[dpdk-dev] White listing a virtual device
Nicolas Pernas Maradei
nico at emutex.com
Fri Nov 7 13:36:48 CET 2014
Hi,
I'm currently using the --vdev option to create virtual devices, mainly
for testing. I noticed that these virtual devices are not being
white-listed any more. That was the original behaviour when the option
was called --use-device. Instead of that the virtual device is being
added to the device list along with the real ones.
You can see this behaviour by running testpmd as shown below. I have 4
Niantics on my system and they are all bound to igb_uio driver. You can
see the 5 ports being reported.
Now, the --pci-whitelist argument lets you white list a device but it
only accepts a PCI address as an option. My question is, how do you
white list a virtual device? Did this feature get dropped when the
--use-device was split into --vdev and --pci-whitelist back in
March/April or is this just an unhandled corner case?
[nico dpdk]((v1.7.1))# sudo
./x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc/app/testpmd -c 0xf -n 3
--vdev=eth_pcap0,rx_pcap=eth_ipv4.pcap,tx_pcap=/dev/null
...
Configuring Port 0 (socket 0)
Port 0: 00:00:00:01:02:03 <---- PCAP virtual device
Configuring Port 1 (socket 0)
Port 1: 90:E2:BA:6D:EC:D4
Configuring Port 2 (socket 0)
Port 2: 90:E2:BA:6D:EC:D5
Configuring Port 3 (socket 0)
Port 3: 90:E2:BA:74:6C:B4
Configuring Port 4 (socket 0)
Port 4: 90:E2:BA:74:6C:B5
Checking link statuses...
Port 0 Link Up - speed 10000 Mbps - full-duplex
Port 1 Link Up - speed 10000 Mbps - full-duplex
Port 2 Link Up - speed 10000 Mbps - full-duplex
Port 3 Link Up - speed 10000 Mbps - full-duplex
Port 4 Link Up - speed 10000 Mbps - full-duplex
Done
No commandline core given, start packet forwarding
...
Thanks,
Nico.
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