 +70,8 @@ Where:
 
 *   TOOLCHAIN is: gcc
 
-The configuration files for the Intel® DPDK targets can be found in the DPDK/config directory in the form of:
+The configuration files for the DPDK targets can be found in the DPDK/config
+directory in the form of:
 
 ::
 
@@ -82,7 +83,7 @@ The configuration files for the Intel® DPDK targets can be found in the DPDK/co
     Within the configuration files, the RTE_MACHINE configuration value is set to native,
     which means that the compiled software is tuned for the platform on which it is built.
     For more information on this setting, and its possible values,
-    see the *Intel® DPDK Programmers Guide*.
+    see the *DPDK Programmers Guide*.
 
 To install and make the target, use gmake install T=<target> CC=gcc48.
 
@@ -106,33 +107,37 @@ To build after configuration, change directory to ./x86_64-native-bsdapp-gcc and
 
     gmake CC=gcc48
 
-Browsing the Installed Intel®DPDK Environment Target
-----------------------------------------------------
+Browsing the Installed DPDK Environment Target
+----------------------------------------------
 
 Once a target is created, it contains all the libraries
-and header files for the Intel® DPDK environment that are required to build customer applications.
-In addition, the test and testpmd applications are built under the build/app directory, which may be used for testing.
-A kmod directory is also present that contains the kernel modules to install:
+and header files for the DPDK environment that are required to build customer applications.
+In addition, the test and testpmd applications are built under the build/app directory,
+which may be used for testing. A kmod directory is also present that contains the kernel
+modules to install:
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
     user at host:~/DPDK # ls x86_64-native-bsdapp-gcc
     app   build    hostapp    include    kmod    lib    Makefile
 
-Loading the Intel® DPDK contigmem Module
+Loading the DPDK contigmem Module
 ----------------------------------------
 
-To run any Intel® DPDK application, the contigmem module must be loaded into the running kernel.
-The module is found in the kmod sub-directory of the Intel® DPDK target directory.
-The module can be loaded using kldload (assuming that the current directory is the Intel® DPDK target directory):
+To run any DPDK application, the contigmem module must be loaded into the running
+kernel.
+The module is found in the kmod sub-directory of the DPDK target directory.
+The module can be loaded using kldload (assuming that the current directory is the
+DPDK target directory):
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
     kldload ./kmod/contigmem.ko
 
-It is advisable to include the loading of the contigmem module during the boot process to avoid issues
-with potential memory fragmentation during later system up time.
-This can be achieved by copying the module to the /boot/kernel/ directory and placing the following into /boot/loader.conf:
+It is advisable to include the loading of the contigmem module during the boot
+process to avoid issues with potential memory fragmentation during later
+system up time. This can be achieved by copying the module to the
+/boot/kernel/ directory and placing the following into /boot/loader.conf:
 
 ::
 
@@ -140,11 +145,13 @@ This can be achieved by copying the module to the /boot/kernel/ directory and pl
 
 .. note::
 
-    The contigmem_load directive should be placed after any definitions of hw.contigmem.num_buffers
-    and hw.contigmem.buffer_size if the default values are not to be used.
+    The contigmem_load directive should be placed after any definitions of
+    hw.contigmem.num_buffers and hw.contigmem.buffer_size if the default values
+    are not to be used.
 
 An error such as kldload: can't load ./x86_64-native-bsdapp-gcc/kmod/contigmem.ko: Exec format error,
-is generally attributed to not having enough contiguous memory available and can be verified via dmesg or /var/log/messages:
+is generally attributed to not having enough contiguous memory available and can
+be verified via dmesg or /var/log/messages:
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
@@ -152,11 +159,13 @@ is generally attributed to not having enough contiguous memory available and can
 
 To avoid this error, reduce the number of buffers or the buffer size.
 
-Loading the Intel® DPDK nic_uio Module
---------------------------------------
+Loading the DPDK nic_uio Module
+-------------------------------
 
-After loading the contigmem module, the nic_uio must also be loaded into the running kernel prior to running any Intel® DPDK application.
-This module must be loaded using the kldload command as shown below (assuming that the current directory is the Intel® DPDK target directory).
+After loading the contigmem module, the nic_uio must also be loaded into the running
+kernel prior to running any DPDK application. This module must be loaded using the
+kldload command as shown below (assuming that the current directory is the
+DPDK target directory).
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
@@ -166,12 +175,14 @@ This module must be loaded using the kldload command as shown below (assuming th
 
     Currently loaded modules can be seen by using the kldstat command.
     A module can be removed from the running kernel by using kldunload <module_name>.
-    While the nic_uio module can be loaded during boot,
-    the module load order cannot be guaranteed and in the case where only some ports are bound to nic_uio
-    and others remain in use by the original driver, it is necessary to load nic_uio after booting into the kernel,
-    specifically after the original driver has been loaded.
+    While the nic_uio module can be loaded during boot, the module load order cannot
+    be guaranteed and in the case where only some ports are bound to nic_uio
+    and others remain in use by the original driver, it is necessary to
+    load nic_uio after booting into the kernel, specifically after the original
+    driver has been loaded.
 
-To load the module during boot, copy the nic_uio module to /boot/kernel and place the following into /boot/loader.conf:
+To load the module during boot, copy the nic_uio module to /boot/kernel and place
+the following into /boot/loader.conf:
 
 ::
 
@@ -184,7 +195,7 @@ To load the module during boot, copy the nic_uio module to /boot/kernel and plac
 Binding Network Ports to the nic_uio Module
 -------------------------------------------
 
-By default, the nic_uio module will take ownership of network ports if they are recognized Intel® DPDK devices
+By default, the nic_uio module will take ownership of network ports if they are recognized DPDK devices
 and are not owned by another module.
 
 Device ownership can be viewed using the pciconf -l command.
@@ -210,10 +221,12 @@ The first column constitutes three components:
 Where no driver is associated with a device, the device name will be none.
 
 By default, the FreeBSD* kernel will include built-in drivers for the most common devices;
-a kernel rebuild would normally be required to either remove the drivers or configure them as loadable modules.
+a kernel rebuild would normally be required to either remove the drivers or configure
+them as loadable modules.
 
-To avoid building a custom kernel, the nic_uio module can detach a network port from its current device driver.
-This is achieved by setting the hw.nic_uio.bdfs kernel environment variable prior to loading nic_uio, as follows:
+To avoid building a custom kernel, the nic_uio module can detach a network port from its
+current device driver. This is achieved by setting the hw.nic_uio.bdfs kernel
+environment variable prior to loading nic_uio, as follows:
 
 ::
 
@@ -221,33 +234,39 @@ This is achieved by setting the hw.nic_uio.bdfs kernel environment variable prio
 
 Where a comma separated list of selectors is set, the list must not contain any whitespace.
 
-For example to re-bind ix2 at pci0:2:0:0 and ix3 at pci0:2:0: to the nic_uio module upon loading, use the following command:
+For example to re-bind ix2 at pci0:2:0:0 and ix3 at pci0:2:0: to the nic_uio module upon
+loading, use the following command:
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
     kenv hw.nic_uio.bdfs="2:0:0,2:0:1"
 
-The variable can also be specified during boot by placing the following into /boot/ loader.conf:
+The variable can also be specified during boot by placing the following into
+/boot/loader.conf:
 
 ::
 
     hw.nic_uio.bdfs="2:0:0,2:0:1"
 
 To restore the original device binding,
-it is necessary to reboot FreeBSD* if the original driver has been compiled into the kernel.
+it is necessary to reboot FreeBSD* if the original driver has been compiled into
+the kernel.
 
 For example to rebind some or all ports to the original driver:
 
-Update or remove the hw.nic_uio.bdfs entry in /boot/loader.conf if specified there for persistency, then;
+Update or remove the hw.nic_uio.bdfs entry in /boot/loader.conf if specified
+there for persistency, then;
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
     reboot
 
-If rebinding to a driver that is a loadable module, the network port binding can be reset without rebooting.
-This requires the unloading of the nic_uio module and the original driver.
+If rebinding to a driver that is a loadable module, the network port binding can
+be reset without rebooting. This requires the unloading of the nic_uio module and
+the original driver.
 
-Update or remove the hw.nic_uio.bdfs entry from /boot/loader.conf if specified there for persistency.
+Update or remove the hw.nic_uio.bdfs entry from /boot/loader.conf if specified
+there for persistency.
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
diff --git a/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/build_sample_apps.rst b/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/build_sample_apps.rst
index 7e85467..14b6a21 100644
--- a/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/build_sample_apps.rst
+++ b/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/build_sample_apps.rst
@@ -31,30 +31,31 @@
 Compiling and Running Sample Applications
 =========================================
 
-The chapter describes how to compile and run applications in an Intel® DPDK environment.
+The chapter describes how to compile and run applications in a DPDK environment.
 It also provides a pointer to where sample applications are stored.
 
 Compiling a Sample Application
 ------------------------------
 
-Once an Intel® DPDK target environment directory has been created (such as x86_64-native-bsdapp-gcc),
-it contains all libraries and header files required to build an application.
+Once a DPDK target environment directory has been created (such as
+x86_64-native-bsdapp-gcc), it contains all libraries and header files required
+to build an application.
 
-When compiling an application in the FreeBSD* environment on the Intel® DPDK,
+When compiling an application in the FreeBSD* environment on the DPDK,
 the following variables must be exported:
 
-*   RTE_SDK - Points to the Intel® DPDK installation directory.
+*   RTE_SDK - Points to the DPDK installation directory.
 
-*   RTE_TARGET - Points to the Intel® DPDK target environment directory.
+*   RTE_TARGET - Points to the DPDK target environment directory.
     For FreeBSD*, this is the x86_64-native-bsdapp-gcc directory.
 
 The following is an example of creating the helloworld application,
-which runs in the Intel® DPDK FreeBSD* environment.
+which runs in the DPDK FreeBSD* environment.
 This example may be found in the ${RTE_SDK}/examples directory.
 
 The directory contains the main.c file.
-This file, when combined with the libraries in the Intel® DPDK target environment,
-calls the various functions to initialize the Intel® DPDK environment,
+This file, when combined with the libraries in the DPDK target environment,
+calls the various functions to initialize the DPDK environment,
 then launches an entry point (dispatch application) for each core to be utilized.
 By default, the binary is generated in the build directory.
 
@@ -73,9 +74,11 @@ By default, the binary is generated in the build directory.
 
 .. note::
 
-    In the above example, helloworld was in the directory structure of the Intel® DPDK.
-    However, it could have been located outside the directory structure to keep the Intel® DPDK structure intact.
-    In the following case, the helloworld application is copied to a new directory as a new starting point.
+    In the above example, helloworld was in the directory structure of the DPDK.
+    However, it could have been located outside the directory structure to keep the
+    DPDK structure intact.
+    In the following case, the helloworld application is copied to a new directory
+    as a new starting point.
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
@@ -96,8 +99,9 @@ Running a Sample Application
 
 #.  Any ports to be used by the application must be already bound to the nic_uio module,
     as described in section Section 3.6, “ , ” prior to running the application.
-    The application is linked with the Intel® DPDK target environment's Environment Abstraction Layer (EAL) library,
-    which provides some options that are generic to every Intel® DPDK application.
+    The application is linked with the DPDK target environment's Environment
+    Abstraction Layer (EAL) library, which provides some options that are generic
+    to every DPDK application.
 
 The following is the list of options that can be given to the EAL:
 
@@ -153,7 +157,7 @@ Other options, specific to Linux* and are not supported under FreeBSD* are as fo
 
 The -c and the -n options are mandatory; the others are optional.
 
-Copy the Intel® DPDK application binary to your target,
+Copy the DPDK application binary to your target,
 then run the application as follows (assuming the platform has four memory channels,
 and that cores 0-3 are present and are to be used for running the application):
 
@@ -163,18 +167,18 @@ and that cores 0-3 are present and are to be used for running the application):
 
 .. note::
 
-    The --proc-type and --file-prefix EAL options are used for running multiple Intel® DPDK processes.
+    The --proc-type and --file-prefix EAL options are used for running multiple DPDK processes.
     See the “Multi-process Sample Application” chapter in the
-    *Intel® DPDK Sample Applications User Guide and the Intel® DPDK Programmers Guide* for more details.
+    *DPDK Sample Applications User Guide and the DPDK Programmers Guide* for more details.
 
-Running Intel®DPDK Applications Without Root Privileges
--------------------------------------------------------
+Running DPDK Applications Without Root Privileges
+-------------------------------------------------
 
-Although applications using the Intel® DPDK use network ports and other hardware resources directly,
-with a number of small permission adjustments,
-it is possible to run these applications as a user other than “root”.
-To do so, the ownership, or permissions, on the following file system objects should be adjusted to ensure
-that the user account being used to run the Intel® DPDK application has access to them:
+Although applications using the DPDK use network ports and other hardware resources
+directly, with a number of small permission adjustments, it is possible to run
+these applications as a user other than “root”. To do so, the ownership, or
+permissions, on the following file system objects should be adjusted to ensure
+that the user account being used to run the DPDK application has access to them:
 
 *   The userspace-io device files in /dev, for example, /dev/uio0, /dev/uio1, and so on
 
@@ -182,4 +186,4 @@ that the user account being used to run the Intel® DPDK application has access
 
 .. note::
 
-    Please refer to the Intel® DPDK Release Notes for supported applications.
+    Please refer to the DPDK Release Notes for supported applications.
diff --git a/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/intro.rst b/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/intro.rst
index bb19615..c628321 100644
--- a/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/intro.rst
+++ b/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/intro.rst
@@ -31,44 +31,44 @@
 Introduction
 ============
 
-This document contains instructions for installing and configuring the Intel® Data Plane Development Kit(Intel® DPDK) software.
-It is designed to get customers up and running quickly.
-The document describes how to compile and run an Intel® DPDK application in a FreeBSD* application (bsdapp) environment,
-without going deeply into detail.
+This document contains instructions for installing and configuring the Data Plane
+Development Kit(Intel® DPDK) software. It is designed to get customers up and running
+quickly. The document describes how to compile and run a DPDK application in a FreeBSD*
+application (bsdapp) environment, without going deeply into detail.
 
-For a comprehensive guide to installing and using FreeBSD*, the following handbook is available from the FreeBSD* Documentation Project:
+For a comprehensive guide to installing and using FreeBSD*, the following handbook is
+available from the FreeBSD* Documentation Project:
 
 `http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/index.html <http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/index.html>`_
 
-DocumentationRoadmap
---------------------
+Documentation Roadmap
+---------------------
 
-The following is a list of Intel® DPDK documents in the suggested reading order:
+The following is a list of DPDK documents in the suggested reading order:
 
-*   **Release Notes** : Provides release-specific information, including supported features, limitations, fixed issues, known issues and so on.
+*   **Release Notes** : Provides release-specific information, including supported
+    features, limitations, fixed issues, known issues and so on.
     Also, provides the answers to frequently asked questions in FAQ format.
 
-*   **Getting Started Guide** (this document): Describes how to install and configure the Intel® DPDK;
-    designed to get users up and running quickly with the software.
+*   **Getting Started Guide** (this document): Describes how to install and configure
+    the DPDK; designed to get users up and running quickly with the software.
 
 *   **Programmer's Guide**: Describes:
 
-    *   The software architecture and how to use it (through examples), specifically in a Linux* application (linuxapp) environment
+    *   The software architecture and how to use it (through examples), specifically
+        in a Linux* application (linuxapp) environment
 
-    *   The content of the Intel® DPDK, the build system
-        (including the commands that can be used in the root Intel® DPDK Makefile to build the development kit and an application)
-        and guidelines for porting an application
+    *   The content of the DPDK, the build system
+        (including the commands that can be used in the root DPDK Makefile to build
+        the development kit and an application) and guidelines for porting an application
 
     *   Optimizations used in the software and those that should be considered for new development
 
     A glossary of terms is also provided.
 
-*   **API Reference**: Provides detailed information about Intel® DPDK functions, data structures and other programming constructs.
+*   **API Reference**: Provides detailed information about DPDK functions, data structures and
+      other programming constructs.
 
 *   **Sample Applications User Guide**: Describes a set of sample applications.
-    Each chapter describes a sample application that showcases specific functionality and provides instructions on how to compile,
-    run and use the sample application.
-
-.. note::
-
-    These documents are available for download as a separate documentation package at the same location as the Intel® DPDK code package.
+    Each chapter describes a sample application that showcases specific functionality and
+    provides instructions on how to compile, run and use the sample application.
diff --git a/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/sys_reqs.rst b/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/sys_reqs.rst
index 2314f39..fdc8a5c 100644
--- a/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/sys_reqs.rst
+++ b/doc/guides/freebsd_gsg/sys_reqs.rst
@@ -31,14 +31,14 @@
 System Requirements
 ===================
 
-This chapter describes the packages required to compile the Intel® DPDK.
+This chapter describes the packages required to compile the DPDK.
 
-Compilationofthe Intel® DPDK
+Compilation of the DPDK
 ----------------------------
 
 .. note::
 
-    The Intel® DPDK and its applications requires the GNU make system (gmake)
+    The DPDK and its applications requires the GNU make system (gmake)
     and the GNU Compiler Collection (gcc) to build on FreeBSD*.
     The installation of these tools is covered in this section.
 
@@ -49,24 +49,26 @@ Compilationofthe Intel® DPDK
     Testing has been performed using FreeBSD* 9.2-RELEASE (x86_64),
     FreeBSD* 10.0-RELEASE (x86_64) and requires the installation of the kernel sources,
     which should be included during the installation of FreeBSD*.
-    The Intel® DPDK also requires the use of FreeBSD* ports to compile and function.
+    The DPDK also requires the use of FreeBSD* ports to compile and function.
 
 To use the FreeBSD* ports system,
-it is required to update and extract the FreeBSD* ports tree by issuing the following commands:
+it is required to update and extract the FreeBSD* ports tree by issuing the
+following commands:
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
     root at host:~ # portsnap fetch
     root at host:~ # portsnap extract
 
-If the environment requires proxies for external communication, these can be set using:
+If the environment requires proxies for external communication, these can be
+set using:
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
     root at host:~ # setenv http_proxy <my_proxy_host>:<port>
     root at host:~ # setenv ftp_proxy <my_proxy_host>:<port>
 
-The FreeBSD* ports below need to be installed prior to building the Intel® DPDK.
+The FreeBSD* ports below need to be installed prior to building the DPDK.
 In general these can be installed using the following set of commands:
 
 #.  cd /usr/ports/<port_location>
@@ -108,7 +110,7 @@ The ports required and their locations are as follows:
 *   /usr/src/contrib/libexecinfo
 
 When running the make config-recursive command, a dialog may be presented to the user.
-For the installation of the Intel® DPDK, the default options were used.
+For the installation of the DPDK, the default options were used.
 
 .. note::
 
@@ -116,28 +118,29 @@ For the installation of the Intel® DPDK, the default options were used.
     it is advisable before running the make install command to re-run the
     make config -recursive command until no more dialogs are seen.
 
-Running Intel® DPDK Applications
---------------------------------
+Running DPDK Applications
+-------------------------
 
-To run an Intel® DPDK application, physically contiguous memory is required.
+To run a DPDK application, physically contiguous memory is required.
 In the absence of non-transparent superpages,
 the included sources for the contigmem kernel module provides the ability to
-present contiguous blocks of memory for the Intel® DPDK to use.
-Section 3.4, “Loading the Intel® DPDK contigmem Module” on page 8
+present contiguous blocks of memory for the DPDK to use.
+Section 3.4, “Loading the DPDK contigmem Module” on page 8
 for details on the loading of this module.
 
-Using Intel® DPDK contigmem Module
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Using DPDK contigmem Module
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
-The amount of physically contiguous memory along with the number of physically contiguous blocks
-can be set at runtime and prior to module loading using:
+The amount of physically contiguous memory along with the number of physically
+contiguous blocks can be set at runtime and prior to module loading using:
 
 .. code-block:: console
 
     root at host:~ # kenv hw.contigmem.num_buffers=n
     root at host:~ # kenv hw.contigmem.buffer_size=m
 
-The kernel environment variables can also be specified during boot by placing the following in /boot/loader.conf:
+The kernel environment variables can also be specified during boot by placing the
+following in /boot/loader.conf:
 
 ::
 
@@ -149,9 +152,9 @@ The variables can be inspected using the following command:
 
     root at host:~ # sysctl -a hw.contigmem
 
-Where n is the number of blocks and m is the size in bytes of each area of contiguous memory.
-A default of two buffers of size 1073741824 bytes (1 Gigabyte) each is set during module load
-if they are not specified in the environment.
+Where n is the number of blocks and m is the size in bytes of each area of contiguous
+memory. A default of two buffers of size 1073741824 bytes (1 Gigabyte) each is
+set during module load if they are not specified in the environment.
 
 .. note::
 
-- 
1.9.4.msysgit.2



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