[dpdk-dev] [PATCH 1/6] ethdev: add descriptor status API
Olivier Matz
olivier.matz at 6wind.com
Thu Mar 2 14:57:52 CET 2017
Hi Andrew,
Thank you for the review. Comments inline.
On Wed, 1 Mar 2017 21:22:14 +0300, Andrew Rybchenko <arybchenko at solarflare.com> wrote:
> On 03/01/2017 08:19 PM, Olivier Matz wrote:
> > Introduce a new API to get the status of a descriptor.
> >
> > For Rx, it is almost similar to rx_descriptor_done API, except it
> > differentiates "used" descriptors (which are hold by the driver and not
> > returned to the hardware).
> >
> > For Tx, it is a new API.
> >
> > The descriptor_done() API, and probably the rx_queue_count() API could
> > be replaced by this new API as soon as it is implemented on all PMDs.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Olivier Matz <olivier.matz at 6wind.com>
> > ---
> > lib/librte_ether/rte_ethdev.h | 86 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> > 1 file changed, 86 insertions(+)
> >
> > diff --git a/lib/librte_ether/rte_ethdev.h b/lib/librte_ether/rte_ethdev.h
> > index 97f3e2d..9ac9c61 100644
> > --- a/lib/librte_ether/rte_ethdev.h
> > +++ b/lib/librte_ether/rte_ethdev.h
> > @@ -1179,6 +1179,14 @@ typedef uint32_t (*eth_rx_queue_count_t)(struct rte_eth_dev *dev,
> > typedef int (*eth_rx_descriptor_done_t)(void *rxq, uint16_t offset);
> > /**< @internal Check DD bit of specific RX descriptor */
> >
> > +typedef int (*eth_rx_descriptor_status_t)(struct rte_eth_dev *dev,
> > + uint16_t rx_queue_id, uint16_t offset);
> > +/**< @internal Check the status of a Rx descriptor */
> > +
> > +typedef int (*eth_tx_descriptor_status_t)(struct rte_eth_dev *dev,
> > + uint16_t tx_queue_id, uint16_t offset);
> > +/**< @internal Check the status of a Tx descriptor */
> > +
> > typedef int (*eth_fw_version_get_t)(struct rte_eth_dev *dev,
> > char *fw_version, size_t fw_size);
> > /**< @internal Get firmware information of an Ethernet device. */
> > @@ -1483,6 +1491,10 @@ struct eth_dev_ops {
> > eth_queue_release_t rx_queue_release; /**< Release RX queue. */
> > eth_rx_queue_count_t rx_queue_count;/**< Get Rx queue count. */
> > eth_rx_descriptor_done_t rx_descriptor_done; /**< Check rxd DD bit. */
> > + eth_rx_descriptor_status_t rx_descriptor_status;
> > + /**< Check the status of a Rx descriptor. */
> > + eth_tx_descriptor_status_t tx_descriptor_status;
> > + /**< Check the status of a Tx descriptor. */
> > eth_rx_enable_intr_t rx_queue_intr_enable; /**< Enable Rx queue interrupt. */
> > eth_rx_disable_intr_t rx_queue_intr_disable; /**< Disable Rx queue interrupt. */
> > eth_tx_queue_setup_t tx_queue_setup;/**< Set up device TX queue. */
> > @@ -2768,6 +2780,80 @@ rte_eth_rx_descriptor_done(uint8_t port_id, uint16_t queue_id, uint16_t offset)
> > dev->data->rx_queues[queue_id], offset);
> > }
> >
> > +#define RTE_ETH_RX_DESC_AVAIL 0 /**< Desc available for hw. */
> > +#define RTE_ETH_RX_DESC_DONE 1 /**< Desc done, filled by hw. */
> > +#define RTE_ETH_RX_DESC_USED 2 /**< Desc used by driver. */
> > +
> > +/**
> > + * Check the status of a Rx descriptor in the queue
>
> I think it would be useful to highlight caller context.
> Should it be the same CPU which receives packets from the queue?
Yes, you are right it would be useful. I suggest the following sentences:
This function should be called on a dataplane core like the
Rx function. They should not be called concurrently on the same
queue.
>
> > + *
> > + * @param port_id
> > + * The port identifier of the Ethernet device.
> > + * @param queue_id
> > + * The Rx queue identifier on this port.
> > + * @param offset
> > + * The offset of the descriptor starting from tail (0 is the next
> > + * packet to be received by the driver).
> > + * @return
> > + * - (RTE_ETH_DESC_AVAIL): Descriptor is available for the hardware to
> > + * receive a packet.
> > + * - (RTE_ETH_DESC_DONE): Descriptor is done, it is filled by hw, but
> > + * not yet processed by the driver (i.e. in the receive queue).
> > + * - (RTE_ETH_DESC_USED): Descriptor is unavailable (hold by driver,
> > + * not yet returned to hw).
>
> It looks like it is the most suitable for descriptors which are reserved
> and never used.
Can you give some more details about what is a reserved but never
used descriptor? (same question for Tx)
>
> > + * - (-ENODEV) if *port_id* invalid.
> > + * - (-EINVAL) bad descriptor offset.
> > + * - (-ENOTSUP) if the device does not support this function.
>
> What should be returned if queue_id is invalid?
I'd say -ENODEV too. On the other hand, adding these checks is
maybe not a good idea as we are in dataplane.
The previous API rx_descriptor_done() API was taking the queue
pointer as parameter, like Rx/Tx functions. It's probably a better
idea.
> What should be returned if the queue is stopped?
For the same performance reasons, I think we should just highlight
in the API that this dataplane function should not be called on a
stopped queue.
>
> > + */
> > +static inline int
> > +rte_eth_rx_descriptor_status(uint8_t port_id, uint16_t queue_id,
> > + uint16_t offset)
> > +{
> > + struct rte_eth_dev *dev;
> > +
> > + RTE_ETH_VALID_PORTID_OR_ERR_RET(port_id, -ENODEV);
> > + dev = &rte_eth_devices[port_id];
> > + RTE_FUNC_PTR_OR_ERR_RET(*dev->dev_ops->rx_descriptor_status, -ENOTSUP);
> > +
>
> May be it makes sense to range check queue_id here to avoid such code in
> each PMD?
If we keep this API, yes. If we switch to a queue pointer as proposed
above, we will assume (and highlight in the API doc) that the pointer
must be valid, like for Rx/Tx funcs.
Olivier
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