[dpdk-dev] Question about unsupported transceivers
Alexander Duyck
alexander.duyck at gmail.com
Thu Oct 15 20:00:08 CEST 2015
On 10/15/2015 10:13 AM, Alex Forster wrote:
> On 10/15/15, 12:17 PM, "Alexander Duyck" <alexander.duyck at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>> On 10/15/2015 08:43 AM, Alex Forster wrote:
>>> On 10/15/15, 11:30 AM, "Alexander Duyck" <alexander.duyck at gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 10/15/2015 07:46 AM, Alex Forster wrote:
>>>>> On 10/13/15, 4:34 PM, "Alexander Duyck" <alexander.duyck at gmail.com>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> If you are using Intel's out-of-tree ixgbe driver I believe the
>>>>>> module
>>>>>> parameters are comma separated with one index per port. So if you
>>>>>> have
>>>>>> two ports you should be passing "allow_unsupported_sfp=1,1", and for
>>>>>> 4
>>>>>> you would need four '1's.
>>>>> This seemed very promising. I compiled and installed the out of tree
>>>>> ixgbe
>>>>> driver and set the option in /etc/modprobe.d/ixgbe.conf. dmesg shows
>>>>> all
>>>>> eight "allow_unsupported_sfp enabled" messages but the last four ports
>>>>> still error out with the unsupported SFP message when running the
>>>>> tests.
>>>>>
>>>>> Before I start arbitrarily trying to patch out parts of the SFP
>>>>> verification code in ixgbe, are there any other tips I should know?
>>>> Can you send me the command you used to load the module, and the exact
>>>> number of ixgbe ports you have in the system? With that I could then
>>>> verify that the command was entered correctly as it is possible there
>>>> could still be an issue in the way the command was entered.
>>>>
>>>> One other possibility is that when the driver loads each load counts as
>>>> an instance in the module parameter array. So if for example you
>>>> unbind
>>>> the driver on one port and then later rebind it you will have consumed
>>>> one of the values in the array. Do it enough times and you exceed the
>>>> bounds of the array as you entered it and it will simply use the
>>>> default
>>>> value of 0.
>>>>
>>>> Also the output of "ethtool -i <ethX>" would be useful to verify that
>>>> you have the out-of-tree driver loaded and not the in kernel.
>>>>
>>>> - Alex
>>>>
>>> Er, let me try that again.
>>>
>>> https://gist.github.com/AlexForster/f5372c5b60153d278089
>>>
>>>
>>> Alex Forster
>>>
>>>
>> It looks like you are probably seeing interfaces be unbound and then
>> rebound. As such you are likely pushing things outside of the array
>> boundary. One solution might just be to at more ",1"s if you are only
>> going to be doing this kind of thing at boot up. The upper limit for
>> the array is 32 entries so as long as you only are setting this up once
>> you could probably get away with that.
>>
>> An alternative would be to modify the definition of the parameter in
>> ixgbe_param.c. If you look through the file you should fine several
>> likes like below:
>> struct ixgbe_option opt = {
>> .type = enable_option,
>> .name = "allow_unsupported_sfp",
>> .err = "defaulting to Disabled",
>> .def = OPTION_DISABLED
>> };
>>
>> If you modify the .def value to "OPTION_ENABLED", and then rebuild and
>> reinstall your driver you should be able have it install without any
>> issues.
>>
>> - Alex
>>
> Yeah, I've had roughly the same thought process since you mentioned the
> args array. My first idea was "maybe the driver can't fit all of my 1's"
> but I saw it was defined at 32. Then I decided to just patch the whole
> enable_unsupported_sfp option out
> https://gist.github.com/AlexForster/112fd822704caf804849 but I'm still
> failing.
Your changes are a bit over-kill and actually take things in the wrong
direction. By commenting out the whole allow_unsupported_sfp block you
are disabling it by default. Remember the module parameter allows it,
by removing it there is no way to enable the feature.
Like I mentioned in my previous email just take a look at replacing the
"OPTION_DISABLED" value with "OPTION_ENABLED" in the .def part of the
structure. After that you won't need to pass the module parameter as it
will always be enabled by default.
- Alex
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